Saturday, December 31, 2011

Free Software Supporter, Issue 45, December 2011

Free Software Supporter

Issue 45, December 2011

We've raised $151,923 for free software this month, and only need $148,077 more to reach our goal by January 31st! Help today at http://donate.fsf.org.

                            .-.                             .'   '.                                  *         ( 2012! )                /\         \     /       /\     /o \   /\    '- -'      / /    /_ _o\  \ \     "      \ \__.'  '   './ /      '       \___.---'---___/        )          /    @    @_     __.'         /  )     _   '   /_/        ;_-'    _(,\__,) / /          / \   \'uuuu' / /        ,'   "", '---' ' /       /       """,--, ,/      /  /       '"\\\ '            *************          * HAPPY GNU *          *   YEAR!   *          ************* 

Welcome to the Free Software Supporter, the Free Software Foundation's monthly news digest and action update -- being read by you and 52,702 other activists. That's 776 more than last month!

Encourage your friends to subscribe and help us build an audience by adding our subscriber widget to your web site.

Miss an issue? You can catch up on back issues at http://www.fsf.org/free-software-supporter.

Multilingual? Send translations of the Supporter to campaigns@fsf.org.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • We want to do more for you: Help us raise $300k for free software by January 31st!
  • LibrePlanet 2012 dates announced: March 24th-25th, 2012
  • Make 2012 the Year of Accessibility for GNOME!
  • Stallman class graduates from IMERIR
  • Fixing rogue printers: don't trade one security threat for another
  • It's been great!
  • Louis CK: Live at the Beacon Theater, DRM-free
  • EU court advisers: Owning software ideas detrimental to progress
  • LibrePlanet featured resource: LibrePlanet Quebec
  • GNU spotlight with Karl Berry
  • Richard Stallman's speaking schedule and other FSF events
  • Take action with the FSF!

We want to do more for you: Help us raise $300k for free software by January 31st!

With your support this past year, we made a difference and accomplished a great deal for free software around the world. But we don't just want to repeat this in 2012 -- we want to make an even bigger impact, and we need your help to do it.

To reach our fundraising goal, we need to raise just under $150,000 more over the next month. If we meet this goal, we will be confident that our existing program expenses will be covered for the remainder of the year, and we can focus on how best to start doing more.

You can help us get there by joining -- an FSF membership is $120/year, which is $10/month or 33 cents per day. Note that while you can contribute $10 or more automatically each month, we cannot yet automatically collect your 33 cents each day :)

We hope you've been enjoying our series of "We Want to Do More for You" articles, introducing you to the work of current FSF staff members and explaining what we'd do with increased resources.

LibrePlanet 2012 dates announced: March 24th-25th, 2012

Since 2009, the Free Software Foundation has run an annual conference in the Boston area for free software developers, activists, and the FSF's own associate members. This conference grew out of a smaller members-only event which ran successfully for six years.

The dates of our next conference have been announced -- March 24th and 25th 2012, at the University of Massachusetts campus in Boston. We have promised to make that conference bigger and better than ever, but we need your financial support to rent a comfortable venue, promote the event and provide audio and video recording.

Make 2012 the Year of Accessibility for GNOME!

GNOME Foundation executive director Karen Sandler announced the launch of a fundraising campaign for accessibility work on GNOME. Please donate to the campaign now and tell your friends!

Stallman class graduates from IMERIR

On 28 October, 2011, FSF president Richard Stallman delivered the graduation speech to the Institut Méditerranéen d'Étude et de Recherche en Informatique et Robotique (IMERIR) class of 2011, which was named after him. We have published photos of that event.

Fixing rogue printers: don't trade one security threat for another

Researchers at Columbia University recently demonstrated that many HP printers can have their firmware reprogrammed by specially crafted print jobs. This is a real and serious security threat, now that printers have a lot of the same functionality as computers. The solution is not to force printers to only run code singed by the manufacturer. Real security requires running free software controlled by its owners.

It's been great!

Our FSF campaigns intern Andrew has written about what he has done during this fall, especially his work improving the Free Software Directory. Thank you, Andrew. It was a real pleasure working with you!

Louis CK: Live at the Beacon Theater, DRM-free

Boston's Louis CK has a new show on his website, but he's doing things a little differently with this one. To quote his site: "No DRM, no regional restrictions, no crap. You can download this file, play it as much as you like, burn it to a DVD, whatever." And it's available in Ogg Theora!

EU court advisers: Owning software ideas detrimental to progress

There are no patents involved in the SAS Institute v. World Programming Ltd case, but there's a very interesting statement from the European Court of Justice's legal advisers, the Advocates-General:

To accept that a functionality of a computer program can be protected as such would amount to making it possible to monopolize ideas, to the detriment of technological progress and industrial development.

It seems likely then that the Advocates-General would also find patent-based software idea monopolies detrimental to technological progress and industrial development. Good to know we might have an ally there.

LibrePlanet featured resource: LibrePlanet Quebec

Every month on LibrePlanet, we highlight one resource that is interesting and useful -- often one that could use your help.

