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Richard Stallman Interviewed By Bryan Lunduke (youtube.com)

Many Slashdot readers know Bryan Lunduke as the creator of the humorous "Linux Sucks" presentations at the annual Southern California Linux Exposition. He's now also a member of the OpenSUSE project board and an all-around open source guy. (In September, he released every one of his books, videos and comics under a Creative Commons license, while his Patreon page offers a tip jar and premiums for monthly patrons). But now he's also got a new "daily computing/nerd show" on YouTube, and last week -- using nothing but free software -- he interviewed the 64-year-old founder of the Free Software Foundation, Richard Stallman. "We talk about everything from the W3C's stance on DRM to opinions on the movie Galaxy Quest," Lunduke explains in the show's notes.

Click through to read some of the highlights.
"Instead of the DMCA, which makes it a crime to show people how to break DRM, it should be a crime to make, import or lease or sell devices with DRM," Stallman says. "Both the players and the media. It should be a crime. The executives of the companies that are now pulling the strings of the W3C, they should go to jail for doing DRM. "

Asked about Sir Tim Berners-Lee's endorsement of DRM in HTML5, Stallman quipped that "The fact that he's a knight means he was of service to the empire. And now he's being of service to another empire...What's happening here is that Berners-Lee and Jeff Jaffee have convinced themselves that by making this a standard, they will make the injustice of DRM smoother and less annoying in minor ways. And they've convinced themselves that that's the purpose of their lives... "

"He should handle it by saying no. But he can't really. And the reason is he set up an organization which is controlled by the businesses that want to put in the most money... By structuring it so it's controlled by the businesses, they've structured it so it wouldn't defend us from those businesses."

Stallman calls Skype "a non-free program with a network effect" whose users are "victim co-perpetrators," and also says that "Nobody uses Facebook, Facebook uses them. Facebook doesn't have users. It has useds. If you have a Facebook account, Facebook is using you to get information about you and about other people you know..."

Stallman pans mobile devices "that are full of peripherals that require non-free software at the system level. So there's no way to free them and have them work, except lots of painstaking reverse engineering, which is proceeding slowly."

And Stallman reserves a special bile for "the internet of Stings", saying "I personally wouldn't tolerate anything in my home that was talking to the internet except for my computer. They're designed to mistreat you. And part of the way they're designed to mistreat you is that they contain non-free software. And as happens often in the non-free software world, they have malicious functionality... It's the act of folly to use such a device."

Citing evils including surveillance, DRM, and back doors, as well as censorship and tethering to a remote server, Stallman says "If any proprietary program nowadays has no malicious functionality, that's basically luck."

"With free software you can remove any malicious functionality [or] a few other users can get together and release their modified version, and you just have to use it. With free software the community of users can defend itself from malicious functionalities. With proprietary software, the users are defenseless. This is why the mere fact of being proprietary software is an injustice." At one point he even says that proprietary software is like a dangerous drug, and "we've got to teach people to get off of it."

His advice to others? "Reject products with DRM. Never use any product designed to restrict you unless you have, immediately to hand, what it takes to break the handcuffs."

Stallman says he's running Trisquel's GNU/Linux distro on a ThinkPad x60, "one of the models of computer that can run a free BIOS with no binary blobs in the BIOS or in Linux, no proprietary software at any level of the GNU system. This is basically what we were aiming for 34 years ago."

Lunduke asks Stallman how a staunch proponent of free software -- and a man who doesn't agree to EULAs -- gets his entertainment media? Stallman replies, "No movie or show or song is worth giving up my freedom for. So I don't. So the only ways I will get copies of publications is when there's an ethical way to do it, one that doesn't mistreat me, doesn't do injustice to those who are using it..." "I buy music on CDs from physical stores... The problem is in the U.S. it's hard to find such stores any more!"

As a recovering teenaged TV addict, he no longer owns a television -- he went cold turkey when he went to college -- but he loved The Prisoner, and quotes it. " 'I'm going to escape and come back and wipe this place off off the face of the earth' is an inspiration to me. You might say that spirit is the base of the Free Software Movement. I'm going to escape from proprietary software, and come back, and wipe proprietary software off the face of the earth."

Finally, Stallman says we need more free software champions to help with this great work, and when Lunduke conveys the thank-yous of many free software fans, Stallman replies, "The best way to thank me and the thousands of other people who've worked on GNU is by helping us advance. So look at GNU.org/help, and you'll see see dozens of different kinds of work you can do or contributions you can make. And it's not all programming..."

172 comments

  1. Re:Nobody cares by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You opened the article, and even posted in it. You care!

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  2. Re:Nobody cares by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Awwwwwwww.......you're such a caring person! 3

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  3. harsh by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    He's harsh on Tim Berners-Lee for supporting DRM. I can't say he's wrong, though.
    Also he's harsh on Facebook.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Stallman is a well-known liberal and he won't spare the opportunity to take a jab at the Crown :) But seriously, he's right. Tim Berners-Lee didn't have a choice to begin with. If TBL said "NO", the rest of the big-money players will just move on without him.

      It wouldn't be quite fair to say it was TBL that "set up an organization which is controlled by the businesses." This is far beyond the control of an individual, no matter how influential and visionary he is.

    2. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He is Richard Fucking Stallman. He is going to be direct, blunt, and passionate, and everything he says is going to be true.

    3. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I can't say he's wrong, though.

      That's Stallman in a nutshell. Particularly the "though".

    4. Re:harsh by unixisc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      'Liberal' is being incredibly generous to RMS. Go through his website stallman.org: you'll see that he's a Progressive, bordering on Socialist. Of course, he claims that his ideals are closer to that of Social Democrat parties in Western Europe, rather than Socialist or Communist parties anywhere. Yet, he had been supportive of Hugo Chavez, when he was around (although I wonder where he stands on the current Venezuelan unrest)

    5. Re: harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is full of IT types these days. They got into IT because a counselor in High School told them it would be lucrative. This isn't the old Slashdot of nerds it once was. Many of them assume this is and was always an IT site.

      IT is modern day clerical work. Shining the modern equivalent of file cabinets. Fighting over the correct color of Pendeflex hanging folders and the merits of Steelcase versus Herman-Miller office furniture.

      Truly, they are the telephone sanitizers.

    6. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ahh, 'progressive'. It's funny how you lot are so scared of that word.

      His ideals are, in fact, that much closer to european social democratic movements. But I don't know why you're so scared of Socialism; the US has lots of examples of it, and some of them aren't even corporate welfare.

      On Chavez: I think a lot of lefties (me included) were very supportive of Chavez when he appeared on the scene; the first few years of Chavez rule were significant in terms of how they improved the lives of the poor.

      Did Chavez go off the rails? Yes. But perhaps that started when the US backed an attempt to have him forcibly removed from an aircraft when it wasn't even on the ground.

    7. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not paranoia though if people really are out to get your freedom...

    8. Re:harsh by unixisc · · Score: 1

      'Progressive' is just an euphemism for Marxist. Sorta like 'People's Democratic'. Like North Korea is the 'People's Democratic Republic of Korea'. That's wonk-speak for ya.

      Socialism is just Communism sans the genocide: it's the forcible confiscation of wealth for equitable re-distribution. Or transfer of wealth. Which is particularly grating to people who earned it, or even had it passed over through generations.

      If Chavez's way was so good, why is Venezuela currently in turmoil, after Maduro attempted a power grab from the legislature? He ought to have the entire population behind him.

    9. Re: harsh by guruevi · · Score: 2

      The w3c is set up for business interest takeover though. To be a member you have to pay a sum, to become part of a working group to create a "standard", you quickly have to sink in thousands if not hundreds of thousands per year. Few individual, small busones or even hobbyist groups will be able to make that expense, the only names you see on there is Adobe, Microsoft, Google etc.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    10. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Progressive' a euphemism for Marxist?

      Seriously? Have you seen any progressives who live their lives like Marxists? Ever?

      Don't be an idiot.

      And if there are any 'socialist' governments anywhere in the world, then the 'forcible' mechanism they are using is the same as US taxation, isn't it?

      You have such a childish, Texas-textbook-view of world politics that I'm surprised you're functioning as an adult.

