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We're honored to have Founder/pres/ed of SFLC Eben Moglen. | |
*applause* | |
I hope you feel as happy about the 30th as I do. After only 22 years of this, | |
I'm getting a discount on the 30th. If you've been working for 22, it may feel | |
like 30... | |
It is true that it is a pleasure to see us at 30. I'm sure there'll be | |
opportunities to get all sentimental and look back at the wonderful stuff we | |
went through, bu I saw this as a chance to see where next we would go. | |
I've been flogging FreedomBox along for 5 years, with help from people in this | |
room. Not having a roadmap, though fun, is not clear. | |
Hopefully I can provide some terrain notes, and not ruin the fun. | |
I want to present the "best we have" in our crystal ball. The past 4 decades | |
with Richard, what we've been doing is far from hiding the Palantir. It wasn't | |
we couldn't see it, but we could taste it. We were giving our lives to it. We | |
were navigating upstream like Salmon, tasting the water, and knowing the place | |
we had to be--not like all-seeing wizards with a marauder's map. | |
You get "the feeling of the organism" *McClintock" and you can be told what is | |
happening. | |
What is happening to the movement is a thing that we would see from a physical | |
chemistry view as phase transition. We've morphing form the first movement, | |
into the second. | |
The first, the one that we've put our time into, had an audience, people who | |
knew how software was made. The philosophy and social was about User's | |
Rights, as per today's name. user's rights were the center of the thing. The | |
users being talked about, were substantially Prosumers. A substantial portion | |
of that portion, made the kinds that many users relied on. In the first | |
phase, we were talking to people who could appreciate the freedom of making | |
things with your hands. Those were the people we had to talk to. They made | |
Free Software. The first movement did a lot of that. First phase created Free | |
Software for other purposes, which didn't mean violating freedom, but | |
violating privacy of humans. | |
<blockquote> | |
A big exoskeleton that never forgets, without justice or prudence. | |
</blockquote> | |
We found ourselves at the end of the first phase, as we succeeded in doing what | |
we meant to do: Put freedom in everything, turn freedom on. In 3 decades, we | |
were busy doing, and we did. We changed how it was made around the world, and | |
the values of the people who made it, to spread the philosophy far. | |
RMS, always worried, that the software would not carry th politics well. The | |
essence of Open Source v.s. Freedom. A vehicle that Couldn't hold tightly to | |
idea, while capitalism could shake philosophy loose. This is a real worry, | |
though not the thing you may worry about all 24 hours of a day. | |
<blockquote> | |
At the end of the first phase, write once, run everywhere, worked. We were | |
busy creating. We did it and produced jobs, and did wonderful things. We were | |
creating some social byproducts, ecological diffuses. | |
<em><strong>What happens when you offer services that aren't good for freedom?</strong></em> | |
</blockquote> | |
When historians will look back, they'll see this today we spend together as a | |
convenient narrative point to talk about inflection. This will be seen in | |
retrospect will be turning point. The symbol of that is Edward Snowden. | |
He changed it form users, to mass movement of th human race. He put up a | |
billboard the width of society, why the freedom of that software was crucial | |
to their freedom. A point we've been teaching of years. And now, lots of | |
people can understand that. | |
Polling data shows that roughly 2/3rds of people who use internet are aware of | |
what Snowden is, and what he represents. Of the 2/3rds of the internet, +/- | |
controversy, a 1/3rd of them are trying to protect their | |
privacy/liberty/freedom in some way. | |
<blockquote> | |
About 1/5th of the internet, are aware they have freedom issues, and want | |
something they can do something about it. | |
About 1/5th of the internet is looking for Morpheus. We had better show up. | |
</blockquote> | |
That broad swath, is looking for use now. You can feel it trying to find it in | |
popular culture. You've watched Mr. Robot? We're the people not quite cool | |
enough to get the girl, but we're getting there. People are seeing the | |
position in the culture as necessary. On the other side, a faceless entity | |
commoditizes selling it. | |
Power cannot be trusted, and it has way more access to you than you know, and | |
what you do know, is barely the beginning. | |
We're going to be able, at least invited to be able, to address a scale of | |
