lightning
[libreplanet-static.git] / 2020 / includes / generated-bios.html
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6 <h3>Keynote Speakers</h3>
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9 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3282">
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11 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
12 <h2 style="clear:both">For us, by us: Free technology, community science, and the pursuit of environmental problem solving</h2>
13 <div class="talkblockheader">
14 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3282">Sunday 09:45 - 10:30 - Opening Keynote</a>
15 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
16 </br>
17 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack12">Keynote</span>
18 </div>
19 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">In a world increasingly defined by environmental deregulation, how can free tools and technology alter the ability for communities to be part of the solution? This talk will explore a decade of work where community science and free technology have been used to support people in addressing environmental concerns. Focusing on the work of Public Lab, the talk will take us from the 2010 BP oil disaster through the rapid growth of free technology for environmental monitoring, and take a closer look at the challenges we face going forward with data, hardware, and governance.</div></div>
20 </div>
21
22 <div class="speakerblock">
23 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Dosemagen_bio image 2020.JPG">
24 <h2>Shannon Dosemagen</h2></div>
25 <div class="webform-long-answer">Shannon is an environmental health advocate and a community science champion, and is enthusiastic about the potential for free systems and technology to support the creation of a more just and equitable future.<br />
26 <br />
27 Shannon has spent the last twenty years working with environmental and public health groups to address declining freshwater resources, coastal land loss, and building monitoring programs with communities living adjacent to industrial facilities. During 2020, she will be a Fellow with the Shuttleworth Foundation, working on new concept called the Open Environmental Data Project. Shannon is co-founder and current executive director of Public Lab, an organizer of the Gathering for Open Science Hardware, and previous chair of both the US EPA National Advisory Council on Environmental Policy and Technology, and the Citizen Science Association. She is an Ashoka Fellow, and a senior Fellow of the Environmental Leadership Program. She is a previous Fellow at both the Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, and Loyola University Environmental Communications Institute. Follow her on Twitter @sdosemagen for the latest.</div>
28 </div></span> </div> </div>
29 <div class="views-row views-row-2 views-row-even">
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31 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3284">
32
33 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
34 <h2 style="clear:both">Locking the Web open: A decentralized web that can operate as free software does</h2>
35 <div class="talkblockheader">
36 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3284">Sunday 17:15 - 18:00 - Closing Keynote</a>
37 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
38 </br>
39 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack12">Keynote</span>
40 </div>
41 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">30 years after the World Wide Web was created, can we now make it better? How can we ensure that our most important values -- privacy, free speech, and free access to knowledge -- are enshrined in the code itself? In a provocative call to action, entrepreneur and libre Internet advocate Brewster Kahle challenges us to build a better, decentralized Web based on new distributed technologies. Web site content and code could be served peer-to-peer, with decentralized pseudonymous identity, and even payment models. What a world it could be! He lays out a path to creating a new Web that is reliable, private, but still fun -- in order to lock the Web open for good.</div></div>
42 </div>
43
44 <div class="speakerblock">
45 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Brewster-Kahle.jpeg">
46 <h2>Brewster Kahle</h2></div>
47 <div class="webform-long-answer">Brewster Kahle is a passionate advocate for public Internet access, and a successful entrepreneur, and he has spent his career intent on a singular focus: providing Universal Access to All Knowledge. He is the founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive, one of the largest libraries in the world. Soon after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied artificial intelligence, Kahle helped found the company Thinking Machines, a parallel supercomputer maker. In 1989, Kahle created the Internet&#039;s first publishing system, called Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), later selling the company to AOL. In 1996, Kahle co-founded Alexa Internet, which helps catalog the Web, selling it to Amazon.com in 1999. The Internet Archive, which he founded in 1996, now preserves 50 petabytes of data: the books, Web pages, music, television, and software of our cultural heritage, working with more than 600 library and university partners to create a digital library, accessible to all.</div>
48 </div></span> </div> </div>
49 <div class="views-row views-row-3 views-row-odd views-row-last">
50
51 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3288">
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53 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
54 <h2 style="clear:both">Free the Future Young Hackers Keynote Panel</h2>
55 <div class="talkblockheader">
56 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3288">Saturday 09:45 - 10:30 - Opening Keynote</a>
57 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
58 </br>
59 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack12">Keynote</span>
60 </div>
61 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">The future of the free software movement depends upon the work of its youngest members, the developers and community members responsible for carrying on the legacy of its founding ideas. As all of us in the world of free software have something to learn from this generation of newcomers, the FSF will be presenting an interview panel with three rising members of the community: Alyssa Rosenzweig, Panfrost developer and former FSF intern; Taowa, the youngest (non-uploading) Debian Developer in the project&#039;s history; and Erin Moon, developer of the Rustodon implementation of ActivityPub.<br />
62 <br />
63 The panel will focus on topics that are crucial to the movement&#039;s continuing success and &quot;freeing the future,&quot; including keeping our focus on the principles of freedom, making a place for the youngest or historically excluded members of the community, and responding to the rise of surveillance capitalism. The panel will be moderated by Greg Farough, campaigns manager of the FSF.</div></div>
64 </div>
65
66 <div class="speakerblock">
67 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/panel.png">
68 <h2>Alyssa Rosenzweig, Taowa, and Erin Moon</h2></div>
69 <div class="webform-long-answer">Alyssa Rosenzweig is a free software hacker working at Collabora. Passionate about freedom at the lowest levels, she leads the Panfrost project to build a free graphics stack for Mali GPUs. She is studying Applied Mathematics at the University of Toronto as a Lester B. Pearson International Scholar. Outside school and software, she likes to make pony puns on XMPP, trot around Toronto, and horse around in the kitchen.<br />
70 <br />
71 Taowa is a (non-uploading) Debian Developer, sysadmin, and free software enthusiast. His interests are in privacy and security tools (and making these accessible to everyone), as well as amateur radio, networking and electronics. Did we mention he&#039;s not old enough to vote yet?<br />
72 <br />
73 Erin Moon is an engineer, student, musician, and very tired. She&#039;s used, contributed to, and developed free software since she was a small kid. Over the last three years, her open source work has focused on federated social media software, as a user, contributor, and maintainer. Her other personal work includes digital signal processing research for musical purposes, ROM hacking, operating system development, and electrical hardware engineering.</div>
74 </div></span> </div> </div>
75 <h3>Speakers</h3>
76 <div class="views-row views-row-1 views-row-odd views-row-first">
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78 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2343">
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80 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
81 <h2 style="clear:both">Diversity in free software projects: A statistical analysis</h2>
82 <div class="talkblockheader">
83 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2343">Saturday 15:25 - 16:10</a>
84 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
85 </br>
86 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
87 </div>
88 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Following our studies on the Turing Award and SoundCloud (&quot;Behind the curtains of diversity at a technology company&quot;), we now turn to diversity and free software projects. In this study, we applied the same methods of inquiry that are commonplace in most sciences: statistics and critical analysis.<br />
89 <br />
90 A variety of free software projects -- both big and small -- will be reviewed from the point of view of their ability to include a diverse set of contributors. A statistical analysis will be provided, the datasets will be made public, and recommendations will be attempted.<br />
91 <br />
92 </div></div>
93 </div>
94
95 <div class="speakerblock">
96 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2020/assets/logo-lores.png">