    11. Re:harsh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because without a standardized DRM platform big corporations would release their products in a open formats without DRM.

    12. Re:harsh by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Way to knock down a strawman. Applause. Now, go learn what the real arguments are.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    13. Re:harsh by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Oh, nobody in the Left actually lives the way they advocate. Like Leo DeCaprio, who is on his jihad against AGW, but still uses his private jet(s) or flies about all over the world, increasing the carbon footprint. Nor do they trade all their excess cash for carbon credits. What exactly is your definition of the difference b/w Progressive vs Socialist vs Marxist, aside from the branding for public acceptance reasons?

      The US taxation system is very much socialist, and the IRS is the closest thing that the US has to the ex Soviet KGB. It has been enhanced over the years by Democrats, and all that Republicans did in response was try trimming it some, as opposed to completely eviscerating it.

    14. Re:harsh by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Stallman is right a surprising amount of the time. Over the decades, I've come to realize that, when he warns about something, it's best to listen and take heed.

      I don't fully agree with his philosophy, but by acting on it he has helped to create great things. We're all better off because of the Gnu project. Some very good and useful software has been released under a variation of the GPL.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  4. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Judging by your reaction something is making you angry. Would you like to talk about that?

  5. the "humorous" linux sux presentations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mrw

    1. Re: the "humorous" linux sux presentations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were light hearted and humorous, and quite entertaining. It's not like the dude is doing stand up.

  6. Re:What by hvidstue · · Score: 0

    Dead skin. He has done it before

  7. Re:Nobody cares by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

    Shut up, Emacs Doctor!

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  8. Slave mentality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a slave who doesn't even want his freedom. That's just pathetic.

    1. Re:Slave mentality by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      But, am I really a slave, in that case...

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    2. Re:Slave mentality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes dude, that is exactly what that means.

  9. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Shut up, Emacs Doctor!

    Touche :-)

    (hey, Slashdot: where are the accents when I need them?)

  10. Re:What by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    camera was trolling him

    camera got what it deserved

  11. Re:What by queBurro · · Score: 1

    IMO, he does that so that he doesn't have to shake hands with people.

    --
    sag
  12. FSF = not practical by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I sympathize with his ideals, because the truth is that a lot of DRM sucks ass and big companies like facebook are screwing their users in unethical ways. But it's still hard to take Stallman seriously because he doesn't provide practical solutions to these problems. The reality is, we live in a world choke full of DRM and information harvesting megacorps - the free software idealism has lost and will never win - and Stallman seems like a radical extremist that advocates blowing up parlament and engaging in civil disobedience by opting out of all the services modern life offers. This is not a practical or tolerable solution for 99% of the population. Most people want to watch Netflix, connect with their friends on facebook and perform Google searches. If you just tell them they can't have all that, you'll never win them over.

    1. Re:FSF = not practical by gringer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      the free software idealism has lost and will never win

      It's becoming more popular in the biology / medical research community, as people start to understand the importance of reproducible and open research. Every thing that can be opened up and inspected is another thing that doesn't need months (or years) of work to repeat.

      --
      Ask me about repetitive DNA
    2. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > I sympathize with his ideals, because the truth is that a lot of DRM sucks ass [...]

      This is probably the most insidious geek trap. "It can't be done perfectly, so I better do nothing..." "Oh! someone tweeted something!". Uncountable geek's corpses lay scattered around on that cliffs.

      The best antidote is: Do as well as you can. Pick your battles. Keep it fun, while not losing the goal's sight. Accept imperfection. Above all, keep it fun.

    3. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "the free software idealism has lost and will never win"

      Never is a very, very long time.
      Never is literally everything ever to come in the future.
      Including thousands and perhaps even millions of years from now.
      It will take billions of years before our sun is gone.
      You could've written "will probably never win".
      But you didn't, you wrote "will never win".
      Humans have only had computers for less than 100 years.
      Think about that for a moment.

      "If you just tell them they can't have all that, you'll never win them over."

      That's why what he says is often more nuanced.
      See, for instance, his writings about DRM'd games.

    4. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of his speeches and writings have all the nuance of a brick to the head. He will NEVER win as long as he maintains his excessively rigid black and white views and if anything his rigidity hurts his cause more than helps it.

    5. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The FSF that is flexible exists too, it's called open source something something.

      His cause isn't hurt, because his cause is his cause, bending his cause hurts his cause because it's different cause even if it's similar.

    6. Re:FSF = not practical by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Free software is winning. What is the most popular OS kernel? Is there a modern computer or mobile device that doesn't run GNU software? Do you think companies like Google would open source their software if free software was losing?

      What about the internet? It was all proprietary, closed systems before free software and protocols set us free.

      Netflix will give us DRM one day. They would do it now I think, if it were not required for licencing the material they offer.

      Think how much worse things would be without free software.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    7. Re:FSF = not practical by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 2

      Stallman seems like a radical extremist that advocates blowing up parlament

      No, he doesn't.

      --
      Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
    8. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the free software idealism has lost and will never win

      Perhaps the problem is that you think in terms of winning and losing, and equate not being the biggest winner to being a loser. Look at nature. Every species alive is alive because it survived all past evolution. That means that every single species alive has been highly succesful, even if they don't have and never had a large "market share".

      Free (GPL'ed) software is running on devices in nearly every household. It's not the most visible stuff, but it's everywhere and I don't see it disappearing anytime soon. There are healthy and functional software projects whose results are available for anyone who feels a need for something different. They don't have the marketing budgets commercial vendors have, but they exist and are available to anyone who feels a need for it. That seems pretty succesful to me.

    9. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My believe is that what you are proposing is too limited in scope to change the world. You do not change the world with principles based on compromise. You need the strictness and its proponents to sway the other side more towards that compromise. It is basic negotiation at a global scale.

      ps i hate negotiations, but in my experience this is how the world also works on the large scale.

    10. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is true that he doesn't like to shower.

    11. Re:FSF = not practical by blahplusplus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The reality is, we live in a world choke full of DRM and information harvesting megacorps - the free software idealism has lost and will never win"

      His idealism has nothing to do with it, he's not an extremist. Basically its people like you who don't understand that the free market is a myth in a society of high speed internet where software producers are under private control, pre-high speed internet their was a balance between buyers of software and makers/sellers of software. AKA you got the software to run entirely on your computer because they physically had to let go of the software, post high speed internet. Basically Steam/mmo's/drm/software companies can take software hostage on the other side of the internet, break it into two pieces.

      Free market theory can't work in such a society because 1) You'd have to be physically close to the companys producing software to hold them accountable and thereby prevent DRM from being forced upon you. 2) The average layperson in capitalist society is not technology literate enough to be a market participant. AKA the primitive primate brain was never designed to make rational decisions in a high tech capitalist society.

      If anything permanently spying on people because private ownership of megacorporations doesn't work when the population using their services/products are physically not close enough to effect their policies. It's not that I wanted Steam or mmo's (drm'd rpg's with a subscription) to take off, it's that the informed members of capitalist society are not organized in a way to produce bad market outcomes. The idea that the average clueless tech illiterate kid is going to make rational decision regarding the future of videogames for instance (aka drm everywhere) is a myth. It has very little to do with Stallman being an extremist and everything to do with the free market having always been a myth, any large organization that controls a large share of the worlds wealth can simply forcibly impose policies on populations because the population is 100's of miles away, without physical proxmity in a post high speed internet age, there's no way to prevent having these policies forced on the population if they want to participate in the culture. Basically the myth of the free market is being shown to be a farce with the rise of the internet.

      The myth of consumer choice is the issue - you can't have genuine accountability or influence over corporations policies without physical proxmity, aka drm wouldn't be a think if we all lived within a few blocks of these companies. They get to force it down our throats because they are taking advantage of the fact the internet allows you to 'distribute' the product while holding part of its functionality hostage on companies servers, aka it's corporate warfare on peoples right to their own personal computers and the files they are purchasing from these companies. UWP and encrypted computing Microsoft and big companies are working on are working to turn computing devices into magical dumb terminal permanently. The entire internet is being re-engineered to take total control of software away from the end user, since the end user is too technically illiterate to understand the sophistication of the attacks on their rights.

