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Christmas Cheer GNU is Not Unix Open Source

Free Software Foundation Publishes Its 2022 'Ethical Tech Giving Guide' (fsf.org) 16

For the last thirteen years the Free Software Foundation has published its Ethical Tech Giving Guide, notes a recent FSF blog post. "The right to determine what a device you've purchased does or doesn't do is something too valuable to lose."

Or, as they put it in the guide: It's time to reclaim our freedom from the abuse of multinational corporations, who use proprietary software and malicious "antifeatures" to keep us powerless, dependent, and surveilled by the devices that we use. There's no time at which it's more important to turn these unfortunate facts into positive action than the holiday season.

The gifts that we recommend here might not be making headlines, but they're the rare exception to the apparent rule that devices should mistreat their users.

For technical users, the guide recommends pairing the FSF-sponsored Replicant, a fully-free distribution of Android, with the F-Droid app repository, which has hundreds of applications including Syncthing, Tor, Minetest, and Termux.

They also praise the X200 laptop, "one of the few home user devices that's able to run fully free software from top to bottom." With easy-to-repair hardware, it's the laptop most frequently used in the FSF's own office — just one of several freedom-respecting devices from Vikings. And there's shout-outs to MNT's Reform laptop, products from PINE64 and Purism, plus a freedom-respecting VPN, and a mini wifi adapter .

The guide even recommends places to buy DRM-free ebooks, including No Starch Press, Smashwords, Leanpub, Standard Ebooks, Nantucket E-Books, Libreture (which also offers a storage solution). Meanwhile for print books, there's the Gnu Press Shop

And it also recommends sources for DRM-free music (including Bandcamp, Emusic, the Smithsonian Institute's Folkways, the classic punk label Dischord, HDTracks, and Mutopia).

And it also tells you where to find free (as in freedom) films...
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Free Software Foundation Publishes Its 2022 'Ethical Tech Giving Guide'

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  • by danda ( 11343 ) on Saturday November 26, 2022 @01:05PM (#63081396)

    It's a great device with good keyboard and trackpoint, all the x series are up to the x230.

    But c'mon 2008? It maxes out at 8Gb RAM.

    Is there nothing more recent they can recommend? ....as I'm typing this on an x220, and still waiting for a decent replacement...

  • by Mononymous ( 6156676 ) on Saturday November 26, 2022 @01:12PM (#63081410)

    Replicant supports only a handful of very old Samsung devices, all of which need proprietary firmware to work.
    If the FSF is already compromising its values by endorsing blobs, why don't they recommend something up-to-date that will run on a new phone, like LineageOS for microG? [microg.org]

    • More like there's no modern drop in replacement for the CPU that doesn't require the blobs. Yet.

      One of the biggest problems today for blobless free as in freedom computers is the fact that all of the major CPU vendors require some sort of blob at some point for "security" (read: DRM) purposes. Regardless of form factor or purpose. OpenRISC may change that, but we are still a few years out.

      As for the Replicant endorsement, that's probably due to the fact that no mobile CPU prior to 2008 is viable for use
    • looking for a open-source, nice and modern Android distro: lineageos.org [lineageos.org]

      * avoid Google Play, by using f-droid.org [f-droid.org] (I only install banking apps fol Google Play...)
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Most of the stuff on the list is quite old - the X200 is an ancient ThinkPad by now and hard to find used for any price reflecting its age.

      You would think they'd have commissioned some replacement hardware already. I mean, they could work with one of dozens of ARM licensees to develop a fully open chip (probably adapting an existing chip design to reduce costs). Or RISC-V is a thing and there are a full silicon vendors for it.

      Of course, part of the problem is the "blob free" handling of things - the FSF con

  • Does it actually require any parts of the original BIOS or have they gotten to the point where you can build and flash Coreboot and have a working system (including hardware like Ethernet) without ever reading a single byte from the original BIOS chip?

  • Remember, FSF isn't telling you to buy these things, it's just a guide for *if* you insist on buying tech. You can always get people socks or a jumper.

    FSF's guide is also for people who put a lot of value on freedom. And I hope a lot of people do. But if you want to make a small effort, another interesting list is Mozilla's "Privacy Not Included":

    https://foundation.mozilla.org... [mozilla.org]

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