97 <h2>Camille Akmut</h2></div>
98 Camille Akmut is a researcher.
99 </div></span> </div> </div>
100 <div class="views-row views-row-2 views-row-even">
101
102 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2666">
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104 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
105 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software for minorities in Turkey in their own languages</h2>
106 <div class="talkblockheader">
107 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2666">Sunday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
108 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
109 </br>
110 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
111 </div>
112 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">In Turkey, along the Anatolia, more than 25 languages are spoken. Our organization, Özgür Yazılım Derneği (Free Software Association of Turkey), wanted to translate our Web site and works to Anatolian languages including Kurdish, Zazaki, Lazuri, and Homshetsi. Through conversations with culture institutes and associations, we learned that Anatolian minorities, who are also enduring repressive assimilation policies, are not able to use their devices with their own languages. <br />
113 <br />
114 Free software and freedom philosophy gives a ray of hope to Anatolian minorities. We are “freeing the future” by translating and documenting GNU/Linux, GNOME, Firefox, LibrePlanet, and perhaps Android/Replicant to their languages, as well as Wiktionary and Wikisource, to help them keep their languages alive.</div></div>
115 </div>
116
117 <div class="speakerblock">
118 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/OzcanAlper.png">
119 <h2>Özcan Oğuz and Alper Atmaca</h2></div>
120 <div class="webform-long-answer">Özcan Oğuz <br />
121 Özcan Oğuz is the president of the Free Software Association (Özgür Yazılım Derneği) in Turkey. Ze started to use computers when ze was 2, in 1999. In 2007, with the Pardus project, ze first encountered free software philosophy and starting from then ze uses exclusively free software in zis devices. Ze graduated from Kadıköy Anadolu High School and Boğaziçi University. From 2016 to 2018, ze was working as publisher and journalist at Çırak mag and Abaküs Kitap. In 2017, ze founded Hackerspace Istanbul in Kadıköy, İstanbul. For three years, ze has been an instructor at Mustafa Akgül Free Software Camps, teaching GNU/Linux system administration.<br />
122 <br />
123 Alper Atmaca<br />
124 Born into 56K era and run his clock with potatoes when he was a child.<br />
125 Failed to keep time accurately with potatoes and upgraded to solar<br />
126 power. Failed again, kept learning and became a part of hacker<br />
127 community. Graduated from Law faculty, become a lawyer and applies his<br />
128 technological knowledge to law. Strict online privacy advocate, free<br />
129 software user/advocate, Hackerspace Istanbul (hs.ist) member and very<br />
130 interested in anything encrypted.</div>
131 </div></span> </div> </div>
132 <div class="views-row views-row-3 views-row-odd">
133
134 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2680">
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136 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
137 <h2 style="clear:both">Lessons learned from cultivating free software projects and communities</h2>
138 <div class="talkblockheader">
139 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2680">Saturday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
140 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
141 </br>
142 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack3">Community</span>
143 </div>
144 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Over the last decade, I’ve had the privilege professionally of building and cultivating some free software projects and communities. This isn’t a tools talk: this is a talk about the soft skills you have to have to be able to succeed as a leader in an free software project. I’ve learned a ton on this journey; honestly I still am learning, but I have some lessons to share, and hopefully, I can warn attendees about pitfalls that can cause wasted cycles and pain. Topics will include scoping your project, personally-backed versus corporate-backed projects, why empathy and audience is important, celebrations, defeats, successful traits of free software projects, and more.</div></div>
145 </div>
146
147 <div class="speakerblock">
148 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/jjasghar_vmworld19.jpg">
149 <h2>JJ Asghar</h2></div>
150 <div class="webform-long-answer">JJ works on the IBM cloud as a developer advocate. He’s focusing on the IBM Kubernetes service, trying to help companies and users have a successful onboarding to the Cloud Native ecosystem.<br />
151 <br />
152 He lives and grew up in Austin, Texas. He enjoys a good strong stout, a hoppy IPA, and Dwarf Fortress, Rimworld, and Factorio. He’s a member of the Church of Emacs, though he jumps into Vim on remote machines. He usually chooses Ubuntu over CentOS, but secretly wants FreeBSD everywhere. He’s always trying to become a better Ruby developer, but experiments with Go, Python, and only when he has to, Node. A father and husband, if he’s not trying to automate his job away, he’s always trying to convince his daughters to “be button makers, not button pushers.”</div>
153 </div></span> </div> </div>
154 <div class="views-row views-row-4 views-row-even">
155
156 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3269">
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158 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
159 <h2 style="clear:both">How to make more users love free software</h2>
160 <div class="talkblockheader">
161 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3269">Sunday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
162 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
163 </br>
164 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack3">Community</span>
165 </div>
166 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">In the free software ecosystem most users end up being someone who has a technological background. Meanwhile, many regular software users stick to proprietary solutions.<br />
167 <br />
168 This talk covers the love story between free software and usability and how easily we can improve the user experience on our products by running usability tests along different stages of the development cycle. Further, we will learn how to run these tests on our own, while commenting on experiences running usability tests on GNOME. We also discuss how to create ways for the community to start contributing. </div></div>
169 </div>
170
171 <div class="speakerblock">
172 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Clarissa.jpg">
173 <h2>Clarissa Borges</h2></div>
174 <div class="webform-long-answer">Clarissa Borges is a Software Engineering student at the University of Brasília, where she learned to love free software. She always loved designing software architectures, programming, and automating tasks. But knowing all of this was not enough, because the whole point of creating software for her was to ease people&#039;s lives, and she didn&#039;t know how to make her software more usable.<br />
175 <br />
176 At this point, Clarissa heard about Outreachy and found a Usability Research project to GNOME. This was the perfect occasion to contribute to a software she has been using for so many years and learn how to improve usability on software products. From December 2018 to March 2019, she worked running usability tests to some important GNOME programs, such as Settings, Notes, Nautilus/ Files, Calendar and Gedit.<br />
177 <br />
178 After the internship, she wanted to help GNOME with frequent usability tests contributions. To archieve that, she has been working on her undergraduate thesis to find a solution to facilitate to non-technical people to contribute with usability tests. She has also been contributing to GNOME, encouraging people to become contributors and being active on GNOME&#039;s Brazilian community. </div>
179 </div></span> </div> </div>
180 <div class="views-row views-row-5 views-row-odd">
181
182 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2572">
183
184 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
185 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software for community radio: LibreTime and other software tools</h2>
186 <div class="talkblockheader">
187 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2572">Saturday 15:25 - 16:10</a>
188 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
189 </br>
190 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
191 </div>
192 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">This presentation will provide a summary of current free software tools that can be used in operating a terrestrial or Internet-based community radio station. It will focus primarily on LibreTime, an AGPLv3-licensed radio automation system, and some of the underlying free software components it is built with, including Icecast and Liquidsoap. I will share how LibreTime is used by my community FM station, WCRS-LP, to operate our broadcast using primarily free software, and some of the challenges faced in doing so. I will also share information about some other free software projects, like AzuraCast and Rivendell, to provide overview of the free software landscape for radio stations. My hope is this will serve as a blueprint of inspiration for other people seeking ways of running their radio station using free software. Community media can serve a vital role in informing the public, and free software can play an essential part of this.</div></div>
193 </div>
194
195 <div class="speakerblock">
196 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/D3003C9E-85A9-45BC-A451-9C6D4A58A8EC.jpeg">
197 <h2>Robb Ebright</h2></div>
198 <div class="webform-long-answer">Robb Ebright is a longtime free software developer and community media activist. For over ten years, he has helped run WCRS-LP, a community radio station in Columbus, Ohio. He has volunteered as a webmaster for community media projects and activist groups for over twenty years. Currently, he is a full-time parent working on his masters in computer science at Georgia Tech. </div>
199 </div></span> </div> </div>
200 <div class="views-row views-row-6 views-row-even">
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202 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2776">
203
204 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
205 <h2 style="clear:both">Why do government projects struggle to produce free software?</h2>
206 <div class="talkblockheader">