      If anything stallman is right and the free market corporate extremists are wrong, in what world do you want to have you private data bought and sold by anonymous corporations and then sold to people who are hostile to your interests AND have your own computer files like games encrypted so you can't modify them while the legal environment is being remade to make file modifications illegal to software you've paid for? What kind of fucked up world do you live in that you want to be a slave of a giant corporation these little ceo kings and ignorant peasants? If anything its the average free marketeer that is the extremist.

      No market relationship can exist when buyer and seller are 100's of miles away from each other, there's no accountability so producers can impose their will on society and the average person is not intelligent enough to make rational decisions regarding technology because the human brain didn't evolve to deal with it.

    12. Re:FSF = not practical by silentcoder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When he started there was no such thing as an entire operating system of free software and no hardware you could run it on. This exists today - it didn't then. It's not as readily and easily available as it should be - but it exists. And, as he rightfully pointed out, if he had compromised the ideal of that existing - it would still not exist at all. It only exists because he never settled for less than that.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    13. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free *software* may be winning, but RMS goes way beyond free *software* - his entire ethos is built around his idea and style of "freedom", which in many ways is significantly more limiting than the alternatives...

      Read Stallman's "GNU Manifesto". Pure nutjobbery.

      Stallman's idea of "freedom" is like something from Orwell's 1984 -- In order to be "free" you must do exactly as I say and anything I don't like is "wrong" and should not be allowed.

    14. Re:FSF = not practical by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      After the Sumerians invented a written language pressed into clay tablets, one of the first uses they had for this tech was business:
      http://international.loc.gov/i...

      Stallman is trying to promote a version of theInternet that by being non-commercial forever fundamentally changes human nature.

    15. Re:FSF = not practical by swb · · Score: 1

      There are times where it feels like free software has an effect similar to a democracy that votes for authoritarianism. It's made it easier and simpler for people to develop DRM and mass spying.

    16. Re:FSF = not practical by silentcoder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Stallman has never opposed commercialism - he has no problem with people earning a living - you just shouldn't get to earn money by ripping people off (stealing their freedom is arguably worse than stealing their money - and that's what's happening, it may be cleverly disguised but conjobs always are - they are still fraud).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    17. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you say that as if he is the only reason it existed, free software existed long before he came onto the scene and he is just a relatively minor part in a much bigger ecosystem.

    18. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ironically those DRM-laden Netflix servers are all running Linux.

    19. Re:FSF = not practical by Gavagai80 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stallman is more like the kind of political extremist who would tell everybody not to vote because it perpetuates the system. He doesn't force anybody to do anything, he only forces himself and suggests to others. Forcing is what he's against.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    20. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes the only missing piece is someone who cares about the missing pieces.

    21. Re:FSF = not practical by ausekilis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm gonna go ahead and channel my inner RMS:

      Free software is winning. What is the most popular OS kernel? Is there a modern computer or mobile device that doesn't run GNU software? Do you think companies like Google would open source their software if free software was losing?

      Android itself is not open source. There is the Android Open-Source Project which, last I checked, was more than a few version behind what the latest flagship phone ships with. Google appears to be slowing down with the contributions to AOSP, which is why Cyanogenmod started in the first place.

      Sure GNU/Linux runs on damned near anything, but it is still a bit niche. Android being the exception, most people don't know or care that Linux is running on that webserver, or that router, or their TV.

        I don' t keep up with what Google has open-sourced... but their primary revenue source (us, ads specifically) and their search algorithms are still proprietary. Have they published the bottom-to-top design and software of their search system? Their datacenters?

      What about the internet? It was all proprietary, closed systems before free software and protocols set us free.

      There's a difference here. Open protocols vs open software. Internet explorer uses an open protocol, but is not free (as in speech) itself. If Microsoft had the pull to force everyone to use their own proprietary protocol/format, you can bet your ass they'd monetize it. Just look at the ODF/OOXML battle a few years back. Microsoft wanted to keep office document formats locked into their own MS Office format.

      Netflix will give us DRM one day. They would do it now I think, if it were not required for licencing the material they offer.

      Netflix already has DRM. They have since day one. Their original web player used MS Silverlight because it could handle DRM and was more difficult to hack than Flash (the bar was low). Now with HTML5 supporting DRM, they can move away from the defunct Silverlight, while maintaining that control over distribution and keeping the MAFIAA happy.

      Think how much worse things would be without free software.

      I have no doubt that things would be worse without free software. I think the GPL has done some great things and kept companies honest about using great, freely available software. There has even been government (Munich, some others) action to move away from vendor lock-in, and those guys are routinely the hardest to break away from the status quo. Unfortunately, the masses don't really *care* if the software is free, non-malicious, openly inspect-able and modifiable. Ask any Apple fanboi why they chose Apple, and the answer is probably "It just works. I can buy other Apple stuff and it all just works together". The truth is 90+% of the population don't want to tinker with stuff, they just want to get whatever job done.

    22. Re:FSF = not practical by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 1

      The most popular distribution of the most popular OS kernel is wrapped in a tightly controlled ecosystem in which everything you can do, which by default isn't much, is tracked and logged.

      What percentage of operating systems in the world are running in an open and "free" environment as per FSF definition? Less than a fraction of a percentage? How can you consider that winning?

    23. Re:FSF = not practical by Major+Blud · · Score: 1

      Above all, keep it fun

      So he does that by suggesting that by people who create DRM need to be jailed?

      He's never going to win the hearts and minds if he keeps at it.

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    24. Re:FSF = not practical by ranton · · Score: 1

      The most popular distribution of the most popular OS kernel is wrapped in a tightly controlled ecosystem in which everything you can do, which by default isn't much, is tracked and logged.

      What percentage of operating systems in the world are running in an open and "free" environment as per FSF definition? Less than a fraction of a percentage? How can you consider that winning?

      AmiJoJo is mostly referring to servers running Linux, not consumer devices. Either that or he/she is just wrong.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    25. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They shouldn't be jailed. People in jail are fed at public expense. They should be shunned by all decent people. They should slowly starve to death in the streets. Or get over it and start contributing to society in some meaningful way.

    26. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats just how things work. Stallman doesn't own the meaning of the term 'free,' he just reminds us of it's meaning. He doesn't demand you observe his definition, he just helps us all interpret the way things are. It might make you upset when he does so. Probably that's not a bad thing.

    27. Re:FSF = not practical by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But it's still hard to take Stallman seriously because he doesn't provide practical solutions to these problems.

      Actually he does: opt out. It won't kill you to only buy entertainment which is DRM-free. So you can't stream the latest episode of Game of Thrones; if you have access to a library you have more alternative ways to entertain your imagination than you'll ever have time to use.

      The problem is not being able to buy what the people around them are buying is just too radical for most people.

      This is not a practical or tolerable solution for 99% of the population.

      This is not anticipated to be tolerable by 99% of the population. They don't actually know, because they'll never try it. Stallman seems to be happy enough without Netflix. But Stallman is a nut. Why is he a nut? Because he's happy enough without Netflix. It's circular reasoning; for all you know you're a nut too, you just don't know it.

      This is how powerful corporations control people: by manipulating their unexamined assumptions of what they can tolerably live with. They don't need police power, because people will police themselves.

      In a sense this is nothing new, they're just manipulating a longstanding fact about human nature: people are very bad at predicting how things will affect their future happiness. I've recently developed an interest in the old Greek and Roman philosophers called the Stoics. They reasoned more or less thus: if happiness is having all your wants satisfied, the surest path to happiness is to want less. But even they realized that nobody can really adequately regulate their own desires. The best you can achieve is a kind of skepticism about what would otherwise be unchallenged assumptions about what you need. But even though it falls short, it goes a long way toward freeing you from self-afflicted dissatisfaction.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    28. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple: you picks the borg you want to join. There won't be any facial scarring unless you try to leave.

    29. Re:FSF = not practical by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Stallman is more like the kind of political extremist who would tell everybody not to vote because it perpetuates the system. He doesn't force anybody to do anything, he only forces himself and suggests to others. Forcing is what he's against.

      And how is this not wanting to use the force of law to impose his ideological views on others?

