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Open Source Software

Free Software Advocates Seek Removal of Richard Stallman and Entire FSF Board (arstechnica.com) 495

AmiMoJo shares a report from Ars Technica: Richard Stallman's return to the Free Software Foundation's board of directors has drawn condemnation from many people in the free software community. An open letter signed by hundreds of people today called for Stallman to be removed again and for the FSF's entire board to resign. Letter signers include Neil McGovern, GNOME Foundation executive director and former Debian Project Leader; Deb Nicholson, general manager of the Open Source Initiative; Matthew Garrett, a former member of the FSF board of directors; seven of the eight members of the X.org Foundation board of directors; Elana Hashman of the Debian Technical Committee, Open Source Initiative, and Kubernetes project; Molly de Blanc of the Debian Project and GNOME Foundation; and more than 300 others. That number has been rising quickly today: the open letter contains instructions for signing it.

The letter said all members of the FSF board should be removed because they 'have enabled and empowered RMS for years. They demonstrate this again by permitting him to rejoin the FSF Board. It is time for RMS to step back from the free software, tech ethics, digital rights, and tech communities, for he cannot provide the leadership we need.' The letter also called for Stallman to be removed from his position leading the GNU Project. "We urge those in a position to do so to stop supporting the Free Software Foundation," they wrote. "Refuse to contribute to projects related to the FSF and RMS. Do not speak at or attend FSF events, or events that welcome RMS and his brand of intolerance. We ask for contributors to free software projects to take a stand against bigotry and hate within their projects. While doing these things, tell these communities and the FSF why."
UPDATE: For a quick summary of the controversy, long-time Slashdot reader Jogar the Barbarian recommends this article from It's Foss.
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Free Software Advocates Seek Removal of Richard Stallman and Entire FSF Board

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  • Umm, what? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by G00F ( 241765 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @07:48PM (#61194766) Homepage

    Sorry, but I'm not sure what this is even on about.

    I know hes an eccentric old guy, but what's so bad that caused this kind of ire.

    • Re:Umm, what? (Score:5, Informative)

      by acroyear ( 5882 ) <jws-slashdot@javaclientcookbook.net> on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @07:53PM (#61194776) Homepage Journal

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      i am not going to state any personal judgement on what is in that section, and all of this was discussed here when it happened. Simply saying that's a brief summary of the situation.

      The baggage is such that the others are exercising a kind of "vote of no confidence" - the impression is that there is no way Stallman can speak (and head of the FSF is primarily a job of advocacy, not code) without this aspect of his past coming back up and being a distraction.

      • Re:Umm, what? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday March 25, 2021 @03:55AM (#61195756) Homepage Journal

        Like it or not that kind of job comes with responsibilities to look out for people, as did his teaching job. He would be expected to listen to complaints about other people's behaviour and deal with them appropriately, and given his recent statements it's hard to see how anyone would have confidence in him doing that.

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          He would be expected to listen to complaints about other people's behaviour and deal with them appropriately, and given his recent statements it's hard to see how anyone would have confidence in him doing that.

          That's funny I think he did listen and deal with them appropriately. He asked for actual evidence for before condemning someone. That raises my confidence diminishes it. He said she said should never fly. If something is happening in most work and academic environments there is at least some third party to corroborate some details if there is really any there there. Except in the most usual situations like well we working together very late - Which is why there exist the Graham rule!

          That rule by the way sho

          • by DarenN ( 411219 )

            That's not what happened at all. After Minsky was accused, he circulated a pseudo-intellectual opinion looking at the term "Sexual Assault" and claimed that it led to the inflation of the seriousness of the accusations.

            Which was poorly timed, poorly worded, in the wrong forum, and stupid. It was entirely predictable that it would end up looking like an apologia for Epstein.

      • As I see it, someone took offence because Stallman corrected them (appropriately and accurately), then lashed out and created the baggage you mention out of exactly nothing. Then, on the basis of the baggage they created for him, demand he be removed from the public eye.

        That is utterly vile and viscous behavior, and we should not reward it by letting the perpetrators get what they want.