207 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2776">Saturday 16:20 - 17:05</a>
208 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
209 </br>
210 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack5">Free software in Government</span>
211 </div>
212 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Government projects generally either do not attempt, or struggle to produce, free software. Projects often utilize free software components, but seldom attempt to create their own. The challenge is helping government entities understand and prioritize the importance of using public resources to create public goods, as well as how to create policy, budgetary, and legal environments which enable projects to produce free software. This discussion focuses on systemic factors which impede the creation of free software in the public sector, and strategies to improve outcomes.</div></div>
213 </div>
214
215 <div class="speakerblock">
216 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/tonyf_webbio.jpg">
217 <h2>Tony Fortenberry</h2></div>
218 <div class="webform-long-answer">Tony Fortenberry was the director of the California Child Welfare Digital Services (CWDS) project from 2016-2018. With a budget of approximately $500M and more than 300 team members, CWDS was the largest US government digital services initiative attempting to leverage free software components, Agile methodology, and user-centered design to produce a free software product licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License.<br />
219 <br />
220 Prior to serving in the California state government, Tony was CIO at the City of Northglenn and CTO at Communication Service for the Deaf. He is currently the founder and executive director at Open Solutions For Government, a nonprofit organization.</div>
221 </div></span> </div> </div>
222 <div class="views-row views-row-7 views-row-odd">
223
224 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2334">
225
226 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
227 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software and the digital divide</h2>
228 <div class="talkblockheader">
229 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2334">Sunday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
230 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
231 </br>
232 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
233 </div>
234 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Free Geek Toronto is a nonprofit organization that seeks out unwanted electronics donations for reuse, primarily using free software. Our model focuses on building digital inclusion by accessible technology while also providing skills building and employment opportunities to community members facing barriers to participation. This also reduces the waste that ends up in landfills, and helps combat the problem of lack of access to personal computing devices, which is necessary to close the digital divide.<br />
235 <br />
236 This presentation focuses on the positives, challenges, and ongoing conversation around using free software to bridge the digital divide, specifically on barriers to entry regarding the level of digital literacy required to complete daily tasks using free software, involving people in the circular economy model of technology reuse, and what possible solutions exist or can be developed.<br />
237 </div></div>
238 </div>
239
240 <div class="speakerblock">
241 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2020/assets/logo-lores.png">
242 <h2>Ryan Fukunaga</h2></div>
243 <div class="webform-long-answer">Ryan is the executive director of Free Geek Toronto, an employment social enterprise focused on increasing digital inclusion in Toronto through the reuse of electronic equipment. Working here has allowed Ryan to focus on his interests in capacity building, fostering a DIY/hacker/maker<br />
244 ethos, environmental stewardship, and building technological resiliency for marginalized communities.<br />
245 <br />
246 For the past five years, he has also been the project lead of Digital Storytelling Toronto, an initiative aimed at increasing digital literacy through storytelling in community and nonprofit organizations. Through this work, he has completed projects with the University of Toronto Scarborough, Brock University, East Scarborough Storefront, Children&#039;s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, and Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital.<br />
247 <br />
248 Ryan holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, and a Bachelor of Education from the University of Windsor, along with years of experience managing small business IT infrastructure.</div>
249 </div></span> </div> </div>
250 <div class="views-row views-row-8 views-row-even">
251
252 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2856">
253
254 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
255 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software enables free science</h2>
256 <div class="talkblockheader">
257 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2856">Saturday 15:25 - 16:10</a>
258 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
259 </br>
260 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack3">Community</span>
261 </div>
262 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">The principles of free software encourage and enable free science. This talk will cover one academic&#039;s experience with free software in academia. The major takeaway is that the principles of free software make for good science. The talk will cover topics on free software development for research purposes, including dissemination and evaluation, as well as teaching, both for supporting education and for teaching about the tools themselves. I will go over (1) how free software has supported my own research by enabling sharing and integration of multiple research projects; (2) how free software is (or is not) used in the academic literature and the effects on repeatability; and (3) how I integrate free software tools in my own courses.</div></div>
263 </div>
264
265 <div class="speakerblock">
266 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/paulgazz.jpg">
267 <h2>Paul Gazzillo</h2></div>
268 <div class="webform-long-answer">Paul Gazzillo is an assistant professor of computer science at University of Central Florida. His research aims to make it easier to develop safe and secure software, and it spans programming languages, security, software engineering, and systems. Projects include analysis of configurable systems, side-channel attack detection, and concurrent smart contracts.</div>
269 </div></span> </div> </div>
270 <div class="views-row views-row-9 views-row-odd">
271
272 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2692">
273
274 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
275 <h2 style="clear:both">Rented future: The dangerous rise of life as a service</h2>
276 <div class="talkblockheader">
277 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2692">Saturday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
278 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
279 </br>
280 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack10">Exploring Free Software concepts</span>
281 </div>
282 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">We are entering the post-ownership age. In recent years, the Service as a Software Substitute (SaaSS) model, which is already dominant in many areas of consumer software, has begun to spread into other aspects of our lives. It will soon be, if it isn&#039;t already, possible to live without actually owning possessions. You can now get your clothes, electronics and food -- among many other items -- on subscription, as well as real-world services such as laundry and transport. In time, we are set to see a handful of companies renting you everything you rely on, and that gives them incredible power, not only in terms of your possessions, but also in terms of their ideological control over you and the wider population. This session explores the potential damage of the Life as a Service (LaaS) model, and what free software can do to help.</div></div>
283 </div>
284
285 <div class="speakerblock">
286 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/lucy-ingham.jpg">
287 <h2>Lucy Ingham</h2></div>
288 <div class="webform-long-answer">Lucy Ingham is a technology journalist and the editor of the Web site and digital magazine &quot;Verdict.&quot; She is the former editor of the futurist site &quot;Factor,&quot; and she specializes in exploring how technology is shaping the world we live in. </div>
289 </div></span> </div> </div>
290 <div class="views-row views-row-10 views-row-even">
291
292 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2599">
293
294 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
295 <h2 style="clear:both">Field notes from a digital rights activist</h2>
296 <div class="talkblockheader">
297 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2599">Saturday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
298 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
299 </br>
300 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
301 </div>
302 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Drawing on their work doing privacy workshops, art exhibitions, and free software advocacy, Giselle will discuss community building strategies and heuristics in two seemingly different environments, the US and China. They will examine cultural perspectives, and reflect on those experiences to help us better understand ourselves and how to communicate with others to grow the free software movement.</div></div>
303 </div>
304
305 <div class="speakerblock">
306 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/signal-attachment-2019-10-19-144649.jpeg">
307 <h2>Giselle Jhunjhnuwala</h2></div>
308 <div class="webform-long-answer">Giselle is an artist, self-taught programmer, and Outreachy alumna. They like to explore the intersections of art, science, and technology, and have been exclusively using free software in their practice for several years. They have worked in technology and at an import/export multinational company, which enabled them to travel back and forth between China and the US. They are a member of the Pittsburgh Restore the Fourth chapter, The Big Idea (a collectively run bookstore), and the Stranger Company Art Collective. In their spare time, they volunteer for various free software projects such as Mediawiki, and write songs about PGP. They have exhibited at a number of private and state galleries in China, as well as in the US.</div>
309 </div></span> </div> </div>
310 <div class="views-row views-row-11 views-row-odd">
311
312 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2528">
