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1 yavor 1.95 <!--#include virtual="/server/header.html" -->
2 ineiev 1.123 <!-- Parent-Version: 1.75 -->
3     <title>What is free software?
4     - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation</title>
5 johnsu01 1.45
6 mattl 1.55 <meta http-equiv="Keywords" content="GNU, FSF, Free Software Foundation, Linux, Emacs, GCC, Unix, Free Software, Operating System, GNU Kernel, HURD, GNU HURD, Hurd" />
7     <meta http-equiv="Description" content="Since 1983, developing the free Unix style operating system GNU, so that computer users can have the freedom to share and improve the software they use." />
8 johnsu01 1.45
9 ineiev 1.120 <!--#include virtual="/philosophy/po/free-sw.translist" -->
10 mattl 1.52 <!--#include virtual="/server/banner.html" -->
11 wkotwica 1.24
12 brett 1.107 <h2>What is free software?</h2>
13    
14     <h3>The Free Software Definition</h3>
15 webcvs 1.1
16 rms 1.110 <blockquote>
17 ineiev 1.112 <p>
18 rms 1.110 The free software definition presents the criteria for whether a
19     particular software program qualifies as free software. From time to
20     time we revise this definition, to clarify it or to resolve questions
21     about subtle issues. See the <a href="#History">History section</a>
22     below for a list of changes that affect the definition of free
23     software.
24 ineiev 1.112 </p>
25 rms 1.110 </blockquote>
26    
27     <p>
28     &ldquo;Free software&rdquo; means software that respects users'
29 rms 1.127 freedom and community. Roughly, it means that <b>the users have the
30     freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the
31     software</b>. Thus, &ldquo;free software&rdquo; is a matter of
32     liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of
33     &ldquo;free&rdquo; as in &ldquo;free speech,&rdquo; not as in
34     &ldquo;free beer&rdquo;.
35 rms 1.110 </p>
36    
37 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
38 rms 1.127 We campaign for these freedoms because everyone deserves them. With
39     these freedoms, the users (both individually and collectively) control
40     the program and what it does for them. When users don't control the
41     program, we call it a &ldquo;nonfree&rdquo; or
42     &ldquo;proprietary&rdquo; program. The nonfree program controls the
43     users, and the developer controls the program; which makes the
44     program <a href="/philosophy/free-software-even-more-important.html">
45     an instrument of unjust power</a>.
46 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
47    
48 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
49 rms 1.110 A program is free software if the program's users have the
50     four essential freedoms:
51 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
52 webcvs 1.1
53 wkotwica 1.24 <ul>
54     <li>The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0).</li>
55 rms 1.105 <li>The freedom to study how the program works, and change it so it
56     does your computing as you wish (freedom 1). Access to the source
57     code is a precondition for this.
58 sinuhe 1.48 </li>
59 wkotwica 1.24 <li>The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor
60 sinuhe 1.48 (freedom 2).
61     </li>
62 rms 1.90 <li>The freedom to distribute copies of your modified versions
63     to others (freedom 3). By doing this you can give the whole
64     community a chance to benefit from your changes.
65 sinuhe 1.48 Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
66     </li>
67 wkotwica 1.24 </ul>
68 webcvs 1.1
69 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
70 rms 1.125 A program is free software if it gives users adequately all of these
71     freedoms. Otherwise, it is nonfree. While we can distinguish various
72     nonfree distribution schemes in terms of how far they fall short of
73     being free, we consider them all equally unethical.</p>
74    
75     <p>The rest of this page clarifies certain points about what makes
76     specific freedoms adequate or not.</p>
77    
78     <p>Freedom to distribute (freedoms 2 and 3) means you are free to
79     redistribute copies, either with or without modifications, either
80     gratis or charging a fee for distribution, to
81 sinuhe 1.48 <a href="#exportcontrol">anyone anywhere</a>. Being free to do these
82     things means (among other things) that you do not have to ask or pay
83 rms 1.88 for permission to do so.
