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@cyberspook "When I say free, I mean free as in freedom, not as in price." - wow that confusion was hard to clear up.
Meanwhile good luck explaining "open source" in one sentence.
>doesn't make it apparent that it's its own type of software rather than freeware or just a source code made publically available
Free software isn't a "type" of software - it's simply software that respects the users freedom.
It's clear that free software is different to freeware and source-available software, as the names are different.
I haven't come across anyone confusing free software with freeware or source-available software myself.
>I think the name was simply an oversight on Stallman's part
Free software has been the idea from the very start.
Sure it has become hugely popular to use free to mean "free of charge" relatively recently, but how is that an oversight on rms's part?
Libre software is an interchangeable name and it's excellent until it comes to non-English languages.
- Alexandre Oliva likes this.
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@Suiseiseki
Also, saying "free software" is no better than saying "open-source software." Which means it's a terrible name that, again, doesn't make it apparent that it's its own type of software rather than freeware or just a source code made publically available. I may support Stallman but I will not back down from this opinion, I think the name was simply an oversight on Stallman's part which due to bureaucracy he cannot change.
@grillchen
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@Suiseiseki
FOSS/FLOSS acronyms are a joke, everyone deciphers them however they want, they have no consistency and don't convey any meaningful message.
@grillchen