    • cancel culture (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @07:56PM (#61194790)

      His friend was an Epstein patron, RMS didn't immediately cut ties with this guy. This makes RMS just as bad as Hitler. And it makes the rest of the board just as bad as Hitler for not cutting ties with RMS. Apparently.

      These loons are like a cult (see "disconnection") to enforce their dogma. They need to shut the fuck up -- there is one certified genius in this news article and it is RMS. He's done a lot more for the free software cause than anyone else in the world with the possible exception of Linus Torvalds and who he befriends is nobody's business.

      • This makes RMS just as bad as Hitler.

        Not immediately cutting ties with someone is a far cry from actively engaging in genocide.

      • Translation: these peoples pussies hurt at the thought of him existing anymore, and cannot separate a personal life from work. The only thing RMS did was stand up for a friend. Its clear that those so willing to condemn are the same people that previously defended Facefuck in a thread I started a couple weeks ago about how facebook causes friendships to expire. The resounding defense kept talking about ACQUAINTANCES. Proof, if ever, they have zero actual friends. Not any friends they would help move. And no
      • His friend was an Epstein patron, RMS didn't immediately cut ties with this guy. This makes RMS just as bad as Hitler.

        Not even close to what happened.

        Minsky got accused, and Stallman, unprompted, decided to send an email to a large mailing list. That was not at all related to this particular subject at all. In the email, he declared that statutory rape isn't rape, and that the minor lying about their age absolves the adult.

        Neither are true. Both are actually quite bad. And neither needed to be said if his goal was to defend Minsky. He could have said "I don't believe Minsky did anything wrong", and that would have act

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Xenographic ( 557057 )

      He had resigned a few months ago, as I recall there was some snafu where he defended some dead MIT Media Lab person who was accused of visiting Pedo Island by saying that it wasn't clear if they knew what was going on there. They're now calling him _phobic and whatnot, I'm not really sure what that's all about, but honestly I think this is just one of those power struggles where they would prefer to control this foundation but who knows.

      Meanwhile, Reddit just hired (and fired) an admin who is married to an

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by rmdingler ( 1955220 )

        Yawn... Reddit employs pedo-enabler Aimee Challenor... not news for nerds or shite that matters,

        Reddit's on borrowed ttime, anyways, so if this expedites the downfall, so be it.

        • Re:Umm, what? (Score:4, Interesting)

          by quenda ( 644621 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @09:58PM (#61195174)

          Yawn... Reddit employs pedo-enabler Aimee Challenor...

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          Wow! That is one seriously traumatised person. Diagnosed autistic and ODD, taken into care and parents charged with neglect. Father convicted of raping and torturing a 10yo, he changes to a woman, marries another dude who presents as a woman and writes about paedophile fantasies. Accuses the Green party of being trans-phobic.

          I thought RMS was weird, but reading about Challenor puts a different perspective on it!
          Stallman looks dull now.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Tailhook ( 98486 )

      Sorry, but I'm not sure what this is even on about.

      It's another purity spiral. RMS said some shit wokium addicts are upset about.

    • Re:Umm, what? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jmccue ( 834797 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:26PM (#61194894) Homepage

      The real reason ? He will oppose the corporate take over over of Linux, pure and simple.

      Yes he is tone deaf on many things, but he is spot on about user's freedom.

    • Re:Umm, what? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @10:24PM (#61195242) Homepage Journal

      When people were picking up their torches and pitchforks shouting "BURN THE WITCH!", he dared to say "wait a minute, let's make sure first".

      A MONSTER, I tell you!

    • Re:Umm, what? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @10:58PM (#61195340)

      He basically made a really clueless face-palm of an attempt at defending Marvin Minsky (whos dead and doesnt actually need defending) from abuse allegations regarding his shady dealings with Epstein.

      I don't think RMS actually meant any harm, and I believe him when he claims to be an ally of women. The problem is he just really really has a problem with putting his feet in his mouth in public and the whole Epstein/Minsky thing just about pissed everyone off. His decision to resign I think we warranted. He recognised he had fucked up and took time out to reevaluate things.