84 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
85    
86 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
87 webcvs 1.1 You should also have the freedom to make modifications and use them
88     privately in your own work or play, without even mentioning that they
89     exist. If you do publish your changes, you should not be required to
90 sinuhe 1.48 notify anyone in particular, or in any particular way.
91     </p>
92    
93 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
94 sinuhe 1.48 The freedom to run the program means the freedom for any kind of person
95     or organization to use it on any kind of computer system, for any kind of
96     overall job and purpose, without being required to communicate about it
97     with the developer or any other specific entity. In this freedom, it is
98     the <em>user's</em> purpose that matters, not the <em>developer's</em>
99 rms 1.88 purpose; you as a user are free to run the program for your purposes,
100 sinuhe 1.48 and if you distribute it to someone else, she is then free to run it
101     for her purposes, but you are not entitled to impose your purposes on her.
102 rms 1.46 </p>
103 sinuhe 1.48
104 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
105 webcvs 1.1 The freedom to redistribute copies must include binary or executable
106 rms 1.5 forms of the program, as well as source code, for both modified and
107 sinuhe 1.48 unmodified versions. (Distributing programs in runnable form is necessary
108 rms 1.88 for conveniently installable free operating systems.) It is OK if there
109 sinuhe 1.48 is no way to produce a binary or executable form for a certain program
110     (since some languages don't support that feature), but you must have the
111     freedom to redistribute such forms should you find or develop a way to
112     make them.
113     </p>
114    
115 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
116 rms 1.88 In order for freedoms 1 and 3 (the freedom to make changes and the
117 rms 1.118 freedom to publish the changed versions) to be meaningful, you must have
118 rms 1.88 access to the source code of the program. Therefore, accessibility of
119 rms 1.92 source code is a necessary condition for free software. Obfuscated
120     &ldquo;source code&rdquo; is not real source code and does not count
121     as source code.
122 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
123    
124 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
125 rms 1.80 Freedom 1 includes the freedom to use your changed version in place of
126     the original. If the program is delivered in a product designed to
127 rms 1.105 run someone else's modified versions but refuse to run yours &mdash; a
128     practice known as &ldquo;tivoization&rdquo; or &ldquo;lockdown&rdquo;,
129     or (in its practitioners' perverse terminology) as &ldquo;secure
130     boot&rdquo; &mdash; freedom 1 becomes a theoretical fiction rather
131     than a practical freedom. This is not sufficient. In other words,
132     these binaries are not free software even if the source code they are
133     compiled from is free.
134 rms 1.80 </p>
135    
136     <p>
137 rms 1.74 One important way to modify a program is by merging in available free
138     subroutines and modules. If the program's license says that you
139 rms 1.88 cannot merge in a suitably licensed existing module &mdash; for instance, if it
140     requires you to be the copyright holder of any code you add &mdash; then the
141 rms 1.74 license is too restrictive to qualify as free.
142 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
143    
144 novalis 1.40 <p>
145 rms 1.93 Freedom 3 includes the freedom to release your modified versions
146 rms 1.89 as free software. A free license may also permit other ways of
147     releasing them; in other words, it does not have to be
148     a <a href="/copyleft/copyleft.html">copyleft</a> license. However, a
149     license that requires modified versions to be nonfree does not qualify
150     as a free license.
151     </p>
152    
153     <p>
154 rms 1.79 In order for these freedoms to be real, they must be permanent and
155     irrevocable as long as you do nothing wrong; if the developer of the
156 rms 1.111 software has the power to revoke the license, or retroactively add
157     restrictions to its terms, without your doing anything wrong to give
158     cause, the software is not free.
159 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
160    
161 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
162 webcvs 1.1 However, certain kinds of rules about the manner of distributing free
163     software are acceptable, when they don't conflict with the central
164     freedoms. For example, copyleft (very simply stated) is the rule that
165     when redistributing the program, you cannot add restrictions to deny
166     other people the central freedoms. This rule does not conflict with
167 sinuhe 1.48 the central freedoms; rather it protects them.