      "Instead of the DMCA, which makes it a crime to show people how to break DRM, it should be a crime to make, import or lease or sell devices with DRM," Stallman says. "Both the players and the media. It should be a crime. The executives of the companies that are now pulling the strings of the W3C, they should go to jail for doing DRM. "

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    30. Re:FSF = not practical by alphaomega325 · · Score: 2

      Okay now, what should we do about it? All this complaining, all this saying that we can't beat back the system and the corporations, it is in essence us brushing our hands off for the responsibility for actually changing things. I believe that the only way that we can change things is to go ahead and build brand new hardware, brand new software that instead of taking control away from the user instead bring the control back to the user. And it will only happen if we build the hardware and the software. Otherwise what your prediction says will happen and the Open Source Movement will die. And we will only have ourselves to blame.

    31. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Applicable to all of life. I love your succinct paragraph too!

    32. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop sucking your own cock for a moment. Linux is the most popular Unix kernel, used by Android because it didn't cost money. That's it. Google doesn't give a fuck about the principals of the FOSS movement. Nor should they.

    33. Re:FSF = not practical by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      the free software idealism has lost and will never win

      It's becoming more popular in the biology / medical research community, as people start to understand the importance of reproducible and open research.

      I though the whole idea of science was reproducible and open research. Also, having more of a natural science than CS background, I've always viewed FOSS as the application of scientific principles to software. Unfortunately, I've come across closed software in fields such as molecular modelling and fluid dynamics. It's an interesting turnaround if scientists have to learn the basics again from software guys.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    34. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think companies like Google would open source their software if free software was losing?

      Really? Where can I download the software that powers Google's search algorithms? How about their ad display software? How about their real time auctioning of ad spaces?

      Google open-sources the things that are not core money-making competencies for themselves, and keeps their money-making software a closely-held secret. Don't kid yourself that they're some sort of open-source evangelists - their attitude towards open source is PROFOUNDLY opportunistic.

    35. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the masses do not care. No market for freedom.

    36. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it's ok to jail citizens for circumventing said DRM? So that's ok then. Basically you are saying it's ok to arrest citizens for breaking a stupid law. But if we reverse the law and arrest the corporation, that's now OMG teh badz!!!!

    37. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is 5 of 9, state your designation.

    38. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux popular Unix kernel?

      I'm not sure you know what the two words mean.

    39. Re:FSF = not practical by erapert · · Score: 1

      But it's still hard to take Stallman seriously because he doesn't provide practical solutions to these problems.

      WTF am I reading?! There's this thing called the GNU project. Maybe you've heard of it.

    40. Re: FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything you said is what RMS is striving for. The geeks get it. Sadly, the average population doesn't. ThAt is why we are slowly losing this war.

    41. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relating Stallman to Stoic philosophy - should mean massive upmods in a fair world.

      Best post on article to date.

    42. Re:FSF = not practical by Kjella · · Score: 2

      When he started there was no such thing as an entire operating system of free software and no hardware you could run it on. This exists today - it didn't then. It's not as readily and easily available as it should be - but it exists. And, as he rightfully pointed out, if he had compromised the ideal of that existing - it would still not exist at all. It only exists because he never settled for less than that.

      Well evil tounges would suggest that without Linus we'd still be waiting on GNU/Hurd. GCC forked off and became ECGS. "Linux libc" forked away from glibc and was only later "gnu-ified" again like ECGS. The rest the FSF made seems mostly to be small utilities, for sure having a GNU/free ls, awk, sed, grep etc. is important but hardly the showstopper. His one (admittedly huge) crowning achievement was writing the GPL, but most the projects seemed to refuse his leadership.

      And even then the adoption by some of the core players seemed to be more by chance than ideological success, like Linus primarily wanted to see what other developers were doing to learn so he could run it on his box. User freedom was never a big deal for him nor most other Linux kernel core developers, which is why the GPLv3 was met with a "meh". X11 and Wayland doesn't use the GPL. Apache isn't using the GPL. Android isn't using the GPL except the kernel. It is popular? Yes. Is it the only commonly used open source license? Very far from it.

      According to Black Duck GPLv3 + LGPLv3 + Affero GPL = ~10% of all projects and GPLv2 + LGPLv2 ~20% so most projects haven't really been following Stallman since 2007. And that's not counting the non-GPL licenses, my impression is that the Apache license has gained a lot of popularity particularly with corporations like Google (Android), Apple (Swift) and Microsoft (ASP.Net). The kernel is the one project that seems to get away with copyleft because you can run any userspace on top. And because it doesn't really crack down on shims and driver blobs.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    43. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > people who create DRM need to be jailed?

      Now *that* would be fun :)

    44. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, just make a living charging people for software they can get for free!

    45. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny I only use open sense 1999.

    46. Re: FSF = not practical by guruevi · · Score: 1

      The open and free software movement is winning though. Especially in specialized and scientific fields people are going out of their way to avoid closed software or write alternatives. They've been bitten many times over and over by large companies.

      The next field I am seeing the trend growth is manufacturing and factories. Again, many things still run on Windows XP or even NT to the point of it being a liability for large companies, utilities and other many are starting to demand open source software at least partially.

      Even Microsoft has conceded the server market to Linux.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    47. Re:FSF = not practical by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      Very little software existed under what we now call a free software license, and none under a copyleft license. He defined the list of user freedoms and crafted a license to propagate those freedoms. He was also the first one to release software under such a license.

    48. Re:FSF = not practical by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      >> Stallman is more like the kind of political extremist who would tell everybody not to vote because it perpetuates the system. I think he's more like a person telling you to vote libertarian. Unfortunately real-world libertarian candidates are more like BSD than GPL.

    49. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't sympathize with his ideals, and I'm glad that neither side has absolute victory. If Stallman had absolute victory, it would be illegal to close anything--only Free* Software would be allowed. Development would be slow, and limited developer resources would tend to coalesce around a few solutions that wouldn't serve some people.

      Likewise, if everything were locked down tight in a walled garden with no open standards life would also suck.

      The worlds is doing well allowing Free Software and proprietary software to coexist.

      *Stallman rather disingenuously puts forth the idea that there is no proper word to describe his type of software in the English language. There is--it's better described as PUBLIC software, as in public schools, public streets, public toilets, etc.

    50. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay now, what should we do about it?

      I'm lazy, but I'm already downloading Trisquel and will throw it on a VM to check it out. It's not the LEAST I could do, but it's close and is at least something. I suggest you start there too.

    51. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Android itself is not open source. There is the Android Open-Source Project which, last I checked, was more than a few version behind what the latest flagship phone ships with. Google appears to be slowing down with the contributions to AOSP, which is why Cyanogenmod started in the first place.

      I'm running the latest version of the Android kernel on my flagship device (the Pixel) and that source is available from AOSP. The only lag is that Google waits until after the final release ships to push the source to AOSP. You can even download firmware to run that version (v7.1.2) on hardware that's no longer officially supported by Google (Nexus 5).

      Cyanogenmod (now LineageOS) was started more as a response to Google's lack of support for certain features that the community wanted. I'd argue that it's actually a great example of open source commercial software allowing users to do what they want with their devices. That's not to say that Google has opened everything (see restrictions on using the Play store), but without Google's continued support of AOSP projects like LineageOS would not survive.

    52. Re:FSF = not practical by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Had Stallman simply used the accurate description of his software - calling it 'Liberated' instead of 'Free' software, he'd have done fine. Instead, he avoids using that word, while using a Spanish word for it, narrowing its appeal. Given how Leftist he usually is in all his world views, I am puzzled that he doesn't use 'Liberated' to describe any software that's fully compliant (according to him) with the 4 freedoms.

    53. Re:FSF = not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your examples are all terrible and I also think you are missing the point.

      RMS hates Android with every fiber of his being. He calls the phenomenon "Tivoization," named for the TiVo that was one of the original companies that took free software and did non-free things with it -- things that were allowed by the license but didn't match up with his personal morality.

      The Internet was built entirely from and in an environment of openness. Only implementations of some specs are proprietary.

      Netflix has DRM up the ass. Why do you think you need some shitty Silverlight player or HTML5+DRM to get it to work? Even the TiVo client is written in Flash FFS.

