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bug#46385: User awareness of Anti-Features
From: |
Maxim Cournoyer |
Subject: |
bug#46385: User awareness of Anti-Features |
Date: |
Thu, 09 Jun 2022 17:12:42 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/28.1 (gnu/linux) |
Hi,
Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> writes:
[...]
>> * ads (I don't think any application in Guix has these?)
>> * tracking (should be patched out if possible)
>> * non-free-network-services
>> * non-free-dependencies (probably not allowed in upstream Guix, but maybe in
>> a channel)
>>
>> The code behind ‘guix show’ and ‘guix search’ would need to
>> be adjusted to display anti-features, and the ‘guix install’ code
>> should warn if someone installs a package with anti-features.
>
> I’m sympathetic with the idea of raising awareness of those
> anti-features. However, I don’t see a clear way we could “define” each
> possible anti-feature; some are definitely ill-defined (for instance, a
> service is neither “free” nor “non-free” in the same sense as software
> can be free or non-free.) It’s also not entirely clear to me how the UI
> could make good use of it.
I agree. It's not well defined, and to me following the FSDG seems an
already good warranty that you're getting only free software from a
project dedicated to fixing any freedom issues that may be discovered.
> That said, there are anti-features that we have always patched out in
> the past, such as tracking/“phoning home” and auto-upgrades. Perhaps we
> could formalize that in our packaging guidelines?
It'd be good to have this documented, indeed.
Thanks,
Maxim
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