168     </p>
169    
170     <p>
171 joeko 1.109 &ldquo;Free software&rdquo; does not mean &ldquo;noncommercial&rdquo;. A free
172 rms 1.75 program must be available for commercial use, commercial development,
173     and commercial distribution. Commercial development of free software
174     is no longer unusual; such free commercial software is very important.
175 sinuhe 1.48 You may have paid money to get copies of free software, or you may have
176     obtained copies at no charge. But regardless of how you got your copies,
177     you always have the freedom to copy and change the software, even to
178     <a href="/philosophy/selling.html">sell copies</a>.
179     </p>
180    
181 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
182 rms 1.74 Whether a change constitutes an improvement is a subjective matter.
183 rms 1.118 If your right to modify a program is limited, in substance, to changes that
184     someone else considers an improvement, that program is not free.
185 rms 1.74 </p>
186    
187     <p>
188 rms 1.98 However, rules about how to package a modified version are acceptable,
189     if they don't substantively limit your freedom to release modified
190     versions, or your freedom to make and use modified versions privately.
191     Thus, it is acceptable for the license to require that you change the
192     name of the modified version, remove a logo, or identify your
193     modifications as yours. As long as these requirements are not so
194     burdensome that they effectively hamper you from releasing your
195     changes, they are acceptable; you're already making other changes to
196     the program, so you won't have trouble making a few more.
197     </p>
198    
199     <p>
200     Rules that &ldquo;if you make your version available in this way, you
201     must make it available in that way also&rdquo; can be acceptable too,
202     on the same condition. An example of such an acceptable rule is one
203     saying that if you have distributed a
204     modified version and a previous developer asks for a copy of it, you
205     must send one. (Note that such a rule still leaves you the choice of
206     whether to distribute your version at all.) Rules that require release
207     of source code to the users for versions that you put into public use
208     are also acceptable.
209 rms 1.39 </p>
210 sinuhe 1.48
211 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
212 rms 1.121 A special issue arises when a license requires changing the name by
213     which the program will be invoked from other programs. That
214     effectively hampers you from releasing your changed version so that it
215     can replace the original when invoked by those other programs. This
216     sort of requirement is acceptable only if there's a suitable aliasing
217     facility that allows you to specify the original program's name as an
218     alias for the modified version.</p>
219    
220     <p>
221 sinuhe 1.48 In the GNU project, we use
222 jrasata 1.94 <a href="/copyleft/copyleft.html">copyleft</a>
223 sinuhe 1.48 to protect these freedoms legally for everyone. But
224 jrasata 1.96 <a href="/philosophy/categories.html#Non-CopyleftedFreeSoftware">noncopylefted
225 sinuhe 1.48 free software</a> also exists. We believe there are important reasons why
226 brett 1.87 <a href="/philosophy/pragmatic.html">it is better to use copyleft</a>,
227 jrasata 1.96 but if your program is noncopylefted free software, it is still basically
228 jrasata 1.97 ethical. (See <a href="/philosophy/categories.html">Categories of Free Software</a> for a description of how &ldquo;free software,&rdquo; &ldquo;copylefted software&rdquo; and other categories of software relate to each other.)
229 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
230    
231     <p>
232     Sometimes government <a id="exportcontrol">export control regulations</a>
233     and trade sanctions can constrain your freedom to distribute copies of
234     programs internationally. Software developers do not have the power to
235     eliminate or override these restrictions, but what they can and must do
236     is refuse to impose them as conditions of use of the program. In this
237     way, the restrictions will not affect activities and people outside the
238 rms 1.74 jurisdictions of these governments. Thus, free software licenses
239 rms 1.122 must not require obedience to any nontrivial export regulations as a
240     condition of exercising any of the essential freedoms.