      What I'm currently concerned about however is that RMS didnt follow up later on with more offensive pedo-defending stuff. Theres no indication he continues to hold those views, but it would seem the offense here is that he isn't STAYING "cancelled" (I dislike that term or its expanded version "cancel culture", its weasel word used by people who dont want an honest debate).

      I think this is dangerous. If people aren't permitted to
      "reform", given the option to recognize they fucked up and make the changes, what exactly is the point of it all?

      This isnt a left wing thing. The disgust at Epstein and his gang are held equally by all sides of politics, nobody likes a kiddy fucker and nobody respects those who defend them. But I just wonder what is achieved by keeping RMS out of public life?

        We all know RMS is somewhat socially awkward. I'd hazard a guess he's fairly heavily on the autistic spectrum, and not allowing people on the spectrum who have social integration issues to self-correct is actually somewhat abelist. My old housemate was an autistic maths PhD. He messed up constantly socially by misreading people, but everyone knew why and so we'd just gently correct him and encourage him to keep engaging. Why is RMS different?

  • I guess they forgot to send a message to the social media companies.

  • Oookaaay. Sounds like there's a lot of backstory we are missing.

    • No there isn't.

      His shtick struck in the craw of some SJW at MIT and now failing to join in on the 2 minutes hate makes you a literal baby killer.

      Given the way these cancel mobs have gone, I doubt the sincerity of many of the signatories if this open letter. It's equally likely to be a "don't hurt me" brigade as it is an actual mob.

      Now's a good time to read up on what a "good German" was.

      • t's equally likely to be a "don't hurt me" brigade as it is an actual mob.

        This is the best I have seen the justification/explanation of (mostly) online social causes articulated

      • Same cancel mobs that cock gobble Woody Allen despite his child rape and eventually marrying his own daughter 30 yrs his junior.
  • They are the people to be shuffled off.

  • must include petty insecurities. Like anything these days. What's your petty insecurity? Mine is traffic lights. Particularly red ones. And the ones at the nearest intersection to my street. I hate those. I know this is wrong and I should take the red lights as they come. I strive to be a better person but it's so damn hard.
  • Backstory (Score:5, Informative)

    by Jogar the Barbarian ( 5830 ) <greg@NOsPaM.supersilly.com> on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @07:56PM (#61194794) Homepage Journal

    Here is a pretty quick summary of the controversy: https://itsfoss.com/richard-st... [itsfoss.com]

  • by theCat ( 36907 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:01PM (#61194818) Journal

    of radical movements. Everything eventually loses the fire and goes mainstream, then the OG radicals who started the entire thing are deemed "unsophisticated". At least RMS is unlikely to be repudiated by the People's Software Central Committee as a counter-revolutionary and shot at dawn with an antiaircraft gun. I mean, probably not. These days there is no telling.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @09:43PM (#61195118)

      Yup. That's the fate of extremists. You naturally attract extremists as followers, and extremists are pretty extreme. Drama and backstabbing is inevitable. And if you survive that, the smooth, politically savvy types will eventually get you.

      RMS took an extreme position, which did a lot of good dragging everything his direction. I'm not sure why he's hanging on. It doesn't sound like the FSF edifice is really something he would want to be involved with. Time to pull a Jerry McGuire and make an exit with your fish. Start the GNG project. GNU is not GNU.

  • WTF (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fwad ( 94117 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:02PM (#61194826) Homepage

    So I read TFA and I don't get it. If the article is indeed a true reflection of his views then whilst I don't think I agree with any of his views (apart from they - it's a plural) I can see a logical argument for them. Why shouldn't he be allowed to have his own views ?

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is the first time you deal with SJW?

      You can say whatever you wanted as long as it is what SJW liked.

      SJW wanted diversity where everyone thinks like them.

      This is simply the American style Cultural Revolution, happening at one organization or company at a time. Get ready to leave when it comes to where you work.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:16PM (#61194856)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:27PM (#61194896)

      RMS should simply tell the mob to go fuck themselves, and get on with his work.

      What work? RMS hasn't contributed any code in ages.

      He also presided over FSF losing pretty much all influence. In early 2000-s GNU tools were essential for the whole industry, life without gcc or glibc was impossible. You could reasonably say that Linux should be referred to as GNU/Linux. These days 5 billion people are running Linux that is built without a shred of GNU tools, even the kernel is compiled using LLVM-based clang.

