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443 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3833
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Title: HPR3833: Software Freedom Podcast
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3833/hpr3833.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 06:16:55
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3833 for Wednesday the 12th of April 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Software Freedom Podcast.
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It is part of the series podcast recommendations.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 40 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is another excellent podcast for your consideration.
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This time it's news from the FSFE.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you are listening to another episode of Hacker
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Public Radio.
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As you know, we have a sister project called the Free Culture Podcast and today is going
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to be a sample episode of one of the podcasts on our sister network.
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Today is the turn of the Free Software Foundation Europe Podcast.
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And as you know, the Free Software Foundation is a charity that empowers user control
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of technology.
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They were our neighbours during Fostem and Bonnie pointed out that we have never aired
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an episode of their show on Hacker Public Radio.
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So today is today is the day that we fix that for once and for all.
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So ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls and everybody in between the Software Freedom
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Podcast No. 14, The World of Mesh Networking.
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Welcome to the Software Freedom Podcast.
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This podcast is presented to you by the Free Software Foundation Europe.
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We are a charity that empowers users to control technology.
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I'm Matthias Kirschner, the president of the Free Software Foundation Europe.
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And our guest today is Elektra, who works as a software and hardware developer and is
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involved in the development of Mesh Networking and the Freifong Initiative.
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She's a philosopher, I think we can say, yeah.
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The author of the book Mesh, co-author of the book Wireless Networking in the Developing
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World and moderates the Freifong Radio and Radio Shows of Microfm at Collabor Radio
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on 88fear.de.
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So way more experienced than I have with Radio and Audio Recording.
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Hello and welcome Elektra.
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Enough with the flattering, thanks for inviting me.
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So Elektra, both of us are from Berlin and at that time lived in Berlin.
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The first time we met was actually in Brazil at the Free Software Conference Fisley there.
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And yeah, so I am wondering actually how you got involved in Free Software before we met
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there.
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So that's already done.
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Over 10 years ago, but I realized we haven't talked about how you actually got involved
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in the first place.
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Well, my first computer was the Commodore 16 and that sucked because nobody was bothering
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to write software for it.
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Everybody wanted a C64 back then.
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Then I had a PC, a 386 without co-processor was using DOS 5.0 for Microsoft and I actually
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was only doing text editing and designing printed software reports.
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Then later I bought my first Pantsum PC and that used Windows 95 and it was just a bummer.
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Nothing did work.
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And then yeah, since I'm an electronics person, I often shopped in electronic stores and
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they had breadhead Linux and Susie Linux in a box and at one point I bought Linux in
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a box and the first thing was the command line is so comfortable and I got an entire planet
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of opportunities like all the universities, all the machines, all the stuff you need to
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do something.
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It was all there and it was all open waiting for me to play with it like a big planet
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official technique but in software.
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It's also interesting because like for myself, the first GNU Linux distribution I got, I bought
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myself or I got it landed from a friend and I bought others and we landed around.
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Nowadays most people they just download it and often confuse free software with creative
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software and for us we had to buy it from the beginning, it's this association isn't
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so present there.
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So for you it was the getting this large tool set empowering you and what you want
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to do.
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An open planet with all the resources for free and it also rang the bell of Mutual 8.
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You probably know the book Mutual 8 by the Russian anarchist Krapodkin.
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I have to admit, no I don't know it.
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Well this is like a huge gap, you should read Mutual 8 because it's an anti-social Darwinist
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book and he's proving that for the flourishment of the species it is important that
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the individuals from the species they help each other.
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So survival is not the battle of the fittest and only the fittest one survives.
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The fittest species is also that one where the individuals help each other.
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So that's in a nutshell.
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So when I think about how we first met that was when you were, when people asked you to
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help with setting up machine networking also there in in Brazil right.
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So we're in the favelias there and looking where could we build the antennas.
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How did you end up in this area of work?
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Well I was fascinated with wireless communication with radio.
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I think I was like eight or nine when I built my first radio.
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It was a simple detector radio.
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And probably a bit younger when I first built my first circuits.
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And radio always has fascinated me.
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And that was also the reason why I got involved in electronics.