241     </p>
242    
243     <p>
244     Merely mentioning the existence of export regulations, without making
245     them a condition of the license itself, is acceptable since it does
246     not restrict users. If an export regulation is actually trivial for
247     free software, then requiring it as a condition is not an actual
248     problem; however, it is a potential problem, since a later change in
249     export law could make the requirement nontrivial and thus render the
250     software nonfree.
251 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
252    
253 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
254 sinuhe 1.48 Most free software licenses are based on copyright, and there are limits
255     on what kinds of requirements can be imposed through copyright. If a
256     copyright-based license respects freedom in the ways described above, it
257     is unlikely to have some other sort of problem that we never anticipated
258     (though this does happen occasionally). However, some free software
259     licenses are based on contracts, and contracts can impose a much larger
260     range of possible restrictions. That means there are many possible ways
261 rms 1.88 such a license could be unacceptably restrictive and nonfree.
262 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
263    
264 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
265 rms 1.41 We can't possibly list all the ways that might happen. If a
266     contract-based license restricts the user in an unusual way that
267     copyright-based licenses cannot, and which isn't mentioned here as
268 sinuhe 1.48 legitimate, we will have to think about it, and we will probably conclude
269 rms 1.88 it is nonfree.
270 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
271    
272 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
273 sinuhe 1.48 When talking about free software, it is best to avoid using terms
274 karl 1.91 like &ldquo;give away&rdquo; or &ldquo;for free,&rdquo; because those terms imply that
275 sinuhe 1.48 the issue is about price, not freedom. Some common terms such
276 karl 1.91 as &ldquo;piracy&rdquo; embody opinions we hope you won't endorse. See
277 sinuhe 1.48 <a href="/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html">Confusing Words and Phrases that
278     are Worth Avoiding</a> for a discussion of these terms. We also have
279 rms 1.88 a list of proper <a href="/philosophy/fs-translations.html">translations of
280 karl 1.91 &ldquo;free software&rdquo;</a> into various languages.
281 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
282    
283 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
284 webcvs 1.2 Finally, note that criteria such as those stated in this free software
285 sinuhe 1.48 definition require careful thought for their interpretation. To decide
286     whether a specific software license qualifies as a free software license,
287     we judge it based on these criteria to determine whether it fits their
288     spirit as well as the precise words. If a license includes unconscionable
289     restrictions, we reject it, even if we did not anticipate the issue
290     in these criteria. Sometimes a license requirement raises an issue
291     that calls for extensive thought, including discussions with a lawyer,
292     before we can decide if the requirement is acceptable. When we reach
293     a conclusion about a new issue, we often update these criteria to make
294     it easier to see why certain licenses do or don't qualify.
295     </p>
296    
297     <p>
298     If you are interested in whether a specific license qualifies as a free
299     software license, see our <a href="/licenses/license-list.html">list
300     of licenses</a>. If the license you are concerned with is not
301     listed there, you can ask us about it by sending us email at
302     <a href="mailto:licensing@gnu.org">&lt;licensing@gnu.org&gt;</a>.
303     </p>
304    
305     <p>
306 rms 1.88 If you are contemplating writing a new license, please contact the
307     Free Software Foundation first by writing to that address. The
308     proliferation of different free software licenses means increased work
309     for users in understanding the licenses; we may be able to help you
310     find an existing free software license that meets your needs.
311 novalis 1.29 </p>
312 webcvs 1.2
313 novalis 1.29 <p>
314     If that isn't possible, if you really need a new license, with our
315 rms 1.88 help you can ensure that the license really is a free software license
316 novalis 1.29 and avoid various practical problems.
317     </p>
318 sinuhe 1.48
319 dora 1.117 <h3 id="beyond-software">Beyond Software</h3>
320 rms 1.57
321     <p>
322 yavor 1.61 <a href="/philosophy/free-doc.html">Software manuals must be free</a>,
323     for the same reasons that software must be free, and because the
324     manuals are in effect part of the software.
