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197 lines
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197 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4079
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Title: HPR4079: The Corresponding Source
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4079/hpr4079.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:20:47
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---
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This is hacker public radio episode 4,079 for Thursday, the 21st of March 2024.
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Today's show is entitled The Corresponding Source.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 18 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, free as in freedom is dead, long live the corresponding source.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Previously we featured an episode of free as in freedom here in HQR, from the good folks over
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at the Software Freedom Conservatory. They now have a new podcast called The Corresponding Source,
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which I found out about our good friend, fellow podcaster, and all around,
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nice guy, Dan Lynch. And I'm posting the first episode of The Corresponding Source.
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So you know that free as in freedom is no more and that you should switch your feeds over to
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this new podcast, The Corresponding Source. So with that, sit back, relax, and enjoy the first
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episode of The Corresponding Source.
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This is episode 00 of The Corresponding Source.
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Hi, I'm Karen Sandler. And I'm Bradley Kuhn. And this is Corresponding Source.
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This is a new show that will be doing for hopefully many episodes that's going to have lots of
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great information about open source, free software, software freedom, and software rights.
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Yeah, I'd say it probably also digital rights, electronic freedom, digital autonomy. I'm just
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being silly now, but you're not smiling. We are in the same room this time, which we often are,
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we weren't in our old show. That's right. Many of our listeners who might be joining this show
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as we start will remember we previously had for many episodes a show called Free as in Freedom
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that ran for quite a long time. We had another podcast even before that. But we're trying to do
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something a little bit different with this particular podcast. Here, we're going to kind of start
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from the beginning. We're going to talk about, well, first in this episode, we're going to introduce
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you to who we are and why we care about these issues. And then what we're hoping to do is have
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a series of episodes that are about the beginnings and inner workings and how free software and
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then open source became to be and what the things are that you need to know about issues related to
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policy, licensing, community, and just generally all the information you might need to know that's
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not in the software itself or the software's documentation to get involved and get excited about
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doing things in open source and free software. And our goal is to provide all of that background
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and introductory information, but also to talk about some of the hot issues and more complicated
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subjects that come along that are connected to that background and history.
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And what we're going to have actually is two different feeds that you can subscribe to. We know
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we have a lot of wonderful listeners that we like coming from our old show. I'm sure they're very
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thrilled that we're back even under a new name. And they're probably going to be more interested in
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the more advanced topics and current issues shows we're going to do. And we're targeting this might
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vary a little bit, but we're talking to have every other show be one of the shows in the series of
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introductory information about open source and free software. And then every other show will be
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about more of a recent topic and so forth. We'll have a feed. The main feed will have both
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those types of shows in it. And for those who want one or the other, get a can subscribe to
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a specific feed for one or the other type of episode. That's cool. I didn't realize that's how
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we were going to do it. That is how we're going to do it. I've had this plan in my head for so long
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can. Finally, we're executing on the excellent plan that I've devised for the future of the
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corresponding source. I'm here for it. My question is, is it corresponding source or the
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corresponding source? Let's explain what that means. Shall we? Yeah. We picked this name from one of
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the most important and popular and famous free software licenses called the general public license.
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And in fact, it's called in GPL version two, the complete corresponding source and in GPL
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version three, it's defined term. If you don't know what that is, don't worry about it. You'll
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learn in a future show called corresponding source with CNS capitalized. And that's what we took
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it from because getting the source code is one of the most important things, in fact, possibly the
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most important thing that you get with your software rights with open source and free software.
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And we're also corresponding. And I hope that we're a source for important information going
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forward. Did I ruin it by being too explicit about the fun other meanings of the words?
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Well, I thought the pun was obvious, but maybe it wasn't. I don't know, but I like it so much that,
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you know, I belabor it. I came up with it. Karen liked it, but I came up with it.
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Riley totally came up with it. You got the credit. That's great. Well, why don't we start by
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introducing ourselves? Karen, do you want to tell your story and your background and how you got
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involved in open source and free software? And just tell us your whole tell us your whole live
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story, Karen. I was going to say, sure, I'd be happy to, but that would take a very long time.
