home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: alt.cd-rom
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!usc!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ennews!enuxha.eas.asu.edu!ejohnson
- From: ejohnson@enuxha.eas.asu.edu (Eric R. Johnson)
- Subject: Re: First GNU CD-ROM
- Message-ID: <1993Jan1.203327.1702@ennews.eas.asu.edu>
- Sender: news@ennews.eas.asu.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
- References: <alt.cd-rom9212091353.AA01413@grackle.stockbridge.ma.us> <1992Dec31.070340.5959@catfish.az05.bull.com> <63123@mimsy.umd.edu>
- Date: Fri, 1 Jan 1993 20:33:27 GMT
- Lines: 69
-
- In article <63123@mimsy.umd.edu> jerryw@cs.umd.edu (Jerry Wieber) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec31.070340.5959@catfish.az05.bull.com> pls@cibecue.az05.bull.com (Paul Schauble) writes:
- >>How do these prices fit with the charter of the _Free_ Software Foundation?
- >>I just can't see how these prices bear any remote relationship to distribution
- >>costs.
- >
- >They don't. As I understand it, the FSF uses a high distribution charge
- >as a way to support the FSF. The (mildly underhanded) thought is that
- >a donation is hidden in the materials charge, thus slipping unnoticed
- >through the paws of the corporate bean counters.
- >
-
- Nothing underhanded about it: see below --
-
- --- snip, snip ---
-
- Newsgroups: gnu.misc.discuss
- From: rms@gnu.ai.mit.edu (Richard Stallman)
- Subject: Fund raising at the FSF
- Message-ID: <9212300616.AA25845@mole.gnu.ai.mit.edu>
- Organization: GNUs Not Usenet
- Distribution: gnu
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 20:16:10 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
- There seem to be many people who use GNU software but have never read
- what the purpose of it is. Misunderstandings are widespread.
-
- The word "free" in our name pertains to freedom, not price. The
- purpose of the GNU project is to give users two specific freedoms:
- first, the freedom to copy the program and distribute it; and second,
- the freedom to change the program as you wish, by having full access
- to source code.
-
- Low price distribution is not part of this purpose. You may get a
- copy of GNU software at a high price, or a low price (even
- zero)--either way is ok. The freedom to redistribute will tend to
- discourage extremely high prices, which is nice, but secondary.
-
- It's understandable that if people think the purpose of GNU is to have
- a low price, they might be disturbed to learn that we don't have low
- prices. But that was never our aim.
-
- The FSF distributes CD-ROMS, like tapes, primarily for the purpose of
- raising funds to pay programmers and tech writers to develop more of
- the GNU system. Naturally we charge enough to bring in a considerable
- amount of margin. Our mission is to increase the amount of free
- software available to a user, and we can do more if we take advantage
- of the opportunity to raise money when we distribute. Most of the
- FSF's funds come from distribution; they always have.
-
- However, it is inaccurate to describe this as "profit". If you look
- at just the FSF's distribution activity, it produces a surplus. The
- FSF spends this surplus paying people to write software for you to
- use. If you look at the FSF as a whole, it does not make a profit.
-
- We may have contributed to the misunderstanding by using the phrase
- "distribution fee" in the CD announcement, because that does imply
- something about the size of the fee, and that is not what we meant to
- say. We should have said, "a fee for distribution." What this means
- is that people pay for the distribution--not, as usual, for the right
- to use the program. (In the case of GNU software, everyone has the
- right to use it, and nobody ever has to pay for that.)
-
- If you'd like us to develop more software, I hope you will order some
- CDs or tapes and thus help us pay more programmers. 80 CDs, ordered
- at the company price, will support one programmer for a year.
-
-
-