      • glibc is still vital. So is gcc for many other software projects.

        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          uClibc, musl, klibc all exist and are viable for at least their target use cases -- and in those domains, often legitimately better than glibc. Google is working on an LLVM-associated libc. glibc gets less vital with each passing month.

          gcc is in a similar situation, although it's always had a lot of compilers to compete against. For my use cases, gcc is usually the best C/C++ compiler, although it only caught up with clang diagnostics with gcc version 10. But it's losing criticality because so many lang

        • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
          They are still important, but not crucial anymore. If for some reason gcc disappears tomorrow, the industry will quickly (in a matter of months) just switch to clang exclusively.

          glibc is also in the same boat. Android uses Bionic, musl libc is used in Alpine Linux and a lot of container-based deployments.
  • Why do the people who signed this letter have *any* sway whatsoever in the goings-on of FSF? Are all of FSF's donations coming from intersectional nutjobs? What contributions have these individuals made to the FSF? Are they going to contribute to MSFT or Oracle instead? Please. Political affiliation, personal identity, etc. should play ZERO role in being able to advocate for free software. If these unhinged lunatics want to destroy Stallman, then he should start a new organization unassociated with the

    • ? What contributions have these individuals made to the FSF?

      I mean, Mozilla, GNOME, FreeDos and X.org have made a wee bit of a contribution to OSS and the FSF, to pick names that jump out at me.

  • Warning... if you have an opinion different than that of the mob, be prepared to be CANCELED!

    The specific complaint: "He (RMS) has shown himself to be misogynist, ableist, and transphobic, among other serious accusations of impropriety. "

    However for once this is not an anonymous mob, there are quite a few signatures on the petition.

  • The previous article didn't mention it nor did this one, how does one get on the fsf board?
    I assume members nominate candidates and there's an election or is there some other process?

  • That's GNU/Cancel (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:27PM (#61194898) Homepage Journal

    I stopped supporting FSF financially a few years ago due to odious behavior, not RMS per se but at the organizational level. Some of their legal stuff is good, but some of it really is not.

    I just stopped paying them anything and that was that. If they want to go off and do weird things then I don't want to associate with them, but I don't want to take over FSF any more than I want to fork Hurd.

    SJW bleating is easy. Forking gcc and leading it is hard. I'll be impressed when people show some skin in the game. Oooh, you made a blog post - so brave, so strong.

  • May not agree 100% with him, but he's an invaluable voice for Free Software, and the purge against him was utterly unethical--a mob of backstabbing climbers and their narcissistic cry-bully enablers. I'm waiting a month or so to make sure the FSF doesn't cave again, then joining at the $1000 level.

  • by 278MorkandMindy ( 922498 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:38PM (#61194936)

    DISCLAIMER: The following is only about the Epstein issue, no other bad behavior he may have been involved in.

    His resignation (apparently, I read a link on the backstory) was due to defending someone who went to an Epstein party and had sex with someone.

    RMS's statement was made from a factual, possibly ASD perspective, in that he used logic and reasoning on an emotive subject. He definitely could have done it better, even if his points were valid. He may also have been wrong, there is not much information to know what (the accused) knew at the time.

    Similar to someone saying "If the Jews didn't lie down (resisted from the start), the Nazis would never have been able to do what they did"
    Likely not accurate (or needs to be stated a different way, such as "The lack of resistance to increasingly brutal policy enabled the Nazis to become emboldened" ), needs clarification and research, but will always get an emotion fueled response.

    When you say something that only MAY be true, and people are highly emotionally invested in the OPPOSITE view, this is exactly what happens.

    • by Antique Geekmeister ( 740220 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @09:54PM (#61195162)

      There was no reliable evidence that Marvin Minsky, one of the leaders of AI research for decades, actually had sex or even a massage with any of of Epstein's underaged masseuses. The relevant excerpt of the deposition that accused Minsky can be read at https://www.theverge.com/2019/... [theverge.com] . It's not very credible testimony, the masseuse did not remember when or where it happened, or what exactly she was told to do with him. Minsky's widow, who was on the island and present with him during most of the stay, denies that anything of the kind occurred.

