free software movement
The
free software movement (abbreviated
FSM) is a
social movement which aims to promote user's rights to access and modify software. The
alternative terms "libre software", "open source", and "FOSS" are associated with the free software movement. Although drawing on traditions and philosophies among members of the 1970s
hacker culture,
Richard Stallman is widely credited with launching the movement in 1983 by founding the
GNU Project.
(1)The
free software philosophy at the core of the movement drew on core and incidental elements of what was called hacker culture by many computer users in the 1970s, among other sources.
Philosophy
Stallman founded the
Free Software Foundation in 1985 to support the movement. The philosophy of the movement is to give freedom to computer users by replacing
proprietary software under restrictive licensing terms with
free software,
(2) with the ultimate goal of liberating everyone "in cyberspace"
(3) – that is, every computer user.Members of the free software movement believe that all users of software should have the freedoms listed in the
free software definition. Many hold that it is
immoral to prohibit or prevent people from exercising these freedoms and that these freedoms are required to create a decent society where software users can help each other, and to have control over their computers.
(4)Some adherents to the free software movement do not believe that
proprietary software is strictly immoral.
(5) They argue freedom is valuable (both socially and pragmatically) as a property of software in its own right, separate from technical quality in a narrow sense.The Free Software Foundation also believes all software needs free
documentation (in particular because conscientious programmers should be able to update manuals to reflect modification that they made to the software), but deems the freedom to modify less important for other types of written works.
(6) Within the free software movement, the
Floss manuals foundation specializes on the goal of providing such documentation. Members of the free software movement advocate that works which serve a practical purpose should also be free.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}
Actions
Writing and spreading free software
The initial work of the free software movement focused on software development.The free software movement also rejects proprietary software, refusing to install software that does not give them the freedoms of free software. According to Stallman, "The only thing in the software field that is worse than an unauthorised copy of a proprietary program, is an authorised copy of the proprietary program because this does the same harm to its whole community of users, and in addition, usually the developer, the perpetrator of this evil, profits from it."
(7)Building awareness
missing image!
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right
Some supporters of the free software movement take up
public speaking, or host a stall at software-related conferences to raise awareness of software freedom. This is seen as important since people who receive free software, but who are not aware that it is free software, will later accept a non-free replacement or will add software which is not free software.
(8)Legislation
A lot of lobbying work has been done against
software patents and expansions of copyright law.The
Venezuelan government implemented a free software law in January 2006. Decree No. 3,390 mandated all government agencies to migrate to free software over a two-year period.
(9)Congressmen Dr
Edgar David Villanueva and Jacques Rodrich Ackerman have been instrumental in introducing in Republic of Peru bill 1609 on "Free Software in Public Administration".
(10) The incident immediately invited the attention of Microsoft Inc, Peru, whose General Manager wrote a letter to Dr Edgar David Villanueva. Dr Villanueva's response received worldwide attention and is still seen as a classical piece of argumentation favouring use of Free Software in Governments.
(11)In the USA, there have been efforts to pass legislation at the state level encouraging use of free software by state government agencies.
(12) Internal conflict
Like many social movements, the free software movement has ongoing internal conflict between personalities and between supporters of compromise versus strict adherence to values.
Open source
In 1998, some companies met to create a marketing campaign for free software which would focus on technology rather than ethics{{Fact|date=February 2008}}. After this
Eric Raymond and
Bruce Perens, founded
Open Source Initiative OSI, which promotes the term "
open-source software" as an
alternative term for free software. OSI does not agree with the free software movement's position that non-free software is a social problem or that it is unethical.
(13)OSI advocates free software (under the name "open-source software") on the basis that it is a superior model for software development rather than it being a social or ethical issue.
(14)Some free software advocates use the term
Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) as an inclusive compromise, drawing on both philosophies to bring both free software advocates and open source software advocates together to work on projects with more cohesion. Some users believe that a compromise term encompassing both aspects is ideal, to promote both the user's freedom with the software and also to promote the perceived superiority of an open source development model.
Stallman and Torvalds
The two most prominent people attached to the movement,
Richard Stallman and
Linus Torvalds, have deep philosophical differences. This has fueled many dramatic news articles, but has not prevented Stallman from using Torvalds'
kernel or Torvalds from using Stallman's
GNU General Public License.
Measures of progress
Ohloh, a
web service founded in 2004 and launched in 2006, monitors the development activity in the
free software community, providing detailed
metrics and
quantitative analyses on the growth and popularity of projects and
programming languages.
Criticism and controversy
Is something impeding progress?
Some, such as
Eric Raymond, criticise the speed at which the free software movement is progressing, suggesting that temporary compromises should be made for long-term gains. Raymond argues that this could raise awareness of the software and thus increase the free software movement's influence on relevant standards and legislation.
(15)Others, such as Richard Stallman, see the current level of compromise to be the bigger worry.
(16)(17) See also
References
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[WEB, Announcement of the GNU project,weblink]}]
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[{{cite web, Use Free Software, gnu.org,weblink}]
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[{{cite web, Stallman interviewed by Sean Daly,weblink Groklaw, 2006-06-23}]
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[{{cite web, Why free software?,weblink gnu.org}]
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[{{cite web, Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism, gnu.org,weblink}]
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[{{cite web, Free Software and Free Manuals,weblink gnu.org}]
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[{{cite web, Transcript of Stallman on Free Software, 2006-03-09,weblink], FSFE}]
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[{{cite web, Transcript of Stallman speaking at WSIS,weblink Ciaran O'Riordan}]
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[{{cite web,weblink Free software liberates Venezuela, Free Software Magazine n°10, 2006-02-08}]
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[{{cite web,weblink An English translation of the Free Software bill proposed in Peru}]
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[{{cite web,weblinkweblink 2007-08-29, Peruvian Congressman Edgar Villanueva writing to Microsoft about free software.}]
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[{{cite web,weblink Open source's new weapon: The law?, ]
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["Free", "Open Source", and Philosophies of Software Ownership]
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[WEB, gnu.org,weblink Open Source misses the point}]
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[{{cite web,weblink ESR's "World Domination 201", on the need for more compromise by the free software movement}]
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[{{cite web,weblink RMS on the progress of the movement and his worry about compromise}]
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[{{cite web,weblink Richard Stallman on "World Domination 201", I cannot agree to that compromise, and my experience teaches me thatit won't be temporary. ... What our community needs most is more spine in rejection of non-freesoftware. It has far too much willingness to compromise. ... To "argue" in favor of adding non-free software in GNU/Linux distrosis almost superfluous, since that's what nearly all of them havealready done., ]
Further reading
- Johan Soderberg, Hacking Capitalism: The Free and Open Source Software Movement, Routledge, 2007, ISBN 0415955432
External links
{{FLOSS}}
মুক্ত সফটওয়্যার আন্দোলনMovimiento del software librePokret slobodnih programaGerakan perangkat lunak bebasフリーソフトウェア運動නිදහස් මෘදුකාංග ව්යාපාරයFree software movement自由软件运动
(...as imported from WP)
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