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Ecodesign Directive: FSFE calls for Device Neutrality and Upcycling of Software

vendredi 15 octobre 2021 à 01:00

Ecodesign Directive: FSFE calls for Device Neutrality and Upcycling of Software

As contribution to the revisal of the EU ecodesign directive and to help understand the impact of software obsolescence, the FSFE publishes a study on the sustainability of software. The findings of the study culminate in five core demands for a more sustainable digitisation, covering the interplay of devices, software, and infrastructure.

In the European Union we currently see a strong desire to make digitisation more sustainable with the European Commission aiming at making products more resource-efficient as well as circular economy methods applicable. The ecodesign directive from 2009 shall be updated in this regard with the "Sustainable Products Initiative" (SPI) that aims "to make products placed on the EU market more sustainable". The SPI will then serve as the main European product policy instrument, in the electronic sector additionally complemented by the "Circular Electronics Initiative" (CEI).

"Circular electronics", symbolized with Arduino Robot Top.jpg by Arduino SA, CC-BY-SA 3.0

It will be for the first time that phones and tablets are included in the ecodesign criteria of the European Union's market. The CEI directly asks for new "regulatory measures for electronics and ICT including mobile phones, tablets, and laptops under the Ecodesign Directive;" and addresses among other things the devices' "shortcomings in durability, [...] reparability, [...] upgradability, e-waste [...], reuse and recycling."

The European Commission is expected to publish its final proposal for the new SPI by the end of 2021 and the proposal for the CEI by the second quarter of 2022. In August this year, however, several news magazines already reported about what details to expect from the new ecodesign criteria regarding electronic devices. Among other things, it has been consistently written that the Commission wants manufacturers of smartphones and tablets to provide security updates for five years and function updates for three years free of charge.

FSFE demands the upcycling of software

Although an extended support time is one step forward in helping durability and lifetime of devices, the obligation of offering several years of security and functional updates is not sufficient enough for a real game change towards a more sustainable (re-)use of our devices. For a critical, long-lasting, and sustainable change and extension of our hardware usage lifetimes, products need to be designed with device neutrality in mind from the beginning. Until we are there, however, and with the current debates about updating the ecodesign directive in mind, the FSFE asks for truly opening up the circular reuse of electronics by enabling an upcycling of software. Such an upcycling will be possible with the manufacturers obligation to publish a device's underlying source code under a Free Software licence at the end of support for any software necessary to run or modify the initial functioning of the device.

The downsides of extending support obligations for proprietary software in contrast to directly opening up aftermarket economies and reuse possibilities through the publication of source code under a Free Software license is manifold: what time span of support seems appropriate for electronic devices in general and others in particular? Is it three years, five years, seven years? Will the decision of today still be valid and up to date at the end of this decade? Even worse, this approach does not fundamentally help one of the core problems of our digital societies which is an e-waste overflow of often still pretty well-working devices that have only been thrown away because a proprietary manufacturer decided to stop support of the device. An extended support obligation does not solve this problem at its core - it just postpones the often unnecessary growth of e-waste for a certain time. Last but not least it takes away the freedom of manufacturers to not continue support for a certain device if, for example, it does not sell well enough.

The graphic demonstrates how the "upcycling of software" can ideally help to extend usage lifetimes and to grow aftermarkets after the end of support by the initial manufacturers.

Icons reused from sources available on Freepik.com

The obligation of publishing a device's underlying source code under a Free Software licence at the end of support instead solves many of these problems in its core: manufacturers can stop the support of a certain device any time and instead of directly de-valuating affected products with the end of support, an aftermarket is enabled to further continue the development and reuse of certain devices. This will not happen as a law of nature, but begin with some popular devices that will experience a second life which got enabled by the publication of their source code as Free Software. And as we can see with the rise of other markets, the more this happens and the more success stories there are, the more competitors and imitators will join and further help creating a market of reuse and cicular electronics. Releasing source code as Free Software thus is the most efficient way to steer the European digitisation from a market of linear hardware production towards circular electronics devices. You can read more about the upcycling of software, the background and its derivation in our in-depth study about software obsolescence and sustainability of Free Software that the FSFE has been able to produce with the support of the German Environment Agency.

In-depth study about the sustainability of Free Software

The study starts with a definition of software sustainablility and shows from there how the inherent characteristics of Free Software enable a sustainability of software as well as their positive impact on the sustainability of IT infrastructures. Software obsolescence is explained and the benefits of using Free Software in saving natural resources by extending hardware usage lifetime and through saving energy cunsumption of software. Finally, based on the findings, five politically demands for a more sustainable digital society are outlined:

For a European shift from linear production and ewaste producion towards a circular electronic economy full device neutrality must be established that includes the Right to use alternative operating systems and software with full access to hardware and freedom of choice. Until then, the upcycling of software will help in the transition as well as the obligation for any public smart infrastructure to be set up with Free Software and public code.