humanity that has not been available to us before. We're doing that in part | |
with Software, and it is welded to the face that can't be undone. | |
We had to disambiguate, with "Free as in beer v.s. Free as in Freedom." | |
In phase 2, we're talking to people, users of what they now understand as a | |
vast structure of digital tech that USES them. They understand they are the | |
product, but don't know what they can do about it. | |
They are looking for Morpheus, and they need a red pill. We have it. It is | |
free software. | |
Free as in "protects your freedom" | |
We're talking to a mass who is afraid their freedom is leaking into a tech | |
that they need, but they know isn't good for them. | |
We have a generation coming. If you savor public opinion date, what you don't | |
but if you do, you know that that reading you love tails off early. | |
Tweens/Teens have little buying power, but can't be studied like the slightly | |
older. | |
If you look at the scanty data, you find in every society where there is data, | |
you find they are more positive about Snowden than other sections. | |
Elsewhere, no matter how enthusiastic the adults are, they are more. | |
I got a note, from an 8th grade essay contest daughter, and 3 kids wrote about | |
Snowden, and no other hero was written about more than once. | |
Chicano Highshool in Chicago. | |
Laura Poitrus(sp) says he has an uncanny resemblance to Harry Potter ;) | |
That is itself, a sign of how Legendry has come around this. Culture coming to | |
reflect the idea that the hidden dark powers, we need a magic that is our | |
own. | |
When I say we need Morpheus, the only one surprised was Richard. | |
We need a choice. | |
<blockquote> | |
This is the last generation in which the human race gets a choice... | |
</blockquote> | |
These young people., who have a strong set of mind already, get into a period | |
where they express themselves. They take on attributes that helps them take on | |
what is wrong in the world. They will be looking for us, and they will be here | |
soon. | |
We need tech, political organization, ideology, for them. | |
2004, I said "We were keeping dinner warm til the kids came home." | |
I thought since this started. Snowden is 62 days away from turning 30. | |
The big bunch is coming. "what do I do about the bit that worries me?" | |
We're about to get a flood of people who are going to attach to an important | |
movement of their lives. Comprehensibly. About their technology, and what they | |
say and do. | |
For this reason, we need to make it clear that this about software that | |
protects freedom. I tried to keep it running even when the house burdened down, | |
and some people here who helped. | |
Oct 30th, we'll be demonstrating this free bits and hardware--to make | |
encrypted calls between any 2 places, protecting from malware, and a virtuous | |
router. We have a lot of tricks to play,a nd we're going to start being able | |
to play them. | |
We're hoping that the stack, the Debian config, can be installed wherever we | |
need to put freedom--the android powered dishwashers, or wherever. | |
Federated social sharing with diaspora too. I really want us to go after the | |
dark star of Facebook. We've been tyring to invent our way there for a | |
half-a-decade. | |
There are 12 year olds looking and saying "this isn't the way we want to live, | |
is it?" | |
That is very important. We're going to need to have the blue and red pill. | |
That means taking Replicant in. Taking GNUplicant in. You take the mobile | |
operating system, and re-engineer it. We need a thing that inhabits the | |
midpoints in the net, and has appliances that can do the things you wan to do. | |
Then inverting the cloud, processing and storing at home, and clustering where | |
electrons are cheap. | |
We'll have a little interlude in Iceland where electrons are cheap, like any | |
good James bond movie. We have freedom, not bit-rot, and it protects freedom | |
better and better. We're the people on your side, and we're in it together. | |
<blockquote> | |
We have to keep the network neutral, as they say, offering services to | |
eachother without discrimination. We'll see business deals cut out network | |
operators. | |
We have a politics. Just as the patent war winds down, and the other things | |
get better, that thing will get worse. Government and regulatory agenda will | |
be big in our next 15 years. | |
North of the Himalayas, there is an autocracy planning despotism forever. 1.3 | |
billion people, controlled by the net and digital tech, on it's own 5th or 6th | |
of the human population. | |
South of the Himalayas, that PM wants to be PM forever too... | |
On the outcome of that experiment, 1/3rd of the human race isn't just the | |
experiment, but the other 2/3rds too. The national digital sovereignty being | |
controlled. | |
