Free Software Foundation
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<tr><th>Type:</th><td>NGO and Non-profit Foundation</td></tr><tr><th>Founded:</th><td>October 1985</td></tr><tr><th>Location:</th><td>Boston, Massachusetts</td></tr><tr><th>Key people:</th><td>Richard Stallman</td></tr><tr><th>Fields:</th><td>Software Freedom</td></tr><tr><th>Services:</th><td>GNU project, GPL, LGPL, GFDL, see below</td></tr> <tr><th>Website:</th><td>www.fsf.org</td></tr> |
The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a non-profit corporation founded in October 1985 by Richard Stallman to support the free software movement ("free" as in "freedom"), and in particular the GNU project. The FSF is incorporated in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and is tax-exempt under 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, which allows donors who file US Federal Income Tax returns to get a deduction on their taxes for their donations.
From its founding until the mid-1990s FSF's funds were mostly used to employ software developers to write free software. Since the mid- to late 1990s there are now many companies and individuals writing free software, so FSF's employees and volunteers mostly work on legal and structural issues for the free software movement and the free software community.
Being consistent with it's goals, only free software is used on all of the FSF's computers.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Current work of FSF
- The GNU Project
- The original purpose of the FSF was to promote the ideals of free software. The organization developed the GNU operating system as an example of this.
- GNU Licenses
- The GNU General Public License (GPL) is the most widely used license for Free Software projects. The current version (version 2) was released in 1991 but FSF is working on version 3. FSF have also published the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), and the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL).
- GNU License Enforcement
- FSF has the resources and the will to enforce the GPL and other GNU licenses, but only for software for which it owns the copyrights; GPL'd software owned by others must be defended by its owners, since the FSF has no legal standing to enforce the GPL for them. FSF handles around 50 GPL violations per year and tries to bring the other party into compliance without involving the courts.
- Guardian of copyrights
- FSF holds the copyrights to most GNU software and some non-GNU Free Software. They require copyright assignment papers from each contributor to GNU packages so that they can defend the software in court if a dispute arises, and so that if there is a need to change the license of a work, it can be done without having to contact all contributors that have ever worked on the software.
- GNU Press
- The FSF's publishing department, responsible for "publishing affordable books on computer science using freely distributable licenses."
- The Free Software Directory
- This is a listing of software packages which have been verified as free software. Each package entry contains 47 pieces of information such as the project's homepage, developers, programming language, etc. The goals are to provide a search engine for free software, and to provide a cross-reference for users to check if a package has been verified as being free software. FSF has received a small amount of funding from UNESCO for this project. It is hoped that the directory can be translated into many languages in the future.
- Maintaining the Free Software Definition
- FSF maintain many of the documents that define the Free Software movement.
- Legal Education
- FSF hold seminars about legal aspects of using the GPL, and offers a consultancy service for lawyers.
- Project Hosting
- FSF hosts software development projects on their Savannah website.
- Campaigns
- FSF sponsors a number of campaigns against what it perceives as dangers to software freedom, including software patents, Digital Restrictions Management, and user interface copyright. Defective by Design is an FSF-initiated campaign against DRM.
- Annual awards
- "Award for the Advancement of Free Software" and "Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit"
[edit] Structure
[edit] Membership
On November 25, 2002 the FSF launched the FSF Associate Membership program for individuals. In March 2005 they had over 3400 associate members.
On March 5 2003 they launched a Corporate Patron program for commercial entities. As of April 2004, they have 45 corporate patrons.
[edit] Organizational
[edit] Board of Directors
[edit] Current Board of Directors
- Geoffery Knauth, Senior Software Engineer at SFA, Inc.
- Lawrence Lessig, Professor of Law at Stanford University
- Eben Moglen, Professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University
- Henri Poole, Founder of CivicActions, a grassroots campaign technology consulting firm.
- Richard Stallman, Founder of FSF and the GNU Project, Founding President, former maintainer of various GNU software, and principal author of the GNU GPL, Versions 1 and 2
- Gerald Sussman, Professor of Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
[edit] Founding Board of Directors
- Richard Stallman
- Hal Abelson, Professor of Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Robert J. Chassell, Founding Director and Founding Treasurer
- Gerald Sussman
- Len Tower Jr.
[edit] Former members of the Board of Directors
[edit] Staff and employees
Some of staff, both current and past, are neither paid employees nor paid contractors. That is, they are unpaid volunteers.
[edit] Current staff and employees
At any given time, there are usually around a dozen employees. Most, but not all, work at the FSF headquarters in Boston, Massachusetts.
- Richard Stallman, President and founder of the Free Software Foundation. RMS is not paid by the FSF.
