> A tool to help to find repos must be Ok, we also provide
> browser that know Google - and Google is also a tool to find such repos.
> There must be at least some solution?
Google is a tool to find anything... anywhere. A local user must
initiate the communication with Google and must ask Google explicitly
for things to search for.
A tool designed only to find information about repos to help users
obtain items we can't legally ship.. automatically... is totally
different.
> Well then we should not provide network access or browsers at all... and
> no support for cd drives...
Feel free to be as flippant as you want.. thats not going to change
the fact that there are real legal issues here that Red Hat as the
managing entity needs to be careful of. If you can't take this
seriously.. then please.. just be quiet. Contributory infringement,
involves a delibrate intent to knowingly aid others to infringe. I
think its pretty damn clear that adding any tool that delibrately help
users find additional repos and instantly configure them falls into
the definition of contributory infringement. A tool that just handles
repo configs is very narrowly defined, its not a general use tool.
Most if not all of the popular 3rd party repos out there are popular
specifically because they provide material that Fedora can not.
One thing that has frustrated me is that we seem before to have just
turned a blind eye to the whole lot even though we know its there. Only
now are we making it clearer as to the reasons why mp3's and the
propietary software are not supported.
However let me ask this is it illegal to add a 3rd party repo or is it
only illegal if the content on it is wrong?
I'm not being stupid I don't understand where the line is because I'm
lucky we don't have that law in Australia at the moment I'm sure that will
change.
If it isn't illegal to supply a repo then what is the problem in for
instance having a list of repo's for yumex like you said.
- and
> this google search gives the result of a rpm-package that enables toe
> possibility for enabling more repositories. (not to make it
> complicated ... ;-) ) So the information is not on the CD and not at the
> official Fedora site. A google search result can easily be interated
> into an application.
I don't think you can get away with a pre-defined google search. Even
if it was legally okay to do that, i think you can trust the accuracy
of the pre-defined google search over the lifetime of a release. I'm
pretty sure I'm not the only one who would delibrately attempt to
corrupt the dynamic list of results to that google search, and I'm
pretty sure the other people would put in pages far more malicious
than mine.
-jef
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