I think you are confusing logical decisions with free will choices. A computer makes logical decisions, based on data and programmed logic. A free will choice can give us the ability to override whatever we see as logical and do something just because we want to, even if we perceive it as wrong or illogical.
This shows that you are still running with a trivial understanding of the nature of will. We can all sometimes choose to do things that we percieve as wrong or illogical, we can all choose to do things that are somewhat out of character for us. If you want to call that 'free' then fair enough, but that is not a profound freedom, it is a limited freedom, the limitation is implied in your choice of words
'just because we want to'. This implicitly recognises that our choices are not profoundly free, our choices in fact manifest our will and we cannot choose what our will is, we can only express it through choice.
I'm guessing that you still haven't gotten around to taking my 'wanting to be gay for an afternoon' challenge. The point of that thought experiment is to bring home the realisation that although we can try to get what we want, we cannot choose what to want in the first place and this is why we are not free, and ultimately, why freedom in this context would be meaningless. Choices made that are truly free of any rationale would be random, pointless,meaningless, and any creature that went around making random undirected choices would be dead in no time. You really wouldn't want true freedom if you really understood it. What we have is a sort of pseudo freedom and that is the best of both worlds.