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FSF looks to 2007 as the year of GPLv3
Mar. 08, 2007

The Free Software Foundation (FSF) holds its annual associate member and activist meeting at MIT in Cambridge, Mass., on March 24. This year's conference theme is the "Year of the Update." The update in question is the upcoming GPLv3, the latest version of the GNU General Public License.

Keynote speakers Richard Stallman, FSF president, and Eben Moglen, FSF legal counsel, will be looking at what issues will demand the free software movement's attention after the release. FSF members and board of directors will discuss ways to increase free software adoption and strengthen the free software movement, eliciting feedback and input to shape plans for the coming year.

In a statement, Peter Brown, the FSF executive director said, "The FSF has had a busy year revising the GNU General Public License and campaigning successfully against Digital Restrictions Management. We see 2007 as a year of opportunity to significantly increase free software adoption, and our annual meeting will help us develop our priorities for the year ahead."

In recent months, however, the FSF has been broadening its focus from GPL to include other issues. This has included the start of an outreach program to hardware vendors; support of a free-software-only GNU/Linux distribution, gNewSense; and setting up a website to encourage desktop users to try Linux instead of Vista. FSF's extending an olive branch to Linux is especially significant because free software and open source don't always see eye to eye.

Now in its fifth year, this annual gathering has become a sounding board for Foundation activities and a place to develop ideas with the free software community. As part of an interactive members forum, Benjamin "Mako" Hill, activist and researcher at MIT's Media Lab, will speak about the impact of free software philosophy on copyright and culture in a presentation called "Defining Free Culture." The Foundation will announce the winners of its annual "Award for the Advancement of Free Software" and the "Award for Projects of Social Benefit." Previous winners have included community luminaries like Andrew Tridgell, Theo de Raadt and Alan Cox.

The full schedule of speakers and details for registration and attendees is available online.


-- Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols



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