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At first I was more involved in electronics rather than in programming and computing.
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But computers of course, the Department of Electronics.
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So it was also fascinating and yeah then the came the internet and I mean it in the internet
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was like two cents back then.
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And so you had to count the minutes and yeah.
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And then the first DSL lines came and there was the opportunity to share those lines via
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radio.
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And so I started to build some wireless technology.
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There was pre Wi-Fi, Wi-Fi was already there but it was an affordable.
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And so when Wi-Fi became affordable and there was a budget for that community, I was
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involved in the low tech.
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It was like before the term hacker space, maker space was coined.
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There were these groups of like squatters basically in the Netherlands and in Germany that
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were setting up internet cafes and training centers for open stores, teaching people how
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to use GPG, how to install Linux or open BSD or free BSD or whatever.
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So that's now more than 20 years ago, 25, 26 years.
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And that was also the time when you Electra got involved with Batman.
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Oh no, Batman was an invention I made together with Thomas Lopatik in 2005, 2006 because
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I was hacking on mesh routing protocols because routing and forwarding is a natural extension.
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If you do radio communication because every radio communication device has a limited range.
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But if there are other devices that mutually help in the forwarding data, then you can
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build a cloud like a beehive where everybody is connected to everybody else, regardless
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of the individual range.
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So all the machines are contributing to build an infrastructure which is based on multi-point
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to multi-point networking.
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Radio communication is always a broadcast.
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It's an artificial limitation.
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If Wi-Fi networks provide hotspots where all the clients need the central hotspot in
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order to communicate with each other.
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And since the Wi-Fi protocols, since the beginning, at least in theory supported the
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ad hoc mode, which is basically multi-point to multi-point communication in 800-2.11.
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I got the idea that we need some kind of software that organizes the interconnection between
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those devices so that every device relays traffic for every other device if needed.
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And this can be done over multiple hops.
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So you can cover an entire area with such a network.
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And it would be license-free.
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It can operate in a license-free band.
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Yeah.
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And so this idea was ripe even before I joined Freifong.
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But when I joined the Freifong community, at its really beginning, I wrote a wikipedia
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– a wiki article in the Freifong wiki – and explained the idea.
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And to my surprise, there was a crowd of people that were excited about the idea.
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And that's how Meshnet working at Freifong essentially started here in Berlin.
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And can you explain again what Batman, then, exactly is with Meshnet working now?
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That's the – you explained that.
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That it's enlarging the range of a network and all the peers help each other to reach
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the other peers.
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Well in the field of Meshnet working, so radio-based Meshnet working with multi-point to
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multi-point, capable radios, there are different types of protocols.
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Some are proactive and some are reactive.
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Reactive protocols we can just skip there only trying to learn about the existence of
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the network and how they can get from A to B if there is a demand while proactive networking
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protocols, they always try to have an idea of the network so that if you want to send
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something from A to B, you already can scan the network to see who is there and then
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you decide I want to send something to B. And in the field of the proactive protocols,
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there were – yeah, there are the link state protocols and they try to calculate a graph
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involving all the vectors between all these individual nodes in the network.
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And calculating this graph is immensely costing in CPU and RAM and also in network traffic.
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And on top of that all, the optimized link state routing algorithm OLSRH, which is one
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of these link state routing algorithms, it created routing loops, it didn't work
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as promised.
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So it was one of the protocols that we tried in Berlin and at least Berlin is still using
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it.
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I didn't manage to convince the Berlin community to make the switch from OLSRH in Tyrelitzu
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to Batman back then.
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It was like 2006, the first Batman code was written.
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And so the idea is to have proactive protocol that is loop free and consumes less networking
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overhead in protocol messages, less CPU power and less RAM.
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And yeah, the Batman algorithm has achieved that.
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So I mean, maybe it makes sense that you explained to some of the listeners who aren't familiar
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with Reifung from out of Germany what that is and that you accomplished in Berlin with
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that.
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It's a community network where people built their own infrastructure based on radio.
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Not all open community networks on the planet are only using radio, but at least here,
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for Berlin and for Germany in general, it's based on Wi-Fi because here regulations
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and so on and such are so complicated, it's easier to set up wireless links than to dig
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up streets and areas and put your own fiber into the ground.