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I'm probably not going to talk about all of the intricacies of my story during this one podcast,
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but or this one episode, but we'll probably come back to some of the important pieces of the
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story over time. My story sort of has like a lot of relevance to a lot of different issues
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about free and open source software. The basic story about who I am and why I care so much about
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these topics is that I have a heart condition that I was born with. It's called hypertrophic
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cardiomyopathy. It means I literally have a big heart. So like what happened to the grinch after
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he started caring about everyone? Three sizes to large or no? It is three sizes too large. Wow,
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exactly. Yes. And that's why you're such a wonderful person. No. The whole thing is not three
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sizes too big. Just pieces of it are parts of it are and really it's not just that it's so big.
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It's that parts of the heart are thick and so the heart muscle is kind of stiff and it doesn't
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beat properly and it's totally fine. I am generally asymptomatic generally. I'm glad to hear that.
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But I'm trying to, yeah, I see I know this story, but I'm trying to react to Karen's stories if
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I'd never heard it before. I'm trying anyway. Bradley has heard this story like a million times.
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Our listeners haven't. So please tell me more. Many of our listeners have heard this story,
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so bear with me if you have. But please tell us more.
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Well, okay. So I'm at a very high risk of suddenly dying. They often call it sudden death.
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And so I have an implanted pacemaker defibrillator. Just in case I go into sudden death,
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my defibrillator should shock me and I will be saved. But I haven't actually needed to be shocked
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so far. What has happened so far is that I have only been shocked unnecessarily.
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And why would a device shock you unnecessarily?
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So when I was working out as myself a young person, I was on the rower and my defibrillator picked
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that up and thought that I was in a very dangerous rhythm. And so it shocked me. And that was just
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the first time. The later on, I was shocked when I was pregnant because my heart was
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palpitating, which is super normal for a pregnant person. When you're pregnant,
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your heart just can have palpitations. And it's not a big deal if you're not pregnant.
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If you're pregnant and you have palpitations, doctors are always like, oh, pregnant people have
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palpitations. Don't worry about it. But when you have a defibrillator, the defibrillator picks up
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the palpitations and things. Oh, no, this is a dangerous heart rate. And that's what happened to me.
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And it shocked me multiple times, even though I didn't need treatment.
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Because it just didn't know what to do with that information and thought I was in a dangerous
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rhythm. And the only way I could reliably stop it from shocking me was to take drugs to slow my
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heart rate down, which made it difficult to even walk up a flight of stairs.
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So that setting was not even adjustable by the electrophysiologist or anybody else. They
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couldn't adjust it once it was in your body to do different things. Yeah, to adjust the algorithm
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to allow for palpitations is simply not... It's not even a conversation you can even have.
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And one of the reasons is that I'm a decade later from when I started, I'm still extremely
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young for a defibrillator patient. Patients with defibrillators are only 15% are under the age of 65.
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And the set of people who are pregnant and have defibrillators is teeny tiny. So there's no
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information about they don't spend the time. And so living with my defibrillator all this time
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stands for the proposition that, you know, our technology really may not be made for us in the
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uses that we rely on it for. And what are we going to be able to do when it fails? And so
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my heart device became a metaphor for the software we rely on. And it just, it totally blew my
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mind about what this means for the technology we rely on, what we need as a society to be able to
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move forward when things fail. And you know, I've been struggling with the concept of this ever
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since because I can't believe that it took me being unnecessarily shocked by my defibrillator to
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realize how terrible the system we have is. And I really hope that you listener don't have to wait
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to have your technology fail or fire in some unexpected way that has negative consequences for
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you before we as a society realize that we have to do things differently. And in this case,
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you were primarily just asking for the very the simplest of the rights that we talk about in
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software, the right to study the software. You did, initially, I think you just asked to
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be able to review it, right? Right. I went to the device manufacturers and asked if I could see
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the source code and I just got the complete run around. And you try to get it from the government
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too, right? You filed a, filed a, filed a FOIA, but we should explain what a FOIA request,
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Freedom Information Act to ask the FDA to give you public information that should be made public.
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And you asked what I hadn't got? I did. Well, I got a whole bunch of documentation about various
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meetings at the FDA. And I found out that the FDA doesn't review the source code on these devices.
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So, you know, there's a lot of intricacies to this story, but ultimately, what I was left with
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was this powerless feeling of having a device in my body that I knew I needed, but I had no
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control over. And not only that, I am not the customer for this device. The patient is not the
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customer. We don't have any purchase power. We don't have any real generally, any control at all.
