Is there any hope for FSFE?
Paul Boddie
paul at boddie.org.uk
Fri May 3 16:00:03 UTC 2019
On Friday 3. May 2019 15.00.30 Reinhard Müller wrote:
> Hi, Besnik,
>
> all sarcasm aside,
>
> Am 03.05.19 um 13:48 schrieb Besnik Bleta:
> > we give the money to lawyers who "helped" us
> > "safeguard" Free Software through Copyright Directive, right?
>
> what exactly do you refer to in this sentence? If FSFE spends money on
> something, I'm usually among the first ones to know, but I have no idea
> what you mean.
I think that there are concerns that the FSFE has not exactly safeguarded the
interests of individual members and Free Software initiatives quite as well as
those of its corporate sponsors and partners.
So, in the case of the Copyright Directive, where much fuss was made about
keeping code sharing platforms free of copyright filters, it seemed that the
FSFE was acting to defend GitHub and various proprietary services on the basis
that they help people share Free Software. As I noted about a month ago,
Microsoft/GitHub can surely do their own lobbying if they don't want their
profitability to be affected, which is surely all they really care about in
this instance.
And upon finding that these filters would still impact other online
activities, it appeared that the FSFE was somehow trying to drum up business
for companies to sell Free Software filters. This rather distasteful
impression was alleviated when a statement in the press release was supposedly
withdrawn, but this episode did not particularly inspire confidence that the
organisation would remain in solidarity with its traditional partners and
their causes.
Certainly, the FSFE has achieved good results in the past, participating in
antitrust cases that have yielded benefits for Free Software. However, its
legal activities remain opaque to supporters of the organisation, leaving
suspicions of a two- or three-tier organisation, with those who donate out of
their own pocket or who participate in their own scarce free time feeling that
they are effectively enabling some kind of private club whose activities are
never disclosed or discussed with them.
Of course, specific legal matters will never be discussed openly, but there is
a significant contrast between the FSFE and, say, the Software Freedom
Conservancy on more general legal activities with regard to transparency. It
is also worth noting that the FSFE has largely had little to say about cases
like Hellwig versus VMware, despite the legal venue being practically on the
FSFE's doorstep:
https://sfconservancy.org/news/2019/apr/02/vmware-no-appeal/
Conservancy may be empowered to participate in such cases due to its role as
custodian of some Linux copyrights, but one can always wonder why the FSFE has
avoided or abandoned such a role when it could have been more influential.
This leaves impressions of apathy or a lack of guidance or strategy, none of
which are particularly reassuring to supporters of the organisation.
I hope this provides some kind of explanation as to what people might be
thinking, not that I seek to represent anyone in particular.
Paul
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