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This term is probably older than Usenet but here's the earliest post I can find on Google Groups:

  • freeware: net.micro.pc - 15 Feb 1983 by INFO-PC@USC-ISIB: [1]
  • freewares: comp.sys.sun - 2 Apr 1988 by William LeFebvre: [2]

RFV discussion: August 2011–February 2012

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Rfv-sense "free software". If we ignore this challenged sense, then freeware is "Complete and functional software that does not require payment or other compensation (and) may be a proprietary license with no access to the source code", while free software is either 1. "Software that can be freely copied, redistributed and modified, including source code; software that is libre" or 2. "Any software that is free of charge, such as freeware." The challenged sense is evidently saying that freeware can be sense 1 of free software (i.e. open and modifiable); I dispute this (even if freeware can coincidentally also be open and modifiable, that's not what it means); please cite. Equinox 19:29, 14 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Fully agreed. A frequent confusion at most. See top warning on w:Free software: "Not to be confused with freeware or open-source software". Free software adepts have been struggling for a long time to make the difference clear to everyone. — Xavier, 00:26, 16 September 2011 (UTC)Reply
RFV-failed. - -sche (discuss) 06:10, 4 February 2012 (UTC)Reply