313
314 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
315 <h2 style="clear:both">Transparent code, secure data: Selling free software to the US Government, our bosses, and ourselves</h2>
316 <div class="talkblockheader">
317 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2528">Saturday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
318 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
319 </br>
320 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack5">Free software in Government</span>
321 </div>
322 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">How many times have you heard someone say that free software seems insecure, that it’s buggy, that it’s a pain to install or use, or that it just looks unprofessional? We love using and championing free software, but how do we sell it in our work? How do we convince clients that free software is professional, secure, reliable, and useful? And how do we help them learn about the ethical and moral value of free software, and empower them to share that message? In this session, we’ll talk through our methods of promoting free software in government digital services projects. We’ll share some wins, some not so successful attempts, and some future initiatives, and talk about how you can make changes at your own organizations. And we’ll share our git repo with some playbooks and strategies for those who want to bring this work back to their own companies!</div></div>
323 </div>
324
325 <div class="speakerblock">
326 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Karen-Johnson.jpg">
327 <h2>Karen Johnson</h2></div>
328 <div class="webform-long-answer">Karen Johnson is curious, self-motivated, and addicted to learning. She keeps software systems healthy, and is constantly looking for ways to automate, standardize, and improve the way they work. She is known for tackling hard problems and coming up with creative, repeatable solutions.<br />
329 <br />
330 Karen studied art history at Bard College, but soon fell in love with technology systems (especially GNU/Linux) -- so she followed her heart and became a tech nerd. She’s also a darn good tango dancer, and an enthusiastic reader of science fiction.<br />
331 <br />
332 This talk will be co-presented with Fen Labalme, who loves to create solutions for problems before they arise. His current mission is to empower better government by delivering free software security and compliance solutions that improve upon previous proprietary systems. He’s also working on automating the ATO process, making it easier for agencies to do business securely. He applies over twenty years of IT experience (and a relentless sense of humor) to mentor CivicActions engineers in creating modern, secure systems for clients.<br />
333 <br />
334 Fen is a Certified Information System Security Professional (CISSP) and a long-time advocate of handling information wisely. His computer science and electrical engineering thesis at MIT presaged the privacy concerns facing today’s Internet and social media platforms. His close-knit family enjoys traveling to historic locations, campaigning for a greener Earth, and playing/cheering at hockey games.</div>
335 </div></span> </div> </div>
336 <div class="views-row views-row-12 views-row-even">
337
338 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2435">
339
340 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
341 <h2 style="clear:both">The GPL is great for companies</h2>
342 <div class="talkblockheader">
343 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2435">Sunday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
344 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
345 </br>
346 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack1">Licensing</span>
347 </div>
348 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">In the last few years, a lot of companies have claimed that free software licenses are bad for business, or that it&#039;s not possible to build a successful startup and company around free software. This talk explains why this is fundamentally wrong, and that it’s absolutely possible to build a working startup and company on top of a free software product. We will discuss how companies like Red Hat, SUSE, and Nextcloud all manage to have 100% free software products, which include big contributor communities, but are still able to pay developers and grow.<br />
349 </div></div>
350 </div>
351
352 <div class="speakerblock">
353 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Frank-small.jpg">
354 <h2>Frank Karlitschek</h2></div>
355 <div class="webform-long-answer">Frank Karlitschek is a longtime free software contributor, and former board member of the KDE e.V. He founded ownCloud in 2010, and its successor, Nextcloud, in 2016, to create a fully free software and decentralized alternative to big centralized cloud companies. Frank was an invited expert at the W3C, to help to create the ActivityPub standard. Frank has spoken at MIT, CERN, Harvard, and ETH, and keynoted LinuxCon, Latinoware, FOSSASIA, Campus Party, and many other conferences. Frank is the founder and CEO of Nextcloud GmbH. He is also a fellow of Open Forum Europe, and an advisor to the United Nations. </div>
356 </div></span> </div> </div>
357 <div class="views-row views-row-13 views-row-odd">
358
359 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2718">
360
361 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
362 <h2 style="clear:both">Public Money? Public Code! A campaign framework to promote software freedom</h2>
363 <div class="talkblockheader">
364 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2718">Sunday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
365 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
366 </br>
367 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack5">Free software in Government</span>
368 </div>
369 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Do you want to promote free software in public administrations? Then the campaign framework of &quot;Public Money? Public Code!&quot; might be the right choice for you. In this European Union campaign, more than 170 organizations and more than 26,000 individuals have come together to demand that publicly financed software should be made publicly available under free software licenses. Together, we contacted politicians and civil servants on all levels -- from the European Union and national governments to city mayors and the heads of public libraries -- about this demand. This effort started with important discussions about software freedom with decision makers, and has already resulted in specific policy changes.<br />
370 <br />
371 In this talk, I will explain how the campaign framework can be used to push for the adoption of free software-friendly policies in your area.</div></div>
372 </div>
373
374 <div class="speakerblock">
375 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/MatthiasKirschner-s0t0s0-2000.jpg">
376 <h2>Matthias Kirschner</h2></div>
377 <div class="webform-long-answer">Matthias Kirschner is the president of the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE). In 1999, he started using GNU/Linux, and realized that software is deeply involved in all aspects of our lives, and this convinced him that technology has to empower society, not restrict it. While studying political and administrative science, he joined FSFE in 2004.<br />
378 <br />
379 He helps other organizations, companies, and governments to understand how they can benefit from free software -- which gives everybody the rights to use, understand, adapt and share software -- and how those rights help to support freedom of speech, freedom of press, and our right to privacy.</div>
380 </div></span> </div> </div>
381 <div class="views-row views-row-14 views-row-even">
382
383 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2748">
384
385 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
386 <h2 style="clear:both">Reconciling all of our social justice causes: Software freedom, and the rest</h2>
387 <div class="talkblockheader">
388 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2748">Saturday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
389 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
390 </br>
391 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
392 </div>
393 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Serious software freedom activists aren&#039;t typically &quot;single issue&quot; folks. Furthermore, now that software is essential to modern work and living, software freedom, which was once a mostly isolated issue, intersects daily with other serious and important causes on a regular basis.<br />
394 <br />
395 We now have seen a strong movement demanding a new wave of licenses, which are undoubtedly nonfree, but have their &quot;heart in the right place&quot; in their desire to stop oppression and mistreatment of others. Once it was a fringe licensing question, but now, how software freedom interacts with other causes is the meta-issue of our day.<br />
396 <br />
397 This talk will be a mostly personal story of how I have personally reconciled my other social justice causes and activist concerns (such as vegetarianism) with my work in free software. I will provide some concrete suggestions on how to balance activism for other causes you care about while keeping software freedom as your primary focus. <br />
398 <br />
399 </div></div>
400 </div>
401
402 <div class="speakerblock">
403 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/bkuhn-photo-2017.jpg">
404 <h2>Bradley Kuhn</h2></div>
405 <div class="webform-long-answer">Bradley M. Kuhn is the policy fellow and hacker-in-residence at Software Freedom Conservancy, and editor in chief of copyleft.org. Kuhn began his work in the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, and was an early adopter of GNU/Linux systems. Kuhn&#039;s nonprofit career began in 2000 at the FSF. As FSF&#039;s executive director from 2001-2005, Kuhn led FSF&#039;s GPL enforcement, and invented the Affero GPL. Kuhn began as Conservancy&#039;s primary volunteer from 2006-2010, and was its first staff person. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude BS in computer science from Loyola University in Maryland, and an MS in computer science from the University of Cincinnati.</div>
406 </div></span> </div> </div>
407 <div class="views-row views-row-15 views-row-odd">
408
409 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2775">
410
411 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
412 <h2 style="clear:both">Keeping secrets: What you need to know about encryption</h2>
413 <div class="talkblockheader">
414 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2775">Saturday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