325 rms 1.57 </p>
326    
327     <p>
328     The same arguments also make sense for other kinds of works of
329 yavor 1.61 practical use &mdash; that is to say, works that embody useful knowledge,
330 rms 1.57 such as educational works and reference
331 jrasata 1.103 works. <a href="http://wikipedia.org">Wikipedia</a> is the best-known
332 rms 1.57 example.
333     </p>
334    
335     <p>
336     Any kind of work <em>can</em> be free, and the definition of free software
337     has been extended to a definition of <a href="http://freedomdefined.org/">
338     free cultural works</a> applicable to any kind of works.
339     </p>
340    
341 dora 1.117 <h3 id="open-source">Open Source?</h3>
342 webcvs 1.1
343 wkotwica 1.24 <p>
344 karl 1.91 Another group has started using the term &ldquo;open source&rdquo; to mean
345 joeko 1.109 something close (but not identical) to &ldquo;free software&rdquo;. We
346 karl 1.91 prefer the term &ldquo;free software&rdquo; because, once you have heard that
347 yavor 1.61 it refers to freedom rather than price, it calls to mind freedom. The
348 karl 1.91 word &ldquo;open&rdquo; <a href="/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.html">
349 yavor 1.61 never refers to freedom</a>.
350 sinuhe 1.48 </p>
351 wkotwica 1.24
352 dora 1.117 <h3 id="History">History</h3>
353 brett 1.72
354 rms 1.110 <p>From time to time we revise this Free Software Definition. Here is
355 rms 1.121 the list of substantive changes, along with links to show exactly what
356     was changed.</p>
357 brett 1.72
358     <ul>
359    
360 rms 1.122 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.121&amp;r2=1.122">Version
361     1.122</a>: An export control requirement is a real problem if the
362     requirement is nontrivial; otherwise it is only a potential problem.</li>
363    
364 rms 1.126 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.117&amp;r2=1.118">Version
365     1.118</a>: Clarification: the issue is limits on your right to modify,
366     not on what modifications you have made. And modifications are not limited
367     to &ldquo;improvements&rdquo;</li>
368    
369 rms 1.111 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.110&amp;r2=1.111">Version
370     1.111</a>: Clarify 1.77 by saying that only
371     retroactive <em>restrictions</em> are unacceptable. The copyright
372     holders can always grant additional <em>permission</em> for use of the
373     work by releasing the work in another way in parallel.</li>
374    
375 jturner 1.108 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.104&amp;r2=1.105">Version
376     1.105</a>: Reflect, in the brief statement of freedom 1, the point
377 rms 1.105 (already stated in version 1.80) that it includes really using your modified
378     version for your computing.</li>
379    
380 rms 1.92 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.91&amp;r2=1.92">Version
381     1.92</a>: Clarify that obfuscated code does not qualify as source code.</li>
382    
383 rms 1.90 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.89&amp;r2=1.90">Version
384     1.90</a>: Clarify that freedom 3 means the right to distribute copies
385     of your own modified or improved version, not a right to participate
386     in someone else's development project.</li>
387    
388 rms 1.89 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.88&amp;r2=1.89">Version
389     1.89</a>: Freedom 3 includes the right to release modified versions as
390     free software.</li>
391    
392 rms 1.80 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.79&amp;r2=1.80">Version
393     1.80</a>: Freedom 1 must be practical, not just theoretical;
394     i.e., no tivoization.</li>
395    
396 brett 1.77 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.76&amp;r2=1.77">Version
397     1.77</a>: Clarify that all retroactive changes to the license are
398     unacceptable, even if it's not described as a complete
399     replacement.</li>
400    
401 rms 1.74 <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.73&amp;r2=1.74">Version
402 rms 1.75 1.74</a>: Four clarifications of points not explicit enough, or stated
403 rms 1.74 in some places but not reflected everywhere:
404     <ul>
405     <li>"Improvements" does not mean the license can
406     substantively limit what kinds of modified versions you can release.