Erik Albers, the FSFE's Programme Manager on Sustainability says: "It has been long time overdue for the European Union to apply ecodesign critera for the currently most selling electronic products, phones, and tablets. The FSFE welcomes the initiative by the European Commission to finally update the European Directive on this. Now it is crucial to do it right from the beginning. Our study explains the benefits of upcycling software in detail but can only be the start of a long time process and transition. In the next months we concentrate on explaining decision takers that we can only overcome linear product waste by an upcycling of software through its final publication under a Free Software licence."

If you are curious now to learn more about the sustainability of Free Software, we invite you read our study "On the sustainability of Free Software" and to watch the upcoming FSFE's track about sustainability at the SFSCon. If you like to support our work in the upcoming months and help us to influence legislation please help us with a financial support.

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Till Jaeger +++ Youth Hacking 4 Freedom +++ SFScon 2021

mardi 12 octobre 2021 à 01:00

Till Jaeger +++ Youth Hacking 4 Freedom +++ SFScon 2021

In our October Newsletter read about Till Jaeger, who knows first-hand what it takes to enforce Free Software licenses. Find out about the contest we just launched: Youth Hacking 4 Freedom. Learn about the donations by a high school yearbook team. Follow our latest activities and write down the dates of the upcoming SFScon.

New podcast: How can we prevent violations against Free Software licenses?

Till Jaeger shared his insight on how can we enforce Free Software licenses. In a podcast hosted by Matthias Kirschner he recalled the beginning of this effort in 2004. This was the first time when a violation of the GNU General Public Licence (GNU GPL) led to a court case and a settlement. The person behind this initiative was Harald Welte who afterwards created a project to rectify GPL violations.

Till Jaeger has been working alongside Harald Welte in enforcing the GNU GPL in court cases in Germany.

17 years after the first court case we now have many more tools to prevent violations against Free Software licenses. Compliance information is clearer, and workshops such as the ones offered by the FSFE Legal Network are available. Still, Till suggests further simplification of licences, interoperability, and licence compatibility. Finally, Till thanks everyone doing GNU/Linux distributions for their crucial work.

Youth Hacking 4 Freedom: coding contest for teenagers

Software development is a powerful, and often self-taught, skill; people who started programming in a young age deserve encouragement. To this end, we are organising a coding competition for teenagers around Europe, Youth Hacking 4 Freedom. From 1 November 2021 to 31 March 2022, you can code any type of software you want, as long as it is Free Software. The winners will be awarded cash prizes (2 x 4096€, 2 x 2048€, 2 x 1024€) and a trip to Brussels. The evaluation phase will be carried out by Free Software experts.

Are you between 14-18 and have already started programming? Join us! Just make sure you register until Sunday, 31 October 2021. Our FAQs might help. We are dedicated to offering an inclusive environment in the YH4F, and we encourage people of all genders to join! We will make sure everyone will enjoy the process and will leave this competition with a smile. Spread the word!

Hittfeld high school shows its support to Free Software projects and the FSFE

The 2021 yearbook of a high school was successfully completed using Free Software, and the editorial team donated all profits from the sale to Free Software projects and the FSFE. This is the story of Hittfeld high school in Seevetal, in the German state of Lower Saxony.

This yearbook was created using Free Software like LibreOffice, GNOME-Desktop, Ubuntu, Nextcloud, gThumb, darktable, PDF Arranger, LimeSurvey, Mozilla Firefox, Mozilla Thunderbird, MailMerge, Jitsi Meet, OpenStreet, Inkscape, and GIMP.

The editorial team mentions that it is beneficial for the school to avoid paying expensive subscriptions to proprietary programs. We deeply thank the pupils and everyone involved in the donation decision. This kind gesture is a nice reminder that we should support those who provide us great tools without restricting our freedom. We encourage everyone to support Free Software projects, just as the Hittfeld high school did.

This year the FSFE celebrates its 20th anniversary. Support our work for the next 20 years to come

Sustainability track at South Tyrol Free Software Conference

The South Tyrol Free Software Conference, SFScon, is one of Europe’s most established annual conferences on Free Software. Save the date! SFScon 2021 is coming up on Friday 12 November and Saturday 13 November 2021.

