294 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
294 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 973
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Title: HPR0973: Freedom is not Free 4 - Money
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0973/hpr0973.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 05:53:52
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---
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Hello, this is Ahuka, and welcome to what is now the fourth.
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In our ongoing series called Freedom is not free.
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We've already looked at the general issue of what we mean when we talk about freedom and
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free software.
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Then we took a look at the first of the issues that you could help with, which is filing
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bugs, a very important activity.
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And in our third program, we took a look at how you might be able to help with things
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like documentation.
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Well, today we're going to get to the spiritual part of this.
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We're going to talk about money.
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Money is an important thing.
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The people who work in free software actually do need money.
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It's something that I think is often overlooked.
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Most of the stuff we do does have expenses.
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It's associated with it.
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If you are a developer working on a free software project, for instance, you may require some
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amount of money to take care of your family.
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Now I do understand that a lot of the developers that work in free software are supported by
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corporate paycheck.
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I think it is absolutely wonderful that companies like Red Hat and IBM and Canonical and Google
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to name just a few that come to my mind right off the top of my head, that they are very
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happy to have people who are on their payroll who are working on free software projects and
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making a contribution that is very valuable to all of us.
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I think that's great.
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That's one of the reasons why I think, in turn, if we have a chance to support those companies
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by buying their products, that's something we should probably think about doing.
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It's not always the case.
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There was a bit of a kerfuffle just in the last week or two about the software distribution
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that I use, which is known as Kubuntu, and that initial K is the hint that this is the
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one that has the KDE desktop, and the fellow named Jonathan, I think Redel is maybe how
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it's pronounced, who is a Canonical employee who has been working on that project full
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time as part of his job, had to post that, hey guys, I'm not going to be able to do
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any more Canonical, no longer things, there's an economic business reason for supporting
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my work on this.
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Now this turned into, for a few people, the Canonical pulls the plug on Kubuntu project
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over, none of which is true, because what a lot of people didn't realize is the vast majority
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of people working on that project, we're not hired by Canonical, and we're not getting
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a paycheck.
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So where do they get their money?
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Well, sometimes they have to come to us and ask for help.
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Another thing that we need to take a look at is that free software projects have expenses
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of various kinds, it's not just the developers, but you might need to have servers.
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And you might need to have that kind of infrastructure that is going to support a project.
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And that is going to require raising some money to do all of that.
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So I think that those of us who are supporters of free software have to be sensitive to that.
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We need to be able to support the software we love.
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Now this is something that I've had strong feelings about for a long time, even long
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before I was into Linux and free software.
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I remember there used to be something called shareware.
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It may still exist.
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I don't travel in those circles anymore, so I wouldn't know much about it.
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But the idea of shareware was that if you were interested in a piece of software written
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by an independent developer, they would let you sort of try it before you buy it kind
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of thing.
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And some of them, it was the honor system, some of them, what you tried was a stripped
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down version, and you have to pay it and register it to get all of the features.
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But there were always people who thought that shareware meant you didn't have to pay for
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something, and would essentially rip off the developers.
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I always thought that was pretty sleazy.
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And there's something that I was not going to do.
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So I registered and paid for any number of shareware programs over the years.
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And then when I got into Linux, you know, the general public license, for instance, is
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a wonderful thing.
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There's nothing the general public license that says, you know, there can never be any
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money changing hands.
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That's not really what free is about in this context.
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So, you know, how are we going to do this?
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And I think there's any number of ways you just have to decide you're going to do it
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and be sensitive about it.
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The first one is if you go to the project's website, and you know, every software project
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probably has a website, and oh, by the way, have you noticed companies are not giving away
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web hosting in most cases?
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So who's paying for the website?
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But if you go to the website for a project, very often you are going to see a donate button.
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You know, they've tried to make it as easy as possible, hook into PayPal, well, you know,
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if it's software you use, and you can afford it, give them a few bucks.
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Now, if it's software you don't use, I mean, that's a different thing entirely.
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I don't think anyone's under any moral obligation to the support software that they don't personally
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use.
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But I think if it's stuff that you do use, particularly if it's something you use frequently, you
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know, you really ought to help them out.
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Now, when I say that, obviously we're not saying make your children go to bed hungry.
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But is that really the case for most of the people, particularly in the United States
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and Europe, who might be lovers of free software involved with this?
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Are they really in a position where they have to choose between feeding their families
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and giving a little bit of support to a software project?
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I don't think so.
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I really don't.
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So generally speaking, if it's software I use and I see that donate button, I, you know,
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click the button, give them a few bucks.
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Now for me, you know, five or ten bucks is not a big deal.
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It's pocket money in any event.