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The other communities like the GIFI network in Catalonia, in Spain, they dig their own
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fibers and there are other communities, probably as well, that do this, but yeah, we're building
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our own infrastructure and it's basically also a technology to deliver services to the
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last mile.
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That's when you roll out internet connectivity or a network, then yes, of course, you
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can have a fiber line from a major city to another major city, but then you have to distribute
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it to the households, for example, to the individual people wherever they live.
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And one way to do that is of course, with radio and machine networking can help that.
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So what we're doing is not local area networking, we're doing like metropolitan area networking
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or yeah, in a certain district, people can use that technology, yeah.
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And of course, there's much more to explain to that, which would be way out of the scope
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of your podcast.
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And I mean, for CDs or like Berlin or also countries like Germany, the aspects you talked
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about before that you need more CPU, more RAM for the other protocol before that might
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not be such a big issue, right?
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Because a lot of people they can afford to have that, they have enough energy resources
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often available to do that.
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I could imagine that this is completely different for the other work you did in some of the developing
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countries where it's way more difficult with the energy or yes, it's the field where I'm
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operating in, please everybody don't get me wrong.
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If you can afford to put fiber to every household, please do so.
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But if you're in an area where money is limited, where energy resources are limited, where
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you want to have a basic service quickly, you can roll it out with wireless technology.
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It doesn't have, it's not always only mesh, it can be point-to-point backbone links and
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a backbone network.
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And the mesh is then that part that delivers it individually to the households, so solving
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the problem of the last mile.
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That's also why I got involved in South Africa with the Council for Scientific and Industrial
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Research.
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They had a program last mile, first inch, there was a development program where they were
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looking for delivering internet access to households in South Africa.
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And besides being a software developer for a very long time now, you're also developing
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open hardware there for accomplishing those projects.
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So I am dead as one part that you create mesh networks with powered by solar power.
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Can you explain a little bit how hard that came to happen and what the challenges there
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were?
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I think you're referring to the mesh potato, maybe.
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While I was working in South Africa at the Meraka Institute in Chvane, I got in contact
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with Steve Song, who's working for the Shuttle War Foundation, and he had the idea to
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project Village Telco, the idea of providing voiceover IP services over a solar power
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mesh network or in general for mesh networks.
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And since I'm an electronic person, I got involved in developing parts of the electronics
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of the device.
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But this is the history now, this happened in 2008, and it's already an exhibition artifact
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here in the German Technical Museum here in Berlin.
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What are the current challenges in this field to make sure that more people get network
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connection in places where you can't have fiber that easily?
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Solar power and suitable radios, but there's already a number of people that are involved
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in that field.
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I'm just one of them today.
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So I was kind of pioneered in that field.
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There are not people doing stuff with lower radios, like a text communication in disaster
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areas and stuff like this.
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Yeah, I'm one of my projects that I'm doing at the moment, this device.
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It's the Fryfunk Open Maximum Powerpoint tracker.
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There are several generations, one is based on an old 8-bit microcontroller, and now
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I'm using ESP32, which is not 32-bit, and has Wi-Fi and lots of other gadgets built
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in, and it's essentially to design, to build independent wireless nodes operated with
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solar, where you can monitor the solar system from afar.
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And if you have a Wi-Fi device, an extra device connected to it, you can monitor that as
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well, and you can turn it on and off, for example, if it has a software hanger and so on.
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So that's stuff that I'm doing at the moment.
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And you already hinted at it a bit, but I mean, you're traveling many countries.
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I used to.
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You used to, at the moment not.
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Yes.
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When I was working in South Africa, I probably, yeah, I was one of these people that created
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an awful lot of pollution already.
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When we met at the Fisley, I wrote to the people, thanks, nice for inviting me, but I usually
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don't fly like 20,000 kilometers just for a weekend to give a talk.
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Are there other things for me that you want me to do so I can stay for at least a month?
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And so they had, and so I started to work in Chile and since I go to Chile.
