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Transcript of Eben Moglen's Harvard Speech

An anonymous reader writes "Groklaw has a transcript of Eben Moglen's Harvard Speech + Q&A up. Good Stuff. During the Q&A he made a good point to think about: 'We stand for free speech. We're the free speech movement of the moment. And that we have to insist upon, all the time, uncompromisingly. My dear friend, Mr. Stallman, has caused a certain amount of resistance in life by going around saying, "It's free software, it's not open source". He has a reason. This is the reason. We need to keep reminding people that what's at stake here is free speech. We need to keep reminding people that what we're doing is trying to keep the freedom of ideas in the 21st century, in a world where there are guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth if it would make value for the shareholders. And what we have to do is to continue to reinforce the recognition that free speech in a technological society means technological free speech. I think we can do that. I think that's a deliverable message.'"

357 comments

  1. Who? by gkelman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Another great slashdot article which assumes you know _exactly_ who the person is featured in the article. Can't we have just a little one line in the first paragraph saying what it's all about?

    1. Re:Who? by thoth39 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, Slashdot articles usually carry these links to stories about the subject you can read...

      The way you put it, we should tell who is speaking so people can assess if it's worth listening.

      But I'd expect this is the purpose of the quote.

      --
      -- Pedro
    2. Re:Who? by syphax · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here are you hints:

      Groklaw
      SCO
      (Richard) Stallman

      With apologies, these names should ring a bell to anyone who occasionally visits /.

      I'm feeling lucky

      --
      Simple Unexpected Concrete Credible Emotional Stories
    3. Re:Who? by Mick+Ohrberg · · Score: 2

      I would think Eben Moglen should be a pretty well-known name by now as well, especially if you visit Groklaw at all.

      --

      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.

    4. Re:Who? by YukioMishima · · Score: 3, Informative

      Eben Moglen is lead counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a professor at Columbia Law School in New York City . He's a proponent of freedom on-line, a friend (or at least acquaintence) of Lawrence Lessig, and someone who works actively as a lawyer to promote open software and copyright issues on the web.


      I had him as a professor for three of my classes while I was there, and he's a lightening rod for controversy. He often interacts with professor Jane Ginsburg, who takes an opposite view of copyright (and teaches copyright at Columbia; she's also the daughter of Justice Ginsburg on the Supreme Court).

    5. Re:Who? by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 5, Funny

      /. targets an audience that has basic web searching skills.

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    6. Re:Who? by Nurseman · · Score: 4, Informative
      He is a laywer who represents/gives leagal advice to
      The Free Software Foundation
      His Bio is Here


      He was responding to the talk given by our buddy Darl McBride Text here

      --
      Save a Life. Donate Blood. Please.
    7. Re:Who? by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Informative
      Eben Moglen is lead counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation
      He is? I can't see anything on the EFF's site to confirm that.

      He is, however, the lead counsel for the Free Software Foundation(FSF) and it is in this capacity that the quote in the article writeup is relevent.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    8. Re:Who? by YukioMishima · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're absolutely right. I mistyped, and I apologize.

    9. Re:Who? by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      No problem. The funny thing is that a couple of hours before you wrote that, I added EFF vs FSF to my "Don't confuse the two" journal entry (see .sig) almost as an afterthought...

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    10. Re:Who? by McLoud · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An "Errata" moderation mode would be usefull to these cases

      --
      sign(c14n(envelop(this)), x509)
    11. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He often interacts with professor Jane Ginsburg, who takes an opposite view of copyright (and teaches copyright at Columbia; she's also the daughter of Justice Ginsburg on the Supreme Court).

      So much like Paula Adbul and MC Skat Kat, they take one step forward and two steps back, We come together
      Cuz opposites attract
      And you know--it ain't fiction
      Just a natural fact
      We come together
      Cuz opposites attract

    12. Re:Who? by ThogScully · · Score: 2, Informative

      From the article summary, I can tell he's someone who's important enough to give a speech at Harvard on the topic of free software and is himself a supporter of free software and the spread of that message. I would assume clicking on the links would give me more details about him and his position on these matters.

      And this is before I've read it and before I knew who he was. What exactly do you expect here? A paragraph explaining that Eben Moglen was the legal counsel for EFF doesn't tell me anything about this article.
      -N

      --
      I've nothing to say here...
    13. Re:Who? by robosmurf · · Score: 1

      I think you mean the Free Software Foundation, not the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

    14. Re:Who? by Sigl · · Score: 1

      Are you saying we should read the article to assess whether it's worth reading? Or are you saying we should assume that since it's posted to /. that it's worth reading?

    15. Re:Who? by thoth39 · · Score: 1

      I'm saying you should read the post, and the quote therein, to assess if the article is worth reading.

      --
      -- Pedro
    16. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another great slashdot article which assumes you know _exactly_ who the person is featured in the article.

      Yeah, who is this "Michael"?

    17. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eben Moglen is lead counsel for the Electronic Frontier Foundation and a professor at Columbia Law School in New York City . He's a proponent of freedom on-line, a friend (or at least acquaintence) of Lawrence Lessig, and someone who works actively as a lawyer to promote open software and copyright issues on the web.

      But who are these "Electronic Frontier Foundation", "Columbia Law School" and "Lawrence Lessig", where is this "New York City" and what is a "lawyer" or a "copyright issue" or "the web"?

      Can't we have just a little one line in the first paragraph (whatever one of those is) saying what it's all about?

    18. Re:Who? by Pinky3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's amazing how many people thought the original poster, gkelman, was asking about Eben Moglen. The post asks a different question, one asked by Eric Raymond in "The Luxury of Ignorance," which was discussed on slashdot yesterday. The real question is why do slashdot postings, as do many configuration utilities, assume the reader already knows the answers?

      All the poster was suggesting was that the original post would have been much more informative if it had included a second sentence that read something like "Eben Moglen is the lawyer for the Free Software Foundation and spoke at the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology lecture on the 23rd on the topic of 'SCO and After SCO: The Legal Future of Free Software'."

      Wouldn't that have made the topic of the article much clearer?

    19. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the poster was suggesting was that the original post would have been much more informative if it had included a second sentence that read something like "Eben Moglen is the lawyer for the Free Software Foundation and spoke at the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology lecture on the 23rd on the topic of 'SCO and After SCO: The Legal Future of Free Software'."

      Wouldn't that have made the topic of the article much clearer?


      Only if you assume that I don't know who Eben Moglen is but that I DO know who the Free Software Foundation and SCO are. Otherwise it just adds to the confusion... I'm generously allowing you the "Haravrd Journal of Law and Technology" as being familiar to a wider audience.

    20. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What's the Free Software Foundation?

      Who's "SCO"?

    21. Re:Who? by alienw · · Score: 1

      Or, in better English, "Eben Moglen, the lawyer for the Free Software Foundation, spoke at the Harvard Journal of Law [...]"

    22. Re:Who? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      It might have told you that Eben Moglen is the legal counsel of the FSF, not the EFF.

    23. Re:Who? by ThogScully · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know - I read another post in response that said EFF and everyone already corrected him, but it was too late once I posted this.

      Ignore that though - it doesn't matter - my interest in the article wasn't based on who he was or who he worked for. It was based on the article summary which explained exactly what the talk was about.
      -N

      --
      I've nothing to say here...
    24. Re:Who? by Syberghost · · Score: 1

      The real question is why do slashdot postings, as do many configuration utilities, assume the reader already knows the answers?

      Because if you're reading it, you have a web browser, and google knows the answers, so there's no excuse for you not knowing them.

  2. FSF's General Counsel by Phil+John · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...who works Pro Bono for them

    --
    I am NaN
    1. Re:FSF's General Counsel by QuijiboIsAWord · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't know why he bothers. U2 isn't exactly giving their music away for free... Seems like a conflict of interest to me.

      --
      -Hmm...I got a G+ invite, better remember to remove the request from my sig...-
    2. Re:FSF's General Counsel by Thuktun · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      I don't know why he bothers. U2 isn't exactly giving their music away for free... Seems like a conflict of interest to me.

      I know this was meant as a joke, but U2 isn't exactly into free speech anyway.

    3. Re:FSF's General Counsel by babyrat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So I read the article on deuceofclubs - what exactly does that have to do with Free Speech?

      Sounds to me like Trademark or copyright violation or maybe even fraud...but not free speech.

      If U2 sued them for saying 'U2 Sucks' then that would be about free speech.

      And they admitted that they were trying to dupe customers into thinking the album was a U2 album! I can see the point they were trying to make - but don't think they chose the right means to try and make the point.

    4. Re:FSF's General Counsel by Thuktun · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So I read the article on deuceofclubs - what exactly does that have to do with Free Speech? Sounds to me like Trademark or copyright violation or maybe even fraud...but not free speech.

      To me, this particular case illustrates that there's a very nebulous line between intellectual property, trademarks, copyrights, and free speech, at least when it comes to art.

      Making a statement in art seems very much like an aspect of free speech. Is that only when the art doesn't cost anything? When you're an artist that actually wants to make a career out of creating art, does that mean you're not allowed to parody, satire, or generally make a statement using aspects of our society that happen to be trademarked or copyrighted?

      Part of the point of this was that at the same time, U2 was using other's copyrighted content without reimbursement in their own concerts. They'd no doubt argue that this was done for their art, but apparently other artists aren't allowed to do likewise, not when it involves U2 trademarks an content. (Note that this was mainly a spat between labels, but U2 declined to make a stand on principle when it came to this particular spat.)

      Anyway, this is a bit off-topic, so I'll not belabor the issue.

  3. Re:Did you read the whole article? by irokitt · · Score: 2, Funny

    You see, some of us actually have subscriptions...

    --
    If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
  4. Re:Did you read the whole article? by millahtime · · Score: 4, Funny

    I was wondering why there so few posts this long after the post. Then I realized that most of the /.ers are actually reading this article.

  5. Two alternatives by Tensor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) They are both subscribers and had more time than you did.

    2) If you read both posts you'll see that neither actually requires reading the article, one just says "But who is this guy", the other says "He's FSF Lawyer"

    1. Re:Two alternatives by pe1rxq · · Score: 2, Informative

      3) They read it yesterday....

      It is already on groklaw for a while.

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    2. Re:Two alternatives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      It is actually ONE alternative. From Dict.org:

      Alternative \Al*ter"na*tive\, a. [Cf. F. alternatif.]
      1. Offering a choice of two things.

      Artaxerxes

  6. Mirror of the webcast? by ansak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I read the whole transcript yesterday. I just wish I could have watched it or at least listened to it. The online archive is in perpetual time-out mode. Has anyone got an (unofficial?) mirror of it? Is anyone allowed to? Can we 'torrent this?

    I just want to hear Eben's jokes in Eben's voice. Someone worth listening to for an hour and a half is a rare bird.

    cheers...ank

    --
    Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
    1. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Curtman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Really? I dumped the stream to disk, as well as the Darl speech. I'd love to torrent/edonkey them if I'm allowed.

    2. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Jayfar · · Score: 4, Informative
    3. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by ansak · · Score: 1

      Thanks Jayfar, but that's the exact link that constantly times-out for me. Is it working for you? Perhaps my corner of the 'net is sick in that way.

      now back to regular programming already in progress...ank (double entendre entendred)

      --
      Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
    4. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Jayfar · · Score: 1

      Oops, my bad (noticed right after I posted). Just got home from a long night shift and my glazed over eyes had missed the 2d half of your comment (about having the link, but it timing out). I was able to watch it in its entirety around this time yesterday and I'd guess it will eventually start responding again after the slashdotting (which I've effectively exacerbated) dies down. Would someone please mod my prior comment down to zero %-) Thx.

    5. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by setzman · · Score: 2, Informative

      That link works for me. Probably a network issue.

      --
      C:\>
    6. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we 'torrent this?

      I dunno. Can we?

    7. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So it's in a format that I'm not free to do what I want with? Stupid. I just want to burn it to a CD, so I can listen in the car (I drive a lot). You can't even get the President's State of the Union in an open format. I've even tried Kaaza.

    8. Re:Mirror of the webcast? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This was mentioned on the LinuxToday article. Here's a response posted by coriordan:
      I mailed the JOLT people last week to ask that they make the talk available in a format for which a free software player exists - and they said they would.

      They made a previous talk (by Darl McBride), available in Speex format, but it took a few days for the Speex version to appear, so check back to their speakers page in a few days and they should have a playable version :)

      Is the State of the Union address considered public domain? If so, someone could probably record it from TV/radio broadcasts each year and post it on the internet.
  7. Eben Moglen resume by aacool · · Score: 5, Informative
    Eben Moglen

    1994-, Professor of Law and Legal History, Columbia Law School.(current)

    1987-94, Associate Professor of Law, Columbia Law School.

    1986-87, Law Clerk to Justice Thurgood Marshall, United States Supreme Court.

    1985-86, Law Clerk to Judge Edward Weinfeld, United States District Court, Southern District of New York.

    1984, Associate, Cravath Swaine & Moore, New York.

    1983, IBM Corporation, Armonk, New York, Associate Corporation Counsel

    1979-84, IBM Corporation, San Jose, California, Programmer/Analyst, Programming Language Research & Development

    Selected Publications

    Anarchism Triumphant: Free Software and the Death of Copyright, First Monday (August, 1999)

    The Invisible Barbecue, 97 Colum. L. Rev. 945 (1997).

    Jewishness and the American Constitutional Tradition: The Cases of Brandeis and Frankfurter (Book Review), 89 Colum. L. Rev. 959 (1989).

    Taking the Fifth: Reconsidering the History of the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination, 92 Mich. L. Rev. 1086 (1994).

    1. Re:Eben Moglen resume by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 1

      1984, Associate, Cravath Swaine & Moore, New York.

      In case nobody noticed, this is the firm representing IBM in SCO vs. IBM.

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    2. Re:Eben Moglen resume by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      1984, Associate, Cravath Swaine & Moore, New York.

      1983, IBM Corporation, Armonk, New York, Associate Corporation Counsel
      -----

      Interesting...

      It just put a few pieces together for me, since Cravath Swaine & Moore are currently representing IBM in SCO vs. IBM (and that Boies, whose firm represents SCO in that action is also a former associate of Cravath Swaine & Moore) who left to form his own firm (something very uncommon with a prestigious firm like theirs).

      Small world, huh?

  8. The Anti-Darl by IronClad · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did you ever wonder what would happen if we get this guy into the same room with Mr. McBride?

    My guess: A flash of gamma rays.

    1. Re:The Anti-Darl by Curtman · · Score: 5, Funny

      Heh, my favourite part of the speech was where he says that on the same day as Darl was speaking at Harvard, he was meeting with Darl's brother. Then says "The McBride's... Sometimes I feel like I'm in a Quentin Tarantino movie.. The McBride's..."

    2. Re:The Anti-Darl by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      Can you imagine if RMS was standing too close when that happened?

      "Don't make me angry, Mr. Raymond, you won't like me when I'm angry."

      -Peter

  9. Differences by Espectr0 · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Can someone sum up the differences between Free Software and Open Source Software?

    1. Re:Differences by tybalt44 · · Score: 0, Informative

      Open Source software is just that... the source code is published openly. Software can be Open Source and still be subject to copyright, patent, and other intellectual property restrictions.

      Free Software is a bit more nebulous a term, but as I understand it, it refers to software for which the intellectual property rights (copyright and so forth) have been deliberately weakened so that others may modify it, create derivative works from it, and in some cases even redistribute it, without fear of legal reprisal.

    2. Re:Differences by Trelane · · Score: 2, Informative
      Free Software

      The software comes with source code. People and businesses are allowed to re-sell and re-distribute it.

      The redistributors/resellers must ensure that the software's source code be free for the users to obtain (subject to recovering media and shipping costs) and read. This includes any modifications to the software.

      The end users must be given the same freedoms and conditions by the distributor as the distributor was given by the original author (e.g. must be given the source code + modifications, must be allowed to re-distribute and modify)

      Synopsis: All end users must be allowed to be resellers/redistributors and developers, including of redistributed or modified versions.

      Open Source

      The software comes with source code. People and businesses are allowed to re-sell and re-distribute it.

      The redistributors/resellers may make the software's source code available, or they may keep it closed. The same with modifications.

      The end users may be prohibited by the redistributor from taking the same freedoms given the redistributor by the original programmer (e.g. the end users might or might not get source, might or might not be allowed to modify or re-distribute)

      Synopsis: End users may or may not be allowed to be resellers and/or redistributors and/or developers, including of redistributed or modified versions.

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
    3. Re:Differences by Trelane · · Score: 4, Interesting
      it refers to software for which the intellectual property rights (copyright and so forth) have been deliberately weakened

      Incorrect.

      While the purposes you outlined are correct, nothing was weakened. It's a use of the existing copyright system to ensure that the end-user is given the same freedoms (and restrictions) given the re-distributors. Those freedoms are the right to read the source, make modifications, and pass the code + modifications on to others.

      Regarding patents: both OSS and FS allow patents to be filed. The difference is that FS requires the patent owner to license the patent for free and without much restriction (IIRC) to the end user, such that the end user's freedom to re-distribute and modify are not restrcited.

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
    4. Re:Differences by Trelane · · Score: 1

      restricted

      Dag nabbit. :)

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
    5. Re:Differences by jmt(tm) · · Score: 1

      The FSF can do that much better than me. They have very interesting articles in their philosophy section. They even have some audio and video material.

    6. Re:Differences by demi · · Score: 1
      Free Software

      What you're actually describing is copylefted software.

      Open Source

      Here you're actually describing non-copylefted free software.

      Probably the best sources of information are the categories of software listing from the FSF, and the Open Source definition from the OSI.

      In practical terms, Open Source is free software, the distinction has to do with the goals and priorities of the respective movements.

      --
      demi
    7. Re:Differences by fbform · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Can someone sum up the differences between Free Software and Open Source Software?

      I'll use an analogy that my friend told me once. Think of vegetarians. There are some people who are vegetarian because they believe killing animals is wrong. There are others who are vegetarian because some medical report says it's healthy. In other words, the former have ethical reasons, while the latter have pragmatic reasons.

      So far so good. There doesn't seem to be any major conflict. The trouble starts when new findings are released which say that eating meat is actually good for you. The second (pragmatic) group will then eat meat too, while the first group WILL NOT - their point is that killing animals for food is wrong, irrespective of whether it's healthy for you or not.

      The first group is Free Software, who advocate freedom as the primary goal and software as merely incidental. The second group is Open Source, who always advocate sharing source for practical benefits (more eyes examining etc), but don't say anything about freedom and liberty. If there is some exploit in the future that makes it seem like closed-source or proprietary software might offer benefits that open-source cannot, then the shear between the two groups will be readily apparent, with the Open Source advocates using closed-source for its benefits, and Free Software advocates holding out on principle.

      --
      Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
    8. Re:Differences by No.+24601 · · Score: 1
      I think the key issue is whether Open Source is a subset of Free Software or the opposite. It appears to me that all Open Source software is free because the code is open so anyone can compile it and use it. However, not all free software is open source. Of course, that's using the free as in beer context of the word free.

      If by free, you mean freedom of the software to be applied or used however way anyway wants... it'd be comparable to equation for Newton's first law... F=ma. That expression is free as in beer and free as in free speech. I think Stallman wants software... or rather algorithms to be free as in F=ma.

    9. Re:Differences by sirReal.83. · · Score: 1

      As an ethical vegetarian and Free Software user, upon reading the first two sentences of your post, expected to be thoroughly offended within the next three paragraphs. See, I'm somewhat used to being ridiculed for taking a stand on my beliefs.

      Your analogy actually was flawless and didn't piss me off. I suspect it wouldn't even bother a carnivorous Microsoft executive, either! Thanks. I'm going to use that one.

    10. Re:Differences by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This naievely assumes that there is no pragmatic value to liberty. When the markets tend to be quickly dominated by robber barons, something meant to curb their ability to dominate becomes remarkably pragmatic.

      "Open Source" is not about "peaceful co-existence". "Open Source" is about watering down RMS rhetoric so that it is more palatable to the likes of Oracle. However, Oracle will still be exploiting the product of RMS rather than ESR.

      OTOH, Free Software was born out of concerns that rival interests had unfettered access to freely contributed work. Corporations tend to have the same concerns.

      RMS is not as far away from Ellison as some would have you believe.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:Differences by LuSiDe · · Score: 1

      It's a nice analogy indeed, but it could be brought futher in other differences.

      Definitions:

      * A vegetarian does not eat products of a dead animal.
      * A vegan does not eat products of a living or dead animal.

      Thus, the ethical people who do not eat products derived from a dead animal, but do eat products derived from a living animal, actually contribute in the exploitation that living animal as well according to ethical vegans. Which makes me wondering what's worse: a long life in torture, or a short life torture and then death? People who commit suicide/euthenasia chose, as they see their future, for the latter.

      My point is.. i have no point.

      Except the following to consider: do you think that eating a product from a dead animal, which contains certain unhealthy substances according to the vegetarian health-group, are NOT in products derived from these animals?

      If the animal had a disease it would be in it's derived products too. Think about milk and BSE for a second.

      That said, though i am prejudiced, i think an analogy based on the vegan/ethical and the vegan/health groups is a much clearer one. I could take both "technical software groups" also to a less extreme standpoint: how about an ethical shared source group?

      --
      WE DON'T NEED NO BLOG CONTROL.
    12. Re:Differences by QuintLeo · · Score: 1

      Open Source and Free Software are neither subparts of the other. They have many similarities, and many of the same proponents, but are seperate classes. It happens that the similarities are great enough that there is a large amount of software that fits both classes - which leads to a lot of confusion between the two classes.

  10. Good message by mao+che+minh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "I think we can do that. I think that's a deliverable message."

    And I know that money talks and bullshit walks. Unless we get some thick-walleted lobbyists on our side, the souless corporations will continue to turn innovation and invention into commodities - and Open Source and Free Software will remain terms that no one but the choir ever hears.

    1. Re:Good message by Trigun · · Score: 1

      IBM sits three feet higher than anyone else due to the immense bulge in its wallet. Go talk to them.

    2. Re:Good message by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      IBM lobbies for itself, not for Open Source. That's just my opinion.