This year the FSFE will participate in the conference by organising a Sustainability track with five 20-minute talks:

The FSFE will also support three additional talks. 'REUSE: Gold standard for Free Software licensing' part of the Legal track, by Max Mehl; 'Protecting Router Freedom' part of the IoT & Cybersecurity track, by Lucas Lasota; 'Public Money? Public Code! During Corona: What role did Free Software play during the crisis' part of the Public Administration & GIS track, by Alexander Sander. We are looking forward to see our readers at the SFScon!

What we have done

During the final week before the German federal election we reached out to politicians asking their stance on Free Software, in line with our electoral activities. Alexander Sander, FSFE Policy Consultant, and Karl Krüger from our associated organisation OSB Alliance conducted 5 interviews (DE) with representatives of German political parties from 20 to 24 September. From CDU we spoke with Nadine Schön, MdB, CDU Deputy Chairwoman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group in the Bundestag. We interviewed three members of the Digital Agenda Committee: Elvan Korkmaz-Emre from SPD, Manuel Höferlin from FDP, and Anke Domscheit-Berg from Die Linke. From the Greens, we spoke with Margit Stumpp, MdB, member of the Committee on Cultural and Media Affairs. The 5 videos are available in German. Also we released our vision for the upcoming decades and concrete demands for the next government and analyzed the election programs of the parties.

New bag

For our 20th anniversary, we now present a new bag! Blue and double-faced, it comes with two slogans, the newest: 'FSFE since 2001', to remember when it all started and our evergreen: 'There is no cloud, just other people's computers'. A sustainable solution for a shopping bag. Get it from the FSFE web shop.

Share the YH4F opportunity with teenagers in your community

Would you like to help us spread the message, and help young hackers spot the opportunity to join YH4F? Then please contact teenagers you know, former schools, hacker spaces, youth facilities, or mailing lists. Share with them our call for registration through a post on your website, a mention in your Newsletter, or a social media post. Also, you can freely use the illustrations in our media kit, as well as our Press Release. Both are available in English and translations.

Your contribution is valuable to make sure that young people will take part — and hopefully connect more with the software freedom movement.

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

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Translators team: Reaching more people in their native language

lundi 11 octobre 2021 à 01:00

Translators team: Reaching more people in their native language

The FSFE's translators team has been working tirelessly throughout the second year of Covid-19 to enable people all across Europe to read and learn about Free Software in their native language. Since the beginning of 2021 we have had over 230 new translations into 9 different languages, not counting the English originals.

Since the founding of the organisation in 2001 the FSFE's translators team has been an important part of the FSFE. The translations made by the translators team have enabled people all across Europe to learn and read about software freedom and the FSFE's mission to empower users to control technology. Translations from English to another language enable people who are not fluent in English to read, learn, and participate in Free Software. Without the help of our translators team, this would not have been possible.

For the last 20 years the FSFE's translators team has been working on translating the FSFE's statements, news items, activities, campaigns, and background information. The first translation for our website, which is today no longer available on the website, was made in 2001 by translating the "Volunteers welcome" text to French. Later the "Volunteers welcome" text became our contribute page. In 2004, with the move from gnu.org to our own infrastructure, the then translation coordinator, Reinhard Müller, launched the first general information page about the translators team and the translation process. Since then a lot has happened.

Reinhard Müller: "Translating web pages and press releases for FSFE is not only an important contribution to increase the outreach of our message, it has also proven to be an excellent first step for getting involved in FSFE's work."

FSFE's translators team today

Today we have over 280 members on the translators mailing list, helping us in their spare time to translate for software freedom. We have 40 languages represented on our web page, with almost 7,000 translations. Among them are large projects, like the nearly finalised translation of the "Public Money? Public Code!" brochure to Spanish and the on-going translation of it to Italian.

Alejandro Criado-Pérez, translations to Spanish: "It's especially important to propagate the FSFE message in as many languages as possible, because Free Software's freedoms and their implications are often unknown or misunderstood, causing the general public to undervalue their vital importance to our democracy, privacy, and sustainability."

Not only have we increased our numbers in every direction (members, languages and translations), we have also improved our translation process. We have an actively maintained webpreview tool which allows translators as well as proofreaders to view the HTML source code as an actual web page. And of course we have also kept working on our style guide, wordlist, and the translators wiki. All of this is done with the help of the translators team itself.

If you are interested in joining the FSFE's translators team you are very welcome to subscribe to our mailing list and have a look at our wiki page.

