Autumn Term 2005

Well its official. Summer is finally over and the Autumn (Fall) term is upon us. Sweden only has two terms. This term (besides the usual extra stuff) my main focus is on two courses:

Computer Ethics РThis will be a traditional course with lectures in lecture halls (in G̦teborg). I am looking forward to this. Course information in Swedish can be found here.

Open Source/Free Sofware: Theory and Philosophy – The course is a distance learning course (in English) which means that it does not have lectures or exams as we are used to. Instead, we have divided the course into one thematic area per week that we read about and discuss. To get the most of the course, we encourage everyone to follow this course plan and participate in the discussions at the same time as fellow students.

First Monday – paper accepted

Free software and open source: The freedom debate and its consequences
– Mathias Klang

“To most outsiders the ethics of software is not something usually considered. To most proficient computer users with a passing interest in this question the ethics of software is recognised as one of the fundamental questions in the digital rights area. To most of the latter, terms such as free software, open source, and their derivatives (FLOSS, FOSS, Software Freedom) are interchangeable. Choosing one over the other is a matter of taste rather than politics.”

First Monday March 2005

Abstract submitted to First Monday

www.firstmonday.org

Recently the University of Göteborg held an online course in the theory and philosophy of free software and open source. During this course a lively discussion on the terminology took place, in particular the concept of free was discussed. Without arriving at particular conclusions the posts included views in part on the lack of user awareness on what was property within the computer, on the difference between free, gratis and libre in different languages and cultures and the need for both a common terminology and infrastructure. This paper is not an attempt to resolve these issues but to bring these questions to the attention of a wider audience in the hope that the discussion will continue.

To most outsiders the ethics of software is not something usually considered. To most proficient computer users with a passing interest in this question the ethics of software is recognised as one of the fundamental questions in the digital rights area. To most of the latter group terms Free Software, Open Source and their derivatives (FLOSS, FOSS, Software Freedom) are interchangeable. Choosing one over the other is a matter of taste rather than politics. However, to most insiders the question is not one of taste. There is a fundamental difference between the two areas even if they share a similar root. Free Software is not the same as Open Source. The two groups differ in their fundamental philosophical approach to software and its importance to society as a whole. This paper examines the two groups? differing philosophies and explores how their actions have affected software development, access to fundamental software infrastructure and the development of the concept of freedom.