    3. Re:Good message by *weasel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or we get Instant Runoff Voting - and lobbyists lose the stranglehold they have on government (which only exists due our 'lesser of two evils' voting).

      With IRV you could vote for an independent without being concerned that you might 'spoil' an election, or 'throw your vote away'.

      More importantly, you could vote for different independent, if the previous independent turned out to not represent your views, or the values he advocated at election.

      Imagine being able to support Perot without risking Clinton, or voting Nader without risking Bush.

      Imagine being able to vote McCain 2k4 because Bush isn't nearly as conservative as you'd like.

      Or being able to say 'screw Kerry, I'll support Kucinich even if he doesn't get the nomination' - and not having to worry about your vote giving power to Bush.

      (indeed party nominations only exist to tone down the chances of 2 similar candidates spoiling the race and handing it to a 3rd party.)

      Get IRV and lobbying won't work because a single vote will be enough to keep you from re-election - and lobbyists can't buy everyone.

      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    4. Re:Good message by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And I know that money talks and bullshit walks. Unless we get some thick-walleted lobbyists on our side, the souless corporations will continue to turn innovation and invention into commodities - and Open Source and Free Software will remain terms that no one but the choir ever hears.

      And the other souless corporations will continue to use the most cost effective solution, which is increasingly becoming open source.

      This is what I love about the GPL. I think everyone can agree, given that a peice of software has been created, it is better for society if everyone to has access to it. The only issue at question is whether by limiting access to the software, we can provide necisarry means and motivation for more software to be written. I look at the GPL as an experiment - if copyright really does provide necissarry means and incentive to produce software then GPL'd software will never be as good as proprietary software, and will reamain on the sidelines. However if GPL'ed software does surpass and surplant proprietary software, then it is proof that there is enough means and motivation to produce software without the burden of copyright. This is increasingly showing itself to be the case.

      The FSF focuses on the first issue, and think that the negative societal aspects of proprietary software are so bad that it doesn't matter whether copyright adds incentive or not, proprietary software is still intolerable.

      The OSI focuses on the second issue, and think that the only important thing about free software is that it is better than proprietary software, and have provided usefull theories which help explain why this is the case.

      But the real clincher is that both issues are true - that not only is software copyright harmfull, it is also unecissarry. It is for this reason that I agree with the FSF in treating it as an ethical situation, because while I am willing to put up with some "necissary evil", there is no reason to put up with proprietary software in the long run.

    5. Re:Good message by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Or we get Instant Runoff Voting - and lobbyists lose the stranglehold they have on government (which only exists due our 'lesser of two evils' voting).

      Maybe if the government didn't have such a stranglehold in the first place it wouldn't matter so much.

      And anyway IRV changes nothing. It doesn't really promote win-win thinking, coalition building, communication. It does promote risk-taking and fragmentation-- which seems likely to lead to instability. Not only that... you thought Florida was bad? You can't stand Diebold now? Just wait until voting is some weird thing where votes have to be tabulated three times just to find out who wins. Do you know that this does to election day and the possibility for fraud and error? *shudder*

      Besides... don't you know that if voting actually changed anything they would make it illegal? ;)

      --
      I do not have a signature
    6. Re:Good message by brsett · · Score: 1

      Stallman is a millionaire, so there is a good start for your fat wallet. And he's not even wasting his money on children or a family (his words, not mine) -- whether he's spending it on trips to pot and trips to Amsterdamm is unknown to me.

    7. Re:Good message by ingenuus · · Score: 1

      I agree with your underlying idea. I too was once a fan of IRV, but I recently learned (from other readers on slashdot!) about the problematic aberrations which can occur with run-off voting (instant or otherwise).

      The page I linked to walks through several examples showing where IRV causes problems similar to our current voting method.

      e.g. in close races with IRV, it is possible to cause your candidate to win by voting against him (A) and voting for a third-party (C) in order to eliminate the other major candidate (B) in run-off fashion.

      i.e. the problem is the way IRV totally eliminates the lowest candidate to calculate the winner in non-trivial cases.

      The site suggests another system called "Condorcet" which seems to be a much more fair and consistent way of calculating a winner.

      In light of this new information, the paranoid in me is starting to think that IRV might be a superficial tactic for our appeasement, actually intended to further subjugate us. ;)

      Tin-foil hats for everyone! :)

  11. Can outsiders attend these lectures? by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I live in the Boston area, and would've liked to attend the last 2 SCO related lectures at Harvard (yes, Darryl's too, out of morbid curiousity).

    Anybody from Harvard: Am I allowed to attend lectures without being part of Harvard? Are they public lectures? Can I obtain permission to attend them?

    Being a recent grad student at a tech school, I know that school ID's are seldom checked at these occasions, but would like to know if it's against the rules or something.

    Thank you.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
    1. Re:Can outsiders attend these lectures? by The+Pim · · Score: 4, Informative

      The lectures were public. You should have come. (At least to Moglen's; I heard some people didn't feel well after McBride's.)

      --

      The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
    2. Re:Can outsiders attend these lectures? by sploxx · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't know about the McBridge speak, but here (in germany), Microsoft came to my university a month or so ago to speak about their security program - a "Microsoft Security Roadshow".

      Because there were several interesting things stated on the announcement, such topics as DRM, TCPA etc., I did of course attend their show. Overall, it was a bit dull (and followed by a very boring marketing campaign for their firewall products), but I did not expect more. I was just curious how microsoft speaks to
      the university people, who are generally more pro-linux.

      I think you should know your "enemy", and, yes, If I had been in the appropiate region, I had attended McBride's speak.lecture.

    3. Re:Can outsiders attend these lectures? by The+Pim · · Score: 3, Interesting
      That's a good point, but trust me, McBride's speech was nothing more than a joke on McBride, not an opportunity for the other side to voice its case. The organization that brought him, the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology, is tech savvy and knows exactly what is going on. They invited him, under pretence of balance, in order to let him make himself look silly at a prestigious institution. His speech was worth attending only as an exhibition of practical satire.

      Or, to put it more bluntly, McBride doesn't have a "side". He is sheer incoherence, and you only waste your time trying to follow him.

      --

      The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  12. My favorite Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no copyright license in the United States today more fitting to Thomas Jefferson's idea of copyright or indeed to the conception of copyright contained in Article 1 Section 8, than ours. For we are pursuing an attempt at the diffusion of knowledge and the useful arts which is already proving far more effective at diffusing knowledge than all of the profit-motivated proprietary software distribution being conducted by the grandest and best funded monopoly in the history of the world.

    1. Re:My favorite Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There is no copyright license in the United States today more fitting to Thomas Jefferson's idea of copyright or indeed to the conception of copyright contained in Article 1 Section 8, than ours.

      Article I, section 8, paragraph 8:

      To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries(emphasis added).

      As much as I'm on the same side of this as you, the above Constitutional clause does not stop at the first comma. The clause, like it or not, does envision proprietary rights for "limited times". The "limited times" was the fight in Eldridge v. Ascroft.

      The idea at the time was that people needed an economic incentive to share their work and to let others expand upon it after the original author had sufficient opportunity to economically gain from the original work. The GNU/GPL is (in a way) contary to this original idea, as there is no limited time of exclusivity on either the original or a derivative work under the license. The next question seems to be whether the Constitution requires an exclusivity for copyright protection to be afforded.

    2. Re:My favorite Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      quote is a verb.

    3. Re:My favorite Quote by FrangoAssado · · Score: 1

      There is no copyright license in the United States today more fitting to Thomas Jefferson's idea of copyright or indeed to the conception of copyright contained in Article 1 Section 8, than ours. [my emphasis]

      Please note the concept of the copyright contained in the US constitution (which is more or less the same all around the world): copyright should promote the progress of science and useful arts, and this should be done by giving authors exclusive rights over their work for a while.

      Eben Moglen meant that the GPL fits better in the concept of promoting the progress than any other license: most commercial licenses (e.g. MS EULA) seek simply to make money to the company; some free licenses (e.g. BSD) don't require future progress to be shared with society.

  13. See the video version by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This was a great speech. I watched the whole video of the lecture, which is in Real Media on this page. I viewed it with the Helix player; Real's player obivously works as well.

    At about an hour in length, it was quite good. I really recommend it, because it puts both SCO and the things you hear Stallman say into very nice perspective, and shows how terribly confused Darl McBride really is. In particular you should watch for Moglen's description of the problems with using Eldred v. Ashcroft to support the odd notion that the GPL is unconstitutional. Darl doesn't realize it, but his argument indicates that he and the FSF are actually on the same side of that Supreme Court case.

    1. Re:See the video version by Curtman · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Mplayer plays it too, but unfortunately it only seems to play with the Windows codec. I could be wrong, I didn't put too much effort into it, but this seemed to work: (remove any anti-lameness filter spaces in the URL of course)

      mplayer -vc rv40win -playlist http://media.law.harvard.edu:8888/ramgen/jolt/spri ng_04/2004-02-23_ae_0630-0830.rm
  14. The Flip Side by Pave+Low · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We need to keep reminding people that what's at stake here is free speech. We need to keep reminding people that what we're doing is trying to keep the freedom of ideas in the 21st century,

    Does this mean that any piece of closed-source software is a threat fo Free Speech?

    Are the store shelves that are stocked with closed-source games and applications threatening the world? The customers who buy them don't seem much to care.

    Maybe some legislation is in order to free the source!!!!

    --
    SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    1. Re:The Flip Side by Soko · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does this mean that any piece of closed-source software is a threat fo (sic) Free Speech?

      Is it, now, right this moment? I really don't know for certain.

      Could it be in the future? You bet.

      Keeping the source open pretty well ensures that the software I use only serves my purposes, not anyone elses.

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
    2. Re:The Flip Side by October_30th · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Maybe some legislation is in order to free the source!!!!

      Please don't even talk about something that.

      I know it's not an analogy, but the first thing that came to my mind was: "Maybe some legislation is in order to make people politically active".

      It's about turning a fundamentally good thing one volunteers for into a compulsory duty.

      --
      The owls are not what they seem
    3. Re:The Flip Side by oldwarrior · · Score: 0

      LOL

      --
      If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    4. Re:The Flip Side by Pave+Low · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Here's a tip for you then. If you don't like it, don't buy it!!

      The rest of us can go on living under this horrible repression of not having the source code, because we don't care.

      Just keep the yapping about the immorality of it all to yourselves. The world will go on.

      --
      SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    5. Re:The Flip Side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's a tip for you then. If you don't like it, don't buy it!!

      Done that.

      The rest of us can go on living under this horrible repression of not having the source code, because we don't care.

      Okay...

      Just keep the yapping about the immorality of it all to yourselves. The world will go on.

      Here's a return tip for you, if you don't like my yapping then stop reading it.

    6. Re:The Flip Side by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software is gradually, incrementally and inexorably taking over more and more of our time, money and controlling our lives. Do you know who wrote the software that controls safety functions in your car? Do you know how it works? Do you know if there are bugs in it that could kill you?

      That is one example. I run into perhaps a dozen a week of instances where I have to troubleshoot some software/hardware interface to make the equipment work. Most is meagerly documented. This stuff is everywhere. With mechanical controls, a smart tech can figure out what is happening at least. With software it is a black box.

      There is an absurd notion that these things lose their value if someone can see how they work. There are dozens of good reasons to keep things secret; legal issues, trade secrets, competitive advantage, etc. The automatic response in most situations is to deny information. In fact, I can do jail time for trying to figure out how something works. But I don't really care about someone's 'business plan'. I want to have the possibility of knowing how something I purchase works. Yes, as in free technological speech. And in large part due to Mr. Moglen and his cohorts, there is a growing body of software out there that is open.

      Derek

  15. Confusing the issue by pubjames · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "It's free software, it's not open source"

    I think if they want to make this message strongly they should keep it simple. Making the distinction between "free software" and "open source" will just confuse most members of the public. Isn't "open source" also about free speech? The same general principals apply don't they? Why do they have to confuse the issue?

    1. Re:Confusing the issue by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Free Software" exists to sell the idea of freedom. "Open Source" exists to sell the reality of freedom.

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    2. Re:Confusing the issue by Communomancer · · Score: 5, Informative

      For those of you too "young" to remember, it was the "open source" advocates (Eric "ESR" Raymond leading the charge) that, imo, muddied the waters in the first place. The driving notion was that in order to find acceptance in the commercial marketplace (as if that were the holy grail we should all be shooting for), "Free Software" had to change its name and its image, because nobody whose job depended on it would ever use something that was "free". So, they created (and indeed trademarked) the moniker "Open Source Software".

      I'm not saying that their methods were not in line with their goals (though I always had reservations about the goals themselves). Name makes a difference in the image. Which is exactly the point that Eben is making in his speech when he advocates not forgetting the "Free" part.

      --
      "UNIX" is never having to say you're sorry.
    3. Re:Confusing the issue by John+Harrison · · Score: 2, Informative
      Obviously the transcriber messed up here. That should read, "It's Free software, it's not open source."

      Obviously the transcriber has missed the point if Free doen't have the uppercase F.

    4. Re:Confusing the issue by Telex4 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think if they want to make this message strongly they should keep it simple. Making the distinction between "free software" and "open source" will just confuse most members of the public. Isn't "open source" also about free speech? The same general principals apply don't they? Why do they have to confuse the issue?

      But they are defining the issue by contrasting those two terms. In a sense, "open source" advocates are doing as much to defend and reclaim our civil liberties as proprietary vendors.

      Free Software is about making software work for communities, whereas Open Source is about development methodologies. By confusing the two you're sending people conflicting messages... we're about better development methodologies, and, oh, you get certain freedoms too.

      In the light of Microsoft, SCO, the DMCA, the EUCD, software patents, the EUIPD and all the other recent examples of the abuse of technology I'd say that Eben Moglen and the Free Software Foundation are spot on in their approach.

    5. Re:Confusing the issue by Brandybuck · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      A different term was sought because the FSF was using the word "free" completely outside of the dictionary definition. It only meant was the FSF said it meant. So when a commercial entity heard the term "Free Software", they didn't know whether it referred to "free beer", "free of restrictions and uncumberances", or "free as in that ranting guy from MIT."

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    6. Re:Confusing the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Free Software" exists to sell the idea of freedom. "Open Source" exists to sell the reality of freedom.

      Almost. Free Software is about freedom. Open Source, as you say, seems to be about selling stuff.

    7. Re:Confusing the issue by braddock · · Score: 1

      It should be noted though that those "open source" advocates were the ones who got Netscape to open their source code. In fact the term "Open Source" had been decided upon by ESR and the rest the day after their meeting with Netscape executives convincing them to "open" the Netscape source code in 1998, as I recall. Obviously they saw a real perception problem with "Free" with the Netscape executives. Those were my old Free Software Union and Open Source Journal days...*sigh*

      Braddock Gaskill

    8. Re:Confusing the issue by jglen490 · · Score: 1

      Agree wholeheartedly. The distinction between "free" as in speech and "free" as in beer is a comparison of apples and oranges. Both are useful, both have value, but both don't have to be in every fruit salad ;). "Free" as in speech is the basis of freedom, "free" as in beer can be the reward of labor, but is actually a choice. That is the basis of the GPL licensing plan. The Linux kernel is a copyrighted work, but it is licensed freely and openly under the terms of the GPL. If you violate the GPL licensing terms, you are pressing you're luck on not also violating the legal copyrighted work which in turn presents the possibility of punishment under the law.

    9. Re:Confusing the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It only meant was the FSF said it meant. So when a commercial entity heard the term "Free Software", they didn't know whether it referred to "free beer", "free of restrictions and uncumberances", or "free as in that ranting guy from MIT."

      Interesting perspective considering that many in the open source community claim that they mean the same thing by "open source" as Richard Stallman means by "free software". Russel Nelson has claimed this quite a number of times.

      So assuming that those people have any integrity, what you're saying they were doing was picking the new term "open source" to clarify that it did mean "free as in that ranting guy from MIT"?

    10. Re:Confusing the issue by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So assuming that those people have any integrity, what you're saying they were doing was picking the new term "open source" to clarify that it did mean "free as in that ranting guy from MIT"?

      They picked the term "open source" for two reasons. First, it was a slightly more accurate term, at least in English. Second, and more importantly, the FSF had politicized the word "free" too much. "Free Software" comes with ideological baggage. Even today you "membership" in the Free Software Movement depends on your acceptance of a particular political ideology. With "Open Source", you don't have to join any political party, be a part of any movement, or have a "cause."

      The "Free" in "Free Software" originally meant "free from legal encumberances, and in the past it was quite common to see the term "unencumbered software" in reference to this class of software, especially for non-copyleft software. But the FSF took a generalized term like "free software", and by capitalizing it, made it a political movement. Businesses which would otherwise be entirely in favor of unencumbered software find having to join an activist cause too large of a pill to swallow.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    11. Re:Confusing the issue by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      "We need to keep reminding people that what we're doing is trying to keep the freedom of ideas in the 21st century, in a world where there are guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth if it would make value for the shareholders."

      The difference between Free Software and Open Source is this:
      Open Source wants there to be no paste-it labels on the ideas.
      Free Software wants to put a paste-it label on every idea that reads "$0.00".

    12. Re:Confusing the issue by TFloore · · Score: 1
      "Free Software" exists to sell the idea of freedom. "Open Source" exists to sell the reality of freedom.
      I'd really rather be cautious is saying what a diverse movement like FS and OSS exist for, but I think you only have it half right.

      "Free Software" exists to sell the idea of freedom.
      Correct. I agree with this.

      "Open Source" exists to sell the reality of freedom.
      Incorrect. Try this instead:
      "Open Source" exists to sell the reality of better software.
      Open Source is only marginally about freedom. Most discussions/evangelizing of Open Source talks about software quality. Not freedom. It's about better software, with better quality, for lower cost, purely a pragmatic decision. Freedom is a "oh, yeah, that's nice too" with Open Source.

      This is part of why Richard Stallman hates it when Free Software and Open Source Software get confused or blurred.
      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    13. Re:Confusing the issue by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      "Open source" was coined because it doesn't have the same problem that "free" does, that being the inability to effectively communicate that it's about "free as in speech" not "free as in beer". Saying "open source" gets the idea across that the speaker is talking about being able to openly access the source code, not about getting the program for no charge. Now, most of the time a free program has *both* features - that you get the source with it *and* that the program is also distributed at no charge. That just added to the confusion, because trypically *both* meanings of "free" were applicable. It became important to have a term to specify which aspect of the software you are talking about - the price or the openness of the code. Consider: Under the "gratis" definition of "free", Internet Explorer is "free software". It's because of this sort of confusion over the word "free" (that the closed-source companies were deliberately taking advantage of in their FUD), that ESR felt the need to coin a new term.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    14. Re:Confusing the issue by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Informative


      Even today you "membership" in the Free Software Movement depends on your acceptance of a particular political ideology.

      No, it doesn't. I do agree that the PERCEPTION that this is the case did hold free software back quite a bit, and that a new term was needed to get around that. But that perception was a misconception.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    15. Re:Confusing the issue by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      The quality of the software is dependent upon the freedom of it. Without the freedom, you cannot achieve the gains in quality that open source promises. Freedom is not a "oh, yeah, that's nice too", but instead a prerequisite. We don't say anything about freedom because 'free' scares people.

      RMS hates it when Open Source gets confused with Free Software because he is of the Chomskyan mold that says that words shape thinking. He very firmly believes that people will not appreciate, respect, and demand freedom unless they hear the word 'free'. That's obviously wrong.

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  16. Transcript is good by overshoot · · Score: 3, Informative
    but for anyone with the time, it is absolutely worth going to actually see and hear the speech itself.

    Moglen is a treat to watch and hear; in an era of dismal public speakers he's a reminder that people once went to Court and campaign gatherings just to hear English rhetoric as a fine art.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
    1. Re:Transcript is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...] he's a reminder that people once went to Court and campaign gatherings just to hear English rhetoric as a fine art.

      Because they didn't have the Internet, video games, movies, or any other better way to waste their time. ;)

  17. Another great quote... by swillden · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... and one relevant to a much-debated topic here on slashdot.

    Those of us who believe in the GNU GPL as a particularly valuable license to use believe in that because we think that there are other licenses which too weakly protect the commons and which are more amenable to a form of appropriation that might be ultimately destructive -- this is our concern with the freedoms presented, for example, by the BSD license

    Moglen makes a very lucid explanation of why the apparently-more-free BSD license is less valuable to people who believe in freedom. He characterizes the the world of free software as a "self-healing commons", that cannot be appropriated, or destroyed, and points out that a BSD-style commons is much more vulnerable to being "proprietized".

    The really interesting parts of his talk, though, were the bits about open hardware and radio spectrum, and their implications on technological free speech, and of course his extensive and detailed explanation of why he thinks the free software battle is essentially already won.

    Even if you don't agree with him, Eben Moglen is a persuasive speaker with very deep and powerful ideas. Very well worth reading/listening to.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    1. Re:Another great quote... by hitmark · · Score: 1

      somtimes there can be to mutch freedom...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    2. Re:Another great quote... by Karn · · Score: 1

      George Bush? You're a Slashdotter!?

      --


      Why do I keep typing pythong?
    3. Re:Another great quote... by hitmark · · Score: 1

      somebody mod that one funny as hell :)

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    4. Re:Another great quote... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Moglen makes a very lucid explanation of why the apparently-more-free BSD license is less valuable to people who believe in freedom.

      But he's still wearing the FSF blinders that don't permit him to see the truth. The ultimate goal of the FSF is to eliminate copyright on software. They seek a world in which all software is public domain software. Yet the only way to get from the GPL to public domain, is to traverse through the land occupied by the BSD and MIT licenses.

      In other words, they want a world that is 100% free, call 95% free licenses "weak", and encourage the use of 90% free licenses instead.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    5. Re:Another great quote... by swillden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The ultimate goal of the FSF is to eliminate copyright on software. They seek a world in which all software is public domain software.