407     Freedom 3 includes distributing modified versions, not just changes.</li>
408     <li>The right to merge in existing modules
409     refers to those that are suitably licensed.</li>
410     <li>Explicitly state the conclusion of the point about export controls.</li>
411 rms 1.75 <li>Imposing a license change constitutes revoking the old license.</li>
412 rms 1.74 </ul>
413     </li>
414 brett 1.72
415     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.56&amp;r2=1.57">Version
416     1.57</a>: Add &quot;Beyond Software&quot; section.</li>
417    
418     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.45&amp;r2=1.46">Version
419     1.46</a>: Clarify whose purpose is significant in the freedom to run
420     the program for any purpose.</li>
421    
422     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.40&amp;r2=1.41">Version
423     1.41</a>: Clarify wording about contract-based licenses.</li>
424    
425     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.39&amp;r2=1.40">Version
426     1.40</a>: Explain that a free license must allow to you use other
427 brett 1.73 available free software to create your modifications.</li>
428 brett 1.72
429     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.38&amp;r2=1.39">Version
430     1.39</a>: Note that it is acceptable for a license to require you to
431     provide source for versions of the software you put into public
432 brett 1.73 use.</li>
433 brett 1.72
434     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.30&amp;r2=1.31">Version
435     1.31</a>: Note that it is acceptable for a license to require you to
436     identify yourself as the author of modifications. Other minor
437     clarifications throughout the text.</li>
438    
439     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.22&amp;r2=1.23">Version
440     1.23</a>: Address potential problems related to contract-based
441     licenses.</li>
442    
443     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.15&amp;r2=1.16">Version
444     1.16</a>: Explain why distribution of binaries is important.</li>
445    
446     <li><a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;r1=1.10&amp;r2=1.11">Version
447     1.11</a>: Note that a free license may require you to send a copy of
448     versions you distribute to the author.</li>
449    
450     </ul>
451    
452 rms 1.110 <p>There are gaps in the version numbers shown above because there are
453 rms 1.126 other changes in this page that do not affect the definition or its
454     interpretations. For instance, the list does not include changes in
455     asides, formatting, spelling, punctuation, or other parts of the page.
456     You can review the complete list of changes to the page through
457 rms 1.110 the <a href="http://web.cvs.savannah.gnu.org/viewvc/www/philosophy/free-sw.html?root=www&amp;view=log">cvsweb
458 brett 1.72 interface</a>.</p>
459    
460 alex_muntada 1.32
461 ineiev 1.123 </div><!-- for id="content", starts in the include above -->
462 mattl 1.52 <!--#include virtual="/server/footer.html" -->
463     <div id="footer">
464 wkotwica 1.24
465 ineiev 1.123 <p>Please send general FSF &amp; GNU inquiries to
466 yavor 1.82 <a href="mailto:gnu@gnu.org">&lt;gnu@gnu.org&gt;</a>.
467 ineiev 1.123 There are also <a href="/contact/">other ways to contact</a>
468     the FSF. Broken links and other corrections or suggestions can be sent
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488    
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505 wkotwica 1.24
506 ineiev 1.123 <p>Copyright &copy; 1996-2002, 2004-2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013
507     Free Software Foundation, Inc.</p>
508 wkotwica 1.24
509 jturner 1.104 <p>This page is licensed under a <a rel="license"
510     href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/">Creative
511 ineiev 1.123 Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License</a>.</p>
512 wkotwica 1.24
513 ineiev 1.119 <!--#include virtual="/server/bottom-notes.html" -->
514    
515     <p>Updated:
516 paulv 1.3 <!-- timestamp start -->
517 rms 1.127 $Date: 2013/12/20 09:31:03 $
518 paulv 1.3 <!-- timestamp end -->
519 wkotwica 1.24 </p>
520     </div>
521 mattl 1.52 </div>
522 wkotwica 1.24 </body>
523     </html>

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