Free software is not politics: petitions for the Italian elections
Short URL: http://fsmsh.com/2823
- 2008-04-11
-
Write a full post in response to this!
I have been saying this for many years: free software must not be associated with an ideology or political party. Doing that would:
- be an utter falsity;
- damage our ability to advocate.
I am not the only one with this opinion! As you may know, we’ll have elections in Italy next Sunday and Monday, and the Italian Association for Free Software is now promoting two remarkable initiatives.
The first is aimed at voters: they are asked to sign an online petition. Voters are asked to declare they will vote for candidates who declare that they will promote free software.
The second is aimed at candidates, who are asked to sign a document. By signing this document they commit themselves to promote and vote laws that, among other things, 1) will bind the civil service to free software and open formats, and 2) declare practices that limit citizens’ freedoms (such as the infamous Trusted Computing) as illegitimate.
A list of the parties that have at least one candidate signing the document is available, along with the parties that don’t have any.
This is an initiative that every national free software association should replicate when their election time comes!
A few references about Trusted Computing
To get a glance of what “Trusted Computing” means and why you should care about it, you can read from the following resources:
- What’s Wrong With Copy Protection (look for “trusted computing” in the page)
- Trusted computing: Users unable to override
- Trusted computing: Loss of anonymity
Write a full post in response to this!
Similar articles
Do you like this post?
Vote for it!
Copyright information
This entry is (C) Copyright by its author, 2004-2008. Unless a different license is specified in the entry's body, the following license applies: "Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved and appropriate attribution information (author, original site, original URL) is included".
Biography
Marco Marongiu: Born in 1971, Marongiu graduated in applied mathematics in 1997; he's now a full-time system administrator for a company funded by the Local Government of Sardinia, Italy. He's also a Perl programmer and technical writer and lecturer by passion, and is interested in web and XML related technologies. Marongiu has been a Debian User since version 1.1.10 and he helped found the GULCh Linux Users Group (Gruppo Utenti Linux Cagliari), the first one in Sardinia. A few years ago he became a father to his first son Andrea, and he's been trying to reorganise his life since, so that he can start writing technical articles again and holding seminars.
- Marco Marongiu's posts
- Login or register to post comments
- 7823 reads
- Printer friendly version (unavailable!)




Best voted contents
-
Special 301: FOSS users. Now we're all Communists and Criminals
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-05 -
Microsoft's Internet Driving Licence: stupid, unworkable and unenforceable
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-10 -
The Bizarre Cathedral - 69
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-03-12 -
Interview: Nina Paley (author of "Sita Sings the Blues" and the two "Minute Meme" animations)
Terry Hancock, 2010-03-15
Buzz authors
Free Software news
- When are YOU get your copy of this AWSOME FREEsoftware? Check it out at http://bit.ly/5NJCME
- RT @flourishconf: ^jh Come to flourish on Friday at 9am at #UIC at 750 South Halsted Street.See http://bit.ly/d3aHC3 for more info. #opensource #freesoftware
- ^jh Come to flourish on Friday at 9am at #UIC at 750 South Halsted Street.See http://bit.ly/d3aHC3 for more info. #opensource #freesoftware
- ^jh Come to flourish on Friday at 9am at #UIC at 750 South Halsted Street.See http://bit.ly/d3aHC3 for more info. #opensource #freesoftware
- @jonathasrr: Que mané freesoftware, o negócio é goodsoftware.
Similar entries
Other sites
- The Top 10 Everything (Dave). The good, the bad and the ugly.
- Free Software news (Dave & Bridget). All about free software -- free as in freedom!
- Book Reviews: Illiterarty (Bridget). Book reviews, blogs, and short stories.
Hot topics - last 60 days
-
Linux performance: is Linux becoming just too slow and bloated?
Mitch Meyran, 2010-01-26 -
Web code is already open - why not make it free as well
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-01-20 -
Save "Sita Sings the Blues" from the Flash format: can you convert FLA?