415 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
416 </br>
417 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack10">Exploring Free Software concepts</span>
418 </div>
419 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">From ciphers to cybersecurity, encryption is all around us. We rely on digital security while we bank, shop, and communicate. At the core of that security lies encryption. As developers, we use some form of encryption in our work every day. Maybe we are storing or sending data online, implementing authentication protocols, or protecting our customers&#039; payment information. <br />
420 <br />
421 This talk will cover the basics of a topic extensive enough to spend years studying. What is encryption? How does it work? Why is it important? You can expect to come away with a solid understanding of the foundational concepts of encryption. We will also take a little bit of time to peek into the future of encryption, where things are getting exciting!</div></div>
422 </div>
423
424 <div class="speakerblock">
425 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/DeeDeeLavinder.png">
426 <h2>DeeDee Lavinder</h2></div>
427 <div class="webform-long-answer">DeeDee Lavinder currently works as a backend engineer, and is a director of Women Who Code Raleigh/Durham. The juxtaposition of analytical thinking and creative problem solving is where she is happiest, and she is particularly thrilled about working in that sweet spot while writing code. When something is hard, she goes deep to understand -- ask her about encoding! When not coding, you can find her listening to audiobooks, driving small people around town, or coordinating something somewhere.</div>
428 </div></span> </div> </div>
429 <div class="views-row views-row-16 views-row-even">
430
431 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2710">
432
433 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
434 <h2 style="clear:both">Secure Scuttlebutt: Peer-to-peer collaboration and community infrastructure</h2>
435 <div class="talkblockheader">
436 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2710">Sunday 15:25 - 16:10</a>
437 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
438 </br>
439 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
440 </div>
441 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Secure Scuttlebutt (SSB) is a technology for decentralized, peer-to-peer, offline-first social media applications based on cryptographic identities. In this session, we will introduce the SSB network and protocol. We will present some of the applications on the network for social networking, games, and code collaboration. We will also look at the values and culture emergent on the SSB network (including the solarpunk aesthetic), how it organizes and funds itself, how it practices diversity and inclusion, and where it may head in the future.</div></div>
442 </div>
443
444 <div class="speakerblock">
445 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/cel.jpg">
446 <h2>Charles Lehner</h2></div>
447 <div class="webform-long-answer">Charles E. Lehner (@cel) is a software developer building collaborative applications on the Secure Scuttlebutt Network.</div>
448 </div></span> </div> </div>
449 <div class="views-row views-row-17 views-row-odd">
450
451 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2743">
452
453 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
454 <h2 style="clear:both">How to teach students about free software</h2>
455 <div class="talkblockheader">
456 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2743">Saturday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
457 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
458 </br>
459 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack1">Licensing</span>
460 </div>
461 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">As most free software advocates know, it can be very difficult to explain the central concepts to people who have never heard of these ideas before. If you introduce too many things at once, people tend to tune you out from being overwhelmed, and then they don&#039;t really appreciate the benefits of free software. <br />
462 <br />
463 This presentation will explain effective strategies to teach the next generation what free software is, how it differs from proprietary software, and how licenses like the GPL and BSD 3-Clause have similar goals yet different legal implementations. William has been teaching (and grading) his college students on these concepts, and he will show you how to do the same for your students or your friends. Foundational legal concepts like copyright, patents, and trademarks will be clarified, as well as how to break down the main software license categories: copyleft (strong/weak), permissive, and proprietary.</div></div>
464 </div>
465
466 <div class="speakerblock">
467 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/IMG_20191119_105151174_Headshot.jpg">
468 <h2>William Liggett</h2></div>
469 <div class="webform-long-answer">William Paul Liggett is a software engineering professor at the Northern Virginia Community College, where he teaches classes on Java, Python, HTML5/CSS3/JavaScript, Relational Databases, Cybersecurity, and GNU/Linux. He also is the owner and coder of junktext.com, where he does freelance development for others. William previously worked in the US defense and intelligence communities as a software developer, IT project manager, and systems administrator. He served in the US Marine Corps, where he was meritoriously promoted to Sergeant (E-5). He is also very skilled at amazing and very funny jokes!</div>
470 </div></span> </div> </div>
471 <div class="views-row views-row-18 views-row-even">
472
473 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3272">
474
475 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
476 <h2 style="clear:both">The Four Free-ums?</h2>
477 <div class="talkblockheader">
478 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3272">Sunday 15:25 - 16:10</a>
479 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
480 </br>
481 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack1">Licensing</span>
482 </div>
483 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Software licenses that give people freedom are facing scrutiny from a variety of interests and organizations. This session seeks to articulate the core values of software freedom: how the tenets of FSF&#039;s Four Freedoms and the Open Source Definition&#039;s criteria enable networks of collaboration and co-creation. Current issues from a variety of interested parties are considered, not on their value as a movement, but rather their impact on the freedoms to run, study, modify, and redistribute works. Alternative approaches to licensing that can address concerns of communities will also be offered.</div></div>
484 </div>
485
486 <div class="speakerblock">
487 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/masson.png">
488 <h2>Patrick Masson</h2></div>
489 <div class="webform-long-answer">Patrick Masson joined the Open Source Initiative as General Manager in November of 2013 after working in higher education technology for over twenty years, including roles as Director of the UCLA Media Lab, CIO within The State University of New York, and most recently, CTO at UMassOnline. Patrick is an Adjunct Professor at the University at Albany, teaching Open Source Principles and Practices within the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences&#039; Department of Informatics. Patrick has worked to promote the awareness and adoption of open source, particularly within education, throughout his career. He served on the Jasig Foundation&#039;s Board of Directors, and is currently on the Apereo Foundation&#039;s Advisory Council as well as Brandeis University&#039;s Graduate Professional Studies Advisory Board. He is the co-founder of the Educause Constituency Group on Openness. Patrick was also elected to his local Board of Education in 2014.</div>
490 </div></span> </div> </div>
491 <div class="views-row views-row-19 views-row-odd">
492
493 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2721">
494
495 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
496 <h2 style="clear:both">Platform cooperativism, surveillance capitalism, predictive analysis, and you</h2>
497 <div class="talkblockheader">
498 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2721">Saturday 16:20 - 17:05</a>
499 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
500 </br>
501 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
502 </div>
503 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Our data makes us unique. How can we own our data? Are we more powerful if we align into groups? How do we own the software platforms we use? How does cooperative development work? How do we share work on large projects? Why and how will free software help us in this era of surveillance? There are so many questions, and very little time for us to come up with solutions or responses. The tech industry has all but left free software in the dust, while spreading malware and using disingenuous advertising campaigns. We can find ways to build the future with free software, but we also need to raise awareness. Although free software is not the answer to all of society&#039;s problems, it plays a huge role in how much control we have over our own data and our own future as citizens and as workers.</div></div>
504 </div>
505
506 <div class="speakerblock">
507 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/micky-metts-200x200-c-micky-metts-cc0-1-0.png">
508 <h2>Micky Metts</h2></div>
509 <div class="webform-long-answer">Micky is a worker/owner of Agaric (agaric.coop) and a member of the “free software for<br />
510 community building” movement, using free software tools like VOIP, Drupal, and GNU/Linux. She is a liaison between the US Solidarity Economy Network (SEN), a group devoted to ongoing dialogue on building the new economy network, and the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC), the national grassroots organization of US worker-owners who are “building power<br />
511 with national and international partners to advance an agenda for economic justice rooted in community-based shared ownership.” As a board member of the MayFirst Technology Movement cooperative, Micky works with technical activists to connect people with the information and tools they need to move from being a global network to becoming a global movement based on solidarity.</div>
512 </div></span> </div> </div>
513 <div class="views-row views-row-20 views-row-even">
514
515 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2724">
516
517 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