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And later in Valparaiso, so I was already back then, I was aware that my traveling activity
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was contributing a huge amount of carbon dioxide to the planet and that we should try to
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avoid this.
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So I had a personal feeling that I'm also responsible for it, which you could criticize and say,
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hey, it's not you that is the problem, but yeah, I was aware of this.
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And at the moment, I'm no longer working in South Africa and I will only travel if it's
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really necessary for a really big and important project.
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So I reduced my number of flights by a great margin.
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And I mean, for me, it was the question I had there was mainly, I mean, the travel part
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is one part, which is a bit sometimes difficult and you have to spend a lot of time on that.
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But I mean, in general, I was thinking about your involvement and all the energy you put
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into all of this work in the last years where it's usually not done by some few hours
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a day where you are involved in that and you get some money for that and that's all
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why you are doing this.
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So I mean, you are working on this for other reasons and that was the question I was getting
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at what, why are you working on all of that and putting so much energy and time of you
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into this?
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Well, my idea was like that democratizing communication, so giving communication to
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everyone and sharing knowledge according to the principle of mutual aid, coming back
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to Krapotkin, works for the betterment of mankind.
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We are all standing on the shoulders of giants, the language that we use, the knowledge
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that we have, the maps that we use, all that has been created by other humans in the past
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and we are all building on top of others and there are people on this planet that are
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pretty much excluded from that because the resources are not there.
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So my idea was to improve the betterment of human society by democratizing communications,
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but on the other hand at the moment I am also a little bit depressed because with the
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ability for everyone to communicate, it was also increasing the level of where people
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start communicating hatred and disinformation and so on.
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So it's a two-bladed sword, but I hope that that edge that supports mankind will finally
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prevail.
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I think that's something for many developers when they see that there's also things done
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with what they created that they don't think that is something fitting into their worldview
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or how people should behave, that's very difficult.
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On the other hand it's then when you are for open communication and you want people to
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work together and the question is like if you start limiting some of the things that can
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be done, what good things would you prevent in the world?
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Yeah, well this is like you are either promoting open communication which I still do whole
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heartedly or you don't, or you don't.
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Well which would bring us to other fields of censorship, control, surveillance, once
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you have an open communication system where people share data and talk about themselves,
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they can also be the target of surveillance and so on.
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So this is an even another aspect, but I still stand by my optimism that it is for the benefit
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of mankind and it's just something you can offer back then when I had the idea to Batman
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to get it with Thomas, I got so excited that it would be such a beautiful protocol and
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then it took me a couple of hours until I realized, oh, but if that mesh communication protocol
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is really so powerful and can do so, can organize communication so well sooner or later
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the military will also look for the protocol and that's what happened.
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And back then when we started the website open mesh org and open mesh net, we registered
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both URLs and I'm still keeping it.
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We came up with a license where we took the DPL and we added some comment that the protocol
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is only legal to be used in non-military and non surveillance activities.
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We actually asked the free software foundation and we got to reply, don't do it, don't
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add more licenses and yeah, well in the end the military guys that we saw in our IP logs,
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one of them approached us and said, I'm sitting on the board and I try to convince my fellow
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people that they use your protocol because it's cool, but with that name Batman nobody's
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taking it serious, can you please change the name of your project?
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So he never got a reply to that email and there's also people that complained that we did
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that step and removed that part in the license, non-military and non surveillance.
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So that's now removed.
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We removed it back then after getting feedback and yeah, some people are complaining that
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we did it.
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Yeah, it's not a free software license than any more from the definition, but yes, it's
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very hard and I think that you're approached then that's something which I hear from a
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lot of developers that they choose a free software license because they want to make
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sure that all the positive things can develop out of it and that we don't go into a direction
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where then people are adding other restrictions and then after some time you disable people
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to actually work together, but on the other hand, it doesn't mean that you have to fully support
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things that you don't approve and you don't have to reply people, you don't have to give them
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support, you don't have to do special development for them just because they offer money and all
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of that.
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Well, the conclusion is that we have drawn back then was we're not going to patent the
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algorithms, so when they see what we're doing, they can study what we're doing and they
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can just re-implement it and since it's military and they can just keep it secret, you can
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just copy our code and I guess a legal fight would be pointless.
