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Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news


From: Christopher Waid
Subject: Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [Dev] Misleading information in EOMA68 news
Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2016 04:42:42 -0400

I'm going to reiterate that it is not my position that the wording 'free software friendly' is perfect. Changing this to compatible with free software operating systems may work. It may not. It may depend on the context. It may be challenging to integrate.

The laptops we sell currently @ ThinkPenguin are not RYF'd and shouldn't be RYF'd, but we are working on something better than LibreBoot in that it solves the free software problems in a more permanent long term way: EOMA68. X86 is dead and we do not need LibreBoot for non-X86 systems. The reason this issue hasn't been solved by us is because it's simply not possible given Intel's hostility and refusal to cooperate. Reverse engineering is a non-trivial task and the resulting code would not run on modern Intel systems due to digital signatures. We can do a lot more than what is feasible with LibreBoot, but it has taken years. Now that EOMA68 crowd funding campaign has succeeded though or is about to succeed we can do a 100% free software system (that is LibreBoot doesn't magically make a computer 100% free, there are other problematic components). We've got the source code for LCD/Keyboard controller firmware, bootloaders, CPU micro code, and similar for the EOMA68 laptop housing and Libre Tea Computer Card. That's huge. And there are more significant developments coming including the release of schematics and higher end CPUs.

I'm not sure if it is clear so I'm going to state for the record that I'm the CEO of ThinkPenguin and ThinkPenguin sponsored Luke's work on EOMA68. I'm a good person to respond to the criticisms about pretty much anything related to TP, EOMA68, and the comments below. We've pulled off getting code for chips in the past and have a solid track record including release of other RYF'd products. More than anyone else actually. We were in competition for being the first company to release an RYF product and our efforts to free hardware pre-date the RYF program.

On 2016-08-24 03:31 PM, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic wrote:
On 24.08.2016 20:18, Christopher Waid wrote:
When this text was written LibreBoot didn't exist

I beg to differ.

The quote was 2008/2009. If there was something else referenced I didn't see it.

The text we refer to is from summer 2014 after
SouthEast GNU/Linux Fest 2014 took place on June 20-22, 2014.

https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/short-interview-christopher-waid-about-thinkpenguin-linux-action-show

The systems are compatible with Trisquel and Parabola GNU/Linux-libre and not dependent on any OS-loaded proprietary bits. This is not to say they are completely free of proprietary bits. That's what we've been working toward, but it's a much bigger goal to hit than just freeing the BIOS.

While FSF awarded the RYF certification to Gluglug for the X60 laptop
preinstalled with deblobbed Coreboot in December 2013.

The RYF Lenovo laptops with LibreBoot from Mini Free are not entirely free even though they have RYF status from the FSF. It doesn't appear at a quick glance that it is being advertised as entirely free either.

http://www.fsf.org/news/gluglug-x60-laptop-now-certified-to-respect-your-freedom

And the deblobbed Coreboot has been named Libreboot "during early 2014".
That is, before the summer conference and show edition.


https://libreboot.org/docs/index.html#why

Knowing that, in the beginning of the GNU/Linux Action Show interview
you still falsely stated that ThinkPenguin "makes sure that all the
hardware in your catalog is 100% free software friendly" (57:20). That
includes desktops and laptops.

You went on and said that "every bit of firmware on your laptops is free
software, except for the BIOS which is... outside". (57:26)

You have to watch the entire segment and keep it in context to understand what was being said. It was not that there weren't any non-free bits. It was that there weren't any OS-loaded non-free firmwares or drivers that would interfere with compatibility and support. Notice the word 'outside' in the quotes. That part might not have been very clear, but by BIOS I was really referring to anything not loaded by the OS, and it was clearer if you quoted the later bit:

"basically anything that is loaded by the operating system is free"

Which obviously excludes the BIOS, hard disk firmware, keyboard/LCD controller firmware, CPU micro code, etc. These bits are all stored on flash and not loaded by the OS (or need not be loaded by the OS as a result).