518 <h2 style="clear:both">The importance of free software games</h2>
519 <div class="talkblockheader">
520 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2724">Sunday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
521 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
522 </br>
523 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack10">Exploring Free Software concepts</span>
524 </div>
525 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">This talk will explain why free software games with free cultural assets are necessary for the free software movement. I will highlight practical ways that anyone can help improve free software games, regardless of whether we know coding or other skills -- even if you don’t know how to code, you can always spread the word about the games that you love! Then, I will conclude with some easy ways for anyone to do a little free software activism every day.</div></div>
526 </div>
527
528 <div class="speakerblock">
529 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/nov2019.jpg">
530 <h2>Lori Nagel</h2></div>
531 <div class="webform-long-answer">Lori Nagel has worked on and off on the free software multi-player online role playing game project “Wograld,” which you can learn about at wograld.org. She has also written a free culture Web cartoon (see jastiv.com) and a free culture novel (see jastiv.blogspot.com/2019/03/free-culture-novels-where-to-post-them.html).<br />
532 </div>
533 </div></span> </div> </div>
534 <div class="views-row views-row-21 views-row-odd">
535
536 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2744">
537
538 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
539 <h2 style="clear:both">GNU Health Embedded: An introduction</h2>
540 <div class="talkblockheader">
541 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2744">Sunday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
542 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
543 </br>
544 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
545 </div>
546 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">The GNU Health software suite is a libre health and hospital information system with a strong focus on public health. This talk focuses on recent updates to GNU Health Embedded, a version of GNU Health that is being updated as a 100% libre software and hardware platform. It will be tailored for pocket-sized computers, and is currently being developed by PrivacySafe for the Beagleboard.org BeagleBone AI hardware.<br />
547 <br />
548 This shift includes an increased focus on privacy and security, allowing GNU Health to be deployed in a myriad of environments with servers that are, optionally, accessible via the Tor network. This talk will dive into the details of the GNU Health Embedded development effort, and explores user scenarios for the platform.</div></div>
549 </div>
550
551 <div class="speakerblock">
552 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/sean-obrien-02.jpg">
553 <h2>Sean O&#039;Brien</h2></div>
554 <div class="webform-long-answer">Sean O&#039;Brien is a lecturer in law at Yale Law School with expertise in cybersecurity and mobile device forensics. Sean founded Yale Privacy Lab, where his research includes privacy auditing of Android apps. His current focus is IoT device security, work that has culminated in the PrivacySafe appliance and the GNU Health Embedded effort for the platform.</div>
555 </div></span> </div> </div>
556 <div class="views-row views-row-22 views-row-even">
557
558 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2389">
559
560 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
561 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software game restoration</h2>
562 <div class="talkblockheader">
563 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2389">Sunday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
564 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
565 </br>
566 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack10">Exploring Free Software concepts</span>
567 </div>
568 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Games are part of our culture, like books and movies. While we have access to some older games via emulators, we are failing to save our free software history. Many developers try to develop a game, and then the game reaches a satisfactory state or the developer just moves on. Finding these games can be hard. Eventually libraries or languages change, and the game no longer runs. This talk will discuss restoring games for future players to enjoy.</div></div>
569 </div>
570
571 <div class="speakerblock">
572 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2020/assets/logo-lores.png">
573 <h2>Dennis Payne</h2></div>
574 <div class="webform-long-answer">Dennis Payne is a free software game developer in his spare time. He has started Bt Builder and Troll Bridge, and maintains several other games he has stumbled across. &quot;Open Game Source&quot; is a series of articles about his game development efforts.</div>
575 </div></span> </div> </div>
576 <div class="views-row views-row-23 views-row-odd">
577
578 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3270">
579
580 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
581 <h2 style="clear:both">Lightning talks</h2>
582 <div class="talkblockheader">
583 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3270">Sunday 15:25 - 16:10 and 16:20 - 17:05</a>
584 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
585 </br>
586 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack2">LibrePlanet special sessions</span>
587 </div>
588 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">A lightning talk is a five-minute presentation on any topic that you think would be interesting to a group of free software users, hackers, and activists. Each session has time for a total of twelve talks. Since we&#039;re seeking a breadth of relevant topics, submitting a talk does not guarantee you a slot. <br />
589 <br />
590 We&#039;ll pick the twelve talks that we feel are most interesting to our attendees once we&#039;ve gotten enough submissions. We&#039;re especially interested in hearing from new people who haven&#039;t ever spoken at an FSF event! <br />
591 <br />
592 More instructions: <br />
593 https://libreplanet.org/wiki/LibrePlanet:Conference/Lightning_Talks</div></div>
594 </div>
595
596 <div class="speakerblock">
597 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2020/assets/logo-lores.png">
598 <h2>Libre Planet</h2></div>
599 <div class="webform-long-answer">Talk upload instructions<br />
600 You should upload your video to our ftp server:<br />
601 <br />
602 Host: `photoupload.fsf.org`<br />
603 Username: `anonymous`<br />
604 Port: `22`<br />
605 Folder: `upload-here`<br />
606 <br />
607 When you are done uploading email campaigns@fsf.org to let us know what video file to use.</div>
608 </div></span> </div> </div>
609
610 <div class="views-row views-row-25 views-row-odd">
611
612 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2332">
613
614 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
615 <h2 style="clear:both">Public Invention: Free hardware inventions “in the public, for the public”</h2>
616 <div class="talkblockheader">
617 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2332">Sunday 16:20 - 17:05</a>
618 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
619 </br>
620 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
621 </div>
622 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Public Invention is a new nonprofit that hopes to create a movement to help humanity by bringing the values that power the free software movement to hardware and math. The basic tactic is to form teams of inventors that work publicly, in the light, with free licenses.<br />
623 <br />
624 This talk will be accompanied by a demonstration of physical devices that embody the public-invention project-based approach. These projects will be explained as a motivation of our intellectual property policies and specific operating practices. We will briefly touch on the six most advanced projects supported by Public Invention, and briefly mention some of the forty invention ideas that have been donated to Public Invention to develop and build. We will place Public Invention in a historic context, discuss the mission, and explain our vision for the future: a world where inventing “in the public, for the public” is the norm.</div></div>
625 </div>
626
627 <div class="speakerblock">
628 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/libreplanet/2020/assets/logo-lores.png">
629 <h2>Robert Read</h2></div>
630 <div class="webform-long-answer">Robert L. Read, PhD (computer science), after serving in director-level software engineering architecture and management positions, was a Presidential Innovation Fellow in 2013, where he advocated free software in the US federal government. He is a champion of Agile software development methods, an inventor, and a thought-leader. He holds two patents in optics. His most popular publication is “How to be a Programmer.” He began Public Invention in 2015 to produce free-libre hardware inventions and mathematical progress, and the project has mentored about eight students and produced two peer-reviewed papers so far. Rob is also the chief scientist of Skylight Digital, and CTO of Wacuri, Inc. He speaks Esperanto fluently.</div>
631 </div></span> </div> </div>
632 <div class="views-row views-row-26 views-row-even">
633
634 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2686">
635
636 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
637 <h2 style="clear:both">Bicycles as a metaphor for free software</h2>
638 <div class="talkblockheader">
639 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2686">Saturday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
640 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
641 </br>
642 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack10">Exploring Free Software concepts</span>
643 </div>
644 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">While riding from Seattle to Bellingham, from my biking community to my GNU/Linux community, I considered just how freeing each transition had been. Historically, biking has been associated with many things including health, happiness, and feminism. What about free software?<br />
645 <br />
646 During the next 45 minutes, we will explore the free engineering, grassroots innovation, hands-on learning, hidden dangers, bright horizons, and overall rad routes that both free software and bicycles cover mile by mile, together.<br />
647 <br />
648 This ride through history, including the past, present, and future, will leave both free software and cycling enthusiasts with a deeper understanding of what it is that &quot;sparks joy&quot; within members of each group.<br />
