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www/philosophy freedom-or-copyright.html


From: Richard M. Stallman
Subject: www/philosophy freedom-or-copyright.html
Date: Wed, 23 Jun 2010 18:46:54 +0000

CVSROOT:        /webcvs/www
Module name:    www
Changes by:     Richard M. Stallman <rms>       10/06/23 18:46:54

Modified files:
        philosophy     : freedom-or-copyright.html 

Log message:
        Minor clarification.

CVSWeb URLs:
http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewcvs/www/philosophy/freedom-or-copyright.html?cvsroot=www&r1=1.33&r2=1.34

Patches:
Index: freedom-or-copyright.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /webcvs/www/www/philosophy/freedom-or-copyright.html,v
retrieving revision 1.33
retrieving revision 1.34
diff -u -b -r1.33 -r1.34
--- freedom-or-copyright.html   28 Apr 2010 21:34:39 -0000      1.33
+++ freedom-or-copyright.html   23 Jun 2010 18:46:51 -0000      1.34
@@ -129,7 +129,7 @@
 dissatisfied with that amount and called the experiment a failure, but it looks
 like a success to me.)  Radiohead made millions in 2007 by inviting
 fans to copy an album and pay what they wished, while it was also
-shared through P2P.  In
+shared on peer-to-peer networks.  In
 2008, <a href="http://www.boingboing.net/2008/03/05/nine-inch-nails-made.html";>
 Nine Inch Nails released an album with permission to share copies</a>
 and made 750,000 dollars in a few days.</p>
@@ -220,7 +220,7 @@
 <p>
 Updated:
 <!-- timestamp start -->
-$Date: 2010/04/28 21:34:39 $
+$Date: 2010/06/23 18:46:51 $
 <!-- timestamp end -->
 </p>
 </div>



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