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GNU Info File | 2001-02-09 | 21.1 KB | 450 lines |
- This is gpc.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.0 from gpc.texi.
-
- INFO-DIR-SECTION GNU programming tools
- START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
- * GPC: (gpc). The GNU Pascal Compiler.
- END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
- INFO-DIR-SECTION Individual utilities
- START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
- * GPC: (gpc)Invoking GPC. The GNU Pascal Compiler.
- END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
-
- This file documents the GNU Pascal Compiler.
-
- Copyright (C) 1988, 1996-2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
- Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
- manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
- preserved on all copies.
-
- Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
- this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also
- that the sections entitled "GNU General Public License", "The GNU
- Project", "The GNU Manifesto" and "Funding for Free Software" are
- included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire
- resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
- notice identical to this one.
-
- Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
- manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
- versions, except that the sections entitled "GNU General Public
- License", "The GNU Project", "The GNU Manifesto" and "Funding for Free
- Software" and this permission notice, may be included in translations
- approved by the Free Software Foundation instead of in the original
- English.
-
- File: gpc.info, Node: GNU Benefits, Next: Objections to GNU, Prev: How To Contribute to GNU, Up: Manifesto
-
- Why All Computer Users Will Benefit
- -----------------------------------
-
- Once GNU is written, everyone will be able to obtain good system
- software free, just like air.(1)
-
- This means much more than just saving everyone the price of a Unix
- license. It means that much wasteful duplication of system programming
- effort will be avoided. This effort can go instead into advancing the
- state of the art.
-
- Complete system sources will be available to everyone. As a result,
- a user who needs changes in the system will always be free to make them
- himself, or hire any available programmer or company to make them for
- him. Users will no longer be at the mercy of one programmer or company
- which owns the sources and is in sole position to make changes.
-
- Schools will be able to provide a much more educational environment
- by encouraging all students to study and improve the system code.
- Harvard's computer lab used to have the policy that no program could be
- installed on the system if its sources were not on public display, and
- upheld it by actually refusing to install certain programs. I was very
- much inspired by this.
-
- Finally, the overhead of considering who owns the system software
- and what one is or is not entitled to do with it will be lifted.
-
- Arrangements to make people pay for using a program, including
- licensing of copies, always incur a tremendous cost to society through
- the cumbersome mechanisms necessary to figure out how much (that is,
- which programs) a person must pay for. And only a police state can
- force everyone to obey them. Consider a space station where air must
- be manufactured at great cost: charging each breather per liter of air
- may be fair, but wearing the metered gas mask all day and all night is
- intolerable even if everyone can afford to pay the air bill. And the
- TV cameras everywhere to see if you ever take the mask off are
- outrageous. It's better to support the air plant with a head tax and
- chuck the masks.
-
- Copying all or parts of a program is as natural to a programmer as
- breathing, and as productive. It ought to be as free.
-
- ---------- Footnotes ----------
-
- (1) This is another place I failed to distinguish carefully between
- the two different meanings of "free". The statement as it stands is
- not false - you can get copies of GNU software at no charge, from your
- friends or over the net. But it does suggest the wrong idea.
-
- File: gpc.info, Node: Objections to GNU, Prev: GNU Benefits, Up: Manifesto
-
- Some Easily Rebutted Objections to GNU's Goals
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- "Nobody will use it if it is free, because that means they can't
- rely on any support."
-
- "You have to charge for the program to pay for providing the
- support."
-
- If people would rather pay for GNU plus service than get GNU free
- without service, a company to provide just service to people who have
- obtained GNU free ought to be profitable.(1)
-
- We must distinguish between support in the form of real programming
- work and mere handholding. The former is something one cannot rely on
- from a software vendor. If your problem is not shared by enough
- people, the vendor will tell you to get lost.
-
- If your business needs to be able to rely on support, the only way
- is to have all the necessary sources and tools. Then you can hire any
- available person to fix your problem; you are not at the mercy of any
- individual. With Unix, the price of sources puts this out of
- consideration for most businesses. With GNU this will be easy. It is
- still possible for there to be no available competent person, but this
- problem cannot be blamed on distribution arrangements. GNU does not
- eliminate all the world's problems, only some of them.
