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Re: [Bug-gnuzilla] GNU LibreJS won't be removed from GNU IceCat


From: David Hedlund
Subject: Re: [Bug-gnuzilla] GNU LibreJS won't be removed from GNU IceCat
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2018 16:10:30 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/52.6.0



On 2018-02-23 02:55, bill-auger wrote:
On 02/22/2018 02:56 PM, David Hedlund wrote:
On 2018-02-22 09:22, Ivan Zaigralin wrote:
GPL-licensed code is not necessarily free. An obfuscated source is
unmaintainable regardless of the license, so two freedoms are taken
away: the freedom to study, and the freedom to run modified versions.
LibreJS is unable to detect obfuscated code.
Thank you. This is a bug, can you please file a bug report to
https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=librejs ?

david - ivan was not reporting any bug that could be fixed - he was
saying that it is impossible for libreJS to determine if a script is
obfuscated or the original source - if the only available version of the
script is obfuscated then the GPL does not apply because all
requirements are not satisfiable - for this reason, any yet unseen
obfuscated script should be considered non-free regardless of it's
reported license

Issues can be reported to https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=librejs as well since there are not dedicated "issue" link for LibreJS.


the only way libreJS can accurately deem a script to be free is either
if it is an original non-obfuscated source that matches identically to a
previously cataloged copy that has a verified license or an it is an
obfuscated script that matches identically to a previously cataloged
copy of an obfuscated script which has been previously verified to have
been produced from the original source that has a verified license -
beyond that, i think the halting problem would need to be solved first

just as you do for the FSD, this would require a human to verify the
reported license of each and every yet un-cataloged script then either
shipping with libreJS checksums for all known scripts on earth as a
white-list or having every script that every user downloads sent to a
central server for verification which would be as much of a privacy
concern as the script itself - also it should be clear from that any
such catalog would be incomplete at best, especially at the rate the web
changes




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