@phnt @Suiseiseki He’s probably talking about a dect phone or something.
@phnt @Suiseiseki The free software movement is not a movement about source code but it is about freedom.
You can call it mental gymnastics all you want but the philosophy behind it is consistent and logical.
@phnt @Suiseiseki Why do you even want the source code for a read only chip? How does that help you? You can’t modify it anyway.
@phnt @Suiseiseki I mean I agree it is nice to have and probably interesting to look at, but having it does not give you any practical benefits.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt Even if they gave you the source code that doesn’t change anything. How do you even verify the source code on the device is the same as what they gave you?
If hardware has built-in anti-features that is still bad of course, but it is outside of the domain of free software.
@snacks @Suiseiseki @phnt Most hardware designs don’t “lock you out” but simply don’t have rewriteable memory. That’s a simple hardware limitation and not a deliberate attempt to curb your freedom.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt That is not a practical thing an average user would do. This essentially destroys the hardware.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt The claim that the free software movement is not pragmatic is a false narrative by the open source corpo bootlickers.
Maybe things in the free software movement are already an imperfect middle ground solution because true freedom has not yet been achieved.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt It’s not cope, it’s true.
I mean the FSF could start complaining that my SSD has proprietary firmware on its controller because that’s just issues the movement ignores for now because if they did nobody would even be able to use a computer in the first place. It is acceptable for now until a solution exists.
@Suiseiseki @phnt Also slightly unrelated, I’m looking to get a DSLR camera without proprietary software.
The best I can do here in this segment of hardware is to get one that is supported by MagicLantern, right? It doesn’t fully replace the camera’s software but it piggybacks off of it.
@Suiseiseki @phnt Literally anyone who used to work at the FSF office. Or just email info@fsf.org and they will probably forward you to someone that knows.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt Yes because these “decades old junk chinkpads” are the best that’s currently available.
If the requirements were more strict and required full software freedom then they wouldn’t be able to recommend a single computer at all.
@romin @Suiseiseki @phnt There is literally no hardware available that requires less proprietary software. That is a fact and not a cope or a troll.
@Suiseiseki @phnt @romin I believe @lxo once said that the only truly free computer is a PDP-11 or something ancient like that.
And if i don’t release updates to my proprietary software it becomes free???
No, you misunderstand. If your hardware has physically no method updating the software doesn’t become free, but the software becomes hardware, because it is an unchangeable part of the it just like the circuitry.
@snacks @Suiseiseki @phnt You can avoid the need for software freedom by making the software part of the hardware. That makes sense, right?
@phnt @snacks @Suiseiseki The fact that it does not take away your freedom does not mean it is in inherently good and not malicious. We’re not arguing for that.
@snacks @Suiseiseki @phnt That really depends on the type of hardware. Not everything is eeprom.
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@lxo @Suiseiseki @phnt @romin I am probably remembering a quote from someone else then. Sorry.