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Well, memory is rarely that precise, and when it is, that doesn't necessarily make it accurate.

        It's neither here nor there in this case, though, because whether the accusation or true or not has nothing to do with the issue of whether RMS is a suitable leader for the free software movement. The inciting incident here was his spectacularly tone deaf response to the news of the accusation, and I would argue that the *underlying* issue is that over the years since his early work in developing GPL he hasn't d

        • "Failing to build upon the goodwill" is not what he's being accused of, nor the bases of the calls for his regignation. Nor was it what he was accused the last time several times unfounded accusations were made against him. , Have you listened to any of his speeches or presentations? Because he is insightful, and has warned people of genuinely dangerous abuses, and suggested some practical though difficult approaches to deal with them. As such, it is worth paying him some attention even if you don't agree w

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            Yes, I've seen him in person a number of times; the issue isn't his insight or past contributions, the issue is his history of unpleasant personal behavior. Bizarre behavior is fine, but rude, arrogant and borderline abusive behavior really means that you're not suitable for leadership.

      • This is the other huge problem with SJWs. Presumption of guilt, forcing the accused to undertake the often-impossible task of having to prove their innocence (impossible in this case since Minsky died before the accusation surfaced). If someone belonging to a group they support makes a claim, they automatically assume it to be true. Contrary to centuries of legal precedent (at least in the U.S.) requiring presumption of innocence and the accuser to prove their accusation. The comparison to the Salem witch
  • It's not clear to me what they're going to do to FSF if their demands aren't met. Are they going to switch to advocacy of proprietary software in order to disrupt FSF's mission? What carrots or sticks are being shown to FSF here?

  • Attacking someone for their opinion and trying to have them fired and blacklisted for a comment they made in an email is much worse than the stupid comments in RMS's email. The good news is everyone who signed the letter is now known. If you have the opportunity, please give them a dose of their own bullshit and deny them employment. Let's see how they like being attacked for their opinions.

  • Not surprised... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ndykman ( 659315 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:47PM (#61194964)

    Stallman is super problematic, has been for years. There were constant complaints about him just being completely insensitive, rude and hostile to people. Many refused to work with him directly. He was sheltered at MIT from most of the consequences because of the work he was doing and some tenured professors giving him cover.

    He was *never* a good public advocate for open source and the related issues of maintaining open computing ecosystems. Most of the moment around that worked around him because of just how bad he was in the public eye and in personal interactions.

    I know some will try to defend him and his actions as part of his autism. Firstly, he's never said he was diagnosed as such. Secondly, ASD is not an blanket excuse. Almost all people with ASD learn the skills to interact in the workspace.

    He was a very talented engineer in the day, but times move on and the FSF is increasingly out of touch with the current issues in development and technology. Yes, diversity is one of those issues. But it's also just plain advances in technology.

    GCC is mired with some bad decisions because Stallman keeps putting his foot in, despite a huge effort to get him out and to modernize the code base in the 90s (remember the ecgs fork, anybody). Emacs is a relic. GNU Hurd is still a zombie, occasionally rising from the grave.

    Frankly, the amount of people and projects that are just willing to write the FSF off is a sign of how much influence and leadership they have lost.

    Technical Postscript. As to HURD, the whole microkernel thing, especially the FSF approach, just doesn't make sense anymore. Linux can be very small and running the IO and Network stack in user space just isn't a huge advantage with zero copy optimizations. Also, MS has shown you can have user and kernel driver spaces. It's not one or the other. Now, a microkernel hypervisor is another story, especially one that is built with an eye towards verification. See the work on L4 for an example.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Have you ever MET him? Ever seen him speak in person? Or are you basing all of this on the writings of people engaged in burning the witch?

      As for the rest, I do remember egcs. A project made possible by copyleft. I also remember that when it had proved it;s point, it was accepted into the gcc mainline.