</blockquote> | |
We have to listen to Mr. Snowden. We have an enormous challenge. We can't just | |
think of the FSF as a thing in a country. We're building an exoskeleton that | |
makes a collection of human kind. It will not be separated based on | |
boundaries. We have to think globally. Speak Chinese. Write Korean. Build | |
bridges to the Islamic world. | |
We need to build a home where everyone is welcome, of course, that is assuming | |
that we want to take the phonecall. | |
How can we not take that call. That is why we exist. This is what we have to | |
do. | |
Tech opportunities, political opportunities, and very large, and very | |
dangerous to not show up. | |
We did 30 years of great work. We are a tech and legal powerhouse in the world. | |
Now we need to figure out how to turn outside respect into leadership of a | |
global mass movement. It isn't easy. I've spent a lot of time thinking about | |
what happens sociologically, when small movements get an opportunity to move | |
into the mainstream of social political and cultural life. | |
It isn't so simple as wining the lottery. | |
Human societies respond in understandable, but not always rational ways, for | |
that scale of success. The adherence to hold ways, and old metaphors, is | |
adaptive, until disruptive growth is necessary. The agility of movement in a | |
small entity turns out to not be there. | |
We're going to face the beauties, as well as the terrors of immense success. | |
30-45 will be about growth in ourselves. And immigrants too. When loads of | |
strangers, who want to live and work and be a part of everything, and have | |
strength show up, communities behave badly. They should be delighted, bu they | |
behave in short-sighted ways. | |
A lot of new people are coming, and they are not exactly like us, and they want | |
to be a part of it. We need to be more inviting, and less geekish. | |
We'll just go and do it. We've had this happen at at tech level. There were | |
projects with 2-3 people, who now have lots more. There are plenty of folks | |
who maybe feel that way in OpenStack? | |
We're going to have a terrific 15 years. We're not going to fit in a room this | |
size for the 45th, if we do it right. If we do it wrong, I will be much less | |
happy to be there at the 45th. | |
They have reason to worry. They have reason to be concerned. The more we know, | |
and the more we understand that if they go up the creek further wit the | |
"iThis" and the "CloudThat"... we understand what happens when you have tag | |
clouds the size of Jupiter. Freedom can get really badly hurt. If you live in | |
the communist China, you can get *real* concerned about the incidence of | |
public forums. We are going to be growing by leaps and bounds. | |
If by chance I'm not here, or RMS isn't here when we get to 45--which could | |
happen--it won't happen. Humanity is about to be where we work. It is a big | |
place, and there are good people in it. Let's make sure we make a place for | |
them, and feel welcome. | |
Q&A: | |
Q: How would a political part of our movement, thinking about problems in the | |
US, deal with the broadband monopolies and cell phone monopolies? | |
A: One question you're asking, about the oligopolists. We'll find that us and | |
Lessig have come back together again. Isn't politics everywhere unclean? | |
Bandwidth generates money, and money influences. That is how Larry got where | |
he is. A little box of freedom sitting on a pole can provide VOIP to villages. | |
At the village level, I can be a telephone company for 40 dollars on a | |
telephone poll. Add WI-Max, and now it more than one village. | |
Then we add more to it for the things that aren't working. | |
I spent a week in LA last week with Universities to keep GPL3 in their | |
core stacks, even as telecommunications sniff around the 5G tech they don't | |
have yet. | |
<blockquote> | |
We're going to have some last-mile disruption from the bottom. The core of the | |
politics is th "ceaseless inventing" that they are doing. The usual power | |
games where we make our running, we have terrific intelligence services, and | |
collide people across fields of fracture. We've always been the | |
balance-in-power-politics-people. We didn't have the money or power, but we | |
proved that we can make capital equipment without capital investments, which | |
made money look less important. | |
</blockquote> | |
Even power was limited by some extent by the power of ideas. We used that as | |
dynamite to collide larger objects. That was our legal/regulatory strategy. | |
I'll talk more about that at the end of October our our annual conference... | |
...where I can talk about the "old magic tricks" in case I ever go under a | |
bus. | |
We're going to play them against eachother. Mr. Zuckerberg is still busy | |