      No, they don't. They specifically do *not* want all software to be public domain, because public domain software can be hijacked. What they want is to ensure that software can always be modified by its users and that cannot be achieved with public domain software, because public domain software can be published in binary-only format.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:Another great quote... by kirkjobsluder · · Score: 1

      I think that there is still a big problem with this logic which is that the argument that an information commons can be "proprietized" is rather weak. It depends on a bit of cognitive dissonance that argues software is a non-rivalous resource, but that software commons need to be protected as a rivalous resource.

      If anything, history has shown that the best defense against something being "proprietized" is to make it ubiquitous. Shakespeare, Twain, Bronte and Austin have survived multiple proprietary publications, editions and adaptations because they are ubiquitous.

    7. Re:Another great quote... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      They specifically don't want software to be owned. Software that is not owned is in the public domain. Therefore they desire software to be in the public domain. Maybe not in the present, but eventually.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    8. Re:Another great quote... by swillden · · Score: 1

      I think that there is still a big problem with this logic which is that the argument that an information commons can be "proprietized" is rather weak. It depends on a bit of cognitive dissonance that argues software is a non-rivalous resource, but that software commons need to be protected as a rivalous resource.

      I don't think it's problematic at all. The reason that the logic has to be somewhat different from what works for, say, literature, is the fact that software can be usefully published in a way that parts can be kept secret.

      The situation with software (at least, with certain types of software) is that it progresses fastest and most effectively if it's treated as a non-rivalrous resourse, but that doesn't change the fact that it can be more effectively exploited by one individual if it's treated as rivalrous.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    9. Re:Another great quote... by swillden · · Score: 1

      They specifically don't want software to be owned.

      Yes.

      Software that is not owned is in the public domain.

      No. The article you linked to provides its own definition of ownership, one that doesn't exactly correspond with the notion of ownership of copyright (whose antithesis is public domain).

      Public domain software can be controlled in ways that are incompatible with the FSF's goals. They don't want PD software, now or ever.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    10. Re:Another great quote... by k_head · · Score: 1

      No you are wrong. They want software to be free (as in freedom). They believe that software in the public domain is actually bad for the commons in the long run because it can be made proprietary.

      The only way to assure that is with strong copyright protections.

      --
      The best way to support the US war effort is to continue buying American products.
    11. Re:Another great quote... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Public domain software can be controlled...

      You cannot control what cannot be owned. In fact, "control" is the very hallmark of ownership. Who has the right to control a piece of public domain software? No one, because no one owns it.

      Let me give you a concrete example. "Othello" by William Shakespeare. This is in the public domain, and has been for centuries. No one owns Othello. No one controls Othello. You could certainly, if you wish, issue your own version of Othello starring Darl McBride out for a pound of flesh, but it would not *BE* Othello anymore. No matter how much you bastardized your version, the original would still be there untouched and uncontrolled. You have no ability to tell me how I may or may not perform my own producction of Othello.

      They don't want PD software, now or ever.

      Tough titties. Eventually their copyright will run out. Currently that's slightly less than a century. Too long in my opinion, but definitely not infinite. Thus, baring the reanimation and subsequent reelection of Sonny Bono, GNU GCC 3.3.3 will be in the public domain. And if RMS is still around there won't be anything he can do about it. The future GNU GCC 9.34.2 won't be in the public domain, but version 3.3.3 will be.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    12. Re:Another great quote... by swillden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let me give you a concrete example. "Othello" by William Shakespeare.This is in the public domain,

      What's your point? Software has several major differences from literature; it's a very different animal. The fact that it's functional as well as expressive, the fact that it's constructive rather than interpretive, the fact that it can be published and yet kept secret simultaneously -- all these are fundamental differences that make analogies with literature weak at best. I wrote a fairly complete explanation of these differences and some of their obvious implications here, if you're interested in more detail.

      IMO, that's one of the biggest problems with current copyright law -- it treats computer software almost identically to literature, and that does not make sense. We really need a ground up analysis of what software is and how the public interest can best be served (to promote the progress of useful arts and sciences) and then we need to construct an appropriate legal framework that meets these goals.

      The software-related changes to copyright law (and patent law) that have been made have not been made in this way, with an eye toward the public good. Instead, they've been made at the behest and in favor of particular special interests, who care mostly about increasing their profits. I don't begrudge anyone their profits, but the purpose of IP law is to establish a structure that ultimately promotes progress and the flow of material into the public domain (note the two parts there -- the order is important), and that is not what has happened.

      I actually don't think that the GPL is the best way to do this, and Stallman and Moglen would probably agree with me. What the GPL is is an extraordinarily clever way of exploiting the mismatches between current, excessively powerful copyright law and the nature of software to produce a system that more effectively meets the original goals of copyright.

      Eventually their copyright will run out.

      Well, we can hope that copyright will run out; CTEA provides for regular congressional review and extension as necessary, so it may not. I don't think that affects the FSF's position at all, though; what they want to achieve is to have Free software available that accomplishes whatever people want to do now, and 100, 70, 50 or even 20 years is a very, very long time in software. Code that old is usually irrelevant except for historical interest.

      However, the FSF has no desire to make copyright infinite in duration. You're arguing out of context. Here's what the context was: You said the FSF wanted all software to be public domain, I said that they didn't want that to be the case now, or ever. I did not say they never want any piece of software to fall into the public domain, I said they never want *all* software to be in the public domain, at least not as currently defined by law. The FSF wants new software to be protected, so that the author and copyright holder can guarantee its freedom, if he or she so chooses.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    13. Re:Another great quote... by amorsen · · Score: 1

      I bet Richard Stallman looks forward to the day the GPL is rendered toothless by the revocation of copyright. The GPL is a temporary evil we must endure until the greater evil is defeated.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  18. Copyrights must die because FS must live by argoff · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Thank You!!!!! and Amen !!!!
    IMHO this is what all the other people (like Lessing) who want a compromize between the copyright lords and the information wants to be free crowd miss. That it's not about copyrights at all, it's about free speech. In the eyes of the internet there is no difference between copyright content, porn content, and free speech content. If you have someone in a position to restrict any information, you have someone in a position to restrict any information they disagree with - it's that simple.
    I think in the end though, we will not be able to rely on the government to secure our free speech rights online. We're simply gonna half to do it in ourselves in defiance. We're gonna half to force an all or nothing proposition. A) Shut down the internet, B) have no controll over content online. So other than that, the internet is completely outside the governments juristiction.

    1. Re:Copyrights must die because FS must live by brunosock · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Are you an anarchist? Idea's like this don't work because absolute freedoms don't truly exist. Free speech is relative to the rights of others. The government sets up restrictions so that one person doesn't infringe on the rights of another. I agree that sometimes the government does a horrible job at this, but seriously, we NEED someone to do something. -ie- I just made a porn website based on pictures of your mom without her permission. Hmm, no content control online, hmm.

    2. Re:Copyrights must die because FS must live by argoff · · Score: 1

      Alot of time we see the scientific world, and understand implicitly that existence is rational, and subject our values to repeatable, measurable, and observable criteria (scientific method) - but then all of a sudden when it comes to rights or freedoms, many of the very same people will think that everything is subjective, relative, and about opinion. Well, how can we have a rational argument with such people?

      Look, if you don't believe in the same rights as I do then fine, make your point. But don't go off spewing this crap that everything is subjective.

      PS: If you post pictures of my mom, I'll think you're a jerk, but other than that it's out of my controll. But if you stalk my mom to get them, then don't be supprised if I'm waiting in the dark shadows for your next visit!

    3. Re:Copyrights must die because FS must live by brunosock · · Score: 1

      We should discuss the book/movie "A Clockwork Orange" sometime.

      And I have to admit, if you are willing to allow me to do something that you disagree with just because of your philosophical stance, that is an admirable thing.

      As for now, lets agree to disagree.

  19. Interesting by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they really mean free as in freedom why don't they just call it that, "Freedom Software Foundation". Just to combat all the confusion about the multiple uses of the word 'free' in the EN-US language. Might also take a bit of the edge off the "terrorist" or "communist" coments directed at it. Although I think they actually would be more appropriately be called the "Software Freedom Foundation". That would require a change to their acronym but be closer to their intent of liberating software. I am in however in some disagreement on the "freeing of the spectrum". I think that if you removed regulation from that it would rapidly degenerate into anarchy ruled by nobody usable by nobody, e.g. bigest transmitter wins. You can have free bandwith on packet radio now under the current regulations. It is generally limitted bandwidth but that is the nature (physics if you want to be precise) of long distance low power radio. Another poster mentioned seeing bandwidth as a service like water or electricity. This is reasonable as the infrastructure (hardware) of the internet is not free. Being a radio node would probably not be as free as he envisions. Would you relay other peoples data? If you would not, would you expect someone else to? Somebody would have to relay packets and could charge a fee for the service (satelite internet service springs to mind as an example).

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Interesting by cats-paw · · Score: 1

      "The single greatest free software problem in the 21st century is how to return the electromagnetic spectrum to use by sharing rather than use-by-propertization."

      Spectrum can be made a _public_ thoroughfare again.

      Anarchy will not rule. There is nothing wrong with putting limits on power and spectrum. What Mr Moglen is talking about is that vast majority of the spectrum is, currently, financially and politically controlled, basically by being allocated to corporations.

      More spectrum needs to be allocated to citizens for free use.

      --
      Absolute statements are never true
    2. Re:Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they really mean free as in freedom why don't they just call it that, "Freedom Software Foundation".

      That would confuse people even more. In English "free" can mean either libre or gratis, hence the usual confusion, but in American "freedom" means "French".

  20. Ob. Simpson's quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bart: I'll do it pro boner. Skinnner: Don't you mean pro bono? Bart: I know what I said.

  21. free/open ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But wait, I thought the FSF mantra used to be "open source, not free software" to spawn corporate adoption and to give the impression it has value and isn't a worthless giveaway. They're now reversing that to make a different point? they need a coherent message...

  22. It's worth _listening_ to. by cduffy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Having listened to the speech, I assure 'yall it's much better listened to than read.

    I've put together a BitTorrent share with a Speex encoding of his speech. Please be gentle.

    1. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by John+Harrison · · Score: 1

      If it is BT how can we not be gentle?

    2. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Poking around at other items on the server's webspace, maybe.

    3. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Oh -- and now that I think of it, the primary way to be gentle (or at least _nice_) when doing a BT download is to leave BT open and seed for a while after your download's done.

    4. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by John+Harrison · · Score: 1

      I was wondering if that was what you meant, and if so, why you didn't state it. :)

    5. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand BitTorrents. Being gentle is bad.

    6. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by cduffy · · Score: 1

      If you'd read the subthread, by "be gentle" I meant (among other things) "please seed after downloading"; the same machine that's running the tracker is presently seeding.

    7. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by hacker · · Score: 1
      Not if you configure your tracker properly. That's what the --allowed_dir option is for.

      Anyone who runs a production BitTorrent tracker should be very familiar with the options, source code, design, and limitations of the project, before they open the ports for public access.

    8. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by wookyhoo · · Score: 1

      I can vouch for that too.

      I probably listened to the whole thing four or five times, and hearing/watching him speak really was a pleasure. There is a fair amount of humour that you can only pick up by hearing his voice.

      He didn't move around at all, or fidget, and he was in complete and utter control the whole time.

      If you saw the Darl speech, it was about as far from that as you can possibly get.

      MadMax.

    9. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Sorry, all, but as it's come to my attention that Harvard objects to 3rd-party distribution of this speech, I'm taking the tracker down now.

    10. Re:It's worth _listening_ to. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      Well, I guess I am guilty of using the old terms myself too.

  23. PocketPC developers take note by Mr_Silver · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We need to keep reminding people that what's at stake here is free speech. We need to keep reminding people that what we're doing is trying to keep the freedom of ideas in the 21st century, in a world where there are guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth if it would make value for the shareholders.

    Hear hear. Now can someone please point this out to the PocketPC developers out there? I got myself this new fangled PDA from Microsoft and the complete lack of GPL code out there for it is truely amazing.

    There are plenty of applications, most of them are shockingly written but the developer has stuck it up on Handago with a tag of $15 in the hope that he/she can make a quick buck off it.

    I, on the other hand, tried to garner interest in developing a simple framework to allow embedded visual basic programmers to create today plugins really easily. The idea was that the code to produce the today screen (which had to be eVC++) would be GPL and that the code for interfacing to it would be free (for use under any licence). Anyone who improved the protocol had to share it, but you didn't have to share the code for your own application if you really didn't want to.

    Unfortunately I can't programme today screens (or evc++ for that matter) for toffee to I advertised for people to help me.

    I had interest from 10 people - not one of them was interested in it being GPL. They would only agree to work with me on it if it was going to be sold and licenced to "approved" people. In short, they wanted to make money from something closed and hidden.

    So what can I do? Learning eVC++ is not really an option unless people want to see something in 2010. Is there anywhere I can find good people who are willing to spread the GPL word in the PocketPC community?

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:PocketPC developers take note by sremick · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Hmmm... a PDA designed to run a OS created by the biggest closed-source anti-GPL capitalistic monopoly in the world. which can only be programmed using a language created by the same said vendor, which caters to and encourages a similar mindset amongst developers. Many of whom are already used to the same sort of closed-source OS/tool/hardware lock-in on the desktop by same said vendor.

      And you wonder why you're having trouble finding GPL programmers for it? :)

      You might have better luck trying to sell the same idea to the Palm community. Not only do you already have a bunch of "anything-but-Microsoft" folks, but even the new development tools are based on the Eclipse open-source IDE. There are FAR more apps and developers out for Palm, many of them free.

    2. Re:PocketPC developers take note by oldwarrior · · Score: 0

      >>>with a tag of $15 in the hope that he/she can make a quick buck off it.

      Maybe he(she) was trying to pay their heating bill since they were laid off by their company that formerly sold lots of "commercial software" but now just offshores and does service work.

      --
      If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    3. Re:PocketPC developers take note by Kismet · · Score: 1

      I've thought of this very thing. I couldn't find a program to read .chm files on my pocket PC without paying for it, in spite of a nice GPL library for working with these files. So I decided to make my own reader, and GPL it (I need to do a little more research first - typically IE will read these formats, but apparently not on PocketPC).

      I also thought it would be fun to make and release some PocketPC games under an open license.

      Problem is that I have mighty little time, so it'll be a while before I get around to these projects.

    4. Re:PocketPC developers take note by ILikeRed · · Score: 1

      Maybe you would be happier if you first installed Opie on your device. They just released a new SDK for that project as well....

      --
      I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
  24. Re:Nonsense by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Is Free Speech in danger when McDonald's doesn't publish the recipes of their menu or when KFC keeps the 13 spices and herbs secret?

    It is in danger if you are not allowed to not talk about how bad the BigMac sucks or are sued when you talk about the ingredients. Or, if McDonalds sue Burger King because the whopper is similar. Or the 6 year old is sued for taking apart a whopper.

  25. Free Software? Nah. by spectecjr · · Score: 1, Interesting

    We need to keep reminding people that what's at stake here is free speech. We need to keep reminding people that what we're doing is trying to keep the freedom of ideas in the 21st century, in a world where there are guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth if it would make value for the shareholders

    Funny... that would make one think that patents are the enemy here, not copyrights. Copyrights protect the embodiment of a single idea in a concrete form. Patents protect an idea which is a process of doing something.

    Ergo, both of these guys are barking up the wrong tree.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
    1. Re:Free Software? Nah. by LMCBoy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Funny... that would make one think that patents are the enemy here, not copyrights.

      Try actually reading/listening to the speech. Moglen says precisely this. You are incredibly confused if you think any Free Software advocate considers copyright law their "enemy". The GPL fundamentally *depends* on the sanctity of copyrights.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    2. Re:Free Software? Nah. by GPLDAN · · Score: 1

      Why don't you actually articulate an argument rather than restate definitions?

    3. Re:Free Software? Nah. by spectecjr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are incredibly confused if you think any Free Software advocate considers copyright law their "enemy". The GPL fundamentally *depends* on the sanctity of copyrights.

      Copyright law is the enemy of the FSF. That's why the GPL is written the way it is; it's designed to use copyright against itself, as kind of a legalistic aikido.

      The FSF would be happiest if no copyright existed for software. If that occurs, then the GPL goes away - which is fine by them, because it's no longer necessary. If it does not occur, they can cause pressure for the same end result, by using copyright to enforce the GPL.

      If you seriously think that Free Software Advocates support copyright on software in any form, you've obviously not read up enough on how exactly the GPL is designed.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    4. Re:Free Software? Nah. by Christ-on-a-bike · · Score: 2, Insightful
      No, you're wrong. Think it through.

      SCENARIO A

      Copyright exists. The GPL exists. People who break the terms of the GPL are guilty of copyright infringement and can be sued for big bucks. Proprietary software makers play the same game with their EULAs. (Hint: this is the actual world.)

      SCENARIO B

      Copyright does not exist. The proprietary software people play the same game, but using lots of DRM in the mix instead of copyright law. Free software is all essentially BSD'd. Why? Because once anyone has the source, they can do whatever they like with it including copying, changing, compiling, and distributing binaries for money.

      How is scenario B good for FSF types? No-one would need to share source because there would be no threat of copyright violation damages. There would be constant forking and very little would get done.

    5. Re:Free Software? Nah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scenario B allows reverse engineering, modification, and redistribution. All software would be free.

  26. Re:Nonsense by FooAtWFU · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or your dear sweet old grandma is sued because her age-old family recipe violates some sort of McDonald's trade secret or patent.

    --
    The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  27. Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by NewIntellectual · · Score: 0, Interesting

    There is a deliberate obfuscation that leads to the legitimate confusion regarding Open Source vs. Free Software. That obfuscation was created by Richard Stallman.

    Stallman's motives are not a secret. I own an old issue of Dr. Dobb's Journal that published a rant by Stallman which lays out his views in a completely unambiguous way; I really need to find it again so that I can post the exact reference when needed. In that rant, Stallman unambiguously made it clear that he considers making money from software to be *bad*, period. He suggests that it is flat out wrong for software companies to exist and that the world would be better served if, perhaps, a government agency wrote freely distributed software. He invokes Kant's philosophy explicitly to provide the so-called moral justification for this view; a philosophy which is utterly against personal gain of any sort.

    The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used. Some choose to (try to) sell that IP; if there is a market, so be it. Some have chosen to simply give it away; that is also their right. However, the secondary issue then remains: Are they doing so because they feel guilt about making a profit? Because "knowledge should be free"? If so, they are operating on a bad moral premise, the idea that profit is evil. Even if it's $1 for an entire operating system. (Note that Red Hat charges a lot more than that for support, but Linus Torvalds and others who created their product gets no compensation linked to those charges.)

    The SCO legal action is bound to be used as a straw man to attack profit making with software IP. Their basis for claiming ownership of Linux is specious. The real issue, again, is whether the *creator* (or creators) of a piece of IP have the moral right to designate its usage. In other words, whether the products of the mind can be *property*. Grant that and the side by side existence of Microsoft with Open Source is no mystery and no problem. Attack that and you do attack the foundations of a civilized society, because you support the notion that "society" can freely steal from those who create.

    1. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used...Attack that and you do attack the foundations of a civilized society

      That's a load of astonishingly ill-informed nonsense. The basis of intellectual property is the promotion of the creation of works that benefit society. To accomplish this, the government grants creators certain limited rights to control certain aspects of how their creations are used. You can read all about this (and nothing about your "absolute" "moral" claptrap) in the foundation of my civilized society, the U.S. Consitution.

    2. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by 110010001000 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      This is absolutely correct analysis of Stallmans motives. The idea isn't to support "freedom", not to destroy the idea that software IP should be sold "for profit". This is very significant and should be considered carefully by those that presume to support the GPL. Stallman is a Marxist.

      It is interesting to note that all the corporations that claim to support the concepts of the GPL keep their own bits of IP hidden away and locked up. However they do encourage you to keep donating your IP to the "community", since they are reaping millions in profits from that IP.

    3. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by JimDabell · · Score: 5, Informative

      Stallman unambiguously made it clear that he considers making money from software to be *bad*, period.

      It's very strange that you can't back this claim up, especially as Stallman and the FSF have made money by selling GNU software.

      In fact, you can order GNU software directly from the FSF right now.

      In fact, why not read what the FSF have to say on the matter straight from their own website:

      Actually we encourage people who redistribute free software to charge as much as they wish or can.

    4. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by ryants · · Score: 5, Informative
      I really need to find it again so that I can post the exact reference when needed. In that rant, Stallman unambiguously made it clear that he considers making money from software to be *bad*, period.
      I'll take this (Selling Free Software) over your hazy recollections and rants any day.
      --

      Ryan T. Sammartino
      "Ancora imparo"

    5. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used.

      That is your opinion, and has no basis in law. The reasoning behind copyright is that it promotes growth of the public domain.

      Attack that and you do attack the foundations of a civilized society, because you support the notion that "society" can freely steal from those who create.

      You need to look up the definition of "steal".

    6. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by tybalt44 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used.

      And it's an idea that is 100% moose hockey.

      Unlike the natural properties (things which are capable of being owned), ideas are not capable of being owned. "Intellectual property" is a creature of law, designed solely to encourage the fixture of ideas (not, crucially, the creation of ideas... the purpose of copyright and patent is solely to have people WRITE STUFF DOWN so that others can access it and use it). It's since gone badly off the rails, but that's the animating purpose behind all such laws.

      You can't own an idea, any more than you can own the word "dental". You can keep an idea private, but that's different from owning it.

      The fact is, that "moral rights" never even appeared on the radar screen of intellectual property until well after the current model of permanent ownership of the products of all human ideas came into being.

      There is no theft in the "theft" of an idea, for the simple fact that my appropriation of "your" idea does not alter or harm your own idea one iota. My taking the "idea" under my control does not, in any way, affect the control you have over the idea. As a result, ideas are simply not capable of being owned, since the only purpose of ownership is the taking under human control of those things that can be controlled.

      Sorry for the heavy Hegelian slant of this (I'm hauling my concept of ownership, incidentally, out of Hegel's _Philosophy of Right_). But in a nutshell, ideas are not things, and treating them as things is stupid.