      Many still swear by emacs. Microkernel vs. mono is still not a settled point. Linux itself has, in fact, welcomed a few components that can best be described as microkernel inspired. For example, FUSE, and KVM

  • by thelexx ( 237096 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @08:48PM (#61194966)

    There's a linked page in the arstechnica article outlining his supposed personal transgressions of the past at MIT. A complete load of horse-shit that felt gross to read through. The person who wrote it should be ashamed of themselves and the whole group should be censured for their actions in this.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @09:17PM (#61195046)

    All of those against Stallman should feel free to go start their own free software movement and do what they like. That's what open source is, anyone can take a new direction any time... you just have to convince people to follow you...

    Myself, I'll keep contributing to the FSF as long as RMS is involved, not because I support all views he holds (there is not one single person on earth for whole I could say that to be true) but instead because of a SINGLE idea that he has spent his life promoting, the notion of truly Free software.

    A popular tweet I have seen in other circles goes like this [twitter.com]:


    1. Identify a respected institution.
    2. kill it.
    3. gut it.
    4. wear its carcass as a skin suit, while demanding respect.

    And that very much seems to be what is going on here.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @10:39PM (#61195290)


      1. Identify a respected institution.
      2. kill it.
      3. gut it.
      4. wear its carcass as a skin suit, while demanding respect.

      And that very much seems to be what is going on here.

      Pretty much, yes. This has become an established pattern in SJW circles. These people are always destroyers, never creators. Their contribution to society is negative.

  • by Swampash ( 1131503 ) on Wednesday March 24, 2021 @10:27PM (#61195254)

    RMS seems to have regarded time spent travelling to a residence as wasted time that could otherwise be spent working, so he slept on a mattress in his office at MIT, which was his legal address.

    According to his accuser the presence of the mattress is evidence that rms is a sexual predator.

    He literally used to have a mattress on the floor of his office. He kept the door to his office open, to proudly showcase that mattress and all the implications that went with it.

    Oh noes, the implications. Just thinking about it causes me trauma.

    Or he’s a nerd with no social skills who literally lives in his office. Get fucked.

  • by trawg ( 308495 ) on Thursday March 25, 2021 @03:52AM (#61195750) Homepage

    The EFF published a statement [eff.org] and it baffles me that this didn't make the editorial cut for context, and instead we get an 18 month old blog post that focuses on the Epstein angle.

    To me this is absolutely the least interesting thing to focus on - as with all the commentators here it's just a bunch of people taking his comments out of context, then a bunch of people being outraged that they did that and angrily replying, rinse and repeat.

    I've never met rms; I greatly appreciate the work he's done on free software. He's obviously an extremist, but fortunately for many software users, one that we're lucky to have on our side in this respect. But there are many credible stories about him being extremely toxic in the workplace, and possibly a harasser of women - I wasn't there.

    But rather than pick fights about the semantics of what he said about Epstein (which is what most of the comments here seem to be) and trying to defend his right to behave terribly if we get software freedom out of it, or whatever, I am choosing to outsource my opinion on this to the EFF.

    • FSF Europe is also distancing itself from FSF [fsfe.org] (emphasis added):

      We learnt through a public announcement that Richard Stallman is again part of the board of directors of the Free Software Foundation, one of our independent sister organisations. We disapprove of this step that came without any message of remorse or willingness to change.

      In 2019, Richard Stallman resigned as president and board member of the Free Software Foundation. On 21 March 2021 Stallman announced he is member of the board again. The FSFE

  • by vbdasc ( 146051 ) on Thursday March 25, 2021 @07:36AM (#61196134)

    With the disclaimer that I don't know and can't know all the facts surrounding this sad affair, my personal opinion is that Professor Minsky has done more for the progress of humanity than all these people who signed that open letter combined, and that a scientist of his magnitude at least deserves fair treatment, benefit of the doubt and presumption of innocence. And as a consequence, people like RMS who raise their voice to remind the public of this should not be subjected to such a vile witch-hunting campaign. Political agendas have no place in the open source movement, yet they dominate it these days. But the writing was on the wall since the Brendan Eich scandal, I guess. How sad.

  • Don't know about anyone else, but for me. This says a lot more about the individuals demanding the purge than it does about Stallman or the FSF board.

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