      Free software is in fact ubiquitous today... it's just that RMS can't stomach a world where proprietary software exists IN ANY FORM. He's crazy, but someone has to be crazy enough to say these things so that we can even get to the point where we are: with plenty of "free" software in existence.

      I'm glad that RMS is around, but I don't subscribe to his philosophy of ONLY free software.

    54. Re:FSF = not practical by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      I'd think the most popular distribution of the most popular OS kernel would be Android. Linux is very successful for servers and embedded software, and has well over a 1% market share of desktops/laptops.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    55. Re:FSF = not practical by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Stallman has helped create a free operating system that's quite successful, among other things. He provides practical solutions to many problems.

      I don't see that it matters if Free Software idealism wins, as long as it exists. I run an operating system that I can examine and modify as I like, and it didn't cost me anything significant. I can get implementations of all sorts of computer languages for free. That's not how things tended to work in the 1980s and before, and Stallman is a very important reason for the change.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    56. Re:FSF = not practical by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 1

      You choose to focus only on the entertainment value of Netflix, and it's easy to argue that people don't really need that form of entertainment and could choose other "free-er" forms of leisure.

      First of all, that is a very utopic argument to make. People live in a society, and most people don't care about the details of technology, privacy, DRM and the moral / ethical implications of all that. Let's call these people "sheep". Most sheep just want to watch good shows and couldn't care less about the political aspects. And those people who actually care about that stuff still have sheepish friends they want to connect with, and they want to watch the same shows.

      Also, there are many other, extremely useful services provided by other information harvesting megacorps. Google search, google maps, cloud infrastructure, social networking... by banning all of that from your life, because it's not "free", you are effectively banning a large part of recent human progress and civilization from your life.

    57. Re:FSF = not practical by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Actually, Android and Tivo are 2 different things, even if RMS hates them both. If GPL 3 was concocted to deal w/ TiVo, a future version of GPL could deal w/ Android.

      The deal w/ TiVo was the company putting the open source code on a flash memory which was then locked. Violating one of the GNU freedoms about changing the software on the box. Problem is that if TiVo allowed that, it would violate the DRM and content providers would instantly yank all rights from TiVo, eliminating it as an option from all the media companies. Of course, RMS opposes the DRM like ISIS opposes non-Muslims, but TiVo doesn't have that luxury.

      Android is different in that the reasons RMS doesn't approve of them has more to do w/ 'respecting users freedom'.. One of the issues is about the way Android combines GPL 2 licensed Linux code w/ Apache 2, and there has been some discussions around that. But another issue that RMS has is the same issue he has w/ Debian. Just as Debian is dinged for offering unliberated software at all (even if albeit separately), the fact that Google uses unliberated applications for talking to services like YouTube & Google Maps. Even though those things are not technically a part of the OS (even though all phones or tablets automatically include them and don't allow their removal, unless one gets rooted). The other issue is Google Play's backdoor, which allows applications to be installed or uninstalled w/o the owner's approval. Like RMS, I disagree w/ that, but that has nothing to do w/ the GPL license.

      At any rate, I have more respect for causes that provide solutions, rather than just rant about an issue. When the FSF guys provide us Replicant, HURD and all the drivers that would enable us to 'freely' (pun intended) replace our Windows and Linux software w/ GNU software w/o having to edit files in /etc/, I'll respect them more. Until then, they've done nothing to earn my support

    58. Re:FSF = not practical by gringer · · Score: 1

      I though the whole idea of science was reproducible and open research.

      Yes, one of the ideas of science is reproducible and open research. The realities involve things like "publish or perish", boys clubs of peer review, and a funding preference for things that no one else has done before, but already have substantial research done to back them up.

      --
      Ask me about repetitive DNA
  13. I'm surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... that Lunduke would even interview RMS again after RMS telling Lunduke that he should go broke rather than develop software... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=radmjL5OIaA

    1. Re:I'm surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Thanks for linking to a 1+ hour video without telling us which minute this happens.
      We all have nothing better to do than search in videos linked to by random people.

    2. Re:I'm surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except that is not what he said.

      Q: The job I am doing is unethical, but it earns me lots of money. Do you want my children to starve?

      A: That does not make it ethical and there are other jobs out there.

    3. Re:I'm surprised... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The video you linked to is over an hour long. I don't know where he said that and I'm not inclined to go looking because you didn't post a time code.

      Anyway, Stalman has said that he isn't against selling software or services like development and support. And in fact companies do just that quite successfully, e.g. Red Hat.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:I'm surprised... by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, getting a job is just like going to Safeway and getting a six-pack of beer, or coke. All you need to do is want it.

    5. Re:I'm surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That link makes Lunduke look silly. He never does grasp what Stallman says about ethics.

      It is clear that his question to Stallman is regarded by Stallman as something like, "If I rob banks, but I want to transition to to a different model, how can I do it?" Stallman rejects the question completely as an unethical profession. "But I have to feed my daughter" is flatly rejected as justification by Stallman. "Don't you care about people" is likewise deflected.

      Clearly Lunduke doesn't feel that his profession is unethical, but he shouldn't be baffled at all responses that are based on that premise.

  14. He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have enjoyed every interaction I have had with him because he doesn't bend his principles. He becomes a modern prophet of sorts to us calling out the truth we already know but are maybe too lazy to actually apply to life without being reminded.
    Now my wife would call him and quite often me a real Sheldon Cooper but we need a few dorks around calling us to do the right thing to shepherd us against those motivated by personal or corporate gain and 'free' not libre systems which actually just use us as farmed cash crops.
    He did like my suggestion for the next openmoko/Neo900 which included a POCSAG pager module though he disagreed on the agreed upon modem module implementation in that design. He would own a phone if it was one which didn't abuse him, having a pager on passive alert and only connecting to the phone network when he chose to to answer/call back his calls sounded good to him.
    I suppose the problem is there is less commercial pressure to produce a phone or computer which fully respects the user when even a little abuse spread among thousands or millions of units can enrich a small number of executives. I think well over 90% of users in our endless September could care less about the mostly invisible abuse going on and like airline passengers just care about the price no matter how bad they are treated.

    1. Re:He is right by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      +1. He is an idealist and pragmatist. If we had listened to him we wouldn't be in the mess we are now, with megacorporations with walled gardens shoveling spyware every chance they get.

    2. Re:He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If we had listened to him [...]"

      There's a difference though between listening to and actions.
      We've listened to Stallman, we know he wants us to live like hermits.

    3. Re:He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Stallman is a true liberal progressive. He can be exceedingly demanding in principles, and unrelenting in their enforcement. He is blunt and to the point.

      But from my experience, he never try to coerce, never to intimidate. He respects people's rights while maintaining his strong differences.

      No wonder so many are afraid of him. When you can't attack his character and message, you attack his person.

    4. Re: He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we all lived like hermits together, we could have a whole big community of hermits.

    5. Re:He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Stallman is a true liberal progressive.

      He is. What's so especially fascinating about that, is how amazingly compatible it is with conservatism.

      If RMS were to win some battles, I might some day find myself in an adversarial relationship with him. But for now, he's the enemy of everyone's enemies. No matter how left or right you are, if you join him in fighting corruption, both sides win.

      Later, some distant day, maybe we can fight about our differences, but in 2017 those differences are insignificant. Freedom is issue #1, and left or right, you want freedom. (If we ever get it, though, we're going to use it differently, because we have different goals.)

    6. Re:He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is an idealist and pragmatist.

      Those are mutually incompatible.

    7. Re:He is right by unixisc · · Score: 1

      You mean 'mutually exclusive'?

  15. Re: Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Stallman is correct in some things he says, like Facebook owns you. But this guy is a total nutjob in other ways.

    He still can't drop the "GNU" which I find funny. It's been like 2 decades now.

    "I'll just have my Linux. Thanks."
    "But... But... But it has GNU software too."
    "We don't care."

  16. Re:Nobody cares by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    Stallman may not have a TV set, but he does have the only computer with a psychedelic bus.

  17. Re:Brian Lunduke, open source beggar by silentcoder · · Score: 1

    You mean like Shakespeare used to do ?

    It's still a product people want to pay for, otherwise there wouldn't be any patrons, it's just the method of payment that's changed.

