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Free Software Foundation Europe

source: Free Software Foundation Europe

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Illegal procurement favouring Microsoft killed in Portuguese court

jeudi 2 mai 2013 à 01:00
Illegal procurement favouring Microsoft killed in Portuguese court

On April 27, the administrative court of Almada, Portugal, declared a 550, 000 Euro contract between Microsoft and the municipality of Almada to be illegal. The technical specifications of the competition launched by the municipality prevented any company other than Microsoft and their partners to submit a proposal.

This ruling is especially significant as it clarifies that a widely used procurement procedure is illegal. The procedure specified the name of Microsoft products instead of their general functional and technical requirements.

Unfair tendering practices in Portugal have been repeatedly denounced by FSFE's Associate Organisation ANSOL and the Portuguese Open Source Business Association ESOP, who brought the case to court. They violate fundamental rules of fair competition and systematically exclude companies that provide services based on Free Software.

FSFE welcome the court's decision, and calls on other European national courts to continue to systematically annul similarly discriminatory contracts.

More information The court's decision (pt) ESOP's press release about the ruling Open Forum Europe: Discriminatory practices continue to plague IT public procurement across Europe FSFE's Contribution to the European Commission consultation on the modernisation of European Union public procurement policy FSFE's work to improve public procurement in Finland

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Stop DRM in HTML5 - Sign the Petition!

jeudi 25 avril 2013 à 01:00
Tell W3C: We don't want the Hollyweb. Stop DRM in HTML5

Join us in calling on the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and its member organisations to reject the Encrypted Media Extensions proposal (EME). This proposal aims at incorporating support for Digital Restriction Management (DRM) into HTML and would therefore exclude Free Software browsers from being compatible with many web pages.

FSFE, FSF and other prominent organisations defending digital freedom have prepared a joint letter to the World Wide Web Consortium and its member organisations, urging them to reject the Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) proposal.

The signatories recognise the need for the W3C to respond to the changing landscape of the Web and to reconcile the interests of multiple parties. But ratifying EME would be an abdication of responsibility; it would harm interoperability, enshrine nonfree software in W3C standards and perpetuate oppressive business models. It would fly in the face of the principles that the W3C cites as key to its mission and it would cause an array of serious problems for the billions of people who use the Web.

Since Digital Restrictions Management requires denying users their right to modify the plug-ins and other relevant programs, it is by nature incompatible with free "as in freedom" software. Because of this, browser plug-ins designed to play media under the EME specification would all be proprietary, and widespread adoption of this plug-in system would pressure more and more Web users to sacrifice their computing freedom in order to view media. Enshrining nonfree software in HTML itself would comparatively diminish the values of freedom, self-actualisation and decentralisation so critical to the Web as we know it.

Take action to defend a free internet and keep DRM out of W3C Standards and join FSFE by signing FSF's petition We don't want the Hollyweb.

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FSFE welcomes Ceata as associate organisation

mercredi 24 avril 2013 à 01:00
FSFE welcomes Ceata as associate organisation

A group of Free Software activists from Romania and Moldova has joined FSFE's program of associate organisations. Active since 2008, Ceata incorporated as a foundation in February 2013. Fundația Ceata and FSFE will work together to promote software freedom in Romania and throughout Europe.

"We are proud to join forces with the skilled and passionate Free Software activists of Ceata", says Karsten Gerloff, FSFE's president."Free Software needs people like these, and they need the backing of an organisation to be effective in the long term. Ceata has a bright future."

For the past years, Ceata has been setting up workshops, hackathons and campaigns around Free Software and free culture in Romania and Moldova. The group, based in Bucharest and with local chapters in Cluj and Chișinău, organises conferences on Free Software, free hardware and free culture, develops Free Software, translates Free Software programs into Romanian, and participates in international campaigns.

"We share a common vision of software freedom for everyone," says Tiberiu C. Turbureanu, Ceata's president. "Together, we can bring this freedom to more people in Romania, Moldova and Europe at large. We are excited to officially be part of the Free Software movement in Europe."

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German Parliament says: Stop Granting Software Patents

lundi 22 avril 2013 à 01:00
German Parliament says: Stop Granting Software Patents

The German Parliament, the Bundestag, has introduced a joint motion against software patents. The resolution urges the German government to take steps to limit the granting of patents on computer programs.