André Ockers, Deputy Coordinator Translations, Translations to Dutch: "I translate for Free Software because I support the Free Software movement and want to help spread our message of empowering people to control their technology to Dutch-speaking people. Dutch is also the policy language in the Netherlands and a policy language in Belgium, so translations might be helpful in enabling policy advocacy on that level."Luca Bonissi, Deputy Translators Coordinator, Translations to Italian: "I love translating items about Free Software mainly because I love Free Software and I want that all Italian people could easily know the benefits of Free Software in their own language. As a side effect, since the translation process usually involves more than one person, I'm also learning more about English and Italian too! :-P "T.E. Kalayci, Translations to Turkish: "I like doing translation for FSF(E) because I want to spread the wise words of Free Software (which is very important to humanity and society in my opinion) to Turkish-speaking people. I am hoping that more people will understand the words, embrace the ideas in it and take part in the community to provide benefit to all the people."Pablo González, Translations to Spanish: "I like translating into Spanish because Free Software is for everyone, including people that don't understand English. One of the barriers here for the adoption of Free Software is the language."

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Learn about Free Software in the Legal Context with FSFE's Legal Education Day

vendredi 8 octobre 2021 à 01:00

Learn about Free Software in the Legal Context with FSFE's Legal Education Day

The FSFE is organizing a Legal Education Day on Saturday, 6 November 2021. This online event is open for all to attend. It will include talks and Q&A sessions on the basics of copyright law, licenses, and other legal topics. The event will help Free Software developers to understand these legal topics so that their software projects can reach their full potential.

We all love the four freedoms that Free Software grants to users and developers, and how they benefit the individual user as well as digital society as a whole. In order to ensure these freedoms, users of Free Software rely on legal instruments and the legal system to be able to enforce them when other try to take them away from us.

Understanding and complying with the legal frameworks and licensing obligations can sometimes feel daunting. Nonetheless, some basic knowledge can keep you and your software project safer from legal aspects, while it helps to build a healthy Free Software environment based on openness and community.

We are happy to be organizing the FSFE online Legal Education Day on Saturday, 6 November 2021, at 12:00 CET. The event will be held online on the FSFE’s infrastructure and is open for all to attend free of charge. With this event, we aim to spread basic legal education on the legal context of Free Software, so that licensing your project and meeting legal obligations in your software project will be less of a daunting task!.

Stay tuned for more updates on the LED homepage. In the meantime, you can optionally choose to register your attendance with us, so that we can get a good idea of how many people will be attending the event.

We hope to see you there soon!

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Youth Hacking 4 Freedom: Coding Competition for teenagers about to start

mardi 28 septembre 2021 à 01:00

Youth Hacking 4 Freedom: Coding Competition for teenagers about to start

The Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) is a charity that empowers users to control technology. To inspire the younger generation to software freedom, the FSFE is organising the coding competition ‘Youth Hacking 4 Freedom' (YH4F), where teenagers from all around Europe have the chance to compete in a fair and fun way. The winners receive a cash prize and a trip to Brussels with other young hackers.

Graphic by Lisa Schmidt, CC-BY-SA 4.0

The YH4F competition includes an online opening day to welcome everyone on board, in a kick-off event on Sunday 10 October, 5pm CEST. The FSFE will present the competition and answer questions. Please find more information on how to join at yh4f.org.

Coding

On Monday 1 November 2021, a five-month coding phase starts and the participants focus on coding until March 2022. Participants may bring all their imagination to the competition; they may code any type of software they want, as long as it is Free Software. The software project can be a stand-alone program written from scratch, or you can modify or combine existing programs. Everything is welcome! The participants will have the chance to briefly follow each other’s work and exchange ideas.

Evaluation

After the participants submit their programs, an evaluation phase is carried out by Free Software experts. Our jury members excel in software development; among them are Neil McGovern, Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation, and Claudia Müller-Birn, Professor for Human-Centered Computing at the Freie Universität Berlin.

Awards

The winners will be invited to receive their awards during a trip to Brussels in June 2022. The 2-day trip includes the Award Ceremony and social activities where the winners will have the chance to get to know each other better.

Graphic by Lisa Schmidt, CC-BY-SA 4.0

We are dedicated to offering an inclusive environment in the YH4F, and we would like to encourage people of all genders to join! We will make sure that everyone will enjoy the process and will leave this competition with added knowledge and a smile. The YH4F is made possible thanks to the kind support of Reinhard Wiesemann, Linuxhotel, and Vielrespektzentrum.

At the website yh4f.org you can find all related information, such as the process, the eligibility criteria, and FAQs. You can also use the illustrations in our dedicated media package when sharing the news of the competition.

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