![]() That should be the priority and collective punishment isn't likely to convince Vladimir Putin it might even radicalise him further. One French software developer, whose views are similar to mine, said we need to stop the war. Several distros of GNU/Linux did the same (in the video I show only one of them, a Polish one based on Debian, though I saw French examples too). OS News with a Ukrainian flag (shown in the above video). In some cases, the message is more subtle, e.g. ![]() Some have gone as far as collective punishment against all the people of Belarus (many of whom strongly oppose the regime) and some have suggested breaking the whole Internet, as Mike Masnick noted yesterday, dubbing it a "Very, Very Bad Idea". This is specifically about sites and projects that act like government- or military-connected entities, resorting to sanctions that are misguided those sanctions are punishing the wrong people, sometimes punishing also the victims. THIS SITE is not a political site and we never cover 'pure' politics, but this is about Free software, not general politics. Summary: Ending the war should be a priority boycotting Nginx, boycotting hardware support, banning developers, banning users, and even banning gamers isn't going to accomplish this ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |