We are intervening in the Apple vs.EC litigation. Become a proud supporter of the FSFE and join us in defending software freedom from monopoly control: https://my.fsfe.org/donate!

Avís: Aquesta pàgina encara no s'ha traduït. El que veieu és la versió original de la pàgina. Si us plau, feu servir aquesta pàgina per a veure com podeu ajudar traduint i d'altres maneres.

Newsletter

I love FS +++ 0 A.D.: Empires Ascendant +++ FOSDEM +++ FSFE20: Interns

on  

In our February Newsletter, we invite you to our Games Event to celebrate the "I Love Free Software" Day on February 14th. Listen to our podcast episode with Stanislas Dolcini from the game '0 A.D.: Empires Ascendant'. FOSDEM was just concluded and the FSFE was there! We complete our celebrations for 20 years FSFE in an interview with past interns.

"I Love Free Software" Day: games, memes and more

Every 14th of February, people around the world celebrate the "I Love Free Software" Day by saying thank you to all the people contributing to software freedom. This year, we are organising a whole event dedicated to Free Software games on Monday 14 February at 18:00-20:00 CET. You can learn the ins and outs of the Free Software gaming world from our guest speakers, or just play Veloren in real time afterwards with others who are attending the event. Make sure you register; we are looking forward to hanging out with you on 'I Love Free Software' Day.

heart and joystick

Before the event and during the day, create your own 'I love Free Software' image card with the help of our brand new sharepic generator, where you can upload your own picture along with a love dedication. Share your card online as a special way to thank Free Software creators.

Picture of a woman in front of a library next to her quote, I love Free Software because it is more transparent, obviates surveillance, and respects my right to privacy. A card created by Niharika Singhal

Podcast: 0 A.D. with 0 proprietary software

The real-time strategy game of ancient warfare, 0 A.D.: Empires Ascendant, is a Free Software game created by an international group of volunteer game developers. Programmers, artists, and historians combined their skills to create this imaginary ancient world. In a new episode, the host of the Software Freedom Podcast, Bonnie Mehring, discusses the growing popularity of the game with the game's project lead. Stanislas Dolcini says that the decision to make the game Free Software made it last for so many years, as many people could contribute - and still can.

Main trade road surrounded by palm trees and temples with hieroglyphs
Kush city center depicted in 0 A.D.: Empires Ascendant. Wildfire Games CC-BY-SA 3.0

The FSFE at FOSDEM 2022

Thank you for joining our virtual booth in this year's online FOSDEM, it was fun to see the Free Software community come together once again. Also, we co-hosted the Legal and Policy Issues Devroom. Masafumi Ohta talked about his experience on teaching Free Software licenses and compliances at a university. Security expert Christopher Klooz addressed the role of international arbitration for security of Free Software.

Vittorio Bertola presented an update on the Digital Markets Act, the new European rules for online competition. Lucas Lasota, FSFE Project Manager, proposed Device Neutrality as the necessary principle to make sure we are able to run Free Software on our devices, without artificial barriers. Italo Vignoli showed how proprietary software gained ground during the pandemic. The Legal and Policy Issues Devroom organisers made closing remarks in a panel. The recordings will be published soon; find them first by subscribing to our Peertube instance.

T-shirts with software freedom slogans lie on a couch
Participants of the FSFE 's virtual FOSDEM booth prepare their home for the event.

Interviewing past interns for 20 Years FSFE

In the final publication about 20 Years FSFE, we wanted to thank everyone who worked for the organisation in an internship position. We contacted eight former interns and asked them about their time at the FSFE and their current involvement with Free Software. Diego Naranjo, George Brooke-Smith, Lucile Falgueyrac, Lyudmila Vaseva, Martin Husovec, Matti Lammi, Polina Malaja, and Stian Rødven-Eide reflected on what they learned during their internship. Since then, everyone has supported Free Software in their own way: as users, developers, researchers, advocates, FSFE donors, or FSFE volunteers.

Pictures of eight people
In order of appearance, from left to right, from top to bottom: Thanks Lucile, George, Lyudmila, Diego, Martin, Matti, Polina, Stian, and all FSFE interns during these 20 years.

'Public Money? Public Code' brochure, now in Spanish

In our Public Money? Public Code! initiative, we offer an exhaustive brochure dedicated to public administrations. Now it is also available in Spanish. Our volunteers recently translated the brochure, allowing the Spanish-speaking world to read about the benefits of modernising public infrastructure with Free Software in their own language.

In an event sharing the good news, we invited experts to join. Luis Falcón, founder of GNUHealth; Ricardo Muñoz from Lliurex; Alexis Puente Montiel from Pica Pica HackLab; Francesc Busquets in representation of Linkat; and Aleix Pol Gonzalez, president of KDE, discussed PMPC developments in Spain. The videos are available in Spanish.

Save the date!

What we have done

Contribute to our newsletter

If you would like to share any thoughts, pictures, or news, please send them to us. As always, the address is newsletter@fsfe.org. We're looking forward to hearing from you! If you also want to support us and our work, join our community and support us with a donation or a monthly contribution. Thanks to our community and all the volunteers, supporters, and donors who make our work possible. And thanks to our translators, who enable you to read this newsletter in your native languages.

Your editor, Fani Partsafyllidou