explaining what a philanthropist he is for giving bandwidth to the poor. We're | |
getting our own traction, explaining he's just buying de-anonymized packets | |
from the poor, at value. "No HTTPS for the poor" is just another MiTM. He went | |
from internet.org, to "free basics by Facebook." He'll soon find out | |
non-profit law may be something of a hurdle. | |
It isn't always elegant, but it works. | |
Q: I think you did a good job explaining we needed to accommodate the masses | |
when they get here. It goes beyond accommodating, but absorbing. When they | |
come, we should allow them to help us with the things we are not good at. I'd | |
like to see more of that. I want to make sure that we let in the folks who | |
wants to. | |
A: The good news is, you're right--but bad news is it is harder than you | |
think. It is hard because you don't absorb <em>them</em>, they absorb | |
<em>you</em>. When the stuff you didn't know was in you. It is fine having a | |
boom when the boom is babies... but when they vote... it gets harder. | |
We need to be effective. They are coming because they want something. The idea | |
is part of what they want, but we have to be there to be effective. Every time | |
I say Raspberry Pi, I hear RMS shouting, and that is his job. If there is a | |
$30 thing out there, to give $30 privacy, and they wanna do that, I want it to | |
work. | |
Part of the beauty is that the ARM9 world has blobs that are free. We're going | |
to have nice competition, but I do want it to run on android-powered | |
coffeepots. If you are person with one, and you want secure comms, I want it | |
to work when you're in China. It is important that it works. | |
<blockquote> | |
"We knew you were coming, we had your back." That is where political power | |
comes from. Not that we were more, or smarter. Our power is coming from us | |
being there for you, before you knew you needed us." | |
Authenticity is the place where it comes from now. | |
</blockquote> | |
<!-- | |
You can boil down the politics today to, "I'm doing a better job simulating | |
(Authenticity) than she is" | |
--> | |
We did this for generations, before you were a glint in your parent's eye. | |
Q: I'm part of the folks in this room who have kids. 3, 6, 9, 12. My 12 year | |
old understands why she doesn't have an iPad, but she still wants one. It is | |
powerful when you say "this is the last opportunity." If I give her one, her | |
brothers and sisters will follow. I would encourage anyone who doesn't have | |
kids, to go to the committees and School Boards, and other people with kids. | |
I'm leaving almost all my work in FOSS completely, to join in the EDU | |
advocacy. I'm not talking about myself, but the impact of people discovering | |
this is amazing. So much information is missing, not being ignored. | |
A: Those are the people we need to be best at reaching. Those of us, who are | |
working in that part of the EDU system, are the people we need to listen to | |
most carefully. I have this feeling. The mayor of NYC, says he's going to get | |
CS instruction to all kids in the next 10 years. That could be terrible if you | |
believe him. Joe Klein, who signs up with Murdoch, to monitor every child | |
through every iPad... that is not us. We have to do that very well. That is | |
why I do all the edX support I can. Keep this in mind. Purity is hard in this | |
world. If you allow yourself to get excluded, you are gone. | |
My nephew went off to college, and I gave him a de-chromed Chromebook. "it's | |
disposable computing." He started his life at Colby, and within hours, he's the | |
kid running Free Software. He is something now, and he is staggering under the | |
unwanted identity. | |
The reach we have to reach down there, should feel like fun to us, because | |
they aren't our kids. It is easier to do other people's dishes, and we have | |
to. We can assume Coca-cola and FIFA are the folks who have to market to these | |
people, but we have to be in touch, and know how to make it better for them. | |
I'm hopeful we'll show up. | |
Q: Do you make a distinction between AWS and Google Cloud? | |
A: What I would say about this, you could try and measure this for us, or you | |
can measure what scares everyone in the industry. Amazon has a franchise that | |
people understand, but that isn't why people are running scared. Google cloud | |
is eating their customer base too fast, and they don't know what to do about | |
it. We do. We say "that is why you must be hybrid cloud builders." You need to | |
offer "not being able to lose their entire destiny." Of course they're going | |
to buy utility computing from Google and Amazon. They aren't doing it because | |
it is "cheaper." The M$ cloud is unique, because it is breaking windows | |
server, and making people use it. Breaking things, then forcing people to use | |