    7. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by hitmark · · Score: 1

      what red hat sells is the same as the doctor sells, a service to help you in need. what microsft sells is the right for you to use theyre product on one computer and by one person pr license bought. can you tell the diffrence there?

      basicly microsft sells you the right to do something, mutch in the same way that the mafia sell you the right to set up shop in theyre area;)

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    8. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by sploxx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Stallman is a Marxist.
      Probably right in a sense. Stallman is somehwat of a visionary. He forethought many things now happening in the software world, and with his analysis, he is IMHO fairly correct.
      Now Marx, surely a visionary, forethought many of the problems inherent in unrestrained capitalism.

      Both of them searched (or are still searching) for solutions to the problems they discovered. From the purely scientifc analysis they got to the merely political task of proposing solutions. Their solutions are radical.

      Most people (me included) furtunately disagree about their radical solutions for more or less obvious reasons. But the problems are still not solved.

      So instead of abandoning both the solution *and* the analysis, one should IMHO still think about the analysis and criticize it. But the need is still there to invent other, better, moderate ways of coping with the problems.

    9. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by NewIntellectual · · Score: 1

      Back WHAT claim up? Are you saying that Stallman did NOT say what he said in that Dr. Dobb's article? You're out of luck. He did. Has he supposedly changed his mind? I'm sure it's been toned down a bit and made less obvious in recent years. But a major, actual change in his views? I don't see any evidence of that.

      As far as "encouraging the sale of free software", that is transparently a cynical ploy. The only way somebody could sell "free software" for more than a pittance is by fooling the end user about the ready availability of the software all over the place for no more than the cost of an internet download, which is as close to free as you can get these days. And in any case, the *creator* of the software, by such design, gets *no part* of almost any of those sales, which is perfectly in keeping with Kant's philosophy of anti-self.

    10. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by sploxx · · Score: 1

      Does it matter if he said that or does it not?

      One should give people the chance to change their opinions, and I agree/disagree about what RMS says *now*.

    11. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by babyrat · · Score: 1

      so if I build a mousetrap and patent it am I patenting the design of the mousetrap or the mousetrap?

      If I am patenting the mousetrap, could someone then look at my patent, and sell plans to make the moustrap?

      Could they then offer a service to build a mousetrap from the plans they just sold? They really wouldn't be selling a mousetrap, they would be selling the plans of the mousetrap. and then selling a service to fasten bits of metal and wood together according to those plans.

      In reality they are selling a mousetrap that I have patented. So did I patent the mousetrap, or the ideas behind the mousetrap?

    12. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      >the purpose of copyright and patent is solely to have people WRITE STUFF DOWN

      I would disagree, it to compensate people for their ideas.

      If develop a 1W lightbulb, I would patent it so I could sell the lightbulb without others ripping me off and selling cheaper. I could then recoup some of my invention costs.

    13. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Kismet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are two problems with your argument.

      1) You make reference to a Dr. Dobbs article, but we have no way to independently verify your reference; because it is too vague. We can't go and look at the article to determine if your paraphrase of Mr. Stallman is acurate. Certainly his recent behavior does not back up your claim (as has been pointed out by others in this thread), so your citation is merely manipulative and can't be taken as serious.

      2) I have studied Kant, and I am not familiar with any so-called philosophy of anti-self. Kant's well-known contribution to philosophy was his a-priori metaphysics, which was a brilliant and thoughtful counterpoint to the empiricists. Perhaps you could recommend one of Kant's writings in which the theory of anti-self is presented and discussed?

      I find your argument manipulative because of its weak backing. The references to Dr. Dobbs and Immanuel Kant do not make me comfortable as to your authority in making such assertions regarding Mr. Stallman.

      Perhaps you could enlighten us with some more tangible evidence?

    14. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by rking · · Score: 1

      Back WHAT claim up? Are you saying that Stallman did NOT say what he said in that Dr. Dobb's article?

      I think it's pretty obvious that he's saying that he's sceptical as to the accuracy of your paraphrasal of what Stallman said in an article that you admit you no longer have access to.

    15. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by pjrc · · Score: 1
      The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used.

      Absolutely wrong!

      The authors and publisher of a newspaper has no moral right to determine how I use my lawfully acquired copy of their newspaper. It's up to me if I want to read it, discard it, or wad it up to aid starting wood burning in my fireplace.

      Likewise, Microsoft has no moral right to determine is I use Word to write a business letter, or write advertising material for products I might sell, or any other function. How I use the copy I have legally obtained is up to me. The author has absolutely no moral right to dictate how I make use if it.

      In fact, I would argue that it is morally obectional for authors to attempt to control exactly how people may make use of their works, after having lawfully obtained them.

      There is a distinction between using work and publically performing it, such as movies.

    16. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by tybalt44 · · Score: 1

      You're not patenting either. The patent is on the process for building the mousetrap. The design cannot be patented, neither can the trap itself. Just the method for building/creating it.

      What they *can't*, do, is offer the trap building service. They can - in theory - make an identical trap, so long as they don't use your method. From a practical point of view, that is generally ignored.

    17. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Christ-on-a-bike · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I would disagree, it to compensate people for their ideas.

      Stop thinking about it in terms of 'compensation'! You want society to compensate you for having a brilliant idea? No. No society has ever done this, because people have always had brilliant ideas regardless of copyright/patent law. (Ask Socrates.) Patents and copyrights are both incentives to publish. And there the resemblance between them ends.

      Copyright is looking less and less justified in the light of ubiquitous near-free Internet distribution. Any information is now essentially free to publish.

      Patents have separate practical enforcement problems which relate to the attempt to allow patents on software. Patents on software are wrong because they constrain the publishing of information (software is information). No other kind of patent can constrain publishing. You might as well let people patent sentences of English. (Imagine the deCSS code as a sentence of English.)

      To repeat: a patent on a drug could (say) stop poor people getting the drug. But it would not stop them knowing how to make the drug, and so after the patent expires they could make it. But a patent on a piece of computer code stops people from even knowing how the code works, because no free source implementation of it is legal to publish.

    18. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by tybalt44 · · Score: 1

      No, it's not. That's not the original purpose of patent law. The original, animating purpose of patent law is to create a storehouse of ideas about industrial process and design. Inventors are given a short window of exclusive use as "payment" for contributing their inventions, ideas, designs, what have you. But the purpose was, and theoretically still is, to collect the ideas and make them available to the public.

      (For copyright law, the idea was to encourage people to write stuff down - and the method was to compensate them with certain legal rights, yes. But the purpose is the publication, not the compensation. Go back and read Jefferson, or better yet the early theorists of copyright. Best place to start is the case of Donaldson v. Beckett from 1774.)

    19. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by tybalt44 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Let me do a little more history while I'm at it. The very first "intellectual property" laws were the Statute of Monopolies of 1624. This invested "copyright" (literally the right to print copies of anything whatsoever) in the Stationers' Company.

      The Stationers' Company acted as warehouse for censorship and prior restraint. (This was the subject of Aeropagitica, John Milton's paean to the idea of a free press). After the Revolution in 1688, the idea of Big Brother deciding what could and could not be printed proved pretty damn horrifying to everyone, so "copyright" by 1695 had pretty much ceases to exist. Result? Cheap books from Scotland were wrecking the English printers' market share. The response was a modern copyright law, designed to encourage the dissemination of books (authors had no rights at all once their works had been bought and published!) and allowed the printer who had bought the book from the author a monopoly on printing it, in order to encourage them to make books widely available (since there was no fear of piracy)

    20. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So why do you think you have to WRITE STUFF DOWN when you apply for the patent? If all it was so that you could sell your lightbulbs, you should be able to apply for the patent with the invention being completely hidden. Your IP, only to be shown to patent officers under an NDA. Why o why do patents demand that the description of the invention should be publically viewable? Why on earth would the government go through great lengths to protect you selling lightbulbs? Oh, and why is a patent limited in time? You benevolant government would make you much better off by not letting the patent expire at all.

      If you think about these questions, you might come to the conclusion that if the main object of patents was to compensate for people's ideas, they're completely pigheadedly set up.

    21. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      If I write a book containing I ideas, I cannot copyright the ideas - at least in a logical, rational world. I can, however, copyright the book, and charge you for copies of it. To tell me that I must provide my book for free is nothing short of hare-brained socialist twaddle.

      A world that allows copyrights on ideas is one founded upon insane assumptions; a world that allows copyrights on things - books, programs, paintings, whatever - is a perfectly rational one, and a splendid example of capitalism. The problem doesn't lie in the copyright of things, it lies in the fact that the law - and those who profit by it - now regard 'ideas' as 'things' as well.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    22. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by saforrest · · Score: 1

      The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used.

      One problem I have always had with Objectivism is that the natural property to which an individual is entitled seems always to be quite an arbitrary accident of history.

      You accept that individuals have an 'absolute right' to own and control the use of intellectual property, and presumably personal property as well. Yet Objectivists are appear to be the first to act as apologists for multinational corporations engaged in exceedingly questionable practices in developing countries, and the first to cite the profit motive as justification for, say, bribery of government officials in these developing nations, clear cutting, and various other acts which are profitable for individuals but not society as a whole.

      It isn't enough to say that, eventually, the invisible hand will step in to correct these sorts of abuses.

    23. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by composer777 · · Score: 1

      There is no logical basis for assigning moral rights to IP. In fact, we can say that in general, there is no objective basis to rights, they are whatever we want them to be. As a result, there is no absolute, rights only extend as far as people agree that something should be a right. You can say something is absolute all day long, but if you can't get people to agree with you then it's not absolute. This should go without saying.

      When evaluating whether or not something should be a right, we need to evaluate the real world ramifications of a system, and avoid asking slanted questions out of the context of reality. When looking at the real world ramifications of IP, it becomes obvious that it can definitely be improved upon.

      Intellectual property is a system of rewarding creative endeavours using a metaphor for real property. There is no real evidence that this is necessary, and in fact, most observation of society shows that this lottery system of rewarding creation does nothing to effectively promote the useful arts and sciences. Effectively, the winners in this "game" are those with enough capital to hedge their bets, in other words, large corporations.

      Further, when examining how things really work, we understand that most of what is created, is in fact created by everyday programmers, scientific researchers (many of whom make less than 40K), and so on, not "innovators" like Bill Gates. Many of these innovators aren't even paid by the corporations that benefit from patenting their ideas, but instead are paid directly by the government, one example being NIH funded drug research. We can come to the conlusion that in many cases, patents are nothing more than a way of handing control over ideas and markets to large coporations, not rewarding innovation. In fact, this control over markets interferes with innovation, since it effectively discourages small business and fledgling innovators from entering the market at all. Given that most innovation comes from paying people a living salary, not vast sums of money, we have to question whether the obnoxious sums of money that Bill Gates gets paid to control their work is necessary at all. When weighing the "right" of "innovators" to charge whatever they want for a product, vs the right of everyday people to have a stake in the American dream, I think that the latter should take precedence. Therefore, a system that doesn't explicitly go out of it's way to allow smaller businesses and fledgling innovators entry into the market is unworkable. A system of rewarding innovation the doesn't explicitly allow those who are underpriveledged access to the knowledge and information necessary for them to have an equal chance runs against the principles that the US was founded on, and even if it didn't, runs against basic human decency. Again, this is my opinion, clearly you think that corporate dominated society is a good thing.

      So, here are some questions:
      1. How often do IP laws directly benefit engineers, scientists, and researchers? vs instead massively benefiting their employers, and then giving the real innovators living wages.

      2. How much innovation does IP interfere with?

      3. Is promoting invention a question of massively rewarding innovators or instead providing them with the resources necessary to create? Which is more important? Don't most innovators create new products on a subsistence salary with large amounts of (currently corporate) resources? Couldn't we promote just as much innovation by making sure that everyone had at least a minimum standard of living, and then give them the resources necessary to pursue their vision?

      This is in fact how I get paid. I get paid a decent salary to program. I'm not rich, not poor, but get paid an ok amount. It's highway robbery that employers are able to jack the price of software through the roof. This is not necessary to promote innovation, and makes no sense. It does nothing more than create a bigger divide between the rich and poor, and rewards "innovators" simply for owning enough capital to pay a team of developers for a year. It rewards power for it's own sake, rather than truly rewarding innovation.

    24. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by composer777 · · Score: 1

      I like Chomsky's response to such philosophical discussion, which is that while it might be very interesting on an academic level, that it can also tend to be a waste of time and distract us from real world problems. Discussing ideas too much outside of the scope of reality can often take one so far away from reality that the discussion becomes abstract to the point of meaninglessness. In order to reach a true understanding, we need to remain cognizant of the real world ramifications of these concepts. This should always be the measuring stick for social policy, the real world ramifications, not logical correctness or academic purity. If an idea is perfect, and logical, but it's result is pain, suffering, and loss of freedom, then the idea should be thrown out, and the problems solved.

      The problem with too much academic discussion, is that while we're trying to come up with the perfect logic to explain why things need to change, others are suffering. Devoting too much time to finding a purely logical and abstract solution is metaphorically equivalent to not saving your friend's life because you're busy trying to logically justify why he has a right to live. If we take this approach with such complex problems as intellectual property, market economics, and other stuff, society may well come and go before we come up with any academically pure and philosophically coherent vision. Sometimes, you just need to do what is right because you think it's the right thing to do. Our opponents aren't logical, that is obvious, but they'll be happy to wait for you to come up with a logical argument for your side. In the mean-time, they'll be busy plundering the planet while we come up with philosophical arguments for why they should stop.

    25. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Sax+Maniac · · Score: 1
      I think the bottom line of intellectual property is indeed that, or more accurately, the belief that statement is true.

      What is in dispute is that a lot of people believe it to be totally true. Most people aren't so far-reaching to think that their own creative work should someday be public property for the good of all. Sure, it's okay for other people's stuff to be public-domain. It's great that we can freely embed quotes of Beethoven's Ninth in all sorts of music scores without paying Beethoven's 900,000 descendents. But the other way around? No, that's mine! You can't touch it.

      This is why I really respect guys like John Carmack, who (aside from being a freaking genius) can make an honest buck from their "IP" and still let the public benefit before it's completely obsolete or passed from memory.

      --
      I can explanate how to administrate your network. You must configurate and segmentate it, so it can computate.
    26. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by composer777 · · Score: 1

      There is no doubt that the GPL is a bit reactionary and short-sighted. The obvious question of how developers are going to eat is an important one, and we need to come up with a better system than the one we have currently. (However, we could also ask the question of where the money goes in our current system, and the majority of it doesn't go to the developers). In the long run, we will need to figure out a way to feed the people that develop open source software, that is, if we want a self-sustaining movement. There is no reason that someone who forks over $50,000+ to get a degree in CS should have to bag groceries in order to eat.

      What makes the GPL unique isn't the amount of control that it has, but instead is the fact that this control doesn't directly serve large corporations. The GPL doesn't directly serve large corporations, and whatever service it does provide to the likes of an IBM, it does much more to free the grip of corporate software control than it does to help it. Just because the GPL benefits IBM doesn't mean that we should quit supporting it. An atmosphere containing oxygen also benefits IBM, that's not an argument against it.

      After all, in our current system, what's the alternative? The alternative is handing complete control back to IBM, Microsoft, et al. You don't fight tyranny by giving in to it. I think that's a point of the GPL, is to show that copyrights and patents are a horribly flawed system that gives too much control to the owners of a particular idea. By arguing against the GPL, IP owners such as Bill Gates are in fact supporting the spirit of RMS's ideas, which to me are about removing the coporate control over ideas that is enforced through our current patent and copyright system. The viral nature of copyrights didn't start with the GPL, the viral and hierarchical nature of ideas has been exploited by private power for decades in order to overcharge for the valuable service of being there first. The controversy is over the fact that for the first time the viral nature of copyrights isn't serving to enforce and protect private dictatorships such as Microsoft.

    27. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by BadDreamer · · Score: 1

      In *what* Dr Dobbs article? Your accusations are rather severe, please back them up with some substance beyond hazy recollection of what you interpreted some article you don't know where it is said.

      As far as encouraging the sale of free software, call it what you want, but it works just fine for the FSF, among others. Yes, many software companies dealing in Free software go under; the percentage would be comparable to those dealing in non-Free software. The majority of software companies go under, that's the name of the game.

    28. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so if I build a mousetrap and patent it am I patenting the design of the mousetrap or the mousetrap?

      The design.

      If I am patenting the mousetrap, could someone then look at my patent, and sell plans to make the moustrap?

      They could do that in either case; patents prevent people from creating the mousetraps. An instruction book on how to create the moustrap is not the act of creation itself.

      Could they then offer a service to build a mousetrap from the plans they just sold?

      Yes, but they'd have to get permission, usually in the form of a royalty for each mousetrap built.

      They really wouldn't be selling a mousetrap, they would be selling the plans of the mousetrap.

      No, they'd be selling the mousetrap.

      they would be selling the plans of the mousetrap. and then selling a service to fasten bits of metal and wood together according to those plans.

      ...and the way the bits of metal and wood are arranged has been prohibited by law to anybody without permission from that particular patent holder.

    29. Re:Free as in "profit is evil", re: Stallman by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To tell me that I must provide my book for free is nothing short of hare-brained socialist twaddle.

      Sory, the burden of proof is on you, and calling it "twaddle" is hardly proof.

      The reason the burden of proof is on you is because the natural state of things is that anybody can make copies of anything as much as they like. There needs to be a reason to prevent something so useful.

      There is a reason of course. The reason is that by giving authors the ability to control scarcity, they have an additional incentive to create. Of course, the whole point in giving them an incentive to create is to grow the public domain.

      The law doesn't state that you "must provide your book for free". The law grants you the right to control its scarcity for a limited amount of time. Nothing more. It is a privilege, not something you automatically deserve for writing something.

  28. Re:Eben Moglen, you sir are by Curtman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Alrighty.. This from an anonymous coward on Slashdot. How insightful.

  29. Yeah, I wondered. by JoeBaldwin · · Score: 3, Funny

    It went something like this.

    BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!!!!!!!

    A mushroom cloud rises out of the room, and both Darl and him are vaporised.

    The Slashdot crowd are puzzled at how to feel.

    1. Re:Yeah, I wondered. by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 1

      No need to sacrifice Eben, after IBM is finished with their counterclaims, Darl will be vaporized anyway.

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    2. Re:Yeah, I wondered. by IronClad · · Score: 2, Funny

      both Darl and him are vaporised

      I was thinking maybe Darl would be completely gone and Eben would look fresh and exfoliated: one less wrinkle. The two may be polar opposites, but one certainly has more substance. ;)

  30. How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labels" by turnstyle · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth"

    What a patronizing way to refer to people (like me) who are trying to make a living selling their own work.

    That's how these guys think about anybody who doesn't drink their free-everything Kool-Aid.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  31. We so desperately need a spokesman like this... by braddock · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There should be an inspiring spokesman like this at every Open Source convention. The community needs it.

    Stallman has done a great service to the community by keeping this aspect of the movement alive. I have had direct correspondance with him multiple times and he has NEVER failed to personally write back with elaboration on a point or a rebuff to an argument. He must have spent the majority of every day for the past 25 years spreading the case for Free Software one person at a time like that without compromise, which is how he has achieved what he has achieved and deserves respect in the community regardless of personal wranglings.

    However, Stallman is so marred with 25 years of personal politics that it is difficult for him to inspire. It never seems like he can quite decouple the ideals of freedom of expression from a certain "I _AM_ THE IDEALS, RECOGNIZE ME, the GPL is the ONLY way to go" attitude.

    If the entire community can be inspired to the real ideals of Free Expression, than the GPL itself would almost be irrelevant. Stallman has used the GPL as the glue to keep the community together regardless of it's beliefs on the issue of free expression, but this needs to be seen as an entirely secondary issue.

    I hope to at least see Eben Moglen and similar speakers invited to more software conferences.

    Braddock Gaskill

    1. Re:We so desperately need a spokesman like this... by The+Pim · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I hope to at least see Eben Moglen and similar speakers invited to more software conferences.

      I do too, and I bet it will come to pass. But (from someone who attended the speech) there's something we should realize: Moglen and RMS are championing almost exactly the same principles and agenda. The differences are in how they serve the agenda: Stallman by writing code (in the beginning) and playing the visionary, Moglen by plotting legal strategy and fighting the legal ground war; and in their particular communication styles.

      So while I agree that RMS's personality may be getting worn and he is somewhat tainted by politics, it is important that we see Moglen not as a less orthodox RMS, but as a new, and perhaps more effective, conveyor of the same fundamental message. It may help to note Moglen's pointed expressions of respect and admiration for RMS during the speech.

      That said, Moglen did put the free software movement in a wider legal and intellectual context better than RMS usually does. Moglen can play the visionary very well if he wishes! Perhaps if we are inspired by Moglen, we can reconsider RMS with renewed appreciation.

      --

      The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  32. Re:Did you read the whole article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh, they're probably watching the video.

  33. Right to not remain silent. by SHEENmaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My right to speak in no way infringes their right to remain silent. Those against open source itself, like the MPAA and SCO, are doing so because they don't like what is being said, as well as how it is being said. The MPAA doesn't want fair use rights, and SCO doesn't want a superior product for the X86.

    The code at the bottom of this post is illegal under the DMCA. Its very illegality violates my right to free speech, because it's only legal so long as it's closed source. That's why this is about free speech, and that's why we must protect it.

    It's not closed software that's the threat to free speech, it's the attacks that are being made upon open software. You have the right to remain silent, but please leave me my right to speak.

    efdtt.c Author: Charles M. Hannum <root@ihack.net>
    Thanks to Phil Carmody <fatphil@asdf.org> for additional tweaks.
    Length: 434 bytes (excluding unnecessary newlines)
    Usage is: cat title-key scrambled.vob | efdtt >clear.vob

    #define m(i)(x[i]^s[i+84])<<
    unsigned char x[5],y,s[2048];main(n){for(read(0,x,5);read(0,s,n= 2048);write(1,s ,n))if(s[y=s[13]%8+20]/16%4==1){int i=m(1)17^256+m(0)8,k=m(2)0,j=m(4)17^m(3)9^k
    *2-k% 8^8,a=0,c=26;for(s[y]-=16;--c;j*=2)a=a*2^i&1, i=i/2^j&1<<24;for(j=127;++j<n ;c=c>y)c+=y=i^i/8^i>>4^i>>12,i=i>>8^y<<17,a^=a>>14 ,y=a^a*8^a<<6,a=a>>8^y<<9,k=s
    [j],k="7Wo~'G_\216" [k&7]+2^"cr3sfw6v;*k+>/n."[k>>4 ]*2^k*257/8,s[j]=k^(k&k*2&34)
    *6^c+~y;}}

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:Right to not remain silent. by hitmark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      like someones ones said: free speech isnt there to protect what you like, its there to protect what you dont like.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    2. Re:Right to not remain silent. by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Insightful
      For a long time, I was planning to write down my thoughts on the use of "Free Speech" and why it is a very misleading term that leads to people thinking that code is speech, and should be free. Although I am highly in favour of the FSF, I do think they are wrong with their "freedom as in speech" argument. As I highly doubt I'll ever get to finishing the essay, the essence can be found below.

