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Re: SUMMARY [Was Re: Fortunes-off - do we need this as a package for Bookworm?]



On 2022-11-23 at 13:06, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:

> All,
> 
> Thank you for your considered opinions thus far. We have various
> developers who have written defending free speech: we've had others
> who have expressed various reservations with one aspect or other of
> the status quo.
> 
> There's been a grudging consensus that this is *hard*. It's very hard
> indeed to draw good conclusions as to what to do when everyone agrees
> that something could be done and disagrees with what that should be.
> 
> Notably, Sam Hartman and Branden Robinson have pointed up flaws with
> the existing categorisations and with a blanket removal based on
> preference. It's also noticeable that this largely comes down to
> consideration of fortunes in English - almost nothing has been said
> about other fortunes files or other languages, though Sam talked
> about cultural perceptions.
> 
> A serious suggestion: it is not necessary for Debian to package
> fortune files at all.

I find this suggestion demotivating and discouraging.

> The single collection we have is largely a random collection from BSD
> of 1995 vintage, itself representative of one Unix site in 1995 or
> earlier.

I believe that this statement is inaccurate. There are parts of the
collection which are Debian-specific (the earliest of which, per the
changelog, were added in 1999), and others which have been added far
more recently than 1995 (there have been what seem like substantive
additions at least as recently as 2006).

The way the Debian packaging splits the collection into various files,
which I understand is not necessarily done upstream, can also be valuable.

> The upstream Github repository is potentially only one of many
> disparate sites on the 'Net and the English language collection
> doesn't reflect the languages of Debian users worldwide.

Can you point to the repository you're referencing?

I wanted to check that repository to see whether it had the
Debian-specific parts of the collection, but since I can't find it, I
can't verify that before sending this.

The only repository URLs I find in the package metadata are the
Vcs-Browser and Vcs-Git URLs from 'apt-cache showsrc fortunes-off'
(which shows the information for the fortune-mod source package), and
those are under anonscm.debian.org.

/usr/share/doc/fortune-mod/README.gz lists several URLs, at least one of
which appears to be a repository, but it isn't on GitHub and leads to a
404.

The files under /usr/share/doc/fortunes*/ don't seem to list any URLs at
all - except for one in changelog.Debian.gz, which dates from 1998 and
is about the addition of the 'perl' fortunes file.

The only upstream I can find referenced is the references in
changelog.debian.gz to "Pascal Hakim", but no apparent place to find
whatever upstream that person might host seems to be mentioned.

> PyPi has a fortunes-mod equivalent to read fortunes files: it
> doesn't necessarily include strfile but it will handle pre-existing
> fortune files. It should be open to anybody to make their own
> fortunes files - just as anyone can make a mix of their own music on
> their favourite music player.
> 
> If Debian doesn't distribute fortune files but instead provides the
> means for users to make/download their own choice, nothing is lost.
> Debian is not responsible for maintaining any file content, whether
> questionable or unobjectionable depending on viewpoint, and we lose
> the burden of translation, maintenance and policing of content.

I sharply disagree that nothing is lost, but I don't seem to have the
emotional energy to try to explain why without becoming argumentative
and probably just making things worse overall. (I have held back a draft
which makes the attempt, but which I suspect distinctly fails.)

> This also means that anyone who wishes can add the *missing* content
> requested in the bugs over years into their own files at their own
> risk.
> 
> Your thoughts, again, please.

I am reasonably certain that this would just lead to far fewer people
bothering to make use of the fortunes database(s) at all, thereby
creating a self-fulfilling prophecy about how irrelevant this is in the
modern world.

From my perspective, this whole discussion looks like someone whom I've
respected coming in and proposing to take away one of the small things
I somewhat like having around, and that taking-away happening almost
immediately despite the existence of pushback over it, and then that
person reacting to the pushback by proposing to take away a *bigger*
thing that I even *more* like having around. I imagine it's not hard to
see how that could be upsetting or demotivating.

-- 
   The Wanderer

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all
progress depends on the unreasonable man.         -- George Bernard Shaw

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