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  1. Dec 5, 2012 · One of the greatest hackers of all time, Richard Stallman is something of a roving prophet for the free software movement. He invented the first ‘copyleft license’ that made the results of his mammoth feats of computer programming free to use, share and change - without falling foul of copyright.

    • The Man Who called Me A Fool
    • An Abomination
    • A Surreal Situation
    • Tim O’Reilly
    • The UC Berkeley/Unix Culture
    • Incorrect Interpretation
    • Open Source Is Born
    • The Open Source Summit
    • Getting The Media Onboard
    • A Great Success

    Stallman took upon himself the role of a “counterweight” to all users who prefer the comfort offered by proprietary software over the freedom of free software. “Like, there might be somebody who wants to talk to you using Skype. Now, Skype is a proprietary program and we know it’s malware. So if you put it on your computer you’re surrendering your ...

    In 1996, Stallman and his colleagues at the Free Software Foundation held a conference. The main speaker was Linus Torvalds. Interestingly enough, even though Torvalds contributed to the GNU project by letting Stallman use his operating system, he did not share Stallman’s ideas and ideology. Of course, he was thrilled to assist the GNU project –but...

    As we all know, Open Source is a much more familiar and household name than Free Software – and we’ll get to the reasons for this, and the actual differences between these two terms in a few minutes. The rise of Open Source created an odd situation, perhaps even a bit surreal. “Most people who have heard of me have been misinformed and believe that...

    At this point, it’s a good idea to introduce into the conversation one of the men who started Open Source. “Hey, Ran! [Ran: Hi, Tim, what’s up?] It’s good.” Although you might not recognize the voice, I’m willing to bet his name will ring a bell – at least for anyone who has been in the Hi-Tech industry for the last thirty years or so. He is Tim O’...

    “Richard [Stallman] came along and said – ‘Copyright is Evil, so we’ve got this new thing called Copyleft.’ Here at Berkeley we just said – ‘Take our software to Copy Central and make copies of it!’ [laughing] that was the culture that I grow up in, like – hey, we’re doing this thing for research, we’re doing this thing to advance the state of the ...

    The popularity of the GNU/Linux operating system clearly demonstrated the positive technical potential of Free Software. Still, there were many engineers and businessmen that doubted its financial basis:how can a company survive if it’s giving away its product for free? One of the reasons some businesses refused to adopt Free Software stemmed from ...

    In February 1998, a few developers and entrepreneurs met in California, in an organization called The Foresight institute. The catalyst for the meeting was a dramatic announcement by the Netscape corporation that had taken place a month earlier. The name “Netscape” was familiar to almost anyone who used the web in the 1990s: it was the owner of the...

    This is where Tim O’Reilly entered the scene. In 1998 he organized a conference of some of the best and brightest mindsin the software world: Linus Torvalds, Guido Van Rossum (the creator of Python), Larry Wall (of Perl) and many other luminaries. “I’ve been thinking about it all through the Fall that I wanted to bring all these people together. I ...

    “I built a lot of relations with the press then, and I also got this idea that telling a big story was the right way to advance the agenda. So in addition to bringing all these people together for this Freeware Summit, my goal right from the outset was: we’re going to tell a story about all these people who have this thing in common. But it was not...

    Tim’s initiative was a great success. The fact that so many opinion leaders and experts sponsored the Open Source initiative helped push it forward, and within a few years it eclipsed its big sister, Free Software. “I had no role in the coining of the term ‘Open Source’. I think what I did that was really meaningful and turned out to be profoundly ...

  2. That's what they mean. It's "Any device*" where the * means any device that runs Kindle.

  3. Jan 1, 2024 · “Free” here means free as in “free speech,” not free as in “free beer.” Stallman's most famous intervention in the “free software” movement has surely been the GNU General Public License ( GPL ), which Stallman created around 1985 as a general license that could be applied to any program.

  4. Feb 11, 2010 · Stallman described the worst practices, from video-content-scrambling, the Sony rootkit, music on defective non-standard CDs, the “Amazon Swindle”, right up to Apple’s “iBad”, all designed to move control from the customer to the seller. He went on to refute the industry’s claims of protecting the authors and

  5. Sep 9, 2007 · In case you don’t know, Stallman is a former MIT researcher who quit MIT to found of the GNU Project, launched in 1984 to develop the free software operating system GNU. Here is how the Free Software Foundation defines free software: <<“Free software” is a matter of liberty, not price.

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  7. Oct 8, 2004 · To explain why, we must first examine Stallman's definition of free software (derived from this site ), which involves four freedoms for the user: The freedom to run the program, for any...

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