- Peter T. Brown, Executive Director (was GPL Compliance Manager and Controller until February 2005)
- Eben Moglen, General Counsel
- Dan Ravicher, Senior Counsel
- Brett Smith, GPL Compliance Engineer
- John Sullivan, Programs Administrator
- Ted Teah, Free Software Directory Maintainer
- Joshua Ginsberg, Senior Systems Administrator
- Justin Baugh, Senior Systems Administrator
- Ward Vandewege, Senior Systems Administrator (part-time)
- Jeanne Rasata, Program Assistant
- Jonas Jacobson, Copyright Administrator
[edit] Former staff and employees
In alphabetical order:
- Jonathan Arcenaux, GNU hacker, GNU Emacs
- Miles Bader, GNU hacker, GNU Hurd
- James E. Blair, Senior Systems Administrator (2003-2005)
- Jim Blandy, GNU hacker, GNU Emacs version 19
- Carol Botteron, Office Manager, etc. (mid/late 1990s)
- Michael (now Thomas) Bushnell GNU hacker, GNU Hurd
- Janet Casey, Free Software Directory maintainer (2000-2005)
- Robert J. Chassell, Founding Director and Treasurer, GNU documentation hacker
- Jay Fenlason, GNU hacker, sed
- Paul N. Fisher, Senior Systems Administrator (2001-2004)
- Brian Fox, GNU hacker, Bash
- Noah Friedman, GNU hacker, FSF Founding System Administrator
- Tami Friedman, Office assistant
- Lisa "Opus" Goldstein, Office Manager, etc. (late 1980s-early 1990s), Manager of GNU Press (2001-2005)
- Mike Haertel, GNU hacker, diff, grep
- Daniel Hagerty, GNU hacker and FSF Second System Administrator
- Mieko Hikichi, GNU hacker, Translator Japanese GNU's Bulletins
- Noboyuki Hikichi, GNU hacker, Translator Japanese GNU's Bulletins
- Prof. Masayuki Ida, Vice President for Japan (late 1990s)
- Bradley M. Kuhn, Assistant to Stallman (2000-2001), Executive Director (2001-2005)
- Tom Lord, GNU hacker, GNU arch, sed, regular expression engine, GNU Oleo features
- Roland McGrath, GNU hacker, GNU Libc, GNU Make, GNU Hurd
- Ian Murdock, GNU hacker
- Phil Nelson, GNU hacker
- Tim Ney, Office Manager (1998-2001)
- Ariel Rios, GNU hacker, Guile
- Paul Rubin, GNU hacker, cpp
- Peter Salus, Vice President (mid/late 1990s)
- Etienne Suvasa, GNU illustrator
- Randy Smith, GNU hacker, GDB
- Pete TerMaat GNU hacker, GDB
- David "Novalis" Turner, GPL Compliance Engineer
- Jonathan Watterson, digital-speech project organizer
- Melissa Weisshaus, GNU documentation hacker
- Tony Wieczorek, Program Assistant
- Brian Youmans, Office Employee (1996-2002)
[edit] Former contractors
- Leslie Proctor, Public Relations
[edit] Former employee of the Zimmer Foundation assigned to the FSF
- Len Tower Jr., GCC, GNU diff, who became a Founding Director
[edit] Sister organizations
In 2001, Free Software Foundation Europe was founded in Germany to act as a "hub" for the Free Software organisations of Europe.
In 2003, Free Software Foundation India was founded in Kerala.
In 2005, it was announced that work is in progress to set up a Free Software Foundation Latin America.
[edit] Recognition
- 1999: Linus Torvalds Award for Open Source Computing [2]
- 2005: Prix Ars Electronica Award of Distinction in the category of "Digital Communities" [3] [4]
[edit] External link
</div>- The Free Software Foundation web site
History: GNU Manifesto • GNU Project • Free Software Foundation (FSF)
GNU licenses: GNU General Public License (GPL) • GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) • GNU Free Documentation License (FDL)
Software: GNU operating system • bash • GNU Compiler Collection • GNU Emacs • Ghostscript • other GNU packages and programs
Advocates and activists: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Robert J. Chassell • Prof. Masayuki Ida • Geoffery Knauth • Lawrence Lessig • Eben Moglen • Henri Poole • Peter Salus • Gerald Sussman • FSF's Past Directors • other FSF's Staff and Employees
Software developers: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Jim Blandy • Michael (now Thomas) Bushnell • Ulrich Drepper • Brian Fox • Tom Lord • Roland McGrath • other FSF's Programmers
Software documentors: Richard Stallman (RMS) • Robert J. Chassell • Roland McGrath • other FSF's Documentors
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Categories: GNU project | Foundations | Non-profit organizations based in the United States | Nonprofit technology | Free Software Foundation | 1985 establishments | Movement against intellectual property | Computer-related organizations | Advocacy groups | Non-governmental organizations | International nongovernmental organizations | Activism