    --
    Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  18. Re:Brian Lunduke, open source beggar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, tell us more about your constipation.

  19. More specificity by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Free software is winning.

    Too broad a brush unless you specify where it is winning. Some places it very much is succeeding, others not so much. Some types of software are absolutely dominated by free software and in some other categories it is, near as makes no difference, non-existent. Good luck finding any company with accounting software or CAD software that is free (speech or beer) and better than the closed source options. (spoiler: none exist) Proprietary software is in no danger of extinction any time soon no matter how much we all might wish for such a state of affairs.

    Is there a modern computer or mobile device that doesn't run GNU software?

    Pretty sure there is basically no GNU software on an iPhone. I'm sure you can hack/jailbreak the device to get it to run but a good approximation of nobody actually bothers to do that.

    1. Re:More specificity by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      You can't legally put GPLv3 software in the App Store, since it requires that the user not only have source code, but the keys to install it. I've read that GPLv2 software can't go into the App Store, but I really don't see it when I reread GPLv2.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  20. If Free Software is so good by Merk42 · · Score: 0

    Then why does Proprietary Software dominate?

    1. Re:If Free Software is so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You misunderstand. Most people are willing to sacrifice The Four Freedoms for other things.
      RMS is not.

    2. Re: If Free Software is so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the nerd is so smart, how come he gets stomped in the locker room after gym class. Obviously the jocks are right, eh?

    3. Re: If Free Software is so good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing as most of the jocks, I went to school with. These days, became drug addicts or wrapped them selves around a utility pole, while driving drunk. It's safe to assume, who's wiser, out of the two.

    4. Re:If Free Software is so good by james_gnz · · Score: 1

      Then why does Proprietary Software dominate?

      More people use MS Windows than Linux for the same reason that more people use English than Esperanto. Not because it's better, but because it's entrenched in society. MS-DOS for the IBM PC wasn't remarkably good. What was remarkable about it was that it hacked together very quickly. Copyright gave monopoly control and massive profits to whoever got something out the door first in an emerging market. (Although control over "the desktop" is now becoming less important than control over "the cloud".)

  21. 34 years by ledow · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, after 34 years, in a world of on-demand entertainment, mobile devices, in-home electronics, video conferencing, etc., Stallman is using a decade-old laptop, watching no entertainment at all, presumably has nothing in the line of other devices (e.g. tablets, phones, CCTV, etc.) and can't talk to anyone who doesn't use the same kind of software as him (e.g. everyone on Skype, WhatsApp, etc.). And he also thinks you should go to jail for wanting to put a restrictive licence on things you own?

    And we're supposed to follow this guy's ideals?

    The guy's a moron. And that's coming from someone who does do an awful lot of things the open-source way, including my own programming.

    If you want to fix this problem, rather than mouth off, try and fix some of the primary problems identified by the FSF - which has included open-source video conferencing for years. Hell, they're still talking about an open-source alternative for Flash which has lived and died in the time they've been trying to create one.

    The sentiment is overblown, the direction is a good one, but the reality is so poor that everyone gave up waiting (e.g. for Hurd which only recently got SATA functionality...). And you're seriously advocating a years-old laptop as the way to live? That laptop stopped manufacture before millions of the users of things like iPads and WhatsApp were even born.

    Not only are you bad at fixing the problem, you're bad at finding interim solutions, and bad at making suggestions, and nothing but bad press for people who DO still want free and open kit.

    I'm incredibly disappointed that NOBODY with these large organisations with tons of skilled people on board has thought to monetise the exact thing they can do : Make a series of machines that are free and open from top to bottom. You can use sales from them to develop further. People would buy one just for a certified "open" tag.

    But, no, the closest you can get is System76 who recycle old IBM laptops still and who have just thought about getting into the game of end-to-end production.

    We could have been doing that since the 386 era when this guy first started mouthing off publicly, but nothing has been done in that direction.

    I'm all for free software but, you know what, I have to talk to real people. That means a mobile phone. I have to use computers. That means ones I can buy in a shop today. I have to live and enjoy. And that means playing games on Steam and watching movies on Amazon.

    Because there are precisely ZERO viable alternatives, short of a 10-year-old laptop and giving everything else up.

    1. Re:34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I have to live and enjoy. And that means playing games on Steam and watching movies on Amazon.

      You make it sound like a penance rather than a reward. If I have to pick between living what you live for and living what Stallman lives for, that kind of "Brave New World" summary is not exactly making me pick the former over the latter.

    2. Re: 34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But but but how is he going to talk to people? Ohhh the horror. I wish they had some sort of electronic mail I could use to talk to people. Why do I have to use these proprietary solutions. Wahhhhh me I just want to talk to people and game. WAhhhhhh.

    3. Re:34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to fix this problem, rather than mouth off,

      He personally wrote Emacs, GCC, and the GNU debugger. (So that free software could be written, compiled and debugged.)

      His "mouthing off" is the foundation of the movement. Stallman did a lecture at linus' school back when linus was only a student. It was that talk that convinced him to make linux free. (Then after linux was free, the movement decided there was no need to complete HURD and moved on to other things.)

      When he "mouths off" like this, he
      -speads the message
      -gets paid for his lectures, and lives like a student so he can funnel that money back into the movement.

      Everything he does or says helps us. Because of him I'm able to post this from a linux box instead of windows 10; suffering ads, MS spying and probably an NSA backdoor.

      What... have you done for us again? There is a loudmouth moron here, but it's not RMS.

      You can suffer facebook and its spying if you want. That's your choice and everyone has a different sweet spot. Me? You couldn't pay me to use it. Anyone who wants to talk to me can find me on JABBER.

    4. Re:34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And he also thinks you should go to jail for wanting to put a restrictive licence on things you own?

      There's the whole thing right there: You don't own the software you write, the end user owns it. Your right to "restrict" people can go fuck itself.

    5. Re:34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, after 34 years, in a world of on-demand entertainment, mobile devices, in-home electronics, video conferencing, etc., Stallman is using a decade-old laptop, watching no entertainment at all, presumably has nothing in the line of other devices (e.g. tablets, phones, CCTV, etc.) and can't talk to anyone who doesn't use the same kind of software as him (e.g. everyone on Skype, WhatsApp, etc.). And he also thinks you should go to jail for wanting to put a restrictive licence on things you own?

      I talked to him on the phone just the other day. Stop being so dramatic.

      And we're supposed to follow this guy's ideals?

      Do whatever you want. If you want to drink from the trough of commercial software, then go for it. If you want to pitch in and write free software, you can do that too. Or not, you can just use free software.

      The guy's a moron. And that's coming from someone who does do an awful lot of things the open-source way, including my own programming.

      He's a legend in his own time, and a visionary. He has more honorary doctorates than anyone that I can think of.

      He slept under his desk so that we can free software. He could have cashed in big time on the commercial software business, but he didn't.

      If you want to fix this problem, rather than mouth off, try and fix some of the primary problems identified by the FSF - which has included open-source video conferencing for years. Hell, they're still talking about an open-source alternative for Flash which has lived and died in the time they've been trying to create one.

      Even better was to get rid of Flash. Eventually that happened, and the world is a better place without Flash and Gnash.

      The sentiment is overblown, the direction is a good one, but the reality is so poor that everyone gave up waiting (e.g. for Hurd which only recently got SATA functionality...). And you're seriously advocating a years-old laptop as the way to live? That laptop stopped manufacture before millions of the users of things like iPads and WhatsApp were even born.

      You don't like the Linux kernel? Maybe you would like one of the BSD kernels instead. FWIW, I run Hurd and it runs GNOME just fine.

      I'm all for free software but, you know what, I have to talk to real people. That means a mobile phone. I have to use computers. That means ones I can buy in a shop today. I have to live and enjoy. And that means playing games on Steam and watching movies on Amazon.

      I talk on a mobile phone, and I also talk on a telephone, Ma Bell and shit. It has worked for the past 100 years, and still works. Sometimes I wait until I get home to place a call. The sound is better, and my monster computer, books, and whatnot are all sitting right here.

      I don't need to play another FPS. They bore the shit out of me. And I don't need the TV shows that Amazon is selling -- e.g. overdramatic portrayals of pregnant women driving to the 7/11 and eating like beasts.

