Yahoo奇摩 網頁搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. Free Software Foundation Latin America ( FSFLA) is the Latin American sister organisation of the Free Software Foundation. It is the fourth sister organisation of FSF, after Free Software Foundation Europe and Free Software Foundation India. It was launched on November 23, 2005 in Rosario, Argentina. [2]

  2. The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization founded by Richard Stallman [6] on October 4, 1985, to support the free software movement, with the organization's preference for software being distributed under copyleft ("share alike [7] .

  3. 其他人也問了

  4. The project received support from the Free Software Foundation and stimulated the creation, headed by the Free Software Foundation Latin America, of the Linux-libre kernel. [46] As of October 2012 [update] , Trisquel is the most popular FSF endorsed Linux distribution ranked by Distrowatch (over 12 months). [ 47 ]

    • Philosophy
    • Actions
    • Organisations
    • Legislation and Government
    • Events
    • Economics
    • Subgroups and Schisms
    • Criticism and Controversy
    • See Also
    • Further Reading

    The philosophy of the Free Software Movement is based on promoting collaboration between programmers and computer users. This process necessitates the rejection ofproprietary software and the promotion of free software.Stallman notes that this action would not hinder the progression of technology, as he states, "Wasteful duplication of system progr...

    Writing and spreading free software

    The core work of the free software movement is focused on software development. The free software movement also rejects proprietary software, refusing to install software that does not give them the freedoms of free software. According to Stallman, "The only thing in the software field that is worse than an unauthorised copy of a proprietary program, is an authorised copy of the proprietary program because this does the same harm to its whole community of users, and in addition, usually the d...

    Building awareness

    Some supporters of the free software movement take up public speaking, or host a stall at software-related conferences to raise awareness of software freedom. This is seen as important since people who receive free software, but who are not aware that it is free software, will later accept a non-free replacement or will add software that is not free software.

    Asia

    1. Free Software Movement 2. International Centre for Free and Open Source Software (ICFOSS)

    Africa

    1. Free Software and Open Source Foundation for Africa Archived 2021-08-27 at the Wayback Machine

    North America

    1. Free Software Foundation 2. Software Freedom Law Center

    A lot of lobbying work has been done against software patents and expansions of copyright law. Other lobbying focuses directly on the use of free software by government agencies and government-funded projects.

    Free Software events happening all around the world connects people to increase visibility for Free software projects and foster collaborations.

    The free software movement has been extensively analyzed using economic methodologies, including perspectives from heterodox economics. Of particular interest to economists[who?] is the willingness of programmers in the free software movement to work, often producing higher-quality than proprietary programmers, without financial compensation[citati...

    Since its inception, there is an ongoing contention between the many FLOSS organizations (FSF, OSI, Debian, Mozilla Foundation, Apache Foundation, etc.) within the free software movement, with the main conflicts centered around the organization's needs for compromise and pragmatism rather than adhering to founding values and philosophies.

    Principle compromises

    Eric Raymondcriticises the speed at which the free software movement is progressing, suggesting that temporary compromises should be made for long-term gains. Raymond argues that this could raise awareness of the software and thus increase the free software movement's influence on relevant standards and legislation. Richard Stallman, on the other hand, sees the current level of compromise as a greater cause for worry.

    Programmer income

    Stallman said that this is where people get the misconception of "free": there is no wrong in programmers' requesting payment for a proposed project, or charging for copies of free software. Restricting and controlling the user's decisions on use is the actual violation of freedom. Stallman defends that in some cases, monetary incentive is not necessary for motivation since the pleasure in expressing creativity is a reward in itself.Conversely, Stallman admits that it is not easy to raise mon...

    "Viral" copyleft licensing

    The free software movement champions copyleft licensing schema (often pejoratively called "viral licenses"). In its strongest form, copyleft mandates that any works derived from copyleft-licensed software must also carry a copyleft license, so the license spreads from work to work like a computer virus might spread from machine to machine. Stallman has previously stated his opposition to describing the GNU GPLas "viral". These licensing terms can only be enforced through asserting copyrights....

    Coleman, E. Gabriella (2013). Coding Freedom: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Hacking. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691144610.
    David M. Berry, Copy, Rip, Burn: The Politics of Copyleft and Open Source, Pluto Press, 2008, ISBN 0-7453-2414-2
    Johan Söderberg, Hacking Capitalism: The Free and Open Source Software Movement, Routledge, 2007, ISBN 0-415-95543-2
  5. Free Software Foundation (FSF) – founded 1985 with headquarters in Boston, MA, USA; supports the free software movement, which promotes the universal freedom to study, distribute, create, and modify computer software

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Linux-libreLinux-libre - Wikipedia

    According to the Free Software Foundation Latin America, Linux-libre is a modified version of the Linux kernel that contains no binary blobs, obfuscated code, or code released under proprietary licenses. [7] In the Linux kernel, those types of code are mostly

  7. Alexandre Oliva receiving a Free Software Award at LibrePlanet 2017. Alexandre "Alex" Oliva, is a Brazilian free software activist, developer, former vice president of the board of directors of the Free Software Foundation (FSF) [1] and founding member of Free Software Foundation Latin America (FSFLA). [2] He is currently on-hold ...