-
- Meanwhile, the users who know nothing about computers need
- handholding: doing things for them which they could easily do
- themselves but don't know how.
-
- Such services could be provided by companies that sell just
- hand-holding and repair service. If it is true that users would rather
- spend money and get a product with service, they will also be willing
- to buy the service having got the product free. The service companies
- will compete in quality and price; users will not be tied to any
- particular one. Meanwhile, those of us who don't need the service
- should be able to use the program without paying for the service.
-
- "You cannot reach many people without advertising, and you must
- charge for the program to support that."
-
- "It's no use advertising a program people can get free."
-
- There are various forms of free or very cheap publicity that can be
- used to inform numbers of computer users about something like GNU. But
- it may be true that one can reach more microcomputer users with
- advertising. If this is really so, a business which advertises the
- service of copying and mailing GNU for a fee ought to be successful
- enough to pay for its advertising and more. This way, only the users
- who benefit from the advertising pay for it.
-
- On the other hand, if many people get GNU from their friends, and
- such companies don't succeed, this will show that advertising was not
- really necessary to spread GNU. Why is it that free market advocates
- don't want to let the free market decide this?(2)
-
- "My company needs a proprietary operating system to get a
- competitive edge."
-
- GNU will remove operating system software from the realm of
- competition. You will not be able to get an edge in this area, but
- neither will your competitors be able to get an edge over you. You and
- they will compete in other areas, while benefiting mutually in this
- one. If your business is selling an operating system, you will not
- like GNU, but that's tough on you. If your business is something else,
- GNU can save you from being pushed into the expensive business of
- selling operating systems.
-
- I would like to see GNU development supported by gifts from many
- manufacturers and users, reducing the cost to each.(3)
-
- "Don't programmers deserve a reward for their creativity?"
-
- If anything deserves a reward, it is social contribution.
- Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so far as society
- is free to use the results. If programmers deserve to be rewarded for
- creating innovative programs, by the same token they deserve to be
- punished if they restrict the use of these programs.
-
- "Shouldn't a programmer be able to ask for a reward for his
- creativity?"
-
- There is nothing wrong with wanting pay for work, or seeking to
- maximize one's income, as long as one does not use means that are
- destructive. But the means customary in the field of software today
- are based on destruction.
-
- Extracting money from users of a program by restricting their use of
- it is destructive because the restrictions reduce the amount and the
- ways that the program can be used. This reduces the amount of wealth
- that humanity derives from the program. When there is a deliberate
- choice to restrict, the harmful consequences are deliberate destruction.
-
- The reason a good citizen does not use such destructive means to
- become wealthier is that, if everyone did so, we would all become
- poorer from the mutual destructiveness. This is Kantian ethics; or,
- the Golden Rule. Since I do not like the consequences that result if
- everyone hoards information, I am required to consider it wrong for one
- to do so. Specifically, the desire to be rewarded for one's creativity
- does not justify depriving the world in general of all or part of that
- creativity.
-
- "Won't programmers starve?"
-
- I could answer that nobody is forced to be a programmer. Most of us
- cannot manage to get any money for standing on the street and making
- faces. But we are not, as a result, condemned to spend our lives
- standing on the street making faces, and starving. We do something
- else.
-
- But that is the wrong answer because it accepts the questioner's
- implicit assumption: that without ownership of software, programmers
- cannot possibly be paid a cent. Supposedly it is all or nothing.
-
- The real reason programmers will not starve is that it will still be
- possible for them to get paid for programming; just not paid as much as
- now.
-
- Restricting copying is not the only basis for business in software.
- It is the most common basis because it brings in the most money. If it
- were prohibited, or rejected by the customer, software business would
- move to other bases of organization which are now used less often.
- There are always numerous ways to organize any kind of business.
-
- Probably programming will not be as lucrative on the new basis as it
- is now. But that is not an argument against the change. It is not
- considered an injustice that sales clerks make the salaries that they
- now do. If programmers made the same, that would not be an injustice
- either. (In practice they would still make considerably more than
- that.)
-
- "Don't people have a right to control how their creativity is
- used?"
-
- "Control over the use of one's ideas" really constitutes control over
- other people's lives; and it is usually used to make their lives more
- difficult.
