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Re: [DotGNU]Revision 4 Philosophy file
From: |
Peter Minten |
Subject: |
Re: [DotGNU]Revision 4 Philosophy file |
Date: |
Sun, 19 May 2002 09:14:26 +0200 |
I've made a few modifications to the previous (4) version, with thanks
to Stephen Compall for some suggestions.
There aren't many real changes in this version, mostly just rewriting
the details, but there is one important thing: the file has double
copyright at the moment. Double copyright can be legally tricky in some
countries so that the copyright stuff may not prove to be stable. The
solution to this would be a single copyright assignment, but there is
the problem that the copyright would have to be assigned to
FreeDevelopers or to the FSF meaning that one of the parties would have
to be left out. That would be a bit unfair in my opinion, but workable.
In this case the copyright would most likely go to the FSF, since
FreeDevelopers doesn't seem to have a legal assignment procedure for
these things (or am I missing something here?). What should be done with
the copyright?
Greetings,
Peter.
DotGNU philosophy file
Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Copyright (C) 2002 FreeDevelopers.Net.
TODO: Solve double copyright.
-- DRAFT VERSION --
-- REVISION 5 -
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this document, but changing it is not allowed.
--
This software is Free Software, not Open Source software. The Free Software
movement is
idealistic and tries to tackle questions related to freedom, ethics, principle
and
improving society. The Open Source movement avoids these questions.
Please note that when this document refers to free it refers to freedom to use,
copy,
modify and distribute, not to freedom of price.
This program is part of the DotGNU project. The goal of the DotGNU project is
to create
an 'operating system for the Internet'. DotGNU provides a platform on which web
based
applications, so called 'webservices', can run. Microsoft is also working on
such a
system called .NET, we believe that the concepts and intentions behind .NET are
bad
for the user. To prevent Microsoft from gaining yet another monopoly on the
webservice
platform, DotGNU was called into existence.
One of the bad things in .NET is the possibility of what is called vendor
lock-in.
Vendor lock-in is what happens when a user has been using a resource and wants
to move to a
different, competing resource, but the resource provider makes that difficult
or impossible,
through 'closed formats', much like how word processor document formats force a
user to use a
certain word processor. Without the old webservice, the user cannot access the
data in its files
and is therefore forced to use that webservice.
DotGNU solves this problem by giving users ownership of their data. When an
owner of data
on a webservice want's to move to another webservice, then the webservice
provider must give
the user the executable code and in some cases (look in the DotGNU faq for more
info on this)
the source code of the webservice.
Another problem we have with .NET is the single-authentication service called
Microsoft Passport.
This system lets users store their data on a central server controlled by
Microsoft.
This creates great security threats because a cracker can then crack that
server and get the
personal information of millions of people. Also the government of the country
in which the
server is located could pass legislation allowing it access to that perhaps
private data.
This would allow that country to spy on people. And of course the
single-authentication
service will be a major monopoly, which is bad for the users.
As an alternative to Passport, DotGNU provides several competing but
interoperable single-authentication
systems. Our systems can run on either a remote server under the same
conditions as webservices
or it can run on the user's own computer. This will make it harder for
unauthorized individuals
or groups to get at confidential personal information.
Please note that DotGNU is not in any way anti-commercial. We are
anti-oppression, we can't
stand the legal tricks that some commercial firms use to tie the consumer to
them and to
keep him/her from using the software optimally.
An example of that is product activation.
If a consumer has bought a box with a certain software product in it, he/she is
free to install
it on a computer and to upgrade that computer. It isn't correct that the
consumer has to prove,
after upgrading a certain number of components, that he/she has bought the
software legally.
Instead common court logic (a suspect is innocent until the opposite has been
proven) dictates
that the software company must prove that the user has bought the product
illegally and may not
expect help from the consumer (nobody needs to help in a case against
himself/herself). Thus
product activation is completely immoral.
We fight for the rights of users, but we don't fight against commercial
businesses; we see
it as everybody's right to benefit financially from the production or
distribution of software,
as long as it's fair to both the producer and the consumer.
Though DotGNU is supported by two organizations (GNU and FreeDevelopers) not
all DotGNU
developers agree with the principles of these organizations. If you would like
to find
out more about these organizations, please visit their websites.
Links:
DotGNU homepage:
http://www.dotgnu.org
GNU homepage:
http://www.gnu.org
FreeDevelopers homepage:
http://www.freedevelopers.net
DotGNU FAQ:
http://www.dotgnu.org/faq.html
The differences between Free Software and Open Source:
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html.
Why we use the term GNU/Linux
http://www.gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.html