On Sun, 20 Aug 2006, Alain Reguera wrote: > On 8/19/06, Dag Wieers <dag at wieers.com> wrote: > > Let me reply to something that gave a bad taste in my mouth. > > > > On Sat, 19 Aug 2006, Alain Reguera wrote: > > > On 8/19/06, Karanbir Singh <mail-lists at karan.org> wrote: > > > > On Sat, 19 Aug 2006, Alain Reguera wrote: > > > > > > > > > Our question was, why continue using something that they don't want we > > > > > use, even in a rebuild from them?, but even worst when we reached to > > > > > love them?. (please, no offence here) > > > > > > > > I dont understand your question. Who is the 'they' and who is the 'we', > > > > and who do you love ? > > > > > > with "they" I refer to redhat (the main builder, who give the sources) > > > > > > with "we" I refer to my friends and I, and maybe the others that could > > > be in the same situation of us. > > > > So your question implies that they (Red Hat) do not want us (you and > > your friends) to use CentOS ? I don't agree with your implication. > > maybe you are not in the list I refer as "we". would like to know how > you'll feel if you see your country in the line 67-68 of this file: > http://olpc.download.redhat.com/olpc/rawhide-snapshots/2006-05-27-0237/eula.txt Talk to a lawyer. But if the user (you) lives in one of the countries listed in the EXPORT CONTROL section of the EULA, I don't see why you would even care about the EULA. :) I don't even understand why they put the responsibility in the hands of the user, especially for countries where the US has no control over (and thus no control over the users). I even doubt that they expect you to understand English and/or obey to there rules. Especially if you're being embargoed. But then again, I don't think the export control laws are really enforcable on a medium called Internet. Either it's public, or it is not. Internet does not care about boundaries. I bet it's just there to formally comply with a checklist. Control export ? Check ! > for a minute, feel like one of "we" and maybe you have the answer that > is needed. (please, I appreciate your comment, don't confuse mine) > > maybe there is or there is no legal implication at using CentOS (and > don't care, what the (fedora|redhat )'s eula.txt file says) ... and > that is what I ("we") need to know. Since a legal point of view. Talk to a lawyer if you care. Again, I doubt that it's enforceable. Especially outside the U.S., even more as an 'external' user. > I don't question those things Dag, indeed think of those things as > "love", what I question is the name of my country in a discriminatory > way on one fedora's official file (and then redhat). That's politics and administrative actions a US company has to comply with. But again I doubt it is enforceable. Especially is you read the EULA from the CD in one of those countries. The moment you merely read the EULA you already broke the stuff you implicitely warrants. Common sense says that that's not fair. Kind regards, -- dag wieers, dag at wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/ -- [all I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power]