-
- People who have studied the issue of intellectual property rights
- carefully (such as lawyers) say that there is no intrinsic right to
- intellectual property. The kinds of supposed intellectual property
- rights that the government recognizes were created by specific acts of
- legislation for specific purposes.
-
- For example, the patent system was established to encourage
- inventors to disclose the details of their inventions. Its purpose was
- to help society rather than to help inventors. At the time, the life
- span of 17 years for a patent was short compared with the rate of
- advance of the state of the art. Since patents are an issue only among
- manufacturers, for whom the cost and effort of a license agreement are
- small compared with setting up production, the patents often do not do
- much harm. They do not obstruct most individuals who use patented
- products.
-
- The idea of copyright did not exist in ancient times, when authors
- frequently copied other authors at length in works of non-fiction. This
- practice was useful, and is the only way many authors' works have
- survived even in part. The copyright system was created expressly for
- the purpose of encouraging authorship. In the domain for which it was
- invented - books, which could be copied economically only on a printing
- press - it did little harm, and did not obstruct most of the individuals
- who read the books.
-
- All intellectual property rights are just licenses granted by society
- because it was thought, rightly or wrongly, that society as a whole
- would benefit by granting them. But in any particular situation, we
- have to ask: are we really better off granting such license? What kind
- of act are we licensing a person to do?
-
- The case of programs today is very different from that of books a
- hundred years ago. The fact that the easiest way to copy a program is
- from one neighbor to another, the fact that a program has both source
- code and object code which are distinct, and the fact that a program is
- used rather than read and enjoyed, combine to create a situation in
- which a person who enforces a copyright is harming society as a whole
- both materially and spiritually; in which a person should not do so
- regardless of whether the law enables him to.
-
- "Competition makes things get done better."
-
- The paradigm of competition is a race: by rewarding the winner, we
- encourage everyone to run faster. When capitalism really works this
- way, it does a good job; but its defenders are wrong in assuming it
- always works this way. If the runners forget why the reward is offered
- and become intent on winning, no matter how, they may find other
- strategies - such as, attacking other runners. If the runners get into
- a fist fight, they will all finish late.
-
- Proprietary and secret software is the moral equivalent of runners
- in a fist fight. Sad to say, the only referee we've got does not seem
- to object to fights; he just regulates them ("For every ten yards you
- run, you can fire one shot"). He really ought to break them up, and
- penalize runners for even trying to fight.
-
- "Won't everyone stop programming without a monetary incentive?"
-
- Actually, many people will program with absolutely no monetary
- incentive. Programming has an irresistible fascination for some
- people, usually the people who are best at it. There is no shortage of
- professional musicians who keep at it even though they have no hope of
- making a living that way.
-
- But really this question, though commonly asked, is not appropriate
- to the situation. Pay for programmers will not disappear, only become
- less. So the right question is, will anyone program with a reduced
- monetary incentive? My experience shows that they will.
-
- For more than ten years, many of the world's best programmers worked
- at the Artificial Intelligence Lab for far less money than they could
- have had anywhere else. They got many kinds of non-monetary rewards:
- fame and appreciation, for example. And creativity is also fun, a
- reward in itself.
-
- Then most of them left when offered a chance to do the same
- interesting work for a lot of money.
-
- What the facts show is that people will program for reasons other
- than riches; but if given a chance to make a lot of money as well, they
- will come to expect and demand it. Low-paying organizations do poorly
- in competition with high-paying ones, but they do not have to do badly
- if the high-paying ones are banned.
-
- "We need the programmers desperately. If they demand that we stop
- helping our neighbors, we have to obey."
-
- You're never so desperate that you have to obey this sort of demand.
- Remember: millions for defense, but not a cent for tribute!
-
- "Programmers need to make a living somehow."
-
- In the short run, this is true. However, there are plenty of ways
- that programmers could make a living without selling the right to use a
- program. This way is customary now because it brings programmers and
- businessmen the most money, not because it is the only way to make a
- living. It is easy to find other ways if you want to find them. Here
- are a number of examples.
-
- A manufacturer introducing a new computer will pay for the porting of
- operating systems onto the new hardware.
-
- The sale of teaching, hand-holding and maintenance services could
- also employ programmers.
-
- People with new ideas could distribute programs as freeware, asking
- for donations from satisfied users, or selling hand-holding services.