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One topic I wanted to quickly go into as well, now some shift from I'm sorry, but actually
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maybe it's not too far because it's also about others controlling you.
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So at the FSFE, we work on initiative, it's a router freedom where we want to achieve
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it that the ISP, the Internet Service Provider cannot tell you what router you have to
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use at home, but that you can decide yourself.
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So from your perspective, is this a huge problem in Europe that the ISPs can just decide
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there or for mesh networking or is that something where you think that this doesn't have a huge
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impact on the possibility of more community networks?
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Well, when you talk about the router lockdown, what immediately comes to my memory is that
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I signed a letter to get rid of Tim Berners-Lee and other people against the idea of the Federal
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Communications Commission trying to ban OpenWRT and open source.
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Can you quickly say what OpenWRT is?
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Well, back then, Linksys, they had a router WRT 54G and some folks discovered, hey, this
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is using GPL software, so for fuck's sake, you have to publish your sources.
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And so they had to comply and they actually did at one point.
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So people starting hacking these devices and they were immensely useful because they were
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like 800 to 2011 G hardware with two antennas, quite actually quite good hardware.
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And so it was possible to liberate the hardware and for like 60 euros, maybe 80 euros, it
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was a lot of bang for the buck back then these days, it's like a wireless router, it's
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like 10 to 15 euros, the cheapest ones.
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So that enabled us to build tri-phone networks at a much higher pace and much higher penetration
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and made it much, much more easier.
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Some clever guys from the open source community came up with patches and so on.
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So it was a big success and thanks to the GPLing and publishing the sources, a project was
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created and since it was a project about hacking that wireless router from Linksys and it
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was to WRT 54G, the project had to got the name open WRT.
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But of course, these days, that's the history and it's now for all kinds of wireless devices
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and it's a very great Linux distribution, it's a meta distribution that you learn to
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use in order to support your wireless device and not only wireless devices, there's also
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going into the Raspberry Pi and so on.
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But clearly the focus is on wireless routing technology, that's what they refer to today.
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So today, don't think of the Linksys anymore, think of wireless routing technology, open
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Linux distribution.
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And you were at explaining that you wrote a letter or signed a letter with Tim Bernstein
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together?
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And others against the Federal Communication Commission of the United States because they
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initiated an attempt to ban open WRT altogether from devices in the United States and unfortunately,
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the European Commission is following that.
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So they're coming up with regulations, they say a virus radius can do damage, they
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can do harm and so software freedom has to be abandoned because yeah.
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So and of course, why I mentioned this in this context is the argument is that banning
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open source would make networking infrastructure more unsafe.
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And this is of course a problem that you also mentioned on your website.
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One provider has like 1 million devices rolled out and there is no updates from the company.
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The company lost interest in updating the hardware.
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So you have to use an unsafe hardware that now in times of war with people, even from
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state actors, start attacking networks.
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This is a clear no go.
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On the other hand, if you are ISP and you have the same device everywhere, it's easier
|
||
to roll out updates and so on and so forth.
|
||
But users should not be forced to obey to a hardware lockdown.
|
||
For most people, they are not too involved.
|
||
There are not many people on this planet that start to configure their own device, they
|
||
just sign up a contract and they just use whatever they get.
|
||
And if it's not working, they call the hotline and the hotline tells them to restart the
|
||
device and then everything is going to be fine.
|
||
I mean, that's also one of the aims there for us in the area of device neutrality that
|
||
well, some people might decide that they just use what they get provided.
|
||
But on the other hand, that individuals, organizations, sometimes even larger organizations
|
||
or even countries that they are able to choose other devices and still be able to communicate
|
||
and still be able to interact with those devices and accomplish their goals with that and
|
||
that's something with the route of freedom and the other part you mentioned with the
|
||
radio equipment directive on the European level where we are also working on where there
|
||
are sometimes really strange arguments why it should be prevented to use other software
|
||
on radio capable hardware.
|
||
It's completely overarching.
|
||
The FCC was completely overarching and Europe just follows blindly and the problem is
|
||
this is technology from technology device is even not feasible what they're planning
|
||
and it will make the planet more insecure.