649 <br />
650 Join me in an exploration of excitement, engineering, and freedom as we take this journey on two-wheeled, self-powered transportation and transformation!</div></div>
651 </div>
652
653 <div class="speakerblock">
654 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/avatar.png">
655 <h2>. Salt</h2></div>
656 <div class="webform-long-answer">Wm “Salt” Hale is a kilted globetrottter, a free software advocate, lifelong hacker, and Seattle local who studies technology and society at the University of Washington (UW) Department of Communication, and is the community director at Snowdrift.coop. He attends, organizes, and speaks worldwide at conferences, conventions, events, festivals, and faires, and he speaks on various topics including communication, crowdmatching, Internet technologies, GNU/Linux, music, sci-fi/fantasy, security, and windsports. Salt is very approachable, and will always be found wearing a kilt.</div>
657 </div></span> </div> </div>
658 <div class="views-row views-row-27 views-row-odd">
659
660 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2778">
661
662 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
663 <h2 style="clear:both">Font Bakery: Gathering font engineering knowledge while improving a large collection of libre fonts</h2>
664 <div class="talkblockheader">
665 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2778">Saturday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
666 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
667 </br>
668 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
669 </div>
670 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Typography is a complex topic, and there are there are plenty of ways that a digital font can malfunction. Font Bakery aspires to become the ultimate font checking tool. To reach that goal, the project is structured as a collaborative compilation of font engineering knowledge and best practices. <br />
671 <br />
672 This talk will discuss the challenges in gathering font engineering knowledge, and compiling it in a manner that is both effective for the implementation of automated quality checks, and simple and easy to grasp for type designers. We&#039;ll also share insights into git-based workflows for the development of libre fonts.</div></div>
673 </div>
674
675 <div class="speakerblock">
676 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/FSanches-300x300_C.png">
677 <h2>Felipe Sanches</h2></div>
678 <div class="webform-long-answer">Felipe Sanches is a software freedom activist and developer with contributions to the development of graphic design, CAD, 3D printing, and 3D modeling libre software such as Inkscape, OpenSCAD, and GNU LibreDWG. During the last few years, Felipe has provided professional libre software development services focused on font engineering and quality assurance for fonts. You can learn more about his work at https://www.fsf.org/working-together/profiles/felipe-sanches.</div>
679 </div></span> </div> </div>
680 <div class="views-row views-row-28 views-row-even">
681
682 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2361">
683
684 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
685 <h2 style="clear:both">The Gandhian way to freedom and privacy</h2>
686 <div class="talkblockheader">
687 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2361">Sunday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
688 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
689 </br>
690 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
691 </div>
692 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">The time is ripe to build a strong case for individual self-hosting, backed up by community-hosted public network services with mutual trust among members. In this talk, I will build a strong case for individual self-hosting backed up by community-hosted public network services by drawing parallels to Mahatma Gandhi&#039;s &quot;Charkha Movement,&quot; in which the traditional spinning wheel became a powerful symbol of self-sufficiency and freedom. We will need a similar approach within our communities in order to truly own our devices and networks, and reclaim our right to privacy.<br />
693 </div></div>
694 </div>
695
696 <div class="speakerblock">
697 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/NS-PRofile.png">
698 <h2>Nishant Sharma</h2></div>
699 <div class="webform-long-answer">Nishant Sharma is a free software and libre hardware entrepreneur. He is a mechanical engineer by education, and has been making a living from free software since 2003.<br />
700 <br />
701 He is co-founder and tech lead at Unmukti Technology, in India, where he works on building network equipment including SD-WAN gateways, VPN appliances, firewalls, access points, home edge computing gateways, etc. These devices are branded as Hopbox. He also worked for DeepRoot GNU/Linux, an Indian VSAT, and a Pan-European ISP, before founding Unmukti in 2010.<br />
702 <br />
703 Nishant was lead translator for Debian Installer l10n to Hindi during 2006-07, and a OpenStreetMap volunteer mapper. He actively contributes to the OpenWrt project and its packages.<br />
704 <br />
705 These days, he tries to build awareness for building network equipment and self-hosting among students and enterprise decision makers. </div>
706 </div></span> </div> </div>
707 <div class="views-row views-row-29 views-row-odd">
708
709 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2450">
710
711 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
712 <h2 style="clear:both">Patents and freedom: Where we stand now</h2>
713 <div class="talkblockheader">
714 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2450">Sunday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
715 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
716 </br>
717 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack1">Licensing</span>
718 </div>
719 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">For many years, the existence of software patents, and the threat that certain entities would use them against free software, was an issue of significant concern to the free software community. Since then, there have been many court decisions that have altered the landscape of what may be patented, procedures allowing challenges to patents outside of the court system, industry initiatives to create &quot;patent peace&quot; around parts of the free software world, and changes in the behaviors of certain patent holders once thought to present the greatest threat to free software. This presentation will give an overview, designed for a non-legal audience, of the latest developments, and suggest where the future of patents and free software may be headed.</div></div>
720 </div>
721
722 <div class="speakerblock">
723 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/Headshot 1 2017 small.jpg">
724 <h2>McCoy Smith</h2></div>
725 <div class="webform-long-answer">McCoy Smith is the founding attorney at Lex Pan Law, a technology and intellectual property law firm in Portland, Oregon, USA. He also is on the editorial committee of the Journal of Open Law, Technology, &amp; Society (JOLTS). For more than fifteen years, he acted as the primary support attorney for free software matters at Intel Corporation. Prior to joining Intel, he was in private practice in New York, NY and Washington, DC, specializing in IP litigation and patent prosecution. He was also a patent examiner in the US Patent and Trademark Office prior to law school. He is admitted to practice in New York, California, Oregon, and the US Patent &amp; Trademark Office.</div>
726 </div></span> </div> </div>
727 <div class="views-row views-row-30 views-row-even">
728
729 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2725">
730
731 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
732 <h2 style="clear:both">Stewarding technological freedom in agriculture</h2>
733 <div class="talkblockheader">
734 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2725">Saturday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
735 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
736 </br>
737 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
738 </div>
739 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Farming is one of humanity’s oldest technologies, and while the principles of free software may only seem relevant to the past 70 years of innovation, farmers have been struggling to keep their technology free for the last 12 millennia. In this session, we’ll look at some scenarios of where this truth has been borne out in our work creating free farm management software with farmOS, and deploying free hardware solutions with Edge Collective. These projects have shown us that the principles of free software can and do make a real difference to farming communities, both large and small, across the globe. Whether it’s by preserving the right to repair tractors, sensors and other equipment on their farm, or by enshrining their right to access, store, and share their valuable data when, where, and how they choose, granting farmers with more freedom leads to better outcomes for the communities who rely on them.</div></div>
740 </div>
741
742 <div class="speakerblock">
743 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/95381.jpg">
744 <h2>Michael Stenta</h2></div>
745 <div class="webform-long-answer">Michael Stenta is the founder and lead developer of farmOS, a free software farm planning and record-keeping system. <br />
746 <br />
747 This session will feature two additional panelists:<br />
748 <br />
749 * Jamie Gaehring has worked on farms and at farmers&#039; markets for most of the last two decades, and today, builds frontend software for farmers with farmOS. <br />
750 <br />
751 * Don Blair builds free software-compatible hardware systems for agriculture in collaboration with farmers and researchers. <br />
752 <br />
753 All three presenters are members of the Gathering for Open Ag Tech (GOAT / goatech.org).</div>
754 </div></span> </div> </div>
755 <div class="views-row views-row-31 views-row-odd">
756
757 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2769">
758
759 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
760 <h2 style="clear:both">Community healing: Re-establishing norms, trust, and truth after crises</h2>
761 <div class="talkblockheader">
762 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2769">Sunday 16:20 - 17:05</a>
763 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
764 </br>
765 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack3">Community</span>
766 </div>
