Freedom 1 includes the freedom to use your changed version in place of
the original. If the program is delivered in a product designed to
run someone else's modified versions but refuse to run yours —
a practice known as “tivoization” or (through
blacklisting) as “secure boot” — freedom 1 becomes a
theoretical fiction rather than a practical freedom. This is not
sufficient. In other words, these binaries are not free software
even if the source code they are compiled from is free.
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