In the resolution, the Parliament says that patents on software restrict developers from exercising their copyright privileges, including the right to distribute their programs as Free Software. They promote the creation of monopolies in the software market, and hurt innovation and job creation. [Correction 2013-04-24: Parliament did not yet adopt the motion, but rather decided to pass it to the parliament committees for further consideration.]

"Software patents are harmful in every way, and are useless at promoting innovation", says Karsten Gerloff, President of the Free Software Foundation Europe. "We urge the German government to act on this resolution as soon as possible, and relieve software developers from the needless patent-related costs and risks under which they are currently suffering."

Software patents are illegal under the European Patent Convention. Nevertheless, the European Patent Office has granted tens of thousands of patents covering software. As a result, software developers constantly risk being accused of patent infringement. This causes legal uncertainty which is costly for large companies, and potentially deadly for small ones.

The Parliament's resolution reminds the government that, under the EU's Computer Programs Directive, software is covered by copyright, not patents. It calls on the government to finally put the directive's "copyright approach" into practice, and make German law more concrete in this regard. It also points out that the restrictions which patents impose are incompatible with the most widely used Free Software licenses.

For any future initiative to reform European rules on copyright and patents, the Parliament asks the German government to make sure that developers' economic exploitation rights for their programs are not restricted by patents. The government should also push to ensure that software is covered by copyright alone, and that patent offices (including the European Patent Office) stop granting patents on software.

More information Joint Motion approved by the Bundestag (in German, PDF) Background on software patents

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How to break free from Skype

mardi 2 avril 2013 à 01:00
How to break free from SkypeAvoid being locked in as Microsoft turns off Windows Messenger

On April 8, Microsoft will discontinue its Windows Messenger service. All current users will be switched to Skype. The Free Software Foundation Europe advises former users of Windows Messenger to take this as an opportunity to embrace Open Standards such as Jabber (XMPP) instead of switching to Skype.

"Crucial technology should not be controlled by a single entity, but instead rely on the sort of Open Standards that have made the Internet great" says Matthias Kirschner of FSFE. "MSN users should switch to Open Standard technologies, like the XMPP protocol, and Free Software chat programs." The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP, previously called Jabber) is widely deployed across the Internet. This standard is not closed or secret; it is governed by an independent foundation with many stakeholders. It can be implemented in any software, and not only gives users the choice of which client to use, but also which servers to trust.

By switching all users to Skype, Microsoft is replacing one locked down technology with another. Acquired by Microsoft in 2011, the proprietary Skype software is widely used for audio and video communication, as well as chatting. Its workings are secret and substantial efforts are made to prevent reverse engineering. Skype's services have serious drawbacks. Their closed, secured-through-obscurity protocol takes freedom away from users. Skype's technology forces people to join the walled garden in order to keep communicating with others, and locks them in. It also makes oversight and checks by communities or independent experts nearly impossible. "Microsoft and Skype have absolute control over all communications going through their network," says FSFE's Torsten Grote. "Once aggregated, the power given to Skype by each individual user endangers freedom on a global scale. Skype is already abusing this power with attacks on privacy, data retention , censorship, and eavesdropping."

The ability to communicate freely is vital, and this is just what Open Standards-driven communication methods such as XMPP provide. People that have the ability to run their own XMPP server are strongly encouraged to do so. The more distributed the XMPP network is, the more resistant it is to censorship and failures. People who prefer not to run their own server are invited to use an XMPP service provider that they trust. FSFE, for example, provides a XMPP server for all their Fellows. "The technology that we rely on should never be controlled by only one entity. Ideally we all control it together. We should be careful not to build new walled gardens." says Grote. "Most companies already agree on XMPP. Only the companies that want to lock-in their users go their own way on this. Even Facebook uses XMPP, but unfortunately they still don't allow their users to talk to people outside of Facebook."

How to move to a Free Software chat solution based on Open Standards : Download a free client Install it and start it If you don't have an existing XMPP account, log in to one of the many public XMPP services using your preferred username. Your client will automatically create the account Add your contacts Start chatting with others on the XMPP network!

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