Also re: "Clarification *almost always* weakens rights." then is Red Hat "weakening rights" by being more explicit and clear than Canonical? Red Hat's solution is far from perfect, but it seems more workable to a pretty outspoken group of people, so I don't see what gets weakened (or put at risk, more precisely) by Canonical adapting the same type of policy.
Re: Comparing to Fedora / Comparing to Red Hat
Also re: "Clarification *almost always* weakens rights." then is Red Hat "weakening rights" by being more explicit and clear than Canonical? Red Hat's solution is far from perfect, but it seems more workable to a pretty outspoken group of people, so I don't see what gets weakened (or put at risk, more precisely) by Canonical adapting the same type of policy.
But while we're at it, I'd love to know.