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234 lines
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234 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 999
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Title: HPR0999: Simon Phipps on Open Software: OGG Camp Part One
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0999/hpr0999.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 17:09:55
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---
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The full circle podcast on hacker public radio in this episode of Camp 11 Simon Thips on
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Open Software Hello World and welcome to our show on hacker public radio.
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This is the first of our highlights of last summer's unconference, Oak Camp 11 held
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at final maltings in the south of England.
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The full circle podcast is the companion to full circle magazine, the independent magazine
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for the Ubuntu community.
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Find us at fullcirclemagazine.org forward slash podcast.
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Simon Thips presented the opening session of the unconference to a packed main hall, speaking
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on the topic of software freedom.
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A computer industry veteran, Simon came on with an actual box of hats which he proceeded
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to change at high speed, reminding me of Tommy Cooper in his heyday.
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Simon has come up through hands-on roles as field engineer, programmer and systems analyst
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run a software publishing company, worked with OSI standards in the eighties on the first
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commercial collaborative conferencing software in the nineties and helped introduce both
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Java and XML to IBM.
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A founding director of the open mobile alliance, Simon is currently chief strategy officer
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at independent software company fordrock and director of the open source initiative.
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Here's an edited version of his presentation.
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We'll play many hats.
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We have hats that we wear for work, hats that we wear for home, you know, I tend to wear
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this hat because it keeps the rain off, when I try to look respectable, I tend to wear
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this hat.
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When I'm trying to look cool and geeky, I tend to wear this hat, and when I re-refine
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up to help in the open source activities over there, I wear this one.
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Now the truth is that they all need all of those different hats that I'm wearing and I
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can't just isolate off one of them at a time.
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And so in this open session, I figure you're going to get two days of all the geeky stuff
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with buttons to put in screens to look at and cool stuff to play with.
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And what I'd like to remind you is of the reason why open source happened in the first
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place.
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I'd like to suggest to you that we are on a trajectory towards either freedom or right.
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There have been lots of technology that was interesting to us all, but when the worldwide
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web was invented and coalesced into something we wanted in our homes, when the technology
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transferred out of the lab and into the pocket, transferred out of the lab into the home,
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and transferred out of the lab into the heart of our lives, we were inevitably put on
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a collision course with the authority that had grown up during the 19th and 20th centuries.
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And although what happened in the UK over the last week was a load of thugs and idiots
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who were stealing stuff and who, I hope, are going to enjoy the prison sentences, we're
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going to see a whole lot more of that because what they were doing was they were pushing
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an awikeness that was being exposed in society.
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You see, the government's response to those rights is going to be to try to diminish your
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freedoms.
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Now, curiously, the example didn't happen in the UK this week, it actually happened
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in San Francisco.
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In San Francisco yesterday, the organisation that runs the subway there, the VART service,
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decided that there was a risk that there was going to be a protest on one of their statements
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about the outcome of a murder trial, where a transit policeman had killed somebody and
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the transit policeman looked like he was getting away with it.
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And there was going to be a peaceful protest, but decided that the risk of what happened
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in London happening in San Francisco to great, and they shut down the cell phone service
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at the station.
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So you couldn't use your cell phone.
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Now, I don't know whether they were entitled to do that, often when we make rules and
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try and live only by the rules, people end up living at the margin.
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When you're able to live by a transit police and by an internal compass, you live in a place
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that satisfies the needs of your internal moral compass.
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But when you live by rules, what happens is you get pushed out to the edge of the rules
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and you live only on the edge of the rules.
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So that's why big corporations think it's okay to do unethical things to make money.
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They do say, because the rules say, they claim they say, that they've got to do for their
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shareholders.
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Think of the future.
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So when you make rules, you push people to the edge of society and to the edge of the
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rules.
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And that's what we're going to see happening more and more.
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We're going to see people being pushed to the edge of the rules.