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So I'm more than happy to do that.
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And so if I see the button, I just, I will click on it.
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Other things that you can watch out for, you know, I talk about developers, there was
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something that I saw recently, you know, I'm mentioning some of the things that I do.
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And I want to make clear, it's not because I'm trying to set myself up as being a, you
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know, especially wonderful person.
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It's just that I'm just giving some examples from my own experience and pointing out it
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doesn't have to be a big deal.
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You just have to make up your mind.
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You're going to do these things and it becomes very easy to do.
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So one day, I'm, you know, reading my messages, and I don't remember if there's this email
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or on Google Plus or wherever that I saw this, but somewhere I saw a note that, fellow
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name, I hope I get his name right, Sebastian Truegh, who is a developer on the KDE project.
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And he posted something saying, I need to raise some money if I'm going to keep doing
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my work on this.
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Now as I've said, I use a KDE distribution.
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That KDE desktop is important to me.
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So I saw that message and it gave a link and I got there.
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There's a donate button, I clicked it and I think it was probably like 10 euros or something
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that I gave to him.
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Maybe it was $10.
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I don't remember what currency it was denominated in.
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The number 10 is sort of the magic.
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I can just do this without thinking about it thing for me.
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So I clicked the button, I gave him a few bucks.
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You know, another one, there is a program that I absolutely love.
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It's called Miro, M-I-R-O, and it lets me download and then play video podcasts of all
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kinds.
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I think it's a wonderful project and I get some podcasts like Geekbeat and things like
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that.
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Hack 5 is a video podcast.
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I get these wonderful videos from NASA because I love space.
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I think that's all great.
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Of course, Ask An Ninja and all of the things like that.
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So this is something I actually use every day because I'm always going in there to take
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a look at whatever is available, what are the new programs that I can take a look at.
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So it's a program I really rely on.
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So they had a fundraiser that they were looking for some support to keep the thing going
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and they came up with, I thought it was kind of clever, adopt a line of code.
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So I thought, okay, so that, I think that looked like $4 a month is what it ended up being
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and I thought, okay, yeah, I can do that.
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So I now have adopted a line of code and at one point I took a look at the about page
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or the about pop up that you get on the software and saw my name listed.
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I don't know if I'm still there though, doesn't matter.
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I know that I'm supporting them.
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The other day, I got another one that's happened to involve DigiCam, which is a photo
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organizer in KDE that I use a lot.
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So I thought, that's fine.
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So again, give them 10 bucks.
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Now one that I didn't, I just mentioned it because I happen to see this is cyanogen
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mod and I saw this message that they were looking to raise some money to keep it going.
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And within a couple of hours, another message came through saying, yep, we've already met
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and exceeded all of our fundraising goals, okay.
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So that one was pretty popular, they didn't have any trouble raising their money and good
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for them.
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I wouldn't want them to have any trouble raising their money.
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If they were having a little more trouble getting there, I probably would have given them
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a few bucks because I'm running cyanogen mod right now on a nook color that I rooted.
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A few other things, there was a thing recently for the Debian administrators manual and they
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were raising money to get that published and, you know, the distribution I use is based
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on Debian.
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So again, I thought, you know, give them 10 bucks.
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So those are just some of the things that I know that I've done.
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But you know, there's other things you can do.
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You can start supporting some of these organizations that are out there doing the good fight for
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software freedom.
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The first one I'm going to mention is the Free Software Foundation.
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Now, that's a little more expensive.
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That one is, I think $10 a month is what I'm paying for that now.
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I'm very proud to be a member of the Free Software Foundation.
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I think it's important.
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It is the only group I can think of that is just consistently out there fighting for our
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freedom in the computing area.
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So this is the group that was set up by Richard Stallman and, you know, they were the ones
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who came up with the general public license and things like that.
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So I'm very happy to be a member and so I'm kicking over $10 a month.
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I would have to say we all know Richard Stallman can be rather controversial and I'm well
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aware of that.
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So you might look at that and say, you know, I don't want to go there.
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Well then, there's also the Linux Foundation.
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Linux Foundation is, that's Jim Zemlin is the executive director.
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You know, Linux Foundation is providing a paycheck to Linus Torvalds, you know.
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One of us who are Linux users would have anything to use if it wasn't for Linus.
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And recently they just brought in as another fellow, in other words, someone who is on
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the payroll, Greg Crow Hartman, who is well known as one of the main kernel hackers and
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kernel maintainers.
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And so he's now on the payroll there.
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So you know, this is another group that I think would be well worth your support.
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And that one I think is like $99 a year to be a member of that and many of these, by the
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way, have reduced prices if you're a student.
