Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 19th Jun 2008 20:28 UTC, submitted by Rahul
Java Back in May 2006, Sun announced during the JavaOne conference it would release Java as open source, licensed as GPL software. While it was released as GPL, it still contained about 5 percent proprietary, non-free code - the Java trap, as the FSF calls it. The FSF called to dismantle this trap, and now the IcedTea project has reached an important milestone.
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RE[4]: The Java Trap
by Moulinneuf on Fri 20th Jun 2008 05:43 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: The Java Trap"
Moulinneuf
Member since:
2005-07-06

"It was not impossible. Many distributions did so. "


Many is nothing compared to all distribution ...

"It was also not impossible to debug and track bugs since the source code was available"


In certain case , in others it was the problem.

"I think you're way too disconnected from the process."


I know your not part of the process. Your even against the process. Your also disconnected from reality.

By being 100% GPL , it means JAVA will be used natively as opposed to a plug-in or an after tought.

Edited 2008-06-20 05:44 UTC

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