|
||
And it's ludicrous because the Raspberry Pi, for example, is completely FCC approved.
|
||
But you can just use the GPI open from the device and you can broadcast whatever you like.
|
||
Because modern day technology, modern day microcontrollers, CPUs, they are so flexible,
|
||
you can modulate whatever you like at what frequency you like and so this is like tell
|
||
the sun to stop shining because it's too hot, it's ridiculous, it's ludicrous.
|
||
And that's also a lesson that I think some bureaucrats in the United States and in Europe
|
||
have to learn and they hopefully learned it soon.
|
||
It's a long way and I think about all the meetings we participated in and the arguments
|
||
you hear there, it's something which really requires long, long time to explain it again
|
||
and again and then some things happen and then under arguments that you brought before
|
||
are then better understood and yeah, but it's yeah, a lot of work to get those arguments
|
||
through.
|
||
But their idea of control, where does it end, you kind of just stop there.
|
||
Then you have to to ban on the electronic components that you buy.
|
||
Yeah, you have to limit compilers.
|
||
What where does it end, where does it end?
|
||
This is like, it's still, it's utterly ridiculous.
|
||
And yeah, that's let's hope that there is still a rest of sense in your brains.
|
||
That's why it's so important that people like you, that many other people who who joined
|
||
us in those, in those discussions there that they continue to talk with decision makers
|
||
about that or support others in doing so, so that we get those points across against
|
||
the sometimes very big, large lobby from other companies there.
|
||
But yeah, I still, so you I'm exploding the amount of time that you want to dedicate to
|
||
that story, we have to come a little bit to the end.
|
||
But so one, one question I wanted to ask you is with all that work in all that different
|
||
countries and for such a long time, what was the funniest, most memorable, exceptional
|
||
thing that, that you think about, when you think about like free software?
|
||
Well, the most memorable moment was when I reached the lowest south of South Africa in
|
||
the area of Cape Town. And I went to a very poor area and there were the blue links
|
||
to boxes running, the fry-funk firmware from Berlin. And so that's when I really had to
|
||
realize what we had done, what we had achieved, that people living in a township had entered
|
||
access thanks to software and ideas that were initiated somewhere here in the Western
|
||
world. And I had the idea, I would like, I would love to just travel around and see this
|
||
type of installations and maybe do a film about it. That would have been cool, but of course
|
||
it would involve a huge amount of traveling. But it clearly was like a very inspiring moment.
|
||
I can imagine. Then I have to come to the last question and that's always when I talked
|
||
people the same one. So on the 14th of February, we always celebrate the Alafry software day,
|
||
where we ask people to thank other contributors, other groups, organizations out there for their work.
|
||
And I don't think we have to limit that to one day. So I'm always asking my guests,
|
||
are there any developers, contributors, organizations out there who we would like to thank for their work
|
||
for free software? Oh dear, there is too many to mention actually. I can only talk about people that I
|
||
was working with personally, but already to people whose names I cannot remember because there
|
||
are too many that provided me with that Linux experience, with that Linux kernel and all the stuff
|
||
that I had access to when I started using redhead Linux and later Slackware.
|
||
But in particular, I would like to thank some folks that I have been working with,
|
||
like Thomas Lopatic, who was coding with me, OLSR and Batman. He was actually the major coder.
|
||
And Sven Ola took it from the from the Berlin Freifold community for his hacks on the WRT-54G,
|
||
and especially in the Broadcom driver. Axel Neumann, who supported me in Batman hand later forked
|
||
to his own Batman project, Simon Wunderlich. Sven Ekelmann, you know, there's many names to
|
||
mention. And I guess they're all driven by this idea to share and contribute, because actually this
|
||
is what we humans, in a positive sense, are we all share and contribute, and we create something
|
||
that others stand on, and we're already standing on the shoulders of giants, like Albert Einstein
|
||
has put it once. Elektra, thank you very much for talking with me about all those interesting
|
||
topics. So pleasure. Thank you very much for all the work you did. Yes, thank you.
|
||
So this was the software freedom podcast. If you liked the episode, please recommend it to
|
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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|
||
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