      I'm from Europe, and where I come from we do not enjoy "Free Speech" as such, but a more carefully worded "Freedom of expressing ones opinion". This freedom is essential to our democracy. If you disagree with your leaders, or think you have a better way of running the country, you can express these thoughts without the fear of being imprisoned for these ideas. (The fact that in actuality this freedom is non-existent in Europe if you want to express Nazi sympathies is very saddening in my opinion. Voltaire would surely agree with me here). This freedom is central to what we call our democracy, and it only takes a quick look to what happens in a totalitarian regime to see how valuable it is.

      If I read arguments involving "code is speech", I think people are talking about something completely different essentially. They are talking about ownership of code and/or inventions, but I do not think this has anything to do with the freedom of expressing ones opinion. This latter freedom is central to our freedom of being individual human beings that are allowed to think for their own, the former is a dispute about ownership. Even though this dispute is very important, and I think the FSF is on the right track with their stance, it is trivial in comparison with the freedom of expressing ones opinion.

      Using freedom of speech as an argument for being able to hack a dvd-encryption scheme is, in my opinion, so far off from the original intent of "free speech" that it more likely to alienate people than to win them. As far as I can tell, even in the US with its careless use of language, most people understand that "Free Speech" means "freedom of expressing ones opinion", and not crying "FIRE" in a crowded theatre, or hacking an XBox. Stating that these things are equivalent is plainly wrong.

      So what to do? I think it would intellectually fairer to avoid this "free speech" alltogether when we're talking about issues of copyrights and patents, and aim for what we're really after: freedom to use ideas. Our own ideas, but, to some extent, also other peoples ideas. Ideas should not be locked up, especially when there is a fair chance that someone with a similar need will come up with a similar idea. This is the real goal, and to claim that it has in some way to do with the freedom to express your opinion is dishonest.

    3. Re:Right to not remain silent. by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Just to correct myself. After (re-)reading the FA, and a bit more on the GNU website, I came to the conclusion that the FSF seldomly makes the mistake I'm fulminating against. It's mostly in forums like /. and on the site of Prof. Tourzetsky that the freedoms of expressing ones opinion and to share knowledge are compounded in 'Freedom of speech'.

  34. Re:Free Speech??!! by Thud457 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Issues like this aren't even on the ACLU's radar. Hell, have they even spoken up about computerized voting machines?

    The ACLU doesn't even have a clue.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  35. Re:Nonsense by microbox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This Free Speech/Open Source movement is not just a philosophy. It's a religion

    Any philosophy would appear like a religion if you don't agree with it. That's just like saying "all you people are wrong, and why don't you just shut up with your new philosophy".

    Is Free Speech in danger when McDonald's doesn't publish the recipes of their menu or when KFC keeps the 13 spices and herbs secret?

    How about my favorite Italian restaurants meatballs?


    Almost all chefs that I've met keep their receipes secret. This is a tradition amongst chefs, and helps them distinguish themselves, much like an artist has a certain style.

    As for those 13 herbs and spices... consider the following transcript from this article...

    So let me tell you what I think the owners of culture were doing in the 20th century. It took them two generations from Edison to figure out what their business was, and it wasn't music and it wasn't movies. It was celebrity. They created very large artificial people, you know, with navels eight feet high. And then we had these fantasy personal relationships with the artificial big people. And those personal relationships were manipulated to sell us lots and lots of stuff -- music and movies and T-shirts and toys and, you know, sexual gratification, and heavens knows what else. All of that on the basis of the underlying real economy of culture, which is that we pay for that which we have relations with. We are human beings, social animals.

    In there small way KFC is threatening freedom of speech. They've created a secret formula, and made it a celebrity. They own a piece of our culture, like George Lucus owns Star Wars, and that's how they make all that money.

    As for freedom of speech, people will publish receipes, (and make movies), and others will take those receipes and improve upon them (there is no requirement to republish), and over the centuries we developed wonderful and complex delicacies and great diversity. KFC gives us a few types of food and they sustain their IP with marketing. Why is this restricted model somehow better for society just because it creates shareholder value in the pockets of a few?

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  36. If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by iggychaos · · Score: 1

    I dont get all this.

    If you want to write software and give it away, I have no problem with that.

    If I want to write software and not give it away (and sell it), that should be my business.

    Check out this article.

    If I try to sell it and no one buys it, sucks for me, but it doesnt affect you.

    Feel free to give away all the software you want. Personally, if someone makes money off a program I wrote, I have no problem if I get paid for my work. But again - to each his own.

    Ig

    1. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by 110010001000 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Comrade, you are morally bankrupt. Please report immediately to the nearest GNU reeducation center.

      On your way to the center, repeat the following: "Our business is your business. Your business is our business."

    2. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by iggychaos · · Score: 1

      Your journal is dead on!

    3. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by Quill_28 · · Score: 0, Troll

      You are failing to understand why GNU was created.

      You selling software is morally wrong, according to RMS.

      Let me repeat. Morally wrong.
      http://lwn.net/2002/features/rms.php3

      Why this doesn't apply to books, music, or any other IP i have no idea, go ask him.

    4. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by the_flatlander · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If I want to write software and not give it away (and sell it), that should be my business.
      Indeed. That is fine. No one has a problem with that. But don't write your code and then claim no one else can write code that does the same thing. Don't write your code and claim you own the method of doing whatever it is your code does.

      Just so you know, however, the large numbers of programmers available to open source projects, and the many, many eyes taht can review open source projects will probably render your proprietary code worthless in short order. That's not a problem for you, is it?

      You intentionally misinterpret the Professors argument. It ain't free as in beer. It's free as in speech. When the code is available, when the algorithm can be examined, fixed, improved upon, everyone benefits.

      Red Hat, HP, and IBM seem to be doing okay with software that's "free." How do they do that? Because the *service* ain't free - it's only the code that you can get free.

      The Flatlander

    5. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by nuggz · · Score: 1

      Proprietary software is antisocial, so developing it is wrong
      or
      The free software movement is based on an ethical stance: that users are morally entitled to the freedom to share and change software, that non-free software is unethical and wrong.

      I think you meant one of those lines. He says not having the freedom to share is wrong. Selling software is perfectly acceptable, the FSF sells software itself.

      The logic is simple, if I have something, and I can share it, I should be able to share it if I want to. Also I should be allowed to change or alter things that I have.

      The GPL is just a tool to encourage others to share by making it a competative disadvantage ot opt out of the sharing pool.

    6. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by tapin · · Score: 1
      Hey, troll. Here's a hint: When RMS uses the word "free", he is rarely referring to $0.00.

      Go read that article you linked, and keep that in mind.

      (Oh, here's a choice bit: I think it is acceptable to do what MySQL AB [..] do[es]: release under the GPL, but sell alternative licenses permitting proprietary extensions to their code)

    7. Re:If you want to give away your stuff .. fine... by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      >(Oh, here's a choice bit: I think it is acceptable to do what MySQL AB [..] do[es]: release under the GPL, but sell alternative licenses permitting proprietary extensions to their code)

      To which RMS would say that is ethically and morally wrong.

  37. Re:Nonsense by IWorkForMorons · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Or, if McDonalds sue Burger King because the whopper is similar.

    Wouldn't that be Burger King suing McDonalds because the Big Xtra is really a Whopper in disguise? I guess it wouldn't matter...McDonalds could probably sue over the Big King anyways.

    But the big boys know they can fight in the courts for years with each other. Fighting against it's own consumers to prevent bad reviews or "top secret recipes" from getting out would be handle very quickly since no one could really put up a fight. But unlike some businesses, I don't think they are stupid enough to do that. Mostly because there are still too many disadvantages to suing your consumers. But, as consumers, we should be fighting to keep those disadvantages stable, which includes fighting for free speech to say all those things they don't like...

  38. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by the_flatlander · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What a patronizing way to refer to people (like me) who are trying to make a living selling their own work.
    Respectfully, no, it is not patronizing. You are allowed to sell your work. Encouraged to sell your work. Respected for selling your work. But do not claim that an idea you have had is "property". The Freedom the good professor is talking about is the freedom to speak, think and have ideas; and to build on the ideas of others. If your idea becomes your property then I can not legally think that thought; that would be bad. If you are a programmer, like it or not, you are in the service business, and your service should not be free, or at least Professor Moglen has neither said, nor I suspect believes, that it should be.

    It is patronizing if you are one of the guys who wants to put a paste-it label with a price tag on every idea on earth, but I doubt he means you.

    The Flatlander

  39. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by Larsing · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What a patronizing way to refer to people (like me) who are trying to make a living selling their own work.

    No, he is refering to people who are trying to make a living selling other peoples work (and keeping the profits for themselves).

    --
    Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
  40. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by The+Snowman · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth"

    What a patronizing way to refer to people (like me) who are trying to make a living selling their own work.

    That's how these guys think about anybody who doesn't drink their free-everything Kool-Aid.

    I think the OP is objecting to people who want to put prices on all intellectual property, not just some of it. Even RMS thinks that not all software must be free. I agree. I think people who want to write free software (like me) should be free to do so, and companies like Microsoft that want to write non-free software should be free to do so.

    The issue is when people try to sue the free software writers out of existence, e.g. SCO. They think all software should come from big companies with big licensing fees. Moderation is key. I use some non-free software. I also use plenty of free software. I do not impose my views of this on the public or the economy.

    --
    24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
  41. Patronizing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If you look into the context (or if you've even read here about the Amazon patents for instance), you'd then know that a better reply would have been:

    "What a patronizing way to refer to people who are making a living selling/appropriating the work of others."

    Sheesh, get some perspective. It's not about getting everyone to give shovels away for free, it's about preventing people from claiming that they have an inalienable right of ownership over the very idea of a shovel.

    In short, if you are a programmer (or such), you're probably not a person like that. If you are in fact a patent attorney fighting on the side of software patents for megacorporations, you should look around at your "colleagues" on /. More than a few of them would probably treat you to a punch in the head, rather than a funny one-liner.

    1. Re:Patronizing... by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      No -- it's about choice, and respecting the decisions of those who choose differently.

      Some may choose GPL or Creative Commons, and their wish should be respected.

      Others may choose to try and sell their work, and similarly their wish should be repsected.

      The trouble with FSF and EFF is that they show no respect for those that choose differently, and agitate to force a new system, and pass it odd as an attack on some Evil Oligopoly.

      Here, it's simple:

      1) Should some be alowed to decide to sell their work, rather than GPL'ing or CC'ing it?

      2) If others copy such work without paying, should there be any downside?

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  42. Ahh yes..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    another nonprogrammer telling everyone to make their software "free".

    When are you going to start doing your job for free?

    1. Re:Ahh yes..... by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1
      another nonprogrammer telling everyone to make their software "free".

      I should know better than to reply to an AC but yes, you are right, I don't program for a living.

      But don't think that I don't release anything under the GNU GPL.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    2. Re:Ahh yes..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how much labor and time did you put into it, and is that your living?

      It is very easy to tell others that their work should not cost YOU anything. It is harder to do something about it.

      My advice, learn to program, or shut up.

    3. Re:Ahh yes..... by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1
      And how much labor and time did you put into it, and is that your living?

      More time than it would to contribute to my project and no, it's not my living. But so? Your point being? Who said anything about me wanting those kind of people?

      I'm looking for people to work with me (in their free time, as mine) to produce something that will benefit everyone else. I am actually doing some of the work myself (I've developed the protocol, the documentation, the eVB interface), not just bossing people around.

      My advice, learn to program, or shut up.

      Yeah whatever. For someone who can't learn to register, I don't really hold your opinion in high esteem.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  43. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    Not everyone who follows the FSF belittles everyone trying to charge for thought. Some of them actually go out and try to come up with a way where the producers can still make a living, while the consumers have convient access.

    Like all the different ways that have been mentioned to compensate artists for work downloaed from peer to peer networks. Or like the premise behind MP3.com (free downloads, and the artists get paid.)

  44. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    Respectfully, no, it is not patronizing. You are allowed to sell your work. Encouraged to sell your work. Respected for selling your work. But do not claim that an idea you have had is "property".

    Wrong. It's no different with the EFF's tacit support of file-sharing, or more recently their tacit support of the Grey Album, in which a DJ appropriated for commercial use parts of others' work.

    They have a long and clear record of utter disrespect for the rights of authors. You want to give away your work? Fine with me. But if I choose otherwise, tough.

    That's just the way it is, can't you tell?

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  45. Re:Nonsense by angryelephant · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The philosophy of the FSF is that Free Speech is endangered when people keep recipes secret. Any time something is created value is added in the world. Keeping the creation in the hands of a select few lessens this value. I don't agree that what the FSF proproses can be executed in the real world all the time, but it is a useful ideal.

  46. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "No, he is refering to people who are trying to make a living selling other peoples work (and keeping the profits for themselves)."

    Ok, then, isn't that what the Grey Album was? A DJ took other peoples work and created a new commercial work.

    The logic always flips this way and that way to suit the politics.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  47. A newbie's view of the Free Software movement by sarastro_us · · Score: 3, Insightful

    IANAL. Hell, IAN even a software developer. I'm just an interested, educated computer user who likes to have a bit of variety in his life. I can clearly see the arguments on both sides of this issue. I have no personal problem with people seeking to make money off software they've written, so long as they don't force me into paying them if I don't want it. And yet I find the constant "How free is Free" argument within the FSS community to be extremely off-putting. Zealotry is never friendly to a new convert, and when even asking a simple question about the merits of KDE vs Gnome on an email list results in a flame war of epic proportions, what kind of impression is this supposed to leave upon those who view the movement from outside? I think the real issue at stake here is the freedom of the developer to see what he or she chooses done with their own product. Some will choose to attempt to make a profit off of their hard work. I say, good luck. It's a tough market out there. Others will choose to release their products gratis. I say, good for you. You are giving back to the community from which you came. Yet others will choose to release their products completely, allowing other developers to take them off in new and perhaps interesting ways. I say, wonderful. You have done a brave thing in giving your creation completely over to the world. Ultimately, the freedom which we are speaking of, and, in many cases, fighting for, is the freedom of a creator to choose the destiny of their creation. Should they be forced to accept one route by law, eschewing all other possibilities? I certainly don't think so. No matter what route might be forced upon the creator, legislating compulsory 'freedom' is contrary to the very meaning of the word.

    1. Re:A newbie's view of the Free Software movement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea is not to shackle a creator from choosing the destiny of their creation. The idea is to stop one creator from detering the creativity of many others.

      If you created some thing good - go ahead do what you want with it. But do not restrict another person from attempting to come up with a similar/better creation.

      What the GPL does is,
      Here is the procedure to do X (source code).
      You are free to come up with something similar or better that X from scratch, but you could save yourself some time by using my procedure but you would have to share your procedure with others like I have.

    2. Re:A newbie's view of the Free Software movement by RedBear · · Score: 1

      I used to think as you do, most of the time. I have recently begun to think differently. I disagree that you "can clearly see the arguments on both sides of this issue." I would argue that you would to well to do a bit more research into really understanding what the "sides" are really saying, and what the consequences will be in the future if we go down one path as opposed to another.

      You're right that there is a bit of zealotry going on, but sometimes one man's zealot is another man's "man with uncompromising and rational principles". People do tend to get riled up when they are trying to protect basic freedoms, especially when they have personally experienced the infringement of those freedoms. If the goverment tried to turn around and take away your freedom of expression, I'll bet the world would have another "Free Speech" zealot on their hands in an instant. Instead of closing your mind as I have often done when someone seems to be a little too zealous about software freedom, maybe you should stop and take a closer look to what they are actually saying rather than how they're saying it.

      You say: I have no personal problem with people seeking to make money off software they've written, so long as they don't force me into paying them if I don't want it. One of the points that some of those zealots make speaks directly to this. If I write some software and patent the secret methods that I used in that source code, you may find yourself being forced to pay that person whether you want to buy his software or not. The way things stand now, you can not only restrict someone from using your software, by charging money for it and not publishing the source (the text of the book, if you will), but you can also restrict vast swaths of other code that might happen to work in a similar manner. If I write some code that happens to use a siliar method, I am now restricted from publishing that code or giving away my software gratis. Instead I am forced into the necessity to license that idea from the author who has patented it. This is the main problem that free software is trying to avoid.

      The Free Software movement has a problem with non-free software not because of price but because we cannot use it the way we use other information, i.e. by sharing and improving upon it, making it work better for us. We choose not to use (or buy!) code that is not free in this manner, because we have seen firsthand that it causes damage to business processes, such as being locked into one solution when another solution would be much better for your company. It causes damage in many ways that I'm not qualified to explain. It slows technological progress throughout the technology world. It damages the ability of the US to keep up and compete with other countries that are willing to embrace Free Software, for example.

      I'm sure I've muddied the waters even more by now, but I do hope you spend more time listening, like I did.

  48. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "I think the OP is objecting to people who want to put prices on all intellectual property"

    C'mon, can't you see the goal is to socialize art? That's what they're doing with their "white paper" -- creating some quasi-governmental agency to regulate prices and control over art.

    That's the sort of shit these guys used to fight against.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  49. Eben, eh? by Popadopolis · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I think it is notable that this Eben Moglen is the first (living) person I have listened to (or even heard of) whose name is the same as mine (Eben is surprisingly uncommon).

    1. Re:Eben, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a Sublime song about a dude with your name. I think it's a rad name, btw.

    2. Re:Eben, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually Ebin.

  50. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "Like all the different ways that have been mentioned to compensate artists for work downloaed from peer to peer networks. Or like the premise behind MP3.com (free downloads, and the artists get paid.)"

    MP3.com went broke. Dreamy talk about "free this and free that and get the artists paid" doesn't get the artists paid.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  51. And captured things rot by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As the corporations corral little bits and pieces of things they consider important, the rest of the world moves on. Look at Disney, hanging on to that stupid little mouse. Look at SCO, hanging on to ancient old code as if it were their precioussssss.

    Sure there's immediate pain and loss when things are imprisoned. But what happends when wild horses are imprisoned? They lose their freshness. Put flowers in a vase? They wither and need replacement.

    Let Disney have their mouse. Popular culture has deserted it. Let Disney waste their resources becoming more and more irrelevant to popular culture. Disney made the choice to hang on to the mouse and let go of Pixar, and it is Disney who will rot from staleness and lack of exercise, not Pixar.

  52. Re:Nonsense by wwest4 · · Score: 1


    In there small way KFC is threatening freedom of speech.


    How do you mean?


    Why is this restricted model somehow better for society just because it creates shareholder value in the pockets of a few?


    Because we don't live in a hive - at least, not yet. The society constructed in the Western world currently has mechanisms in place to allow autonomous, individual pursuit for people or corporations.

    KFC Corp. keeps trade secrets because it's in its own interest. If they are going to give back, it will be on their terms. This is perfectly legal and by design.

  53. Playing devil's advocate here by agslashdot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The good Professor is simply reiterating what Marx said about 150 years ago.

    eg. Lets say bicycle is an idea. The state outlaws private ownership of bicycles, because ideas belong to the masses, they are not one man's private property. So nobody can own a bicycle.
    But the state places free bicycles at the corner of every street and every avenue.
    So you walk to a corner, pick up a bicycle & pedal to wherever you want & leave it at the other corner. No tolls, no insurance, no gasoline, no ownership, no maintainence, no hassle.

    Malthus read this and told Marx he was an ostrich.

    That's the problem right there. You can't pretend man is an ostrich, so lets be benign & do away with the notion of private property & share & take just what we need & so on. This socialist utopia is ideal, but unfortunately we don't live there.
    Capitalism says man is not benign - man is malign. He will want ownership. In that sense of the principle, you can own intangible ideas just as much as you own actual tangible objects - no difference. That's just the reality we live in.
    Deal with it.

    1. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I get the impression you haven't thought this stuff through anywhere near as much as you think you've thought this stuff through.

    2. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by bebonzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You miss the point here...

      In your "the state places free bicycles at the corner of every street and every avenue."

      The state has to spend money and effort to do this.

      The "bicycle is an idea" means that anyone can use a bike, make it, improve it, sell it make money etc.. but doesn't have to do so. (nor does the state has to).

      It's not at all Marx, it's called 'free' market.

    3. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by agslashdot · · Score: 1

      Not at all.
      1. State needs money for bicycles - we call them "taxes".
      2. Bicycle is an idea means just that. Its an idea, just like every single formula in Mathematica is just an idea. Yet, do you know the net worth of Stephen Wolfram ?
      3. I get the impression you are running away fast from Marx towards the free market candyman. Look, Marx is respected as an economist just as much as Adam Smith is. Its just that Smith has turned out the victor in the real world. Marx was the victor for a while in the last century under Lenin, until Stalin the despot totally hijacked Marxism, just like Andrew Fastow of Enron hijacked capitalism.

      Doesn't mean Free Market right, Marxism wrong.
      First law of Philosophy - "Every idea has its time" . The time is not right/ripe for Professor Eben Moglen's idea. One fine day we will get there, and I look forward to it myself. But that day is not today.

    4. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      I think the grandparent was pointing at the fact that unlike bicycles, ideas do not cost (much) money to put on the streets. Just talk to a few people about the idea, and if it's any good, it'll spread around on its own. Unlike tangible goods, it actually costs money to make ideas not widely available (you need patent offices, lawyers, etc.). So, for tangible goods, reproducing them cost money, for ideas, *not* reproducing them costs money.