Terry Hancock, 2010-01-29 -
Microsoft's Internet Driving Licence: stupid, unworkable and unenforceable
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-10 -
Special 301: FOSS users. Now we're all Communists and Criminals
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-05
Hot topics - last 21 days
-
Microsoft's Internet Driving Licence: stupid, unworkable and unenforceable
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-10 -
Special 301: FOSS users. Now we're all Communists and Criminals
Gary Richmond, 2010-03-05 -
The Bizarre Cathedral - 69
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-03-12 -
Interview: Nina Paley (author of "Sita Sings the Blues" and the two "Minute Meme" animations)
Terry Hancock, 2010-03-15
Odiogo
Free Software Magazine uses Apollo, project management and CRM for its everyday activities!

Standards not software
Submitted by Terry Hancock on Wed, 2008-04-16 03:36.
Vote!In examining similar initiatives where I live, we concluded that advocating a requirement to use free software was not a good policy. There are too many examples of government needs where there is no free software application that does what you need.
That creates a bad “slippery slope” situation: you can’t have a blanket ban against using proprietary software (because in some cases it would be totally impractical, and result in enormous taxpayer expense), so you have to add “weasel words” that let an organization escape the requirement. And in practice, they’ll manage to escape it for everything (e.g. “we have to use word because Open Office doesn’t support…” [some arcane feature]).
Also, it’s quite easy to argue that such a rule is “anti-competitive”, using exactly the same arguments that have been used (for example) against Microsoft (e.g. you certainly don’t want laws that require you to use a particular proprietary software, do you?).
And besides, it doesn’t matter. I am not materially harmed because some government employee uses MS Word to write their documents.
What harms me is not being able to read the documents because they are in some proprietary format. And that is a MUCH stronger case.
So it’s better to focus on open standards: standard, well-documented file formats that put free software and proprietary software on an even footing.
Of course, in general, given such an even-footing, free software will win in the marketplace anyway, because it can offer as much or more value for less cost. More importantly, free software users will not be discriminated against, whether the world at large uses the same software or not.
Proprietary software companies know this of course, so they’ll try to fight such an initiative, but you’ve given them a much harder target if they have to justify storing public records in proprietary file formats.
Conflicting statements
Submitted by Ryan Cartwright on Wed, 2008-04-16 08:49.
Vote!Whilst I agree with the sentiment - but perhaps not the action - it seems you have a conflict here.
and the title “Free software is not politics”.
Both indicate that free software should not be a political issue, yet the actions you support and advocate..
..are saying that free software should be political.
Whilst I would love to see governments using only free software, it’s very difficult to legislate that without creating bigger issues. What I would want to see was leglisation which demanded that government:
Aside from that, I agree with Terry that government use of open standards[1] should definitely be under legislation.
cheers
Ryan
[1] Although these days that might not mean an ISO approved standard!
ISO
Submitted by Terry Hancock on Wed, 2008-04-16 22:46.
Vote!Actually, a lot of ISO standards aren’t fully “open”, as I discovered when I tried to get the STEP documentation, so that’s not necessarily a surprise.
"politics" / "not politics"
Submitted by Terry Hancock on Wed, 2008-04-16 22:49.
Vote!I noticed the conflict too. But I think what Marco is trying to say is that supporting free software shouldn’t become a partisan issue.
Certainly, it’s true that there’s a danger if one party tries to “own” free software advocacy. It creates a risk that the other party (or parties) will feel it has to fight free software, which we don’t want.
Clarifications
Submitted by Marco Marongiu on Thu, 2008-04-17 20:35.
Vote!Thanks for your replies, I think I need to clarify my point a bit.
Free software is for people. And people are people, no matter what their faith or their political inclination is. Therefore, I strongly believe that FS is not tightly bound to any ideology.
For this reason, I don’t expect that a single political party has the duty to advocate free software. I’d rather like a number of politicians from different parties to promote laws in favour of free software. One of the aforementioned petitions works exactly that way: it aims at politicians, no matter what their party is.
Believe it or not, not only I found people that stated an equation between free software and communism; they went further saying that promoting FS I was also promoting the ideas behind it, that is: I was promotimg communism. They decided I am a communist.
Feel free to be what you are, but don’t let this become a wall between you and anybody else that, in the end, is doing the same thing you do: promoting free software.