this post was submitted on 07 Jan 2024
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Tney do. The first one causes confusion without context, the second one is a much rarer word. I hate the situasion we've gotten ourselves into, but it is what it is.
No 'liber' means - at least if we assume the meaning for other written works - that it's public record. Unless we meant to say 'libre', but then the british immediately start screeching because french words. 'free' means that it's free, it costs nothing. Hence the two can go together, meaning that:
But yeah it sucks. Weird bullshit abbreviation bingo to play.
I always liked the comparison of free beer vs free speech. Free/libre is just a bit less clunky than saying no-charge and available.