    5. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Capitalism says man is not benign - man is malign. He will want ownership.

      What a crock of socialist shit. Capitalism makes no judgements on the moral condition of human beings; it simply assumes that they primarily motivated from self-interest.

      There is nothing 'malign' or evil about self-interest. Neither is there anything inherently good about a lack of self-interest.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    6. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by Andrew+Cady · · Score: 2, Informative

      Another ignorant capitalist saying Marx was against personal property.

      Clue: communism is about social ownership of CAPITAL, the -means of production-. Not bicycles, but the factories that manufacture them.

    7. Re:Playing devil's advocate here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite. If you listened or read through the entire speech, Eben Moglen stated precisely that the importance of freedom in software is because of [Ed. almost] zero marginal costs, which don't apply to physical goods.

      At least not until we have Star Trek -like replicators.

      You also misunderstand Marx, but that's an entirely different issue.

  54. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that we have to insist upon, all the time, uncompromisingly.
    Sorry if fragmented sentences dont' make sense... Uh.. what the fuck does the above mean?

  55. Not another word game... by firewrought · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "It's free software, it's not open source". He has a reason. This is the reason.

    I have enough trouble getting my boss to distinguish b/t "open source" and "shareware". Throwing "free software" into the mix is going to hurt corporate adoption, not help civil liberties.

    The thing that Bruce Perens, etc., understand that Stallman does not is "branding". "Open Source" is a distinct, brandable term. It has successfully fought off imitation brands like Microsoft's "Shared Source" concept. It even has a crisp, compact logo. The FSF does not understand this game, and they can't seem to produce a brand name w/o botching it up with recursive algorithms ("HURD"), semantic ambiguitiy ("free software"), or phonetic confusion ("GNU"). And their logo sprawls all over the place.

    Furthermore, the FSF appears to have a touch of NIH syndrome ("not invented here"). Stallman tries to draw a distinction b/t the terms "free software" and "open source", but they mean the same thing, practically speaking. Why hair-split the semantics when you could present a unified, prepackaged concept to the world?

    Sigh... enough ranting. I just want to see FSF do the little things that would help give it corporate cred.

    FYI, the GNU homepage has a lot of actions you can take to support free software politically. Take a look.

    --
    -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    1. Re:Not another word game... by Christ-on-a-bike · · Score: 1
      I think you're largely right. However, you're wrong that open source is essentially the same as free software. Free software is really about copyleft, and the FSF recommends copyleft licenses. Open source is a more permissive idea.

      One of the problems with the ' free software' brand is that it has the word 'software' in it and so it can't easily be applied to other domains. The 'sharealike' concept from Creative Commons is better and expresses essentially the same idea. GPL'd software = sharealike open source. Sharealike even has a logo -- that's right, it's copyleft.

      I prefer 'sharelike' to 'copyleft' (although either one is good). It expresses what I really like about GPL'd software like Linux. Anyone can share in it, but they all share back as well.

    2. Re:Not another word game... by groomed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with most of your criticisms wrt branding, but I think you are completely distorting the point when it comes to the distinction between open source and free software.

      The open source movement aims for better software. They claim the open source development methodology achieves this. (A claim which, by the way, I think is preposterous and nonsensical.)

      The free software foundation aims for a better world, by protecting people's freedom to share and use information.

      I really don't see how you can claim they mean the same thing.

    3. Re:Not another word game... by Srin+Tuar · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I have enough trouble getting my boss to distinguish b/t "open source" and "shareware". Throwing "free software" into the mix is going to hurt corporate adoption, not help civil liberties.

      So dont! Thats the whole point of the "Open Source" foundation: to package and sell the Free software concept to busineses is a way they can understand.

      I just want to see FSF do the little things that would help give it corporate cred.



      Thats not what the FSF is about.
      If the FSF had a slick corporate logo, catch-phrase filled marketing rhetoric, and all the other trappings of the corporate world- well it would lose all credibility.

      The FSF exists to talk about things as they are or could be. People can read about it and draw their own conclusions.

      Marketing is anathema to free thought. "Marketing" is the application of psychological techniques to alter someone's percoptions or decision making process. (basically to trick people)

      No one should have to "sell" you Free software. You can decide thats what you want though, and when you do, you might just decide that youll accept no substitutes (OSF), and instead prefer the non-candy-coated variety (FSF).

    4. Re:Not another word game... by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how aware you are of this, but the term "Free Software" (in the Stallman sense) predates the term "Open Source" by more than ten years.

      Anyway, just a tidbit -- the way you describe it, you sound like open source was around and now people are trying to come in and say, "Call it 'free software' instead" when what really happened was the other way around (for good or ill).

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    5. Re:Not another word game... by firewrought · · Score: 1
      I think you are completely distorting the point when it comes to the distinction between open source and free software.

      They're two sides of the same coin. FSF's emphasis is philosophical/social and OSI's emphasis is more on engineering/benefits, but both labels ("open source" and "free software") mean the same thing when applied to a piece of software: you can take it, modify the source, and redistribute it. That's what I meant by "practically speaking". There's absolutely no difference to the people who select, deploy, use, and support the software.

      The two terms do not meaningful differentiate two pieces of software. You're never going to say "package foo is open source but not free software". You're never going to say "I would prefer to use free software here instead of open source". Among the categories of 'proprietary software', 'freeware', 'shareware', etc..., the terms 'open source' and 'free software' occupy a single entry.

      My point is that the FSF will face a lot of difficulty forcing a distinction b/t the two terms outside of the geek community. FSF has got some complicated concepts to explain to legislators, CEO's, judges, journalists, and countless others. They should embrace the better branding ("open source") and emphasize the freedom aspect of it. I can understand how they are attached to the term 'Free Software' (especially since they came up with it long before OSI), but this is, IMO, not strategic.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    6. Re:Not another word game... by firewrought · · Score: 1
      Marketing is anathema to free thought. "Marketing" is the application of psychological techniques to alter someone's percoptions or decision making process.

      FSF has many preconceptions that it is trying to alter. If it wants to effectively reach a large audience and encourage people to consider new ideas, then hell... a slick logo is worth it.

      I hate the marketing-saturated culture we live in, but FSF could communicate more effectively. (They're doing better in some aspects, actually...)

      Just my 2 cents...

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    7. Re:Not another word game... by The+Pim · · Score: 1
      The thing that Bruce Perens, etc., understand that Stallman does not is "branding". "Open Source" is a distinct, brandable term.
      Bruce Perens: It's time to talk about free software again.
      --

      The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  56. Re:Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It is in danger if you are not allowed to not talk about how bad the BigMac sucks or are sued when you talk about the ingredients. Or, if McDonalds sue Burger King because the whopper is similar. Or the 6 year old is sued for taking apart a whopper.

    Way to completely sidestep the issue and attack a strawman.

    This is about open vs. closed source, not EULAs, DMCA, or other crap. In that respect the Free Software zealots have no answer wrt to other "closed-source" products. Why should software be any different from anything else?

  57. Stallman is reviled only in the USA by Magnus+Pym · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have had conversations with many folks from various countries about Stallman. My feeling is that he is held in VERY high regard by both the technical and political classes in every country except his own. The unfortunate fact is that in the USA, (which, BTW, is my home country) most people are anti-intellectual, and do not have the capacity to comprehend the magnitude of his accomplishments. Even most technical folks in the USA are so decidedly one-dimensional that their frame of reference in worldly matters is like a postage stamp.

    In almost any other country, a man who has sacrificed his earning potential to pursue a larger cause is revered. In the USA, that is considered the sign of a loser or a crank. This is the root cause of the differences in perceptions.

    Magnus

    1. Re:Stallman is reviled only in the USA by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      In almost any other country, a man who has sacrificed his earning potential to pursue a larger cause is revered.

      A great many other countries are socialist backwaters interested only in the Borg-like acceptance of the idea that wealth is evil. This is a prime exampel of 'postage stamp' thinking, expressed by a bunch of fucking idiots whose sole goal is to punish everyone who's able to accumulate more wealth than they are. Everyone's equal in a socialism, so long as they're all equal with the lowest common denominator.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:Stallman is reviled only in the USA by Dirtside · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think a lot of that attitude comes from a historical perspective on the severe abuse of wealth and power. Certainly no one disagrees that at this point in history, money and power are generally interchangeable. And so peoples who have long cultural experience with being abused by powerful institutions (e.g. the monarchies of Europe, whose existence was predicated on the oppression and ignorance of the populace), now that they've gotten democracy and other modern social structures, realize what a danger it is when too few people hold too much power.

      I won't claim that this doesn't get perverted into rabid anti-capitalism, just as happens with virtually every ideology, but that doesn't mean there's no sound reason behind it all, no historical basis, or that a majority of people in such places share that fanatical belief. And honestly, what is there to be gained by calling people names and getting all bitter about what other people think? Aren't we all better served by a rational, thoughtful, informed approach to our world, rather than relying on fear and anger? I know I don't even hold myself up to that standard all the time, but I know that I should (and I do try).

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    3. Re:Stallman is reviled only in the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just that, but personally, I find both Eben Moglen and RMS compelling because whether or not I agree with them, they are always consistent and rationa, even pedantic.

      For comparison on (mostly) the same side, look at the writings of ESR. While he has more moderate views, he seems far less rational and thoughtful in the way he presents arguments, seemingly not differentiating between facts and opinions, which I find very disturbing whether I agree with him or a particular issue or not.

      It seems that ESR is more popular on slashdot, which is probably because his views are; sadly, a lot of people decide to who they listen to based on the extent to which they agree with their opinions, they don't care about the logical validity of the arguments presented.

      If this weren't true, people like Darl McBride would probably never get anyone to listen to them, being extremely poor at constructing valid, consistent arguments.

    4. Re:Stallman is reviled only in the USA by che.kai-jei · · Score: 2, Insightful

      mention postage stamp size perspectives and evey moron with a semi-opinion comes out to betray his own ignorance on any issue.
      your views on socialism are narrow. please don't mention anything to do with things you have never even attempted to google for let alone read about. your sentence "Everyone's equal in a socialism, so long as they're all equal with the lowest common denominator." that sentence does not make any sense. how can there be a lowest common denominator if everyone is equal as you state?
      an LCD [lowest common denominator] in the analogy of LCD implies spread spectrum of the thing you deem to exhibit such properties and therefore is not 'equal' at any point.

      if you were indeed making a reference to how real world socialist systems have either failed their implementations or have been capitalist states with benign socialist feaatures such as sweden then you would only be a fool for condemning two separate things; one of which fails due to mans own capitalist tendencies and one of which succeeds in maintaining a lowest common denominator in standards of living for everyone DESPITE it existing inside of capitalism.

      thanks.

  58. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    So the first time they compiled and ran it, it didn't work. That doesn't mean it won't work when someone looks at the business model, applies patches, and tries to run it again.

    For now, the lesson to the artist is don't depend on getting all of your income from a single source. Especially if that source is still experimental.

  59. Legal distribution in free formats coming soon? by jbn-o · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For those of you who appreciate the irony of an FSF speaker being recorded in a proprietary format, I should tell you I have already asked both Eben Moglen and the JOLT Harvard folks to consider distributing their talks in free formats under licenses that allow at least verbatim distribution in any medium.

    Prof. Moglen told me if the JOLT folks did not produce a free format copy of his talk, he would do so himself. The person I spoke with at Harvard said he would take the licensing issue to their board for review.

    1. Re:Legal distribution in free formats coming soon? by Panoramix · · Score: 2, Interesting
      For those of you who appreciate the irony of an FSF speaker being recorded in a proprietary format, I should tell you I have already asked both Eben Moglen and the JOLT Harvard folks to consider distributing their talks in free formats under licenses that allow at least verbatim distribution in any medium.

      I actually transcoded the full Darl lecture to MPEG-1, segmented the thing so that individual questions could be easily downloaded, and requested permission to distribute the files. It was denied, on the very reasonable terms that the copyright of the media is owned by Harvard, not JOLT, and so they could not grant anyone any right to distribute the media.

      They offered to host the transcoded files, and I made them available for them, so you may be able to get them from the JOLT archive at some point in time.

      However, since the full conference in MPEG-1 is over 1GB of data, and since these guys are probably busy, this may take a very long time, or probably won't happen. But for me, that's ok. I prefer that they use their time producing these wonderful webcasts at all, even if they use Real.

    2. Re:Legal distribution in free formats coming soon? by phallux · · Score: 1
      That's very commendable. But over 1 GB of video... have you considered using a more modern codec than MPEG-1, such as, oh, I don't know... MPEG-4? ;-)

      XviD is an open source MPEG-4 codec you know, and should be able to squeeze that puppy down to the size of the original RA stream (or smaller) with no discernable loss in quality. ;-)

    3. Re:Legal distribution in free formats coming soon? by Panoramix · · Score: 1
      XviD is an open source MPEG-4 codec you know, and should be able to squeeze that puppy down to the size of the original RA stream (or smaller) with no discernable loss in quality. ;-)

      Indeed I tried it. It is not as compact as Real, regrettably---the result was a stream of some 400 MB of video, if I recall correctly, or near twice the size of the RV dump (and I did space the keyframes a lot, and made as many adjustements as I knew to get better compression with reasonable picture and audio quality). In the end, the poor compression may stem from the fact that the source was not very clean, as it was being recompressed from an already very compressed format. Smaller files can be created by lowering the frame rate of reducing the picture size, but then the quality degrades much more. Real Video, for all its proprietary ugliness, seems to be amazingly effective.

      The reason why I chose MPEG-1 was that it seems to me it is really the lowest possible common denominator for digital video, and the one that was most likely to be playable in absolutely all players and devices (in fact, the format used was that for VCD, so that the video could be recorded into a CD-R and played back on a standard TV through an ordinary DVD player). And I segmented the video precisely because 1GB of data is really an awfully big chunk to move around on the net.

      Well, that was the idea. But hey, they published my Speex recoding of the audio (I was not aware of that until this Slashdot story reminded me to check their site), so the goal of helping them get a wider distribution of the media in a non-proprietary format was acomplished.

    4. Re:Legal distribution in free formats coming soon? by phallux · · Score: 1

      Yeah, XviD is much more difficult to wrangle with than DivX or other MPEG codecs, especially when it comes to meeting your target filesize. It takes lots of practice, and I admit that I still don't have it fully mastered myself yet. But those I know who have mastered it produce encodings much smaller in filesize than mine and with higher quality -- and definitely comparable to anything you can do using RealVideo (though RealVideo is now MPEG-4 based I believe). I guess what XviD really needs is better encoding applications specifically geared towards making XviD encoding easier. To date, nobody I'm aware of has even come close to offering such tools.

  60. Spot the Reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't get it.

  61. Philosophy warning, deep water ahead by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    On one hand there's the idea of property as a human right or a natural right. You usually see this made explicit in libertarian writings. Viewed as a human right, the idea is that if you can't own anything you are going to be owned by others, the essence of slavery being that you don't *get* anything for your labor. Viewed as a natural right, the idea is that property law simply acknowledges and protects something that existed before the first dog barked at a trespasser.

    On the other hand there's the idea that "property is theft". You see this most often in anarchist writings. Here the argument is that for one person to own something, that person has to take it away from everyone else. Then a whole coercive apparatus has to be built up to keep everyone else from taking it away from the owner.

    Scarcity, according to Aristotle, is the fundamental principle of economics. If there's a limited supply of something and unlimited demand, then there needs to be some kind of rationing. Property laws provide that function.

    A matter duplicator would force us to rethink our ideas about physical property because it would remove the scarcity issue. The Internet is forcing us to rethink our ideas about intellectual property for the same reason.

    >whether the *creator* (or creators) of a piece of IP have the moral right to designate its usage

    Well put. From a human-rights point of view, "designate the usage" means giving orders to the other six billion people on the planet about what they can do with a piece of "IP". From a utilitarian point of view ("greatest good of the greatest number") useful intellectual work should get spread as widely as possible. The compromise of copyright law was an attempt to ensure the greatest good given 18th-century distribution methods.

    If I understand the rms position, it's not so much that it's bad to make money from software, but rather that it's bad to imprison the software and make money by charging for access to it.

    Honest and thoughtful people can come to different ethical conclusions on these questions. I just wish more bright people would give those questions the depth of thought they deserve.

  62. Shocking! by amightywind · · Score: 2, Funny
    I got myself this new fangled PDA from Microsoft and the complete lack of GPL code out there for it is truely amazing.

    You entered a whorehouse and expected to find virtue?

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  63. The Power of Free by thoth39 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What I find most interesting in these great speeches about freedom of information, like what I read in http://www.creativecommons.org/, is that the more strict legislation over what you can do is passed, the more people react to it.

    When we were feeling sad about the state of copyright law, feeling that nothing would never enter public domain and become humanity's propery, there comes all these people sharing because they want to. Everything is automagically copyrighted? Fine. I'll explicitly license it to everybody. What are you evil people going to do, tell me I can't license what is mine?

    Give them (or us, as I write a little free software here and there) twenty years more; the body of freely licensed knowledge will be so huge there won't be any benefit in anything proprietary. There will be so many musicians and artists licensing their cool stuff that we won't need to infringe on anyone's copyright to listen to good music. Those that try to say "Hey, come here and buy the right to hear this song" will face the question "Why? There's so many free stuff to hear I actually haven't got the time".

    The last time I bought a CD was more than two years ago, because they're expensive. But I gladly buy very expensive beer and pay the artist's fee at this jazz cafe I go almost every week. The music is just too good.

    --
    -- Pedro
  64. Good Source of Insight by Dr.+Transparent · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think Cartman has some good insight when he said, "Hippies, hippies... they want to save the world but all they do is smoke pot, play frisbee [and complain about paying for stuff]!"

    1. Re:Good Source of Insight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, you would think that was insightful, wouldn't you. oh well, we can't all be awake.

  65. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "So the first time they compiled and ran it, it didn't work. That doesn't mean it won't work when someone looks at the business model, applies patches, and tries to run it again."

    Hey, I wish MP3.com did work -- there's nothing I like more than the idea of independent musicians replacing making it on their own. But MP3.com went very broke giving away music, and it's not a simple a recompile.

    The question is how will musician have a best change to claim power, and the EFF/FSF of free everything isn't going to help musician, coders, etc. to claim more economic power.

    It might benefit all the people who can consume all that work for free, but it doesn't benefit the people making it.

    "For now, the lesson to the artist is don't depend on getting all of your income from a single source. Especially if that source is still experimental.'

    And especially is the other sources are "give your work away, some magic will come by and compensate you."

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  66. It's not... by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not "Free Linux", it's "GNU/Linux". We need to keep reminding people that what's at stake here is GNU.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  67. MOD UP +1 COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to be missing from your comment ... like the body or the subject!)

  68. Thank you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just sayin'

  69. "IP" says more about speaker than about Stallman. by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    I wish you had produced this article rather than related it with what appears to be your failing memory. In addition to the other essays others have already pointed to, I direct your attention to the notes on the use of the term "intellectual property" or "IP". This term is bad, and Stallman misses no opportunity to say as much in his talks, because it conflates a lot of different areas of law (copyright, trademark, patent, just to name a few) and presents them as though they were one cohesive set of laws with a common ground. They are anything but that. The term also prejudices one's thinking to cut short the discussion on how these laws should be thought of--property is one possible way to think about them (not a particularly accurate way), not the only way.

    If you understood Stallman's motivation and logic as well as you say you do, you would know this too. Your post is highly overrated and I hope it is moderated down.

  70. bad to imprison the idea by nuggz · · Score: 1

    This is precisely the point of free software.
    Surprisingly the foundation of copyright and patent law.

    To benefit society, ideas must be shared.
    Copyright tries to force an idea to artificial scarceness to encourage sharing.
    This has worked very well, think of the amount of additional creative production that has been generated. Books, movies and music come to my mind.

    Patent law attacks this directly. You still get a limited monopoly, but the terms require complete disclosure of how your idea works and can be implemented.
    Again the idea is to disseminate this information to the world at large, not imprison the idea to a select few.

  71. Free software != free speech by I'm+Spartacus! · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How free is the speech when there are restrictions placed upon how, when, and where I can use that speech? The GPL is more facist than free as it restricts the way I may use that speech (i.e. code).

    I'm not arguing that's necessarily a bad thing, but I do object to calling something free when it really isn't.

    --
    "War is God's way of teaching Americans geography." -- Ambrose Bierce
    1. Re:Free software != free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then am I free to take your life?

      Stop thinking of yourself, and think of "Total Freedom". 99% freedorm for 100% of people, or 100% freedom for you? Which is better?

      "Shall we ration out laughter? No! Make more laughter!".

    2. Re:Free software != free speech by Hal9000_sn3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The GPL only gives a pre-written license for one way you can use that speech (i.e. code). It in no way prevents you and the developer of that code reaching a different agreement about what you may do with the code.

      In other words, it gives you one option, with specific restrictions. You are free to negotiate any other option with the copyright holder.

  72. real history of term "open source" by thomas_klopf · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to "Rebel Code - Linux and the Open Source Revolution" by Glyn Moody (chap. 10), the term "Open Source" was coined in Winter/Spring 1998 (February 3rd?). Eric Raymond initiated the search for a term for this "free software" coming out, and later "open source" was decided upon. It seems they were looking for something less ambigious and more business-friendly than "free software". The term itself was originally suggested by Christine Peterson of the Foresight Institute.

    regarding Stallman (quoting from the book)

    "Richard Stallman always viewed this shift [from terms like 'free software' to 'open source'] with alarm. 'The open source movement is Eric Raymond's attempt to redirect the free software movement away from a focus on freedom,' he says. 'He does not agree that freedom to share software is an ethical/social issue. So he decided to try to replace the term 'free software' with another term, one that would in no way call to mind that way of framing the issue."

    So it seems that, historically, there is something of a difference between "open source" and "free software"

    1. Re:real history of term "open source" by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seems they were looking for something less ambigious and more business-friendly than "free software".

      Possibly they were looking for something more business friendly but they definitely weren't looking for something less ambiguous and if they had been then they wouldn't have settled on "open source".