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But yeah, that's not obviously not the status that I'm in and it was my hair turns progressively
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grayer.
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But you know, joining these groups is a good thing.
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Another thing you can do to provide some support that you might not be aware of, there's
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a group called the software freedom conservancy.
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And I learned about it because Bradley Coon, who is the executive director there, was
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one of our keynote speakers at Ohio Linux Fest this past year.
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And as I've mentioned, I'm the publicity director for Ohio Linux Fest.
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So I was involved initially with talking to Bradley about, you know, getting his bio information
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and publicizing it.
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And that started a nice little conversation.
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And you know, I got to hear more about the stuff that he's doing.
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And it's a very interesting group.
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Now Bradley used to be at the Free Software Foundation and is still pretty well known
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as perhaps the major enforcer of the general public license.
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So you know, he's very active in promoting that and he loves to talk about that work,
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which by the way, mostly involves just writing emails to companies saying, oh, by the way,
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you know, you took on an obligation when you used this software, maybe you weren't aware
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of this.
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He doesn't sue people if it all possible and so far he mostly avoids that.
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So now he's the executive director of the software freedom conservancy and what's that
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about.
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Well, what that is about is the fact that a lot of people, a lot of projects in the
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Free Software community, you know, need to raise money, the various kinds, which projects
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are we talking about?
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Well, here's a few of them.
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See if you've heard of any of these, Amarok, very well known as a player of sound, MP3
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and AUG and things like that.
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So it's a great music program, Git, which is the software that Linus Torvales recently
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was instrumental in developing for helping to manage software projects and replacement
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for things like subversion.
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Samba, that's the software that allows people who want to connect to Windows computers
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and Windows servers that allows that connection between Linux and Windows.
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So that's very important.
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And then line, which is for the people who wish to use Windows software and run that in
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a Linux environment, so that's just a few that I think are pretty well known.
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And these are all members of the software freedom conservancy.
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Well, what does that mean?
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The software freedom conservancy basically handles a lot of the stuff for these projects
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that they would otherwise have to handle for themselves, such as collecting donations,
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keeping bank accounts, you know, filing legal documents, etc.
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It does that on behalf of all of these individual projects.
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So you could certainly donate to the individual projects through the software freedom conservancy.
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And the other thing is that the software freedom conservancy itself is a nonprofit that
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is looking for support and I will say on Bradley's behalf that I'm pretty sure they would
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be grateful for any donations to help support the work that they do.
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So that's another thing you could take a look at.
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I think if you take a look at the work the software freedom conservancy does, you agree
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that they're doing really good work and they deserve to be supported.
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So these are all some of the things that you can do with your hard earned money to help
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support free software.
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I'm going to mention one other thing that you might not have thought of.
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There's something called the Linux Fund.
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And the Linux Fund, I think I heard about this initially through Randall Schwartz, the
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Pearl programmer who has the podcast Floss Weekly.
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And I think he's on the board of directors of this Linux Fund if I recall correctly.
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And what they do is they have affinity cards and you may have seen these, you have credit
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cards that are tied to, you know, your organization or what have you.
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So it's a way of raising money with affinity cards.
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If you sign up to get a credit card through them, then the sponsoring group gets a small
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cut of every transaction.
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So the Linux Fund offers a Linux affinity credit card.
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I don't, I think it's master card or visa or one of the major ones like that.
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But you know, have a nice little logo on it.
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And that's another way that you can support things.
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So, you know, here's a, I hope we've given you a lot of different ways that you can
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support financially, all of the free software stuff that we know and love.
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So I'm going to now do a couple of plugs here.
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The first is for Ohio Linux Fest.
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We have our call for talks open and we are looking for all sorts of people to come and
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give wonderful talks because to tell you the truth, generally speaking, the people who
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talk are wonderful.
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They may not know that they are, but I've listened to quite a few over the years.
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We're looking for a wide variety, right?
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So if it's anything involving free and open software, if it's anything involving open
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hardware, it doesn't have to be limited to Linux.
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In fact, BSD is something that we consider to be important.
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We're looking for a wide variety of experience levels.
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So we want talks that are for expert system administrators, but we also want talks that
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are aimed at newcomers who are just learning about Linux.
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So you know, it's pretty much anything that is related to free and open software.
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We're going to be interested in.
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You know, just submit a talk.
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I'm going to put the URL in the show notes for all of that along with the URL of my own
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website.
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The other thing I want to mention is that Northeast Linux Fest is coming up.
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That is on March 17th in Worcester, Massachusetts.
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And they are going to have a wonderful program.
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Focus is on accessibility.
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So if you're going to be in the Massachusetts area, please take a look at dropping by.
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And this is a hooker, and I'm signing off.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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