
>Once again, the FSF takes a noble goal to a loony extreme.
As far as i understand FSF nothing has changed. Their position was always that everyone should have the same freedom related to software (files of functional work) on your computer.
So the shift doesn't come from the FSF but from the hardware manufactures. At that point of time where they pull the firmware out of the hardware and put it into a file of my computer the same qestion arrises as for any other software: Why should one person have more power over this file on my computer than i?
As i understand it the position of the FSF was always "We are all in the same boat". So everyone should be able to change it or nobody. Now that the firmware is just a file on my harddisk, just a pice of software, why should the right person (employee of the right company) be able to modify it and i'm not? If you allow this compromise for firmware you have to answer the question "and why don't make the same compromise for a driver, or for a binary which does foo?". At the end it is all the same. It is a file on my computer which does some functional work and in the eyes of the FSF this should alway bee free softwar so that everyone has the same freedom and noone has power over you and your computing.
Suburbia is where the developer bulldozes out the trees, then names the streets after them. -- Bill Vaughn