      Because there are precisely ZERO viable alternatives, short of a 10-year-old laptop and giving everything else up.

      You're taking things to an extreme. Anyone can run GNU/Linux, BSD, and other free OS's on brand new hardware, such as Lenovo.

      RMS using this old equipment merely highlights the remaining need for e.g free BIOS and free Wifi. If you spent any time with free software, then you might know this is a sticking point.

      We buy the computer and hardware, but they want our soul.

    6. Re:34 years by JThundley · · Score: 1

      That's like arguing that the health-conscious are wrong because they're not opening healthy drive-through restaurants to compete with McDonalds.

      Stallman isn't in the business of creating software to compete with *every* proprietary piece of software out there. He's in the business of changing minds. When you change minds, the market will accommodate the needs of the consumer. Just like how McDonalds has healthy options now (or so I hear, haven't been to one in years).

    7. Re:34 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like how McDonalds has healthy options now (or so I hear, haven't been to one in years).

      That is the healthy option.

  22. Re: Nobody cares by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

    And yet if you go back to some of the recent Android articles, you'll find people saying that Android isn't really Linux, because it doesn't contain the GNU stuff that they expect on a 'real Linux' system.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  23. Re:What by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do that as well. I use a pocket knife and scissors to lop off the calluses under my toes and at my heels. They get nice and thick and taste like cheese. They are also tough and chewy and take a while to eat.

  24. Freedom with limits? by dromgodis · · Score: 1

    > Stallman replies, "No movie or show or song is worth giving up my freedom for. [...]"

    It seems to me like he is giving up a lot of one kind of freedom in order to attain his kind of it. Having limited options, even if self-prescribed, is a lack of freedom.

    1. Re:Freedom with limits? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many times have you seen on Slashdot that most of the music, movies, shows produced in the last 10 years are garbage?

      And here we have a comment saying refusing such garbage is a "lack of freedom."

      http://imgur.com/gallery/ckPu0hL

  25. Re: Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Accents as in diacritical marks, or accents as in I should read your post like the frenchman from monty pythons holy grail? Or both? ;)

  26. Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by unixisc · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Stallman pans mobile devices "that are full of peripherals that require non-free software at the system level. So there's no way to free them and have them work, except lots of painstaking reverse engineering, which is proceeding slowly."

    Thanks for reminding me: how is that Replicant project (or should it be GNU Replicant?) coming along? Are we likely to see it any sooner than HURD? Or will that too be a HURD like project - abandoned by you after going through an odyssey of experiments by the devs?

    "I buy music on CDs from physical stores... The problem is in the U.S. it's hard to find such stores any more!"

    Don't you still get CDs in the mail from BMG or Columbia House, like I used to, in the 90s? Here's what I consider mistreatment: having to put down anything from $7-15 on a CD w/ 11 songs, only 1 or 2 of which I like. And being spammed by them every other week, only w/ actual physical mail, as opposed to email.

    I have 2 ways of getting my music. Since I prefer music videos, I just download them from YouTube, and by now, have quite a collection. Unfortunately, in my car, I can't control that from my steering wheel on anything but an iToy, and that doesn't allow me to upload my freely obtained music. So I did buy something like 10 of my favorites on iTunes, but for some of them, iTunes did not have the music video available (even though I had it from YouTube, usually from the artists' Vevo channels). So I am forced to make do w/ less. I do wish my car navigation system could simply work w/ Windows 10 Mobile's Groove and Movie apps, so that I could control that from my steering. That, and I wish that Groove could make itself look like an iPod to any external device, and that it could handle music videos, instead of handing that function over to movie.

    Anyway, I digress. Bottom line: I prefer the current system, where I only pay for each song I actually want and like, and not for arbitarily selected groups of songs that the record company selects. Since everybody's tastes vary, this is easily the best way to distribute music.

    I do agree w/ RMS on TVs: I too no longer have a TV at home, although I do watch some news programs over YouTube live. While he makes some good points, his goal at the end - eviscerating proprietary software from the face of the earth - just reveals his evil Stalinist tendencies that have never left him, and never will.

    1. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

      his goal at the end - eviscerating proprietary software from the face of the earth - just reveals his evil Stalinist tendencies that have never left him, and never will.

      The problem with Stalin wasn't his ideals. The problem with Stalin was that he killed people who disagreed with him. Either you have a very basic lack of understanding, or you are purposely trying to mislead people. Which is it?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re: Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're letting the buttons on your steering wheel have too much control, dude.

      They are just switches. Sometimes referred to as 'controls' , but it's not you they are supposed to be controlling.

      I mean, by god, it sounds like your steering wheel forced you to buy an iGadget from Apple. That's just repulsive and puts your licence to carry a nerd card in peril.

    3. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also the ways he went about implementing his ideals were pretty problematic a lot of the time.

    4. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah that's true. He wasn't very good at running a country.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by unixisc · · Score: 2

      I never said that Stallman shared Stalin's ideals. I did imply that he has goals similar to what Stalin had, except that whereas Stalin eviscerated entire populations and conducted genocide, Stallman wants to wipe out businesses that operate on principles different from what he believes in. Yeah, he doesn't want to kill people, but he wants to stamp out all ideas other than his own. Not a whole lot better than the Soviet leader.

    6. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're willing to kill people who disagree with you, maybe something is wrong with your ideals? Big concept for you, I know.

    7. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, he doesn't want to kill people, but he wants to stamp out all ideas other than his own. Not a whole lot better than the Soviet leader.

      Uh, the means matter? Every school teacher wants to stamp out all ideas he considers wrong. That is called "education".

    8. Re:Stallman's jihad: beating something w/ nothing by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Depends on whether the wrong ideas are opinions or facts. Stamping out wrong facts would be education. Stamping out wrong opinions would be indoctrination

  27. Re: Nobody cares by unixisc · · Score: 2

    It's what people see. Like if I have a microwave oven or washing machine that has Linux underpinnings and someone asks me whether I run Linux, my answer would be no, since this computer that I'm typing on is TrueOS, and so Linux ain't what I do my computing on.

  28. Re:What by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Mr Stallman, you shouldn't count yourself in the plural

  29. Re:What by unixisc · · Score: 1

    I thought that his special BO cologne is what guarantees that

  30. STALLMAN SAID NOTHING WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Once again, Stall man is on topic, on point, and right about everything. People hate Stallman because they hate freedom, and hate a man with principles.

  31. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What kind of nerd doesn't know Alt+130?

  32. I find your religion to be boring by Brannon · · Score: 0

    Is there anyway to pre-unsubscribe to your newsletter?

    1. Re:I find your religion to be boring by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      You can stick your fingers in your ears and go "neener neener neener" if you see me coming down the street, and stop reading websites where I post things.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
  33. And we wouldn't have usable computers. by Brannon · · Score: 1

    It takes a special kind of stupidity to think that any technology that people have to be forced to use is going to be successful.

    1. Re: And we wouldn't have usable computers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the whole point that you aren't getting. Nobody is forcing anything on anybody. RMS is just telling you what the right thing to do is. He's not forcing you to use free software.

      You are being forced to use proprietary software though. It comes installed on almost every computer and smartphone. That is successful is it not? You are out of your league and just need to leave this thread. I've never seen you post before and you aren't adding anything useful to this convo. You sound like a shill defending his turf TBH.

  34. FSF = ultimately very practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So he does that by suggesting that by people who create DRM need to be jailed?

    I think this is a great example of the situation. I used to think of RMS as a nutcase, and over the years I've come to agree with him on nearly everything. (Though yes, I do make some compromises.) Fighting for peoples' rights does win hearts and minds. Maybe you're not a programmer, but to a programmer, it is extremely offensive to have laws that prohibit me from doing what I want, especially when those laws don't even serve the interests of society. It is, quite simply, the fight against evil.

    Yes, creating DRM ought to be a crime. If this sounds extreme to you, you need to remember that it's already a crime to make software that works with DRM. So this modest proposal is not government expansion beyond the current status quo. The 2017 premise with DRM is that the government is already taking sides, and the public approves of the government spending money to prosecute and imprison people on the issue of DRM.