767 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Free software comprises a commons shared and coordinated voluntarily by users, developers, and others. If we think of free software participants as a self-governing community, they need paths toward setting their own expectations and standards, evaluating facts, and developing trust between them. Those are three interrelated but different kinds of processes. When one of these processes is disrupted, we rely on the others. When all three are disrupted, crises can spiral. Each may need to change, be reconfirmed, or left as an open question. <br />
768 <br />
769 In this talk, we&#039;ll explore practical approaches for community leaders, moderators, and contributors, as well as concepts of deliberative democracy from Habermas&#039; theory of communicative action. </div></div>
770 </div>
771
772 <div class="speakerblock">
773 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/DIYspinningwheel.png">
774 <h2>Katheryn Sutter</h2></div>
775 <div class="webform-long-answer">Katheryn Sutter is an indefatigable DIY tinkerer, and a user of free software and Debian OS for day-to-day computing since 2003. She holds a PhD in community development and policy analysis, and a BS in human resources and family studies. Her fields of expertise include consensus-building, nonprofit board training, qualitative data analysis, and democratic theory.</div>
776 </div></span> </div> </div>
777 <div class="views-row views-row-32 views-row-even">
778
779 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2855">
780
781 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
782 <h2 style="clear:both">Sugar Labs -- Past, Present, and Future</h2>
783 <div class="talkblockheader">
784 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2855">Sunday 14:30 - 15:15</a>
785 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
786 </br>
787 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
788 </div>
789 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Sugar Labs is a community of developers, teachers, and students, all working together on educational free software projects. Everyone learns by doing, contributing, critiquing, and reflecting on their work -- anything from short code created in a visual programming language to a major contribution to a critical project. The Sugar Labs&#039; community has been around and active for more than a decade, it operated as a member organization under the umbrella of Software Freedom Conservancy, and now we are entering an exciting new chapter as its own non-profit. In this talk, we will discuss a little bit of the history of Sugar Labs, what has made it special over the years, and what we expect for the future. We will demonstrate some of our leading learning tools, such as Turtle Blocks, Music Blocks, and the Sugar OS. Lastly, we are open to ideas and questions about our future.</div></div>
790 </div>
791
792 <div class="speakerblock">
793 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/profiles_ulibarri.jpg">
794 <h2>Devin Ulibarri</h2></div>
795 <div class="webform-long-answer">Devin is co-creator of Music Blocks, a visual programming language for music created with Walter Bender as a SugarLabs project. He is co-founder and president of MAP Family Learning Center, which seeks to improve child development by offering high-quality classes in music, art, and programming. Devin is former chair of guitar for prep and continuing ed at New England Conservatory. Devin serves as co-admin and faculty for Boston GuitarFest, a prestigious festival directed by renowned guitarist Eliot Fisk.<br />
796 <br />
797 SugarLabs founder Walter Bender will be co-hosting this presentation.</div>
798 </div></span> </div> </div>
799 <div class="views-row views-row-33 views-row-odd">
800
801 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2591">
802
803 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
804 <h2 style="clear:both">LibreOffice&#039;s tenth anniversary: The many faces of a global free software community</h2>
805 <div class="talkblockheader">
806 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2591">Saturday 16:20 - 17:05</a>
807 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Freedom
808 </br>
809 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
810 </div>
811 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">LibreOffice was announced in 2010, and will celebrate its tenth anniversary in 2020. Over these last ten years, the global community behind this project has grown from a small group of volunteers, mostly based in Europe, to a large and diverse group of free software advocates spanning many countries. This presentation will discuss the challenges faced by the community during this incredible growth, and will provide a better understanding of the community for people who have only followed this evolution through announcements and events. </div></div>
812 </div>
813
814 <div class="speakerblock">
815 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/bergamo.jpg">
816 <h2>Italo Vignoli</h2></div>
817 <div class="webform-long-answer">Italo Vignoli is a founding member of The Document Foundation, the chairman emeritus of Associazione LibreItalia, an emeritus member of the OSI board, and co-chair of the ODF Advocacy OASIS Open Project. He co-leads LibreOffice marketing, public relations, and media relations, co-chairs the certification program, and is a spokesman for the project. He has contributed to large migration projects to LibreOffice in Italy, and is a LibreOffice certified migrator and trainer. From 2004 to 2010, he has been involved in the OOo project. In his professional life, he is a marketing consultant with decades of experience in high tech, and a visiting professor of marketing, public speaking, and public relations post-graduate courses. He has a degree in humanities at the University of Milan, and MBAs in marketing, public relations, and journalism. </div>
818 </div></span> </div> </div>
819 <div class="views-row views-row-34 views-row-even">
820
821 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2464">
822
823 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
824 <h2 style="clear:both">Freeing the mobile phone: The story of the Librem 5</h2>
825 <div class="talkblockheader">
826 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2464">Sunday 11:35 - 12:20</a>
827 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
828 </br>
829 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack9">Free Software in practice</span>
830 </div>
831 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Purism&#039;s founder and CEO Todd Weaver will tell the story of the Librem 5 from its inception, through decisions made to comply with the FSF’s Respects Your Freedom certification program, and on to many humorous anecdotes connecting tangential topics to the overall goal of freedom in technology.</div></div>
832 </div>
833
834 <div class="speakerblock">
835 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/todd-weaver-casual-headshot-2015-800x1200.jpeg">
836 <h2>Todd Weaver</h2></div>
837 <div class="webform-long-answer">Todd Weaver is a hardcore geek and digital rights activist who believes the best method of saving humanity is to create convenient products that fully respect people.</div>
838 </div></span> </div> </div>
839 <div class="views-row views-row-35 views-row-odd views-row-last">
840
841 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="3031">
842
843 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
844 <h2 style="clear:both">Creative Commons: Free software and the commons</h2>
845 <div class="talkblockheader">
846 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#3031">Saturday 10:40 - 11:25</a>
847 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Back Bay Grand
848 </br>
849 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack1">Licensing</span>
850 </div>
851 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Creative Commons is proud to empower free media. We recognize the invaluable role free software plays in the creation, collaboration, and dissemination of free media. In this session, Timid Robot shares Creative Commons’ efforts to create and contribute to free software and the communities that sustain it.<br />
852 <br />
853 In this talk, they will introduce Creative Commons and the general concept of the commons (globally-accessible public commons of knowledge and culture); explore the relationship between free media (the commons) and free software; and promote free software governed by Creative Commons.</div></div>
854 </div>
855
856 <div class="speakerblock">
857 <div class="speakerheader"><img class="speakerpic" src="https://my.fsf.org/sites/default/files/webform/timid.jpg">
858 <h2>Timid Zehta</h2></div>
859 <div class="webform-long-answer">Timid Robot brings over fifteen years of professional experience empowering others’ use of technology and digital infrastructure. They have a BA in liberal arts from Sarah Lawrence College. Timid Robot loves cats, free source software, systems, and giving back to the communities around them.</div>
860 </div></span> </div> </div>
861 <div class="views-row views-row-1 views-row-odd views-row-first views-row-last">
862
863 <div class="views-field views-field-nothing-2"> <span class="field-content"><hr id="2538">
864
865 <div class="talkblock" style="clear:both">
866 <h2 style="clear:both">Free software and the environment</h2>
867 <div class="talkblockheader">
868 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-calendar"></i>: <a class="lpcalendarlink" href="/2020/program/#2538">Saturday 13:35 - 14:20</a>
869 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-home"></i>: Patriot
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871 <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack4">Social context</span>
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873 <div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Free software is much better than proprietary software in many ways, but this talk is about how it’s also a more environmentally sustainable model for computing. Free software makes it easy to reuse old machines and prevent excess waste from going into the environment. This can&#039;t be done with proprietary software because the manufacturer can force updates that slow the machine down, or they could stop supporting the system altogether. This is not a problem with free software, because the source code can be modified. </div></div>
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878 <h2>Ben O&#039;Neill</h2></div>
879 <div class="webform-long-answer">I am a high school student from the Boston area. I&#039;ve been interested in free software since I was 13. I enjoy programming, listening to music, hanging with friends, and watching war movies.</div>
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