Rahul, Thank you for your reply, you're the only @fedora poster I see so I only read and respond to you,as you represent officialness, I trust none of the other 10 posters or so in this thread were, because they did not post from fedora/redhat so to avoid getting into long rantings with trolls, I did not read them, after this post of thanks to you I shall unsubscribe from this list, since Fedora wont be the way my friends or I traverse, but I thank you. > Claiming it might be illegal and trying to pass off responsibility to > end users doesn't work in US. Doing that would amount to contributory > infringement. Users may not care but Fedora is legally based in US and > doesn't operate in the same environment that Canonical (legal and > commercial) entity behind Ubuntu) works. So it is not legally possible This is noted, it is the users that make a distribution, users just want a,b and c to work, they don't care, which I guess is why Ubuntu has a good foothold now days, not being U.S based it is not subject to its laws or requirements and as none of us are U.S based, nor are we. > You might consider using Red Hat Enterprise Linux (which is derived from > Fedora) or one of the free rebuilds where every release supported upto > 7-10 years. More like 5-7 from what I was told by them, and yes, CentOS is nice. Best, Laura -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines