Yes, this.
Its important to remember that we are asking these questions because this is a group of people who place special value on process, not just the result. It makes perfect sense that in this context, people want to establish boundaries, definitions and define parameters that may include or exclude certain processes. Its no secret that many prefer to segregate processes that emphasize digital tools (or make use of them at all) into their own realm, so as to not contaminate the meaning and domain of traditional materials and methods. I get that - I do. But I choose not to adopt more radical notions that seek to exclude non-silver-based technologies from the very definition of "a photograph". That level of granularity only matters to the practitioners of the craft (and perhaps the art dealers) who, for reasons I need not explain here, value the process as much as the result. Presumably that is why the majority of us are here, inhabiting this particular space and choosing to protect the domain of The Photograph.
However, I will not imbrace this often hostile sentiment that digital imaging tools are somehow The Enemy. Its as if by accepting the fact that computers have changed how some people craft a work, that we are inviting the disastrous collapse of the silver technology we love and value. That's simply not rational. It reminds me strongly of the objections raised by the artists and illustrators of the 19th century, claiming that photography would ruin their media and contaminate/corrupt their way of making art. (Photography certainly did increase the artists vocabulary and expand its scope by adding new tools and techniques, but I wouldn't define such a contribution as "contamination")
Ultimately, it doesn't matter to me whether some choose to segregate all image-making processes touched in any way by computer technology into some non-photographic category of its own, or whether the definition of "a photograph" includes any camera technology that collects, organizes and makes a record of light. Here - in the APUG Universe, its clear that most feel that silver-based technologies are "special" and deserve recognition as such, and that this traditional process needs protection from other technologies that threaten it. That is the nature of this community, and though I don't always agree with everything that gets said, I comprehend where its coming from, and why.