this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2024
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People who deeply care about this typically use a distro which has a strong stance on FLOSS software like Debian or Fedora
Arch Linux is more free on this as long as the user gets a more conveniant way to install everything (even proprietary software)
the Arch Linux way however is also reading every PKGBUILD (where the license is stated) before installing and if you need to have an easier way to search through licenses just programatically solve this yourself i.e. by using https://github.com/archlinux/aur and going through all branches with a script
Seeing "Ubuntu" and "strong stance on Free, Libre, Open-Source Software software" in the same sentence is confusing to say the least.
sorry that was a blunder on my part, I wanted to say "Debian and Fedora" but autocorrect gotten a hold on me it seems
Don't you think that in the context of this thread, ubuntu is more FLOSS than arch?
This post is made wishing that someone will tell me I am missing something here. But if I'm not then it seems like we have to give the point to ubuntu no? because you have a much better chance of obtaining a FLOSS system if you can at least have a way to select what you are installing.
Would be interesting if there was a script that could audit the licenses being used by all the installed applications. Then generate a report. I wonder what the arch-based community is rocking with. I guess they also have logs of what people download though not sure how centralized/available that info is.
This thread is hurting my brain, but if I understand correctly maybe absolutely-proprietary is the kind of thing you're looking for? It checks your installed packages against a list of proprietary packages and suggests libre alternatives if they exist.
ah wonderful!
boooooooooo!!!
Somehow my wifi drivers have become non-free? I am pretty certain I selected the free variant during install. Though come to think of it I wasn't clear how assertive that option was. I do think there are free drivers for this.. hmm.
As FYI for anyone reading this,you need to use
-f
to get a complete list. It only shows me about a dozen even though it says there 87! The information is carefully hidden.i live like this all the time. :/ wouldn't wish it on anyone else. sorry to inflict my cognition on you but I appreciate your time :D
Oh don't apologize! It's nothing to do with you, I'm just dumb lol
I find it surprising that this data, which as you say is available is impossible to display except by going on one by one investigations. It is too time-consuming to be reasonably accomplished. Especially when you consider going up the dependency chain. I am hoping someone can point me to a reasonable way to go about it. If none exists I do feel like its just not a priority for the whole community. I couldn't even find anything about this by scouring the usually-helpful arch wiki. I don't find any gists or other scripts, no forum posts, nothing .
I have not been much of a distro-hopper, just using ubuntu/debian and now manjaro for years. Maybe I will switch. I strongly prefer the pacman situation to apt. I never looked into any of the other options though so maybe there is something suitable.