This is what I call very good openness. Hope this continues and a fix to bug #1 is found soon. :)<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Mon, Jun 9, 2008 at 10:36 PM, Mark Shuttleworth <<a href="mailto:mark@ubuntu.com" target="_blank">mark@ubuntu.com</a>> wrote:<br>
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Mark Fink wrote:
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<pre>I just read this article:<br><a href="http://boycottnovell.com/2008/06/07/ubuntu-remix-codecs/" target="_blank">http://boycottnovell.com/2008/06/07/ubuntu-remix-codecs/</a><br><br>I hope this is wrong or I will have to stop using ubuntu and find<br>
another distro to use. Such a shame...<br> </pre>
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Mark, Remco<br>
<br>
There is (again) absolutely no truth to the rumour that Canonical has
done a deal with Microsoft for access to codecs - either in return for
money, or for some other quid-pro-quo.<br>
<br>
The recently-announced netbook remix is a prototype of the sort of
platform that Canonical is working on with OEM's. Those OEM's almost
always want to make sure that media is *legally* playable by the users
who purchase their devices, and Canonical will gladly work with
companies like Real Media or Fluendo to make sure that is possible. If
you are an OEM you should be able to ship machines based on Ubuntu and
not break the law, and if you are an individual user you should be able
to purchase media codecs and not break the law. Those codecs include
things like Flash, MP3-4, WMV, QuickTime and so on.<br>
<br>
That said, I will defend (again) the importance of being willing to
work with Microsoft, under reasonable and transparent conditions, to
further goals that we share, if the opportunity arises.<br>
<br>
I'm entirely against the idea that any company is "untouchable" - we
have our values, they have theirs, and it's important to remember that
we might actually have many things in common. For example, we both have
an interest in making sure that countries have open and competitive
internet access, because both Ubuntu and Windows depend on having fast
internet access for updates. We might well work together to encourage
good telecommunications policy. To reject that sort of collaboration
is, in my mind, just as self-defeating as it was for Microsoft to call
the GPL "a cancer". The reality is that the world is a heterogenous
place, and Windows and Linux are both real forces that need to be
accommodated. That does not mean we need to sell out on fundamental
principles, as we think some distributions have done, but it does mean
we need to stay open to the possibility of collaboration on terms that
we are comfortable with. It's not working with Microsoft that would be
wrong, it's working with Microsoft in a way that undermines free
software. And Canonical has not and will not do that.<br>
<br>
There is nothing new in what is being done with the netbook remix. It
is not an edition of Ubuntu. It is not even a real "finished product" -
what you have are a set of packages that can be used together with
Ubuntu to make the starting point of an image for an OEM. There is no
intentions to put proprietary codecs into standard Ubuntu - that would
be against our stated principles. You are welcome to download and
modify any of the pieces Canonical has put together for that remix. The
remix is more of a statement of intent to the OEM industry - that there
is an easy to use, classy, effective starting point for their devices
that is intrinsically Ubuntu while still being friendly for "newbie
netbook users".<br>
<br>
OEM's have always - as long as I have been around - wanted to help
users with the codec problem. Dell very kindly underwrites the cost of
DVD playback for people who purchase a machine from them with Ubuntu
pre-installed, using legal codecs and players. You might well question
the wisdom of the law that makes it necessary for that to be
proprietary, but I think Dell deserves praise and thanks for their
willingness to help their customers make DVD playback work. The more
people are using Linux, the more awareness there is of free software
issues, the more likely it is that laws are not written which make it
impossible to do things in a free software way. I'm proud to be part of
the process of bringing free software to a wider audience, and don't
believe that working with OEM's to make it possible for products - or
end users - of Ubuntu to achieve their goals legally is a setback in
that regard.<br>
<br>
While I appreciate the vigilance of folks who have expressed concerns
on this thread, and understand that the role of Canonical within Ubuntu
is such that we *must* have constant scrutiny of Canonical's decisions
by the broader community, I would ask that this scrutiny itself be held
to a high standard. This rumour and thread sprung up with no evidence
of a breach of trust on the part of Canonical, and escalated into ad
hominem attacks that are not in keeping with the Ubuntu code of
conduct. I encourage people to ask questions of their leaders in the
community, but not to slander them without evidence.<br><font color="#888888">
<br>
Mark
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<br></blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Chandra Sekar.S<br><br>e-mail: <a href="http://chandru.in" target="_blank">chandru.in</a>@<a href="http://gmail.com" target="_blank">gmail.com</a><br>Blog: <a href="http://tuxychandru.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">http://tuxychandru.blogspot.com/</a><br>
<br>We choose the brand of our Mobile Phone, Motorbike, Car, Shirt, Shoe, Bread, etc. Then why not the brand of our OS too?<br><br>Pre-loading and forcing Vista on new laptops kills consumers' choice. Fight for choice of OS just as there is for the Hard Disk capacity in new laptops.