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- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!eclnews!cec2!lfa1
- From: lfa1@cec2.wustl.edu (Lorrie Faith Ackerman)
- Subject: host an RMS talk
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.205338.27197@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- Sender: usenet@wuecl.wustl.edu (News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cec2
- Organization: Washington University, St. Louis MO
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 20:53:38 GMT
- Lines: 77
-
- The ACM student chapter at Washington University in St. Louis is
- sponsoring a lecture by Richard Stallman on January 22. In order to
- make efficient use of his time, RMS has asked me to find out if there
- are any other groups who would like him to speak while he is in the
- midwest. WashU will be paying his transportation to St. Louis,
- your group would have to pay his transportation from St. Louis to
- wherever you are. If you are interested, please contact me by
- email. (Also, if you are in St. Louis and would like to attend
- the talk at WashU, contact me for details.) The following is
- excerpted from infor RMS sent me about his talk:
-
- Title:
-
- Protecting the Freedom to Write Software
- The new software monopolies, and what we can do about them
-
-
- Abstract:
-
- New monopolies threaten the freedom of programmers to continue doing
- their work. Copyrighted interfaces prohibit supporting the commands
- users know and expect. Patented algorithms and techniques make each
- design decision carry the risk of a lawsuit.
-
- Richard Stallman will talk about how these monopolies originated and
- why they are bad for computer users and programmers. He will then
- suggest what you can do to help eliminate them.
-
-
- Bio:
-
- Richard Stallman is one of the founders of the League for Programming
- Freedom, a grassroots organization whose aim is to protect the freedom
- to write programs. Specifically, the League aims to abolish two
- recently established forms of monopoly which restrict programmers'
- freedom to do their work: interface copyright and software patents.
-
- The 800 or so League members include programmers, professors,
- students, entrepreneurs, users, and software companies.
-
- In the field of software, Richard Stallman is best known for
- developing the extensible editor, Emacs, while working at the MIT
- Artifical Intelligence lab between 1971 and 1984. Today he is working
- to develop the free UNIX-compatible software system known as GNU.
- Like many other software developers, he fears that the new monopolies
- will make his work impossible to continue.
-
- In 1990, Stallman received a MacArthur Foundation fellowship; he also
- received the 1990 ACM Grace Hopper Award for his work on Emacs.
-
-
- Additional info:
-
- To cover the two topics of copyrighted languages and software patents
- properly takes two hours (including time for discussion). If
- necessary, I can make the talk shorter by cutting things out, but then
- the talk won't be as good. With just an hour, I can talk about either
- interface copyright or software patents, but not both.
-
- The facilities I need are a transparency projector and a whiteboard or
- blackboard. But I can do without them if you can't arrange for them.
-
-
- Charging admission:
-
- I give talks on this subject to help make the public aware of a threat
- to their freedom. Limiting the admission to the talks partially
- defeats their purpose.
-
- I don't mind if you ask people to contribute to defray costs, but
- please admit people even if they cannot pay.
-
- --
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Lorrie Ackerman -- Washington U. engineering and policy grad student
- 6645 University Dr. Apt 2-W, St. Louis, MO 63130 (314)727-4910
- lorracks@informatics.wustl.edu lfa1@cec1 lorracks@maria lorracks@cs1
-