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And the thing is, in this world, Lawrence Leccik pointed out that code is law.
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And what the law says doesn't matter very much on the ground.
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It doesn't matter whether the bomb police in San Francisco were actually allowed to turn
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off the cell phone network.
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It turns out there was a switch on the wall that said cell phone network and they turned
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it off and the cell phone was off.
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And that was the law on the ground at the time.
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And the thing is that we're moving from a society where the people who can set the law were
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people in London, in pot offices.
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So the people who make the law are people who wear back teachers.
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So the truth is that because of the things we're interested in, because we're interested
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in cool tablets and we're interested in limits and we're interested in web-hosted services
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and we're interested in syndicated software and we're interested in digital music and
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we're interested in digital video, because we're interested in those things.
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We are going to become the people who hold the law in our hands.
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And this is the reason why I've been telling people for quite some time now that what
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really matters in their world is going to be software freedom.
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Software freedom really matters.
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It doesn't matter simply because you're going to be some kind of a radical annutator.
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It matters because it matters of technology.
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The principles of software freedom are your compass.
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The lack of software freedom is a set of principles and you can tell when you're sticking
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with the principles.
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You'll remember that by the round of this photograph, I took this photograph from
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battery park in New York.
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And you can see that great symbol of liberty, the static liberty, standing visible for
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everyone to see.
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And in the background you can see the doctrines of New Jersey adopting the same posture.
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And we can tell the difference.
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We can tell this is about liberty and this is about commerce.
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Maybe you don't think OpenCore is a problem.
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OpenCore is where a company takes free software and they pack a load of stuff around it which
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isn't free and sell you that.
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And they tell you that because in the middle there's software freedom that they enjoy.
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Therefore you can buy the thing on the outside which doesn't have software freedom.
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That's OpenCore.
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We're also threatened by cloud.
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Cloud is a threat to your software freedom and it's a really big challenge actually working
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out what it means for software freedom to happen in cloud computing.
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We're stuck with cloud computing.
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I already got taken to hell by it today and we are all going to live with cloud computing
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no matter how hard it gets the amount by whosoever wants to in the computing industry.
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And we have to work out how to map freedom into the cloud.
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So what I mean by freedom, well the four freedoms, this is my paraphrase of the four freedoms.
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The four freedoms are the freedom to use software for any purpose.
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The freedom to study the source code so you know how it works.
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The freedom to modify it so it does what you want and the freedom to distribute it so
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that your friends, colleagues, customers and more can do the same things you can do.
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The other software freedom and the idea of software freedom is that anything that abridges
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those rights is wrong.
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It's the freedom to succeed or to fail early because you're not burdened down with just
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ifying the button.
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If you're using Open Source software you can afford to fail earlier and that means you can
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get to the point where you succeed early because you know that nothing works until you've
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tried it three times.
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So I'd like to suggest to you that software freedom in business is important because everything
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that you value about Open Source software is the first derivative of software freedom.
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Now what's diagnostic about protecting software freedom, but what's diagnostic is who ends
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up with the software freedom.
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You see people talk about software freedom and open source in business software but you've
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got to ask yourself who is ignoring those freedoms.
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If your supplier is enjoying your freedom, well that's fantastic and please your suppliers
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enjoy those freedoms and I would find for their life to do so.
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But you're not going to get any of these benefits that I've just told you about.
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You're not going to get the freedom to use the software for any purpose without having
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to worry about licensing terms, your supplier is.
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You're not going to have continuity in a market that changes, your supplier is.
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So it matters who has the software freedom and that's the diagnostic.
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When you see Open Source menu, when you see free software menu, ask who ends up with
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the software freedom.
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I'd suggest to you that Open Source software is no more risky than any other kind of licensing,
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hugely less risky and in some very important ways it comes with great benefits.
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The first one is that that freedom to use the software for any purpose means that in your
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business, as long as you're not distributing the software outside your business, there is
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no need for you to count how many copies you're using and do license audit.
