Eventos de la FSF & Richard Stallman

Agosto 23 – El Software Libre en la Ética y en la Práctica (Cordoba, Agentina)

Agosto 24 – Software Libre en la Ética y en the Práctica (Buenos Aires, Argentina)

Agosto 25 – El Movimiento del Software Libre (Buenos Aires, Argentina)

Agosto 26 – Wikimania Keynote Speech (Buenos Aires, Argentina)

Agosto 31 – Is Digital Inclusion a Good Thing? (Mar del Plata, Argentina)

Vía: FSF Events

Why free software shouldn’t depend on Mono or C#

Tengo fiaca para traducir …

stallman

Debian‘s decision to include Mono in  the default installation, for the sake of Tomboy which is an application written in C#, leads the community in a risky direction. It is dangerous to depend on C#, so we need to discourage its use.

The problem is not unique to Mono; any free implementation of C# would raise the same issue. The danger is that Microsoft is probably planning to force all free C# implementations underground some day using software patents. (See http://swpat.org and http://progfree.org.) This is a serious danger, and only fools would ignore it until the day it actually happens. We need to take precautions now to protect ourselves from this future danger.

This is not to say that implementing C# is a bad thing. Free C# implementations permit users to run their C# programs on free platforms, which is good. (The GNU Project has an implementation of C# also, called Portable.NET.) Ideally we want to provide free implementations for all languages that programmers have used.

The problem is not in the C# implementations, but rather in Tomboy and other applications written in C#. If we lose the use of C#, we will lose them too. That doesn’t make them unethical, but it means that writing them and using them is taking a gratuitous risk.

We should systematically arrange to depend on the free C# implementations as little as possible. In other words, we should discourage people from writing programs in C#. Therefore, we should not include C# implementations in the default installation of GNU/Linux distributions, and we should distribute and recommend non-C# applications rather than comparable C# applications whenever possible.

Vía: Free software Foundation

Nota: para muchos Richard Stallman es un fanático, pero es coherente con lo que viene defendiendo hace años…y ya saben, si no les gusta usen software privativo.

The Free Software Song

Me estaba acordando de la cancion que escribio Richard Stallman y quise compartirla.

Pueden descargarla de aca y la letra es sencilla:

Join us now and share the software;
You’ll be free, hackers, you’ll be free.
x2

Hoarders may get piles of money,
That is true, hackers, that is true.
But they cannot help their neighbors;
That’s not good, hackers, that’s not good.

When we have enough free software
At our call, hackers, at our call,
We’ll throw out those dirty licenses
Ever more, hackers, ever more.

Join us now and share the software;
You’ll be free, hackers, you’ll be free.
x2