For this month, we are highlighting LibrePlanet Quebec, whose primary objective is to act as a liaison between the FSF (and similar international organizations) and what's happening in Quebec, in order to promote freedom across technology and the arts.

Do you have a suggestion for next month's featured resource? Let us know at campaigns@fsf.org.

GNU Spotlight with Karl Berry


autoconf-archive-2011.12.21 icecat-9.0.1 autogen-5.13 liquidwar6-0.0.13beta automake-1.11.2 parallel-20111222 bayonne-2.99+3.0apionly2 sipwitch-1.1.4 freeipmi-1.0.10 stow-2.1.2 gnufdisk-2.0.0a1 ucommon-5.1.0 gnunet-0.9.1 vc-dwim-1.6 gnunet-gtk-0.9.1 xnee-3.11 gnutls-3.0.9 zile-2.4.3 gv-3.7.3

To get announcements of most new GNU releases, subscribe to the info-gnu mailing list: http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnu. Nearly all GNU software is available from http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/, or preferably one of its mirrors (http://www.gnu.org/prep/ftp.html). You can use the url http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/ to be automatically redirected to a (hopefully) nearby and up-to-date mirror.

This month I'd like to specially mention the first release of Stow in many years, thanks to much work by the new co-maintainer Adam Spiers.

This month we welcome Pouya Kary as the new maintainer of GNU Gleem.

Several GNU packages are looking for maintainers and other assistance. Please see http://www.gnu.org/server/takeaction.html#unmaint if you'd like to help. The general page on how to help GNU is at http://www.gnu.org/help/help.html. To submit new packages to GNU, see http://www.gnu.org/help/evaluation.html.

As always, please feel free to write to me, karl@gnu.org, with any GNUish questions or suggestions for future installments.

Richard Stallman's speaking schedule and other FSF events

  • March 24th-25th, 2012 -- Boston, MA, USA -- LibrePlanet

http://www.fsf.org/events/libreplanet-2012

Take action with the FSF

Contributions from thousands of individual members enable the FSF's work. You can contribute by joining at http://www.fsf.org/join. If you're already a member, you can help refer new members (and earn some rewards) by adding a line with your member number to your email signature like:

I'm an FSF member -- Help us support software freedom! http://www.fsf.org/jf?referrer=2442

The FSF is also always looking for volunteers (http://www.fsf.org/volunteer). From rabble-rousing to hacking, from issue coordination to envelope stuffing -- there's something here for everybody to do. Also, head over to our campaign section (http://www.fsf.org/campaigns) and take action on software patents, DRM, free software adoption, OpenDocument, RIAA and more.

#

The Free Software Supporter is edited by FSF volunteer Osama Khalid.

Copyright © 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.

"Happy GNU Year" is copyright © 2011 Chris Webber and used with permission. It is also licensed as a separate work under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.


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Friday, December 23, 2011

[FSF] Part 2: We want to do more for you!

We've raised $107,694!
Can you help us reach our goal of $300,000 by January 31st?
Become an associate member for just $120 or $10/month

 

Thank goodness the FSF does not pay our founder and president, Richard M. Stallman (RMS). We couldn't afford him!

This year, RMS delivered over 100 talks in two dozen countries. He met with students, teachers, policymakers, and the general public, giving presentations in English, Spanish, and French. He addressed a variety of topics from the dangers of software patents to building a free digital society.

Somehow RMS also squeezed in time to write articles for the Guardian and Huffington Post, gave dozens of statements to press around the world, and responded to more email in a year than the average person will in a decade. Oh, and he wrote a little code too.

So you might ask, what is RMS's secret to being so productive while managing an insane travel and speaking schedule?

A big part of the answer: FSF staff member, Jeanne Rasata.

Jeanne's job title may officially be stated as "assistant to the president," but would you call Robin the assistant to Batman? Of course not.

She's a superhero in her own right!

Jeanne not only helps in coordinating and planning RMS's grueling travel and speaking schedule -- which often involves communicating in several different languages with event organizers -- she is also the front-line of communication for nearly all email sent to the FSF, and is our virtual front-desk for questions and requests from FSF associate members. (With over 40% of our funding coming from our members, this is no small task!) In her, um, remaining time, she's managed to start a new habit of sharing photos and accounts from some of the events she's helped to organize:

But, like a true superhero, Jeanne is not content with simply doing well in a demanding job. She wants to do a lot more for free software.

After editing the second edition of Free Software, Free Society last year (yes, she edits books too), Jeanne is eager to see this and other FSF publications translated into more languages. As a polyglot, she has the training and skills to tackle such a task, but, does she have the time?

After six years of interacting with members and free software activists around the globe, Jeanne knows the problems and challenges that individuals face when they first start getting into free software. She knows we can do better in publishing more comprehensive and multilingual sets of educational materials. But should she have to try to do it alone?

Support Jeanne's mission to do more for free software

From her secret home base in Germany, Jeanne helped the FSF accomplish a lot around the world this year for free software. But, next year, we want to support her in being able to do even more.

