On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 11:34 AM, Normand Chamberland gemnoc@gmail.com wrote:
if you do not have a savannah or other libre hosting service please send me an ssh public key and i will set you up with a gitolite repository.
No, right now I'm too fucking pissed off by your zealotry to do anything resembling that and I might very well stop my contributions right there.
sorry normand, that clearly wasn't the intent - it's never "zealotry": "zeal" implies some sort of irrational (completely illogical) fervour based on some sort of "faith" and/or pleasure in asking people to do something that they clearly don't like. look into the eyes of anyone under the spell of "zeal" and you will find someone that's clearly possessed and/or completely insane.
i don't _enjoy_ asking people not to use proprietary services, and i really should have asked last week: i was simply too exhausted (and also packing up the 10 suitcases for the move from zhuhai back to taiwan) to send the message at the time you said "i don't have a public online web service / hosting arrangement".
i'm so sorry you felt like you were wasting your time - i do need your help (and that of others)... but if i am forced to choose between compromising on integrity and ethical principles that i am trying to advocate to large businesses... i can't do it, can i? it completely defeats the purpose of the exercise. the way this project starts out and scales up, if it scales up and includes the use of proprietary services, that's how it ends up staying and it's going to be impossible to stop.
there are plenty of companies that have compromised and taken us - all of us in the software libre community - for granted. openssl, gpg, the gentoo lead developer who ended up with $USD 45,000 of credit-card debt and had to take a paid job with microsoft - countless more examples where corporations are take, take, take and we just... let them.
somebody has to put their foot down if nobody else is going to. i don't _enjoy_ or get any kind of "zealous kick" out of being virutally totally isolated and ostracised from everyone else in the software libre world, normand. it's not fun, but it's better than giving up on what's now getting on for six _years_ of hard work.
those pictures looked really good, too.
l.