      "Open source" just sounds like the source code is available. It does not sound as though you get the freedoms promoted by the Free Software Foundation and, apparently, by the Open Source Initiative at all.

      If anything it is more ambiguous. At least 'free as in freedom' or 'free as in speech' rolls off the rongue a little more easily than 'open source as in free (as in speech) software'.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
  73. The FSF on "open source" and "free software". by jbn-o · · Score: 2, Informative

    The FSF has written an essay to clarify this point. I think it is one of their most underrated essays. This essay has been published by the FSF for years now and is also in RMS' book of selected essays "Free Software, Free Society: The Selected Essays of Richard M. Stallman". Please notice how different this essay is from what the Open Source Initiative says about the free software movement (in case you don't already know, the OSI reduces the free software movement, from which it sprang, to "ideological tub-thumping").

  74. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by the_flatlander · · Score: 1
    Wrong. It's no different with the EFF's tacit support of file-sharing[...]
    Ah, you are confused. This is the FSF, *not* the EFF. I am unaware of FAF's stand, if any, on file-sharing of, for example, music.

    The Flatlander

  75. The failure of the judicial system is correctable by Baldrson · · Score: 0, Troll
    The judicial system has failed due to the fact that we live in a technological civilization and the judiciary views technologists as an after-thought to the constitution of civilization. They've simply forgotten where law came from to begin with.

    Now this isn't to say we should go around offing the lawyers but to be realistic we have to recognize we don't have lawyers worthy of technological civilization at all.

    The best thing to do is correct the corrections system by providing alternatives to it. If programmers need a little competition to keep them honest why not the judiciary and the law enforcement system upon which its founded?

    The best way to do this is simply render judgements and opinions and then leave it up to the enforcers to do the enforcing. Either the enforcers of the world will start paying attention to the right courts and the right rulings or they won't. If they don't we're screwed anyway but the least we can do is provide them with good judgements.

    If I were a military or police man now I'd hate my job with a passion and desperately wish to find some courts with some compassion for humanity and justice rather than the leviathan that orders me throw people in prison to be "corrected" via gang-rape by the worst elements of society. That's the motivation for the enforcers. People want to be good -- particularly guys who want to be our protectors the most. Rendering judgements that actually upheld the nobility of creativity rather than forking the honors over to those with a brother-in-law sleaze-bag lawyer would be a natural consequence of correcting the corrections system so they could actually look at themselves in the mirror without averting their eyes.

  76. Re:Nonsense by microbox · · Score: 1

    In there small way KFC is threatening freedom of speech.

    How do you mean?


    What if everybody did this... a moral question that kids begin to ask when they are 9ish. So the only new foods we have are trade secrets backed by advertising campaigns, and 100 years later we've still got the same foods.

    KFC Corp. keeps trade secrets because it's in its own interest. If they are going to give back, it will be on their terms. This is perfectly legal and by design.

    But there is something rotten in our laws. There's nothing wrong with KFC making $$$ by creating a receipe and marketing it as kewl if, over time it is beneficial to society.

    So in 50 years the receipe may still be secret. Now I'm not interested in it, but pretend I am... well too bad... someone else owns my culture. Star Wars is a much better example, because it really is part of our culture.

    The society constructed in the Western world currently has mechanisms in place to allow autonomous, individual pursuit for people or corporations.

    So the George Lucas is rich, and so are many other who worked on this great piece of art. They needed to protect the monopoly on Star Wars for a certain amount of time to get their due compensation. But Star Wars has transcended 'money making', and little kiddies and adults want to do things with Star Wars IP, like write stories and make other movies, but they can't.

    Big business owns this celebrity, and they make big $$$ because many people have attachments to it. They have lobbied and subverted IP laws so that they can hang on to such cash cows as long as possible (indefinitely would be nice for shareholders). We need to rewrite IP laws and strike a balance somewhere.

    Specifically, if some fan of a celebrity should be able to create (art?) for non-commercial purposes. (Why should Wizards of the Coast dislike fanfiction).

    If the original author has already made $$$ from a work, then why shouldn't they be forced to compete and innovate with other authors (commercially) who want to extend that work? Because it's easier to lobby congress with those original $$$, and create a legal situation where you can sit on your thumb playing golf and still wrack in the dollars.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  77. Enligthening Q/A by Shane · · Score: 4, Informative

    Q: But what about the software writer?

    Moglen: Ah, the software. . .

    Q: That's the kind of stuff I think I was more getting at with my question. So you have somebody who creates something useful but it has a zero distribution cost, and it's useful in a way that's not, not useful like celebrity, though I'm not sure, I don't think that's useful in some ways, but it's useful in the different sense that it takes a long time to create well.

    Moglen: See, the programmers I worked with all my life thought of themselves as artisans, and it was very hard to unionize them. They thought that they were individual creators. Software writers at the moment have begun to lose that feeling, as the world proletarianizes them much more severely than it used to. They're beginning to notice that they're workers, and not only that, but if you pay attention to the Presidential campaign currently going on around us, they are becoming aware of the fact that they are workers whose jobs are movable in international trade.

    We are actually doing more to sustain the livelihood of programmers than the proprietary people are. Mr. Gates has only so many jobs, and he will move them to where the programming is cheapest. Just you watch. We, on the other hand, are enabling people to gain technical knowledge which they can customize and market in the world where they live. We are making people programmers, right? And we are giving them a base upon which to perform their service activity at every level in the economy, from small to large.

    [1:15]

    There is programming work for fourteen-year-olds in the world now because they have the whole of GNU upon which to erect whatever it is that somebody in their neighbourhood wants to buy, and we are making enough value for the IBM corporation that it's worth putting billions of dollars behind.

    If I were an employee of the IBM corporation right this moment, I would consider my job more secure where it is because of free software than if free software disappeared from the face of the earth, and I don't think most of the people who work at IBM would disagree with me.

    Of all the people who participate in the economy of zero marginal cost, I think the programmers can see most clearly where their benefits lie, and if you just wait for a few more tens of thousands of programming jobs to go from here to Bangalore, they'll see it even more clearly.

    --
    -- You can be a geeklord too :)
  78. What are you jabbering about? by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    (Note that Red Hat charges a lot more than that for support, but Linus Torvalds and others who created their product gets no compensation linked to those charges.)
    So I suppose the fact that Linus owns heaps of Red Hat stock (which is definitely linked to what Red Hat charges) means nothing? Stock, incidentally, that Red Hat GAVE to Linus gratis? I suppose ignorance is preferable to knowledge when you want to cast idealists in a negative light.
  79. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    Hold on a second. The EFF and FSF are about making things better for the consumer. They're also about opposing new restrictions on copyrighted work. That doesn't mean they want "everything" to be free.

    If you had a low-overhead system, I'm sure a "paid-for by advertisement" website that performed in the role of the old mp3.com would be perfectly viable. In fact, I'd try to keep it privately held so as to prevent the volatilies of investor opinion from influencing the owner's policies.

    An even better idea would be a paid-for-by-advertising p2p system that compensated copyright holders for trafficked data.

  80. RMS on commercial software is often misunderstood. by jbn-o · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You selling software is morally wrong, according to RMS.

    And your support for this statement is where, exactly? You've provided the URL to an interview that doesn't seem to back up your assertion and then not clarified precisely what statement RMS made that backs up what you claim he said.

    The closest thing I could find in that interview to backing up your statement is:

    [Q:] Is it your belief that "high-paying organizations" (i.e. proprietary software vendors) should be banned?

    [RMS:] I would not ban high salaries, but I think they should have a high tax bracket. As for making software proprietary, I really don't care whether it is legal as long as in practice it is rare enough to have no significant impact on society.

    This does not support your statement and it looks like you don't really understand what RMS means when he refers to proprietary software. He is not against commercial software, he is against proprietary software.

  81. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1

    "Hold on a second. The EFF and FSF are about making things better for the consumer."

    Correct, but sadly not the artist/coder.


    "They're also about opposing new restrictions on copyrighted work."

    Ah, but they also want to take away the rights of people engaged in some creative art -- music, coding, and whatever that can be expressed digitally.

    That's why they agitate in favor of file-sharing (even when it comes to clearly copyrighted work), and that's why they agitate for commercial reuse without compensation in the case of the Grey Album -- or at least taking an artists right to decide when their work can be sampled into something else.

    They talk a ton about copyright when it's protecting the GPL, but disregard it when it's protecting an artist that chose *not* to give away her work.


    "That doesn't mean they want "everything" to be free."."

    But that's what they want, you may not like it, but that's just the way it is. Everything is socialized into some new quasi-government agencey.


    "I'm sure a "paid-for by advertisement" website that performed in the role of the old mp3.com would be perfectly viable."

    So go build it! ;) Seriously, you can't pay for servers, bandwidth, tech time, and artists with a bunch of banners. Don't you remember the dot-com boom? And bust?

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  82. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "Ah, you are confused. This is the FSF, *not* the EFF. I am unaware of FAF's stand, if any, on file-sharing of, for example, music."

    No, not confused. They're both flag wavers in the free everything movement. Are you actually saying that you fault the EFF position on copyright when it comes to filesharing and the Grey Album?

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  83. I know KFC's secret recipie by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 1

    Actually my friend does, who cooks for me sometimes.

    But truth is, theres only so much culture out there. When you've seen it all, whats new is only variations on the old that you could expect.

    I've been down the road of caring, and it leads to Jesus. Then when you find God everything changes.

    1. Re:I know KFC's secret recipie by microbox · · Score: 1

      But truth is, theres only so much culture out there. When you've seen it all, whats new is only variations on the old that you could expect.

      Most artists would agree with you in part. If you get really wierd and really really think about what creating art is (and what's considered art), you'll see that there is always a variation and something known... even if it's as simple as the shape of a smile.

      So, you're really saying that there's no artist out there who's been able to surprise you with the way in which they've composed things from their environment.

      For example, assume you're art is C++. We all spend a lot of time using other peoples code (using system libraries for example), can copying other peoples ideas of solving problems (design patterns). Sometimes we come up with something original, most of us do at some point. That is art, and if it's recognized, it is culture.

      I'm saying that your statement is an extension of the I've never seen an original idea

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  84. Re:RMS on commercial software is often misundersto by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

    > that non-free software is unethical and wrong

    about 3/4 the way down.

  85. Free Software vs Open Source by nuggz · · Score: 2

    They don't mean the same thing.
    For many practical purposes they are similar, and provide many of the same benefits.

    What many people like you don't realize is that the distinction _IS_ important.
    It is mostly an ideological issue IMO.

    When you have a founding idea that you follow or pursue it can help guide your efforts in a unified and more productive way.

    RMS is pursuing a moral/ethical goal, by keeping that in mind has been able to retain this focus and become quite successful in his pursuit.
    The Open source is pursuing slightly different goals. If you lump them together you might assume that something that is good enough for the Open source movement is good enough for the free software movement too, and this might not be the case, due to the difference in their respective goals.

  86. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by swillden · · Score: 1

    No, not confused. They're both flag wavers in the free everything movement.

    Admittedly, some here enjoy engaging in hair-splitting, but if you always view everything this simplistically, you're going to miss most of what goes on around you.

    The EFF and the FSF are very different organizations with different leadership, different goals and different approaches. The EFF does tend to agree with most of what the FSF says, but there are vast numbers of issues the EFF talks about that the FSF has no position on whatsoever.

    Similarly, your mischaracterization of the FSF arises from excessive simplification of the issues. The FSF approves of selling software, both Free and proprietary, and doesn't necessarily want to eliminate proprietary software from the world -- they just want to make sure that there are Free alternatives for everything, so that no one is forced to use proprietary software if they don't want to. Of course, the natural effect of the existence of Free alternatives for everything will be that all proprietary software competes at a huge disadvantage, and so there won't be very much of it, but that's a side effect, not a goal.

    I realize that last bit is probably too fine a distinction for you to get your mind around, but it really is an important one.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  87. Free everything by the_flatlander · · Score: 1

    Still, with respect, no not free everything. And anyway, it is free as in liberty, not free as in beer.

    Do I fault EFF over file-sharing? Nope. Unenforcable laws are an abomination. To put a file on a server violates no laws, at least not until the DCMA came along. To donwload it might violate laws. Tell me how to tell. Tell me how to prevent it.

    I respect copyrights. I don't download music, or anything else that I suspect may be another's property But if ensuring compliance with the law requires taht the police observe every byte that travels down the wire, then I say to heck with compliance! I am not prepared to give up my privacy for your property rights.

    The Flatlander

    1. Re:Free everything by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      "Still, with respect, no not free everything. And anyway, it is free as in liberty, not free as in beer."

      Don't you ever get tired of that mantra? "Free as in liberty, not free as in beer. Free as in liberty, not free as in beer."

      You miss the whole economic fact. It is free as in beer. Duh, wake up! It is free as in beer.

      Companies are making money of coders' free work, it's just a simple fact. Coders should be making that money and gaining financial control. NOT giving it away because people keep chanting "Free as in liberty, not free as in beer."


      "Do I fault EFF over file-sharing? Nope. Unenforcable laws are an abomination. To put a file on a server violates no laws, at least not until the DCMA came along. To donwload it might violate laws. Tell me how to tell. Tell me how to prevent it."

      Bingo -- it's all the same. Even when somebody is sued for having downloaded thousands of files, it's still unacceptable.

      The conclusion is obvious: tough shit if you want to make a living selling your work, and you have no choice but to buy into our vision of some new government aganecy. Thanks, but I don't buy it.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    2. Re:Free everything by the_flatlander · · Score: 1

      No. You are wrong. And you are not engaging in logical argument.

      Look, it's like this: If you wish to be paid to write code, but to keep all the value you create for yourself, then *you* must be the company, too. It isn't a big deal, lots of people start their own businesses. If you want finacial control, go for it.

      The Artists aren't the ones who earn money off of CD sales. The Artists make their money at the concerts. See, for example, The Hell Freezes Over Tour. (It wasn't because The Eagles CDs didn't sell anymore.) File downloading hurts the record companies. Tough luck, you can't legislate around evolution.

      Our programming jobs have moved to South-Central Asia, where the work is done as well, or better, and cheaper than it can be done here. Well, this means I need a new job, not another stinking law. It wasn't free software that did that to me either, it was just good ol' capitalism. (The everything costs money, nothing is free movement.)

      The Flatlander

      You may have the last word, if you wish, I'll be done here. Be well.

    3. Re:Free everything by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      "Look, it's like this: If you wish to be paid to write code, but to keep all the value you create for yourself, then *you* must be the company, too. It isn't a big deal, lots of people start their own businesses. If you want finacial control, go for it."

      Correct, and likewise in a post-record company world, the musician is the company too. Unless of course you favor a socialized state controlled system.

      The same logic that protects coder bits protects musician bytes, and vice-versa.


      "The Artists aren't the ones who earn money off of CD sales. The Artists make their money at the concerts. See, for example, The Hell Freezes Over Tour. (It wasn't because The Eagles CDs didn't sell anymore.) File downloading hurts the record companies. Tough luck, you can't legislate around evolution."

      Once again, The Big Bad Record Company is proxied in place of all artists, over all time. What of all the independent musicians trying to sell their work on sites like CDBaby? Fuck them?

      And the tour argument is similarly weak -- for starters, guess what? It's great when an independent musician can sit back and sell some CDs, good for them. Have you ever lugged a tube amp up a flight of stairs? No, of course you havn't.

      Furthermore, your tour "vision" entirely dismisses any non-live work -- what about electronic and other complicated mixwork? Fuck that too?


      "Our programming jobs have moved to South-Central Asia, where the work is done as well, or better, and cheaper than it can be done here. Well, this means I need a new job, not another stinking law. It wasn't free software that did that to me either, it was just good ol' capitalism. (The everything costs money, nothing is free movement.)"

      Sorry, but are you somehow saying that South-Asian coders are worth less than you? Look, if they work hard and produce equal quality work, good for them.

      But that has nothing to do with justifying copying others' work, or any of the other mumbo-jumbo liberally tossed around by EFF/FSF/free everything mafia.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    4. Re:Free everything by the_flatlander · · Score: 1
      [Deep shame] I said I'd give you the last word, but you've asked a question I can not walk away from....

      Sorry, but are you somehow saying that South-Asian coders are worth less than you? Look, if they work hard and produce equal quality work, good for them.
      No. My point was, like yours, "good for them." They are worth whatever they are willing to work for and someone is willing to pay them. This is how a free-market economy works. I am not sure how you read that as I thought them to be worth less than me. They are a better deal for people looking to purchase programming services.
      The same logic that protects coder bits protects musician bytes, and vice-versa.
      Musicans existed before digital, or even analog, encoding of their work. They have been paid, one way or another, through all of recorded history. I would expect that to continue. I do not, have not, never will suggest that anyone should steal someone else's property. But there are limits to the rights I am willing to give up to ensure that no one steals anything of yours, or even of mine. And I never suggested disregard for others' rights in the rude terms you have chosen.

      No, I have never worked as a roadie, but I have carried more electric hospital beds up and down narrow stair cases than most folks you'll meet.

      FSF is not about free everything. Your repeating that they are, in ever more strident terms does little to further your point. I must confess, that I remain completely ignorant of what, exactly, your point in this ranting is.

      The Flatlander

      I will really be done now, you may attack as you please.

    5. Re:Free everything by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      "No, I have never worked as a roadie, but I have carried more electric hospital beds up and down narrow stair cases than most folks you'll meet."

      'Nuff said, right? ;)

      The point is that there are people trying to make a living selling their digital work. Some are coders, some are musicians. FSF and EFF are agitating to weaken their lot in life, and pass it off as an attack on some Evil Oligopoly.

      So many armchair pundits. Look, I work on a daily basis trying to sell my code, and I work on a daily basis with people trying to sell their music. And on a daily basis I see the EFF encourage people to rip off others' work, and the FSF encourage coders to give their work to big companies for free, and I think it sucks.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  88. Re:RMS on commercial software is often misundersto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > that non-free software is unethical and wrong

    about 3/4 the way down.


    Yeah, let's all read something Stallman says about "non-free" software and pretend we think he's talking about price. You are SO funny.

  89. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "FSF [snip] doesn't necessarily want to eliminate proprietary software from the world -- they just want to make sure that there are Free alternatives for everything"

    Yup, that's what I'm saying, and that goal is at odds with the economic position of coders. Tons of free code is good for the people that use it, but it comes at the uncompensated expense of those making it.

    FSF, EFF, etc, it's all the same -- devaluing the work of those engaged in creative professions.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  90. People do pay for free software by nuggz · · Score: 1

    But people do pay for free software.
    Lets take an example, like Redhat.

    They take Linux, make a distribution. Sell it, people buy it. They realize it needs some improvement to sell more. They hire some experts on thie software, not surprisingly some of the people who wrote it.
    Now they have a better version, that they can keep improving. They keep selling it, people keep buying it. The programmers get paid.
    You could get it for free, but it is worth the money to some to pay for an expert to make sure things work smoothly.

    Redhat makes money by adding value to the free software. The software is still free, you don't have to pay, but they are able to offer something worth paying for.

    Now it is more directly support contracts, the software has still remained free, people still pay, the programmer still has a job, and the corporation still makes a profit.

    I don't see the problem, and Redhat isn't fooling anyone, Fedora (aka Redhat) is still available for free.

  91. Re:Nonsense by wwest4 · · Score: 1

    > If the original author has already made $$$
    > from a work, then why shouldn't they be forced
    > to compete and innovate with other authors
    > (commercially) who want to extend that work?
    > Because it's easier to lobby congress with
    > those original $$$, and create a legal
    > situation where you can sit on your thumb
    > playing golf and still wrack in the dollars.

    The answer to the question is that the author gets a reprieve as mandated by law. This is a planned, deliberate economic incentive (without which, btw, George could not have exploited economies of scale to create such a grand, opulent visual orgy. star wars would be a dime novel or nothing without the visuals).

    Not everyone rests on their laurels an manipulates laws. Also, not everyone is dead-set against non-profit fan art (Lucas, for example). They are just against coat-tailers, which is their right since that is how the law is designed. In 2050 you can sell all the fan art you want, but until then its George's party and that much at least is fair IMHO.

  92. Sorry, but I beg to differ by El · · Score: 1
    our major problem will be that bandwidth is now treated in the world also as a product, rather than a public utility. And you are allowed to have, in general, as much bandwidth as you can pay for. So then in the world in which we now exist, though hardware is cheap and software is free, there are major difficulties in disseminating knowledge and encouraging the diffusion of science and the useful arts, because people are too poor to pay for the bandwidth that they require in order to learn.

    Bandwidth is effectively a "commons". As such, unless there is some economic disincentive to prevent every user from utilizing just as much bandwidth as they can, it is subject to the problem of "The Tragedy of the Commons." Surely Professor Moglen doesn't beleive bandwidth can long continue to violate the basic principles of economics...

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    1. Re:Sorry, but I beg to differ by qcomp · · Score: 1
      Bandwidth is effectively a "commons". As such, unless there is some economic disincentive to prevent every user from utilizing just as much bandwidth as they can, it is subject to the problem of "The Tragedy of the Commons."

      In Lawrence Lessig's book "The future of ideas" this very point is discussed: novel methods of using the electromagnetic spectrum (essentially using packets and hopping in frequency) can provide essentially limitless bandwith. (References to these methods can be found in Lessig's book). This would pevent the "Tragedy".
      There are other means to reach the same goal:one could make only part of the spectrum a commons, one could still sell licenses but regulate their use (like the use of AT&T's phone lines was regulated).

  93. Re:Nonsense by microbox · · Score: 1

    I like your ideas, but I have to disagree...

    The answer to the question is that the author gets a reprieve as mandated by law. This is a planned, deliberate economic incentive (without which, btw, George could not have exploited economies of scale to create such a grand, opulent visual orgy. star wars would be a dime novel or nothing without the visuals).

    Star Wars was expensive in it's day (the first movie), and 'new and risky', and it made bake enormous sums of money very quickly. Many would say that the quality of Star Wars has declined over time, society (through George Lucas) is now investing hundreds of millions into making substandard new movies. If Star Wars was open to competition, then an inspired fan could have written something... inspired , and we could have fed the starving millions in the mean time.