Office 365. | |
Everyone who has enterprise email, there is on a software checklist with your | |
CIO/CSO with "Two-factor Authentication (2FA), yes/no." if no, go to the | |
compliance office to get whacked. You buy from phone-factor, "sms" factors. So | |
Microsoft buys phone factor, and then "for tech reasons, you can't do 2FA for | |
your own exchange server BUT if you upgrade to cloud, you can!" | |
This is part of the reason that the patent wars are over. Microsoft and Google | |
agreed this week to stop. | |
<blockquote> | |
Peace is breaking out everywhere. We have to go win it before other's win it | |
for us. Leaving out the Microsoft cloud, they are not selling cheaper | |
computing, but expensive utility computing, but you get to remove IT jobs. You | |
don't need a single throat to choke anymore. The execs are having a morose | |
year, but it will balance back. Even if people want to get rid of IT | |
staff--revenge against revenge of the nerds--if they need to spin up 10K | |
images an hour, they'll buy it at 1.5x and get rid of jobs. A bit later in the | |
cycle, the CIOs and Boards will decided they've given up too much destiny, and | |
take some back. | |
</blockquote> | |
The really smart people will realize they're in the datamining business, and | |
the databrokerage will help they get through the next cycle. Martin Fink's | |
announcement let other semi-conductor announcements come forth. But that is | |
another talk. | |
Q: What is opinion of Apple pushing a BSD stack to replace GPL? | |
A: One thing we need to understand, we have to do two things to keep our tech | |
vital: prevent bit-rot, and keep people from becoming allergic to Copyleft. | |
Making sure the PH didn't get too high or low, is something that we do that is | |
valuable. If we allow allergies to GPL, we'll stimulate more such activity. | |
Keeping GCC ahead of LLVM becomes a very difficult technical job. RMS's | |
designs carried us for an entire generation. Solving a nuance in Copyleft to | |
do Inter Process Communication (IPC) in a clever way. When we went from GPLv2 | |
to GPLv3, we protected large-scale IPC optimization. That would mean writing | |
out more data, and more room for proprietary optimization. When we moved to | |
GPLv3, we changed gcc linking exceptions, and gave our selves more room for | |
not rewriting the frontends, which worked for a while. What has happened as a | |
consequence of Android, and Java overdependency, and hotspot, we've found a | |
place where Jobs can screw us from the dead. Are we going to face more | |
non-Copyleft alternatives? Yes. Do we need to be careful how to keep demand | |
growing for Copyleft? I'm busy worrying about embedding. Rocking and rolling | |
with the bylaws of the OpenStack foundation by making GPL'd contributions? | |
Yea, I'm hoping to buy more scotch to make that happen. | |
Is Samba going to turn out to be more than it was? That is like every release. | |
Will Samba not be as important when no one is running Windows? Yes, and we'll | |
have a party then. :P | |
We should not think about this oppositionally. This problem is not our fault. | |
Oppositional thinking is cheap/easy. Ecological thinking is harder, more | |
expensive. Ecologically, we need to get the idea of Copyleft "born Free, stays | |
Free, no Bullshit, no patents" cores, with other exploring going on around it. | |
Then there'll be commercial feed zones, where people can eat eachother's | |
customers. | |
RMS would say "Eben's job is companies and intrigue." Intrigue isn't the word | |
he always uses, but I won't repeat it here. | |
Sometimes the companies are parsecs away, and we don't care. But the | |
overdifferentiation for no good reason. I'm telling them "if you don't have | |
enough Copyleft in this vertical, you'll lose money differentiating for no | |
good reason." | |
<!-- TIL: Overdifferentiation is a crucial aspect of Ecological thinking in | |
the enterprise realm.--> | |
"You're going to have too many orchestration layers. You need AGPL in the | |
middle of OpenStack." Imagine if NASA understood as clearly as we do now... | |
A certain billionaire said to me "We should have just put OpenStack under | |
AGPLv3." | |
People waste a lot of money on this stuff. Differentiating stuff is more | |
important to them. | |
If we keep our mind on the ecology. If we concentrate on "why is everything | |
under the Apache license? Look at what the consequences will be?" | |
We have to talk the language they understand, which isn't "it's evil.' it is | |
"it's expensive." | |
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
This derivative work is licensed CC-BY-SA 4.0 International License: | |
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ |
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