On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 05:17:02PM -0700, Adam Williamson wrote:
On Mon, 2014-03-31 at 09:17 -0500, Rex Dieter wrote:
> Richard W.M. Jones wrote:
>
> > - VLC
> >
> > Free software video player, but with a requirement (or at least can
> > use if available) proprietary / patented / ugly / semi-legal codecs.
> > Currently packaged in RPMFusion for reasons I'm not clear on.
>
> I've looked into this a bit, and discussed with other distro packagers and
> vlc upstream.
>
> VLC is fairly modular, and it's unencumbered bits could be brought to fedora
> and the other stuff live in some -freeworld subpkg in rpmfusion.
>
> Implementing this would be a bit of work, but worth it in my opinion. I
Well, I'm not so sure. A *lot* of people really don't understand the
patent issue. Like, at all. They don't understand modularity. Like, at
all. To a lot of people, the thing called 'vlc' is a magic black box
that plays every video ever. They "install VLC" and then they play
videos. This is the limit of their understanding.
Right. I think my question was too subtle :-(
It wasn't about whether VLC could go into Fedora, but if there going
to be a ring, with the Fedora name, where basically anything goes
including software of insalubrious legality (in the US). And I guess
the answer is no.
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Fedora Windows cross-compiler. Compile Windows programs, test, and
build Windows installers. Over 100 libraries supported.
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/MinGW