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author | P. J. McDermott <pjm@nac.net> | 2011-11-19 19:32:52 (EST) |
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committer | P. J. McDermott <pjm@nac.net> | 2011-11-19 19:32:52 (EST) |
commit | 52f1097959b46e12edda05e0a2c9a50dd67497d5 (patch) | |
tree | 497214e4110f2ee8390c35e5ad3a47ceacfa36a6 | |
parent | 3f62cee3634feb5e05b70a8a7a9b7c86ff8c875c (diff) | |
download | www-52f1097959b46e12edda05e0a2c9a50dd67497d5.zip www-52f1097959b46e12edda05e0a2c9a50dd67497d5.tar.gz www-52f1097959b46e12edda05e0a2c9a50dd67497d5.tar.bz2 |
Fix a hyperlink.
-rwxr-xr-x | essays/commercial-free-software.html | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/essays/commercial-free-software.html b/essays/commercial-free-software.html index 74b0922..512590d 100755 --- a/essays/commercial-free-software.html +++ b/essays/commercial-free-software.html @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ compare "open-source" software and "commercial" software as if the terms were opposite and mutually exclusive. This is in fact a logical fallacy; specifically it is a - <a href="http://www.pehjota.net/essays/commercial-free-software.html">false + <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirming_a_disjunct">false exclusionary disjunct</a>. Software can be both free and commercial. If a software copyright license allowed only noncommercial dealing, it would be considered neither free nor open source. |