    They just happen to take sides against the people and liberty, and (IMHO) the long-term viability of copyright itself (since DRM causes piracy). So given the premise that we must draw our guns and point them at people's faces (the essense of law), why not point our guns at the right faces?

    However horrible and overreaching you think it is, that you could be sent to jail and lose your family and fortune over DRM issues, you already live in that world today! The proposal is merely to punish evil people instead of good people.

    Until DMCA's anti-circumvention stuff is repealed, it is totally reasonable that DRM be outlawed. If you repeal DMCA (so that people aren't risking fines or jailtime by trying to work with the content) then you could repeal the prohibition against DRM too -- I'm all for getting government out of this decision. But until then, it should be illegal to use DRM. There should be fines and prison time for authorizing the use of technical measures which limit access to copyrighted works.

    Please understand: I'm not saying this isn't extreme! I'm just saying it's no more extreme than the status quo: DMCA itself. And outlawing DRM would be an improvement and overall less extreme, so it'd be a step in the right direction.

    So, hell yes, it's practical. Why not?

  35. Re: Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GNU as branding failed, and Linus's only crime was naming his kernel correctly. The OS is now Linux, because everyone who packaged it understood subconsciously that saying "Linux" and typing "Linux" both work great and there's no confusion. In speech, Gnu is supposed to be "guh-new", which is terrible, and in writing you have to rely on the capitals to distinguish it from the animal (which is pronounced mostly as "new" in english). Linux is named correctly, and unlike EVERYTHING ELSE in that space, the name won out immediately, and "Linux" has been the name of the OS (and also the kernel) since the 90s as a result.

    Stallman is a hardcore nerd. That's nothing to be ashamed of, but failing to brand stuff in ways that work outside of hardcore nerds has ramifications. If you care about being popular, focus on that. If you care about nerdery, focus on that. Stallman focused on principled nerdery (and succeeded) and shouldn't complain that he failed at normie branding.

  36. POSIX isnt DRM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dont you go there! People like you are what extend functionality of otherwise crippled OS like a virtual printer driver to print a document to postscript for exporting as PDF.

    Yea I can see someone like you rewriting a local ide disk driver as a DRM neywork mount. Fucking typical.

  37. And the winner is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Folks, you gotta understand that the most stable form of society is feudalism. The Enlightenment revolted against this, and there has been a blip that resulted in the French and American Revolutions. But, eventually as things quiet down, society returns to the stable state. Look around; ever more, the society is divided into serfs and nobility. In N. Korea, we have the Kim family dynasty. In Syria, the Assad dynasty. In the US, we had the Bush dynasty. The Clinton dynasty was deposed, but now we are seeing the beginnings of the Trump family dynasty. In Calif, the Brown family. In NY, the Cuomo family.

    Stallman's ideal society is not stable, unfortunately.

  38. Re:Brian Lunduke, open source beggar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Isn't it kind of better though? Rather than trying to shove your product down people's throats to convince them they should pay you for it, they get to use your product and evaluate its worth TO THEM and give to you freely as they see fit.

  39. Re:Nobody cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How does "Shut up, Emacs Doctor" make you feel?

  40. Re:All of you are incompetant on DRM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The /etc/shadow file proves my goddamn point.

    /etc/shadow was a way to keep the computer that you own more secure for you to use. DRM is a way to keep the music/movie/data/software that you own secured from you to only the ways the company that sold it to you wants you to use it.

  41. Sound bite philosophy by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Actually he does: opt out. It won't kill you to only buy entertainment which is DRM-free

    True but a bit of a dodge really. That's like arguing that I always have the option to leave the US if I don't like the president. Technically true but highly unrealistic for all but the most severe cases of oppression. DRM is a problem (whether they realize it or not) but for most people it isn't something that they care about on a deep level so long as it doesn't conspicuously interfere with their daily lives. It's one of many little bits of friction in our daily lives which we have to work around. Fortunately we have some people fighting the good fight so there is hope.

    This is not anticipated to be tolerable by 99% of the population. They don't actually know, because they'll never try it

    I'm not about to try all sorts of things that I'm pretty sure I won't enjoy. To be sure I'm probably wrong about some of them but I am quite certain I've got a better idea about what I am willing to tolerate than anyone else.

    This is how powerful corporations control people: by manipulating their unexamined assumptions of what they can tolerably live with.

    Where do you get the idea that people do not examine what matters to them? People do this all the time.

    They reasoned more or less thus: if happiness is having all your wants satisfied, the surest path to happiness is to want less.

    Argument from a false premise. Happiness demonstrably does not arise from having all your wants satisfied and it's not automatic that wanting less will result in having more of your wants fulfilled.

    If we want to do sound bite philosophy I think a better version is thus: Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get.

  42. The Donald Trump of the tech world by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 0

    "I'll make the best OS. It will be free. The very best free. And I know how everyone should think about their data. I'm very good with data. The best. And their wrong. We need to make HURD best again."

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
    1. Re:The Donald Trump of the tech world by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Eric Raymond would be the Trump of the tech world. Or maybe Linus might be. RMS is more like the Bernie Sanders of the tech world

    2. Re:The Donald Trump of the tech world by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

      Except, he's the one that's generally all talk. HERD, for example, is the Trump University of OS kernels.

      --
      -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
    3. Re: The Donald Trump of the tech world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eric is the Pat Buchanan of tech.

    4. Re: The Donald Trump of the tech world by unixisc · · Score: 1

      No, the Pat Buchanan of tech would be Woz

  43. Re:Nobody cares by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Shut up, Emacs Doctor!

    I thought that Emacs was a church (or a mosque), not a hospital

  44. car music controls by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Yeah, they are just switches, wise guy! But they are easily accessible switches, which is not so important if I'm sitting on a sofa doing nothing, but is definitely much more important if I'm driving and shouldn't be getting my attention diverted from the road.

    And no, they didn't force me to buy an iPhone: FaceTime did (and that's another story). But I like watching music videos while listening to them on my phone or tablet, I want the music to be local to the device and not have to be online for Vevo or YouTube to access it, and I don't want to have 2 copies of the same song on any device - one in mp4 and another in mp3. So I choose to just have music in mp4 format. Which works beautifully at home, but creates an issue in the car. That is - to smoothly change what songs I'm listening to w/o having to turn to my phone and go into it, which would take my attention off the road.

    What they did force me to buy was a few songs from iTunes, so far amounting to ~$20. Those switches are not controlling me, but to my disappointment, the only things they properly control are my iToys, but not my Lumia.

  45. Re:Brian Lunduke, open source beggar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shakespeare built his own theater and sold tickets to see his plays.

  46. Re:Nobody cares by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

    Maybe it's a witch doctor? Or a faith healer? Unless the difference is lost on you like it is on me.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  47. Wrong. DRM is a carrier contract! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if the load (content) resides on your computer harddrive owned by you, like a forest troll guarding a bridge, it is delivering content to you. Some regulationsvwill actually reintroduce you as a carrier yourself as an intra-carrier load exchange due to the fact politically the interaction of service is not rendered acceptably other than as an abandonment.

    Every aspect of computer theory is being skewed by laws, the nature of an identity to an ageny or administrative body is about interceding to rights that have no vested interest aka privileges.

    What it all boils down to is Richard Stallman isnt a liberal or even a progressive because civics render him far short of the graces of good care and order in his daily advocacy of principles: he is a communist, and a thief, starting with claiming all sources unendorsed yet accompanied by someone else's script and letters: the only rights beong transferred by the GPL are those of the owner to the GNU and restricted use by whomever cognizant of it's mishandling.

  48. Unix & Linux by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Ummm, Linux is similar enough to Unix - POSIX compatible shells, commands w/ some few variations. Granted, it doesn't have the Open Group's certification, since nobody though it worth the money. But the fact that IBM, Oracle, HP have all pretty much abandoned their proprietary Unixes in favor of Linux (in case of IBM, even on their p-Series) is enough evidence that Linux is more often than not a good enough replacement for Unix in a way that Windows ain't

  49. Woah by rbpOne · · Score: 1

    I'm going to escape from proprietary software, and come back, and wipe proprietary software off the face of the earth.

    Calm down there, Mr. Ahmadinejad