From 5f2f956115cf68f91e9573b538bc25d9ba8164eb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zoe <zoe@fsf.org> Date: Thu, 17 Mar 2022 22:55:13 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] correction aaron wolf --- 2022/includes/generated-bios.html | 7 ++++--- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/2022/includes/generated-bios.html b/2022/includes/generated-bios.html index b4f2bb16..cbc0caf6 100644 --- a/2022/includes/generated-bios.html +++ b/2022/includes/generated-bios.html @@ -1142,15 +1142,16 @@ I am currently enrolled in a PhD program, and the talk I am giving is related to </br> <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span> </div> -<div class="abstract"><div class="webform-html-textarea"><p>A discussion of the economic distinctions between private goods, club goods, commons, and public goods; and why software freedom struggles to get economically supported.</p> +<div class="abstract"><div class="webform-html-textarea"><p>There are four categories of economic goods: private goods, club goods, commons, and public goods. Free software programs are public goods, and they don't fit our market economy which relies on scarcity and exclusion.</p> +<p>This talk will lay out a new way to understand the economic dilemmas with public goods. It will discuss how the typical language and models of economics work against the goals of software freedom. With this foundation, we can start working on the challenge of how to build a new economy based on sharing and abundance.</p> </div></div> </div> <div class="speakerblock"> <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Aaron-Wolf-headshot.jpg"> <h2>Aaron Wolf</h2></div> -<div class="webform-html-textarea"><p>There are four categories of economic goods: private goods, club goods, commons, and public goods. Free software programs are public goods, and they don't fit our market economy which relies on scarcity and exclusion.</p> -<p>This talk will lay out a new way to understand the economic dilemmas with public goods. It will discuss how the typical language and models of economics work against the goals of software freedom. With this foundation, we can start working on the challenge of how to build a new economy based on sharing and abundance.</p><br /> +<div class="webform-html-textarea"><p>Aaron Wolf is co-founder of Snowdrift.coop and a long-time free software and free culture activist. In his day job as an independent music teacher, he pushes his students to use free/libre tools and release their music under free licenses.</p> +<br /> </div> </div></span> </div> <div class="views-field views-field-value-11"> <span class="field-content"></span> </div> </div> -- 2.25.1