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Software asset management is not something you have to do that can sort of suffer.
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Something you have to do if you're distributing the outside your company, but you do that
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anyway if you're distributing software because you've got to manually output to all the
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libraries and software that you'll bring into the company anyway.
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Open Source is just one more kind of software you're consuming and I'd like to suggest
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you that that's a massive benefit.
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The fact that if you use Open Source software in your business, you have reduced your
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cost of managing your software infrastructure.
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I'd like to suggest to you that we've got trapped by the grandest meaning of free.
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I'd like to suggest to you that that only means free, that free, where you're more pure
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when the guys from Ockham tell you there's free beer tonight, there is free beer tonight.
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When they tell you that you see you hear, that's when they tell you that your software
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freedom has been preserved, you go, because you see that free, that not paying word is
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really interesting to us, whereas that liberty word, when you don't need liberty until
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somebody tries to take it away and by the time someone challenges your liberty is too
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late to protect it, the time that you need to protect your rights is when you don't
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need them.
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I'd suggest to you that what really matters is not the cost cut in history of free software
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and the focus on price.
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I'd suggest that if we didn't know better, we'd pay extra for Open Source software, because
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it has something the proprietary software just doesn't have, it comes with freedom inside.
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And so I'm calling on you here at Ockham this weekend to remember every time you see something
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to ask, well where's the freedom in this?
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So all the time you go through here, I'm asking you, every presenter, focus on freedom
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and ask them what they're doing with the software or the technology they're working with to
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protect your freedoms.
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Now we're all drawing that line somewhere in our lives at the moment.
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I know very, very few people who are able to stand and explain honestly that absolutely
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everything in their life has got free software in it all the way down to the ground.
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Everyone is compromising some way.
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And so the message to you for Ockham is not get to be a radical that destroys the practicality
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of life in pursuit of freedom, but rather be conscious, be conscious of your freedoms.
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So be aware of where your freedoms are, because being aware of your freedoms is the key
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to liberty.
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Now I'd like to suggest to you that this could be the most important thing that you do,
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because as we move forward in society, you're going to discover that it's those liberties
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that allow you to operate in society that is going to get increasingly worried about
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technology.
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What's the point of having some sort of open data transparency directive across Europe
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if all of the files are in a format, you have to buy a reader from Microsoft to read.
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What is the point of being able to use any software you want if the computers you can buy
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are all knocked down by software patents and design patents?
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Who wants a world where Android is strong, but it's been barred from all markets by somebody
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with a species patent or design claim?
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And this is a world that's coming and the only people who are going to be able to organize
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a protest against it, and you, because the other folks who organize protest about technology
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are dead steel TVs.
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So I don't know how you feel about this message.
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The message that I've got to give to you is that software freedom is the key to what
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we're doing with computers and technology.
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We have to reinterpret it for the current era.
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But the world is thinking we've got to adapt to it because we are the new policymakers.
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We are the new legislators because the technology that we work on is the point where in practical
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terms people of day-to-day experience look.
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We are the people who are programming BlackBerry's secure messaging service.
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We are the people who understand why it's a crazy idea to try and control and ban people
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from using social media.
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For goodness sake, has the man never worked out what social media is?
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Does he, is no one advising anyone that can serve the government at the moment?
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We are the people who have been very comment on that.
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You are the people who have been comment on that.
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So please, pay attention to people.
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We need you.
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Our frames depend on you.
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Thank you very much.
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That was Simon Fipp's presentation on software freedom from OgCamp 11.
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OgCamp is a joint venture organised by those lovely podcasters, the Linux Outlaws and
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the Ubuntu UK podcast.
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With more highlights of the OgCamp Unconference coming up on the full circle podcast very soon,
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including Karen Sandler and the OgCamp panel discussion.
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For now, I'm Robyn Cattling.
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Thank you for listening and goodbye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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