    Not everyone rests on their laurels an manipulates laws. Also, not everyone is dead-set against non-profit fan art (Lucas, for example). They are just against coat-tailers, which is their right since that is how the law is designed. In 2050 you can sell all the fan art you want, but until then its George's party and that much at least is fair IMHO.

    I agree that not everybody rests on the laurels, I'd say that most don't, because they like creating art. (Creating art is more important than profit sometimes). But "not resting on your laurels" is not required by law, and often not required by market pressures.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  94. Re:Nonsense by microbox · · Score: 1

    and often not required by market pressures

    I should say industry lobbiest attempt to subvert the law so that market pressures don't prevent them from "resting on their laurels"

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  95. Re:RMS on commercial software is often misundersto by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Please provide an exact quote of the statement.

  96. "Foundation for Software Freedom"? by mr_tenor · · Score: 1

    I suggested this once, since it would require no acronym change and is grammatically correct.

  97. What's with the timestamps? by El · · Score: 1

    ...

    [60:05] ...

    [1:00:05]

    At least on my microwave, these two are exactly the same time... was the transcriber using some timebase not comprised of 60-minute hours?

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  98. C'mon, gimme a break by mccrew · · Score: 1
    Those against open source itself, like the MPAA and SCO, are doing so because they don't like what is being said, as well as how it is being said.

    I have not seen the MPAA (or RIAA) make any stink about open source software. While I certainly will not defend their practices, primarily they are out to stop the blatant theft of their product, which is what they should be doing.

    You have the right to remain silent, but please leave me my right to speak.

    You're right, just don't confuse that with the notion that you therefore have a right to be heard.

    --
    Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
    1. Re:C'mon, gimme a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      blatant theft of their product

      It's not theft because you are not depriving them of physical property, you are making a copy. Redistributing their "product" without permission is copyright infringement, it is not theft and no court of law would recognise it as such. You're right in essence, just don't confuse the legal facts with the industry propaganda.

    2. Re:C'mon, gimme a break by mccrew · · Score: 1
      It's not theft because you are not depriving them of physical property, you are making a copy.

      We can mince words, call it copyright infringement, couch it as some kind of highbrow "fair use," or some other euphamism that doesn't sound so judgemental. But the end of the day, if you got it but you didn't pay for it as you are required to, then that is stealing, plain and simple. No legal jargon, no industry propaganda, just the cold hard fact.

      --
      Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
  99. Strawman. by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 1
    Way to completely sidestep the issue and attack a strawman.

    Thank you.

    Actually it is not. The source code is not the only issue in Closed v. Open, but also the legal issues of copyrights and patents. My response is not the main topic, but a dervitave topic.

  100. Erratum by LouisvilleDebugger · · Score: 1

    In parent, for "errata" read "erratum." :)

    (Ripping off an old Doug Hofstadter example)

  101. "Limitless bandwidth"?!? by El · · Score: 1
    Although I'm sure there are technological measures that could facilitate sharing, I'm willing to bet they all depend on all participants being well behaved. For example, the Ethernet CDMA algorithm relies on random exponential backoff in response to collisions. One node could theoretically increase its own throughput on a saturated subnet by ignoring the algrithm and immediately retransmitting instead. This would work until everybody started doing it, at which point effective throughput drops to zero. How do "software radios" guarantee that they will still abide by the rules established by the FCC for sharing?

    "Essentially limitless bandwidth" is a misleading expression; I beleive the best that you can do is to design a system where throughput under heavy use degrades in a way that is fair to all participants.

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  102. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think your quite mistaken, to devalue a work is to make it worth less. But worth isn't expressed in money, that's a capitalistic idea in trying to optimise society, or atleast it does if you try to put high values of monetary worth to it, most economists seemed to have shied away from researching near zero marginal cost economic goods. It doesn't work in all cases, and infact oftently fails quite miserably with ideas and derivitaives of it. The best examples of this would really be the scientific and engineering community, which have only been able to build up to this current point due to free access to ideas.

    To work out this position out to a more practical 'real world' position, how do coders get to be payed to still advance software products? How about going to IBM then and looking at what there transforming there entire organisation to, namely services, end users oftently wish for professional help to run there programmers, and in some cases to add to existing code for extra features. Programmers will have to be payed for this service and feature work. Thus total work in the world doesn't really change all that much, but the way people can use it is though. And from what we've seen historically in the engineering and science community, the greatest innovation is when a system is open. Thus if I had to choose between the open and closed system, I'll choose the open system, as it brings more benefits to everyone.

    Quickshot

  103. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by swillden · · Score: 1

    Yup, that's what I'm saying, and that goal is at odds with the economic position of coders.

    I disagree. I'm making a good living writing software, and a good part of it is working on free software.

    Your position confuses the welfare of software developers with the welfare of software development companies -- which, by the way, employ only a small fraction of all of the programmers in the world. Most programmers work for companies whose primary business is not software.

    As long as there's a demand for new software, and computers can't write it themselves, there will be a need for programmers. As long as there's a need for programmers, there will be a way for programmers to get paid. As Moglen pointed out, it's not the programmers who will lose out in a free software world, it's the managers of software companies.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  104. Why not Public Domain? by pH7.0 · · Score: 0

    GPL kind of free software does NOT give you (the user) freedom. It force you to do thing their way. OTOH, Public domain give you freedom. No if and or but.

    While I'm not saying that GPL kind of "freedom" is bad or anything. RMS surely have the right to promote his agenda and all. The point is GPL does not give YOU freedom.

    Paul

  105. Not Quite and Quite Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The bottom line of intellectual property is this: The creator of that IP has an absolute moral right to determine how his property may be used."

    This simply is not true as;

    1. Patent and Copyright are statutory rights granted by congress. The extent of the right to monopolize the expresion of speach or the expresion of an idea in mechanical terms (A Device) are regulated by congres.

    2. Copyright does not cover the use of anything. Section 106 of the law specifically states that the holder, with the exceptions and limitations granted in sections 107-122, has the right to authorize the repuduction of copies, prepare derivative works, distribute and transfer ownership of copies, to perform the work publicly (In the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works), to display the work publicly, or to digitaly broadcast the material to the general public (DMCA added this so as to try to get around the exemption in section 1008).

    3. Non Comercial Consumer copying of music is not to be prosecuted nor can any portion of the Copyright act be used to prevent digital or audio recorders. This is codified in section 1008. The AHRA (American Home Recording Act) which created chapter 10 is a trade off. The Music industry gets a 2% royalty on all audio recording devices and a 3% royalty on every piece of audio recording medium and all serial records must have anti-piracy features (Such as watermarking) in exchange the US public was to already have permision to do any of the actions in 106 as long as it was non-comercial and at the consumer level.

    4. Patent does cover the "use" of the invention. This is a chief difference between copyright and Patent Patent protection however does not cover expresions of speach or artistic work. Again just with copyright the right holder has not rights to prohibit or extend the rights granted by congres. The US Supreme court has been very clear on this point. In the US software can be covered by both Patent and Copyright. However when you file a patent you must provide a detailed specification which goes imedatly into the commons (Public Domain). Enough EULA cases have not be heard with the right arguments in front of the US Supreme court. The lower courts are divided although most court rullings swing towards making all EULAs which restrict use or circumvent exemptions and limitations to copyright, such as 107-fair use, as invalid and unenforcable.

    The problem today is that the US Govt is allowing both Patent and Copyright protection without forcing them to make the source available so they can also claim tradesecrete. On top of all that they are also allowing the Software makers to use contractual licenses to extend both copyright and patent beyond what congress legislated.

  106. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by turnstyle · · Score: 1
    "I'm making a good living writing software, and a good part of it is working on free software."

    Sure, some do, but *more* don't -- and that's the point, the sum total economic power of coders is diminished. There's no shame in putting together a good peice of work and charging for the effort, but the FSF would have us think otherwise.

    --
    Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  107. Freedom is not absolute; all freedoms aren't equal by jbn-o · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Free speech is not absolute. And not all freedoms are deemed equal (some conflict). As Brad Kuhn and RMS have pointed out in their talks, your freedom to drive your car on the sidewalk is not deemed as valuable as my freedom to walk down that sidewalk safely (sadly, I don't know of a transcript of Kuhn's talk about how he came to free software or else I would cite the exact language). So, in copylefted free software licenses (such as the GNU GPL), one is prohibited from placing restrictions on the freedoms the license grants to licensees. The FSF argues that it is necessary to place these restrictions on licensees in order to grant these freedoms for derivative works and thus grant more important freedoms to a wider audience.

  108. He's an objectivist by extrasolar · · Score: 1

    nuff said

  109. Some practical outcome of these differences. by jbn-o · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This also has a practical impact on what software is developed. For open source proponents, non-free software is merely suboptimal, so if there is a need that is met with a non-free program, open source proponents will probably not seek to replace that program with an "open source" equivalent. After all, the practical ends of the user are being met.

    Free software proponents, on the other hand, are more likely to seek a replacement for that non-free program with a "free software" replacement because they see non-free programs as unethical. Free software proponents will reject the non-free software out of hand regardless of its function because of its inability to be shared and/or modified.

    Also, the difference between the two movements exposes a built-in philosophical weakness of the open source movement that the free software movement doesn't have: if all you value is practical function (runs faster, costs less, is more stable, etc.) the open source movement will sometimes have no way to convince you to use an "open source" equivalent to a proprietary program. You'll either be directed to use the proprietary equivalent or have no reason to reject the proprietary program.

    If, instead, you learn to value software freedom (as the free software movement advocates) you value something software proprietors can never offer. Therefore, the free software movement is never put in a position where they are compelled to advocate non-free software. They appreciate the need to meet practical ends, so they advocate either writing a free replacement yourself, hiring someone to write the free software for you, and/or finding a way to do without that functionality until a free replacement is obtained.

    Thus, it is the free software movement's philosophy that is the real threat to software proprietors.

  110. Software freedom does not refer to price. by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Considering that the "free" in free software refers to specific freedoms and not price (as has been pointed out in this thread and virtually every other thread discussing software freedom), I don't understand how your post deserved to be moderated as "Insightful".

  111. Re:How patronizing "guys with little paste-it labe by swillden · · Score: 1

    Sure, some do, but *more* don't

    This is not true. At least, if you're claiming that most programmers work on proprietary, commercial software, you're wrong. Most programmers work on in-house stuff that is never sold or distributed in any way.

    There's no shame in putting together a good peice of work and charging for the effort, but the FSF would have us think otherwise.

    Of course there's no shame in it, but you're wrong that the FSF would have us think otherwise. As I said before, the FSF doesn't care about eliminating or demonizing proprietary code, they just want to make sure that there are Free options available.

    For that matter, I put together plenty of what I think is good work and charge for the effort -- using Free and open source tools and sometimes even by actually modifying Free software, for a fee. There's nothing wrong with that.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  112. So who's going to be the first by Alien54 · · Score: 1
    in a world where there are guys with little paste-it labels with price tags on it who would stick it on every idea on earth if it would make value for the shareholders.

    So who's going to be the first to figure out some way to patent/copyright/trademark/whatever the idea of free speech itself?

    Normally you would think of this was a crazy idea, but these days, watch somebody try.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  113. You are Mistaken. by HopeOS · · Score: 1

    You appear to be confused as for what it is precisely that you charge people money.

    No one is saying that you should not be able to charge for your service as a software developer. My livelihood, as yours, depends on the ability to charge for the time that I spend solving other people's software problems.

    More to the point, if we cannot make a living because all the algorithms and best-practices necessary for our work are restricted by patents, then we have only a few choices. We can starve. We can throw in the towel and become house slaves to some multi-national corporation. We can find another line of business. Finally, and most assuredly, we can stand up and defend our rights.

    When Eben Moglin talks about "guys with little paste-it labels", he is talking about the people that threaten our livelihood as independent software developers, small companies, and individuals. He's talking about preserving your Civil Rights.

    -Hope

    1. Re:You are Mistaken. by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      No Hope, not so. Ultimately their agenda is to disenfranchize all whose work is reproducible digitally.

      Digital authors face more immediate threat from the culture of unlimited copying cheered on by FSF, EFF, etc.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
    2. Re:You are Mistaken. by HopeOS · · Score: 1

      Naturely, this must be so since you say it is so, but forgive me for being skeptical, particularly since you offer no evidence. The artificial scarcity of information is coming to an ignoble end. I hope that your fortunes are not tied to the wrong side of history. You can no more prevent the people from sharing than you can prevent them from talking to one another or peacefully assembling. If you try to stop them, they will revolt.

      -Hope

    3. Re:You are Mistaken. by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      "Naturely, this must be so since you say it is so, but forgive me for being skeptical, particularly since you offer no evidence. The artificial scarcity of information is coming to an ignoble end. I hope that your fortunes are not tied to the wrong side of history. You can no more prevent the people from sharing than you can prevent them from talking to one another or peacefully assembling. If you try to stop them, they will revolt."

      Geez, the evidence is right there in your quote: more tacit approval of copying, regardless of copyright status.

      But I'm sure if some commercial vendor were to wrap up GPL code into a closed project, you'd be among the first to cry "copyright foul!"?

      This is the problem with the free-everything bullies. It's not just about their decision to release their work as they see fit -- it's about forcing everybody else to do the same.

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  114. Hot Coffee was killed by that bitch's lawsuit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lawyers suck as they get rich by forcing us to drink cold coffee,smoke overpriced ciggarettes and keep women from installing a realistic giant rack.
    The LAW is an ASS.We should move beyond such primitive concepts of law and find other ways of securing life,liberty and property.

  115. idiocy by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 1

    Lawyers suck as they get rich by forcing us to drink cold coffee,smoke overpriced ciggarettes and keep women from installing a realistic giant rack.
    If you read the facts about the McDonalds case, you will that the award against McDonalds was clearly justified.

  116. code==speech by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

    Source code is just another form of speech, because code to hack an XBox just explains how to hack an XBox, how to put an owner in charge of their own processors. It's not crying "FIRE" in a crowded theater, because no one is hurt.

    This is why many of us equate speech and code. For us, code is just another way to express an idea.

    Just as freedom is the freedom to say "two plus two equals four", freedom is the freedom to type "2+2==4".

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  117. French Software Foundation! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make the Freedom point and also get back at those idiots who order Freedom Fries...

  118. Still, in OVER 13 years, OpnSrc is still a duck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    .

    Still, in OVER 13 years, OpnSrc is still a duck. It copies ideas for the most part and makes the source available. For all those years, all those people, what's to show? Damn little, I say. Why? Because it pretty much all stinks, is abandoned, and frankly, it's communism soviet style -- doomed to fail. But, viva Castro! He proves OpnSrc can survive.

    .

  119. ...and if you can't do, teach by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hm

  120. PJ was told McBride asked to speak at Harvard by ejhuff · · Score: 2, Informative
    Here is a comment by PJ, owner of GrokLaw:
    Unfortunate
    Authored by: PJ on Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 06:30 PM EST
    Actually, McBride was the one, I've been told, [who suggested] he speak at Harvard, not the other way around.
    1. Re:PJ was told McBride asked to speak at Harvard by The+Pim · · Score: 1
      Even better for the Harvard people--they didn't have to make the dubious invitation! Seriously, I was being a litle melodramatic, but all PJ's post shows is that McBride wildly overestimates his credibility and underestimates the technical cluefulness at Harvard Law. I'm sure that in accommodating his request to speak, JOLT knew both that he was wrong, and that the audience would see through him.

      BTW, I just listened to the beginning of the McBride audio (I attended Moglen's talk but not McBride's), and the subtext is hilarious. Listen to the introducers carefully disclaim an endorsement of McBride and emphasize the planned rebuttal by Chris Stone. They say he's "learn-ed on the GPL" and compare him to Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl! (McBride even plays along with this jibe.)

      The introducers reveal their real purpose: to "frame" the "hard questions" of software law, by offering an extreme viewpoint in caricature.

      --

      The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  121. ...and if you can't teach, troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    works for me.

  122. Ranger Eben Woodlore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just to give you an impression, think Ranger Woodlore.

  123. IRV is a disastrous election method, use Condorcet by Paul+Crowley · · Score: 1
    See this example for why IRV would be a Very Bad Idea, and why Condorcet is a vastly better alternative. I think the site makes a strong argument for these points which I'll quote from the linked page:
    Under IRV, votes for minor parties are therefore symbolic at best, or dangerous at worst. [...] The only way a voter can be assured of not wasting his or her vote is to rank one of the two major parties as their first choice, which is precisely what happens now under plurality voting. [...] if IRV is ever actually adopted, we will likely remain stuck in the old two-party system, just as Australia still is, despite the fact that it has used IRV since around 1920. [...] In other words, IRV will not solve the classic "lesser of two evils" problem that plagues plurality voting. [...] IRV has other serious problems too, which are explained in more detail elsewhere at the website.

    In summary, IRV is a deceptive and potentially dangerous non-reform masquerading as a reform. If adopted, the cure could be worse than the disease. Once the inadequacy of IRV becomes clear in actual practice, it could disillusion the public with electoral reform and thereby close the door to true reform. The stakes are way too high to get this one wrong. We can only hope that the well-intentioned and devoted advocates of IRV are still open-minded enough to recognize this reality. The battle for electoral reform will be difficult enough without insurmountable ignorance within the reform movement itself.
    I think the case against IRV is overwhelmingly strong. I'd like to hear even a smidgeon of an argument as to why Condorcet wouldn't be in every way far better.
  124. No no no no no by RedBear · · Score: 1

    You couldn't be more wrong. The GPL is fascist? You've got something very backwards. Firstly, the GPL doesn't say anything about how you can use the software. This needs to be said a lot more often, because most people still don't get that part clear in their heads. Even I didn't get it until pretty recently, even though I've been hearing about the GPL for years now.

    Secondly, the GPL extends the rights given to you by normal copyright law, it does not restrict your rights. You know, the copyright law that automatically applies to any published work, giving sole permission to the author to say how it may or may not be copied. That copyright law is the only thing that might be said to be restricting the way you use the code, because you can't redistribute (copy) the code without permission from the author.

    The main point of the GPL is one simple idea: If you promise to abide by terms of the GPL and openly publish any changes you make to my copyrighted work, I will automatically give you permission to distribute (and/or sell!) your derivative version of my copyrighted work at no cost. If you don't want to redistribute your derivative version of my copyrighted work, you can do whatever you want with it. The GPL doesn't even apply, as long as you aren't trying to make copies of my work and redistribute it to others.

    If there was no GPL, you would be violating copyright law if you attempted to redistribute code without getting express permission from the author. The GPL is solely a way of automatically extending that "permission to copy" to any person who chooses to abide by the rules of the GPL. Of course, you are always free to negotiate any sort of non-GPL license with the author directly, if you wish to have permission to redistribute his copyrighted code.

    I guess if giving you more rights than the normal laws allow is fascist, then by golly the GPL is fascist. But I think several million people would disagree with you quite strenuously, because it's wrong. It's as wrong as wrong gets.

    I'm actually finding it difficult to understand what problem you do have with the GPL, as I can't get from your post whether you want code to be absolutely free (Public Domain) or you want to be forced to pay to license all code (commercial code protected by copyright law plus usage agreements that are more restrictive than copyright law!). I think you need to do a bit more research and thinking about this issue.

  125. DRM is trivially defeated... by amorsen · · Score: 1

    ...as long as it is legal to defeat it.

    --
    Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  126. You Can't Have it Both Ways You Know... by HopeOS · · Score: 1

    Your statements remind me of those made by people who rally behind their first amendment rights and then decry other people's exercise of free speech.

    If you stand for copyrights and the rights of the author then you should honor the GPL as a statement of the author's intent. If you challenge the legitimacy of that exercise, then you are challenging the legitimacy of copyright law itself. A reasonable man cannot do both at the same time. Your position appears to be that the world must honor your copyrights, but the exercise of their copyrights should be limited to that which conveniences you. That is not a defensible position.

    I have yet to see any situation in which an author was coerced into releasing their software for free. Nor have I seen any situation in which 12 year olds trading Britney Spears MP3's have invoked the GPL as the basis for renewed discussion on the legitimacy of copyright. If anything, it's brought up the inefficiencies of the distribution system, both for the dissemination of content and for the artist's remuneration.

    Your only point of evidence appears to be that a culture of content sharing is growing. If that content is shared legally and according to the author's intent, where exactly is your complaint?

    -Hope

    1. Re:You Can't Have it Both Ways You Know... by turnstyle · · Score: 1
      I absoultely stand by the rights of an author who chooses the GPL, but frankly I don't think that most in the free-everything movement similarly stand by the rights of those that choose not to be.

      If you don't think that coders are coerced into writing free software, you must not be trying to sell your own code.

      In any case I have no problem with sharing for people who have made that decision regarding their work, but then there should similarly be respect for those who choose otherwise.

      AND, I do think that the coercive free-everything environment is duping a lot of young coders into giving away work that could instead be helping them pay their bills.


      "Your statements remind me of those made by people who rally behind their first amendment rights and then decry other people's exercise of free speech.

      If you stand for copyrights and the rights of the author then you should honor the GPL as a statement of the author's intent. If you challenge the legitimacy of that exercise, then you are challenging the legitimacy of copyright law itself. A reasonable man cannot do both at the same time. Your position appears to be that the world must honor your copyrights, but the exercise of their copyrights should be limited to that which conveniences you. That is not a defensible position.

      I have yet to see any situation in which an author was coerced into releasing their software for free. Nor have I seen any situation in which 12 year olds trading Britney Spears MP3's have invoked the GPL as the basis for renewed discussion on the legitimacy of copyright. If anything, it's brought up the inefficiencies of the distribution system, both for the dissemination of content and for the artist's remuneration.

      Your only point of evidence appears to be that a culture of content sharing is growing. If that content is shared legally and according to the author's intent, where exactly is your complaint?"

      --
      Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
  127. Re:Nonsense by EzInKy · · Score: 1

    Is Free Speech in danger when McDonald's doesn't publish the recipes of their menu or when KFC keeps the 13 spices and herbs secret?

    Even if Free Speech isn't in danger, people who are allergic to any of the secret ingredients certainly are.

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.