Humorously it also becomes more apparent when you take into account that I had mentioned Linux Mint alongside Trisquel. This was essentially a sales pitch to users of non-free distributions (ie most Linux Action Show viewers) to care about and understand some of the damage done by proprietary drivers/firmware.

Fast forwarding to November 2015 when FSF announces the discounted
ThinkPenguin products for their associate members.

https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-members-now-get-5-off-thinkpenguin-free-software-friendly-devices

Quoting:

"ThinkPenguin sells free software-friendly hardware, including laptops,
desktops, WiFi adapters (useful if your laptop's WiFi can't work with a
free driver), printers and more."

I guess it's convenient to have FSF recommend their associate members
your laptops and desktops with proprietary BIOS 1 month after their 30th
anniversary in October.

These were not my words and I'm not sure this is really incorrect. The laptops and desktops do support 100% free distributions like Trisquel and Parabola GNU/Linux-libre.

Right after in October you were sending off Libreboot founder and lead
developer to go work on free software for GPS devices, because in your
opinion she "would have done better" . You went on and said the effort
to have free BIOS for older laptops "would have been better spent
elsewhere", because getting software freedom-respecting laptops "is a
harder problem to solve and it is going to require massive amounts of
money".

Yes- I did say something along those lines. It's taken out of context though. I didn't feel that LibreBoot was the best approach and suggested working on a different hardware effort. I still would like someone to produce a free software GPS navigation device.

To back up on why this was the wrong approach you have to look back to 2009 when I began looking into CoreBoot and talking with CoreBoot developers about porting of CoreBoot to modern systems. This was mainly at LinuxCon 2009. The problem as it was explained to me is it's difficult enough to port CoreBoot from one system to another let alone to newer generation hardware. At the time things were going from being difficult to impossible because Intel was adding signature checking. Ultimately it wasn't going to work out long term so we didn't move on it, and it hasn't. There were other important projects we worked on instead including getting sources for modern USB N wifi chipsets and resurrecting LibreWRT.

If you look at what we've done since then it becomes obvious why that was the wrong approach too. Luke was working on a modular computing standard (EOMA68) and we teamed up with him to work on this. He was the only person working on anything that seemed remotely plausible for a solution to the problem. The reason we went this way was because it would reduce the cost long term of designing and manufacturing systems that we would be able to make utilizing only 100% free software. It also gives us an additional angle. Because we can easily switch CPU/SOCs we can play prisoners dilemma with the companies designing the CPUs/SOCs. If one or a handful don't cooperate with us we can easily switch to a competing CPU. It's much less likely to fail because of financial issues (insurmountable costs to design a new model or inability to get cases/parts, etc), will scale, and won't hit a brick wall like how LibreBoot has.


https://trisquel.info/en/forum/asus-chromebook-c201-now-supported-libreboot-arm-cpu?page=1#comment-80943

It's also convenient to let know all FSF associate members that your
devices are OK in respect to freedom:

"5% off free software-friendly devices from ThinkPenguin" --
https://my.fsf.org/

But for you it must be as you say, just a "minor issue" you "can't
afford waste time" on it. For the rest of us, including founder of the
free software movement and the GNU project, it's not:

I'm having a hard time taking you seriously. Wake me when you've actually contributed something of significance and aren't just trying to undermine those working on solving these problems. For some of us it isn't about financial gain. We actually want to see 100% free hardware.



On 16.08.2016 22:52, Richard Stallman wrote:
On 16.08.2016 17:14, Tiberiu-Cezar Tehnoetic wrote:
IMO, we should teach users to avoid this ambiguous term. Instead of
"free software friendly", they should use the term "compatible with
fully free operating systems" if the hardware is compatible with free
distros endorsed by FSF.

I agree.  The FSF could post something about this.  I will suggest it
to the campaigns people.

In the long term, I hope that our endorsement, RYF, will set a
standard and that people will come to see other terms, without clear
and strict definitions as inadequate.



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