- I have met people who are already working this way successfully.
-
- Users with related needs can form users' groups, and pay dues. A
- group would contract with programming companies to write programs that
- the group's members would like to use.
-
- All sorts of development can be funded with a Software Tax:
-
- Suppose everyone who buys a computer has to pay x percent of the
- price as a software tax. The government gives this to an agency
- like the NSF to spend on software development.
-
- But if the computer buyer makes a donation to software development
- himself, he can take a credit against the tax. He can donate to
- the project of his own choosing - often, chosen because he hopes to
- use the results when it is done. He can take a credit for any
- amount of donation up to the total tax he had to pay.
-
- The total tax rate could be decided by a vote of the payers of the
- tax, weighted according to the amount they will be taxed on.
-
- The consequences:
-
- * The computer-using community supports software development.
-
- * This community decides what level of support is needed.
-
- * Users who care which projects their share is spent on can
- choose this for themselves.
-
- In the long run, making programs free is a step toward the
- post-scarcity world, where nobody will have to work very hard just to
- make a living. People will be free to devote themselves to activities
- that are fun, such as programming, after spending the necessary ten
- hours a week on required tasks such as legislation, family counseling,
- robot repair and asteroid prospecting. There will be no need to be
- able to make a living from programming.
-
- We have already greatly reduced the amount of work that the whole
- society must do for its actual productivity, but only a little of this
- has translated itself into leisure for workers because much
- nonproductive activity is required to accompany productive activity.
- The main causes of this are bureaucracy and isometric struggles against
- competition. Free software will greatly reduce these drains in the
- area of software production. We must do this, in order for technical
- gains in productivity to translate into less work for us.
-
- ---------- Footnotes ----------
-
- (1) Several such companies now exist.
-
- (2) The Free Software Foundation raises most of its funds from a
- distribution service, although it is a charity rather than a company.
- If _no one_ chooses to obtain copies by ordering from the FSF, it will
- be unable to do its work. But this does not mean that proprietary
- restrictions are justified to force every user to pay. If a small
- fraction of all the users order copies from the FSF, that is sufficient
- to keep the FSF afloat. So we ask users to choose to support us in
- this way. Have you done your part?
-
- (3) A group of computer companies recently pooled funds to support
- maintenance of the GNU C Compiler.
-
- File: gpc.info, Node: Funding, Prev: Manifesto, Up: GNU
-
- Funding Free Software
- =====================
-
- If you want to have more free software a few years from now, it makes
- sense for you to help encourage people to contribute funds for its
- development. The most effective approach known is to encourage
- commercial redistributors to donate.
-
- Users of free software systems can boost the pace of development by
- encouraging for-a-fee distributors to donate part of their selling price
- to free software developers - the Free Software Foundation, and others.
-
- The way to convince distributors to do this is to demand it and
- expect it from them. So when you compare distributors, judge them
- partly by how much they give to free software development. Show
- distributors they must compete to be the one who gives the most.
-
- To make this approach work, you must insist on numbers that you can
- compare, such as, "We will donate ten dollars to the Frobnitz project
- for each disk sold." Don't be satisfied with a vague promise, such as
- "A portion of the profits are donated," since it doesn't give a basis
- for comparison.
-
- Even a precise fraction "of the profits from this disk" is not very
- meaningful, since creative accounting and unrelated business decisions
- can greatly alter what fraction of the sales price counts as profit.
- If the price you pay is $50, ten percent of the profit is probably less
- than a dollar; it might be a few cents, or nothing at all.
-
- Some redistributors do development work themselves. This is useful
- too; but to keep everyone honest, you need to inquire how much they do,
- and what kind. Some kinds of development make much more long-term
- difference than others. For example, maintaining a separate version of
- a program contributes very little; maintaining the standard version of a
- program for the whole community contributes much. Easy new ports
- contribute little, since someone else would surely do them; difficult
- ports such as adding a new CPU to the GNU C compiler contribute more;
- major new features or packages contribute the most.
-
- By establishing the idea that supporting further development is "the
- proper thing to do" when distributing free software for a fee, we can
- assure a steady flow of resources into making more free software.
-
- Copyright (C) 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- Verbatim copying and redistribution of this section is permitted
- without royalty; alteration is not permitted.
-
-