You can support this goal by helping us reach the fundraising target of $300,000 by January 31st. If we meet this goal, we will be confident that our existing program expenses will be covered until this time next year, and we can focus on how best to start doing more.

**But you might consider pitching in $20/month to cover the cost of all those unpaid superhero sidekicks out there!

 

Your friends, 

Josh, Brett, Donald, Jasimin, Jeanne, John, Martin, Matt, Peter, Richard, and Ward


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Sent from the Free Software Foundation,

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Your group membership has been activated

Welcome. Your membership in the "Free Software Supporters" group has been activated.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

[FSF] We want to do more for you!

Help us raise $300,000 for free software by January 31st.

With your support this past year, we made a difference and accomplished a great deal for free software around the world. But we don't just want to repeat this in 2012 we want to make an even bigger impact, and we need your help to do it.

To reach our fundraising goal, we need to raise just $229,000 more over the next seven weeks. If we meet this goal, we will be confident that our existing program expenses will be covered for the remainder of the year, and we can focus on how best to start doing more.

You can help us get there by joining -- an FSF membership is $120/year, which is $10/month or 33 cents per day. Note that while you can contribute $10 or more automatically each month, we cannot yet automatically collect your 33 cents each day. :)

Who we are and what we do

Last year we helped arrange over 110 events around the world, including our annual LibrePlanet conference. We responded to well over 14,000 email requests from our members, reporters, and the broader public. We gathered tens of thousands of signatures, and broke stories on computer user freedom into the mainstream media. We helped people learn about getting started with free software, and ran educational advocacy campaigns about the efforts of major corporations to eliminate free software. We took in over 100 new copyright assignments for the GNU Project, replied to over ten times that many free software licensing questions, and provided important distribution and development infrastructure for GNU hackers. We offered feedback to organizations and standards bodies, and gave guidance on legislation and policies being enacted around the world. We run a store and publishing company out of our office, shipping freely licensed books, printed t-shirts, and stickers to dozens of countries.

"The FSF is a small, humble organization of passionate individuals working tirelessly for our software freedom."

Benjamin Mako Hill, FSF board of directors

But we want to do more a lot more. And the only way that can happen is if you help us grow.

The Free Software Foundation is a staff of ten dedicated and effective individuals, working with a global network of volunteers and supporters of the free software movement. Our president, Richard Stallman, does not receive a salary from the FSF. Every person and function in our organization is pushed to its capacity, and to do more, we need to grow.

Each week until the end of our fundraiser on January 31st, we will be presenting you short focus pieces detailing our work and our desire to do even more for you!

The goal of our fundraiser is to raise $300,000 for free software. Our goal as an organization is to spend your donations wisely and effectively, so that we can do our very best on your behalf at defending the rights of computer users around the world and encouraging free software development.

How you can help

Sincerely,

Josh, Brett, Donald, Jasimin, Jeanne, John, Martin, Matt, Peter, Richard, and Ward

PS. If you are in the US, please call your representatives this week to stop the Internet blacklist legislation, SOPA, from becoming a law! Visit http://fsf.org and follow the instructions on the pop-up window (if you do not see the pop-up, clear your cache and refresh).


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Monday, December 12, 2011

Help us make LibrePlanet 2012 a success!

Help us make LibrePlanet 2012 a success!

The dates have been announced for our next conference -- March 24th and 25th 2012, at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. A call for papers has also been announced. The conference will include talks from the FSF staff and board, GNU project contributors, and other members of the global free software community. I hope you will join us!

Since 2009, the Free Software Foundation has run an annual conference in the Boston area for free software developers, activists, and the FSF's own associate members. This conference grew out of a smaller members-only event which ran successfully for six years.

The conference has featured many free software luminaries over the years, including FSF president Richard Stallman, Eben Moglen of the Freedom Box Foundation and Software Freedom Law Center, EFF co-founder John Gilmore, GNOME Foundation executive director Karen Sandler, Jeremy Allison of the Samba project, Selena Deckelmann of PostgreSQL, Máirín Duffy of Fedora, and veteran GNU developer Rob Savoye.

We are planning the upcoming conference in the midst of our annual winter fundraiser, the time of year when we work the hardest at inviting new people to become FSF associate members. Our associate members are the most important means of financial support for the Free Software Foundation -- individuals in our community, making a financial commitment to software freedom. Because we want the conference to be an opportunity for these free software supporters to meet each other, our associate members can attend the conference without charge.

At last year's event, I promised we would make this conference bigger and better than ever before. As I and the other staff work hard to bring some of the pioneers of our community together, we are relying on your contributions to help make the financial aspect of this event possible, without hanging ugly corporate banners everywhere.

We just need 100 new members, and the conference is paid for entirely. Funding is necessary for us to provide a comfortable venue, devote enough staff time to promote it and have it run smoothly, and offer other features like audio and video recordings of the talks for future use.


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Sent from the Free Software Foundation,

51 Franklin Street
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United States

You can unsubscribe to this mailing-list by visiting the link http://crm.fsf.org/index.php?q=civicrm/mailing/unsubscribe&reset=1&jid=125466&qid=960694&h=b84121e0d1e39544.

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