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It's the doctors who are the customers. And most doctors have very little technical understanding
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about the way software works. And especially when I first got this a fibrillator, they didn't even
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understand there was software at these devices. I think in the intervening time it's gotten a little
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bit better, but they still have no their doctors. They have a lot of really amazing expertise in
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areas of cardiology or whatever their area of interest is, but they don't have a strong technical
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understanding. They don't even know the questions to ask. And so, when I got a new defibrillator,
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because I needed your defibrillator is only as good as long as the battery is good.
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And so, when I got a new defibrillator, my electrophysiologist let me be the one on the phone with
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the device manufacturers. And I could ask them questions about it. And it turns out the technicians,
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the people that they had available to answer questions for the doctor's offices also didn't
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know very much about these devices, because nobody was asking them any of these questions.
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And so, it's all really fascinating. The device I have now is the only device that was available
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in the United States where you could disable the wireless communication. So, that's the one I got.
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But as I have my device, I continue to live with it. And I continue to see all of the areas in which
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there's a mismatch between what we need to be able to control our medical care,
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what we need to be able to live with our medical devices, and simply all the technology that's
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integrated into our lives. There's a mismatch between the corporations that manufacture and
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deploy it and sell it and profit on it, and the ultimate use cases that are likely to happen.
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My current defibrillator, which was installed a few years ago, still has 10 to 15 years of battery
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life on it. If we look forward to that time in the future, I don't know what the world is going
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to be like at that time. And this device could have software upgrades to it, but it's impossible
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to anticipate what those will be. And so, we really need to have the ability to adjust that,
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and companies go out of business all the time. In fact, the company that I have my defibrillator from
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has reduced its presence in the United States considerably during the time that I've had my defibrillator.
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And it is now extremely challenging to get my defibrillator interrogated at a short moment's
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notice, which means that it's impossible to go into any normal regular hospital or doctor's
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office and expect them to have the equipment to be able to talk to the device, get information
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out of it, and change those settings like the one I was talking about before when I was pregnant.
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And that also might be information they would need if you had a complication related to a condition,
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they would need that information quickly to be able to treat you presumably.
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Potentially, yeah. So this experience, this turned you into a software
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rights and right to software for repair activists, right? Yeah. I mean, it's wild. I started out just
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thinking, oh, you know, I'm a technical person. I used to code. I went to law school. I have this
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policy interest. And it was sort of like, oh, you know, yeah, open source is something important.
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It's cool. It's good for business, you know, whatever. It really wasn't of primary interest to me.
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And then like having this experience with my medical device, it just made me realize like,
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first of all, this is a story that people seem to be able to understand as a metaphor for why
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we should care about all of our software. But for me personally, that feeling of powerlessness
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over software that is so critical to my very well-being and like ability to function in the world
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is it just really showcases why we can't like we can't just accept what companies do. We can't
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just accept the software that we are given and expect to have no ability to do anything with it
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down the road unless we can keep that company in business and caring about our particular use case.
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And so that's where my position is on on software freedom and lag. I got so excited about it.
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But I want to also hear about you Bradley. Well, I think what we ought to do so that we don't make
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our our episodes too long. Why don't we have this be our first episode? Everybody learns about
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one of our co-hosts Karen has just told you the story of how she got excited about software rights
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and the software right to repair. And then in the next episode, I'll tell my story and you can
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ask me questions about it. Oh, that sounds really good. Yeah. And we're going to talk more about
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these issues as we examine like the fundamentals. We'll we'll bring back our stories and talk more.
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If you have any questions about my story, if you want to know anymore about it, feel free to
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contact us. Yep, and there'll be contact information in the show notes and you'll probably hear it in
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the lead out as we finish up this episode. We hope you'll continue to subscribe. We welcome all
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our listeners back over from Free is in Freedom, our old show. And we're really excited to have
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all you new listeners who are excited to learn more about open source and free software.
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And for any of the terms that you are confused about, you can feel free to write in. But you may find
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many of those answers come up in future episodes as we're going to be doing lots of educational work
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to explain all these different concepts about open source and software freedom to you.
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I think it's going to be really fun.
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The corresponding source is an audio cast of the software Freedom Conservancy, a charitable
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nonprofit organization in the USA dedicated to the right to software repair. We're supported by
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your donations. Visit sfconservancy.org to learn how to support us and subscribe to the cast.
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You can email us at castandsfconservancy.org.
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Hi, I'm Karen Sandler. And I'm Bradley Kuhn. And this is...
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Karis.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
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broadcast, you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our
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things.net. On this advice status, today's show is released on their creative comments,
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attribution 4.0 International License.
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