273 lines
14 KiB
TeX
273 lines
14 KiB
TeX
%% Copyright (c) 2002, 2010 Sam Williams
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%% Copyright (c) 2010 Richard M. Stallman
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%% Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
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%% document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
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%% Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
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%% Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and
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%% no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
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%% file called ``gfdl.tex''.
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\chapter{Preface by Sam Williams}
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This summer marks the 10th anniversary of the email exchange that set
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in motion the writing of \textit{Free as in Freedom: Richard
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Stallman's Crusade for Free Software} and, by extension, the work
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prefaced here, \textit{Richard Stallman and the Free Software
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Revolution}.
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Needless to say, a lot has changed over the intervening decade.
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Originally conceived in an era of American triumphalism, the book's
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main storyline -- about one man's Jeremiah-like efforts to enlighten
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fellow software developers as to the ethical, if not economic,
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shortsightedness of a commercial system bent on turning the free range
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intellectual culture that gave birth to computer science into a rude
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agglomeration of proprietary gated communities -- seems almost
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nostalgic, a return to the days when the techno-capitalist system
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seemed to be working just fine, barring the criticism of a few
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outlying skeptics.
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Now that doubting the system has become almost a common virtue, it
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helps to look at what narrative threads, if any, remained consistent
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over the last ten years.
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While I don't follow the software industry as closely as I once did,
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one thing that leaps out now, even more than it did then, is the ease
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with which ordinary consumers have proven willing to cede vast swaths
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of private information and personal user liberty in exchange for
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riding atop the coolest technology ``platform'' or the latest networking
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trend.
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A few years ago, I might have dubbed this the ``iPod Effect,'' a
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shorthand salute to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs' unrivaled success in
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getting both the music industry and digital music listeners to put
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aside years of doubt and mutual animosity to rally around a single,
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sexy device -- the Apple iPod -- and its restrictive licensing regime,
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iTunes. Were I pitching the story to a magazine or newspaper nowadays,
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I d probably have to call it the ``iPad Effect'' or maybe the ``Kindle
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Effect'' both in an attempt to keep up with the evolving brand names
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and to acknowledge parallel, tectonic shifts in the realm of daily
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journalism and electronic book publishing.
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Lest I appear to be gratuitously plugging the above-mentioned brand
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names, RMS suggests that I offer equal time to a pair of web sites that
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can spell out their many disadvantages, especially in the realm of
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software liberty. I have agreed to this suggestion in the spirit of
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equal time. The web sites he recommends are \url{DefectiveByDesign.org}
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and \url{BadVista.org}.
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Regardless of title, the notion of corporate brand as sole guarantor
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of software quality in a swiftly changing world remains a hard one to
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dislodge, even at a time when most corporate brands are trading at or
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near historic lows.
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Ten years ago, it wasn't hard to find yourself at a technology
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conference listening in on a conversation (or subjected to direct
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tutelage) in which some old-timer, Richard Stallman included, offered
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a compelling vision of an alternate possibility. It was the job of
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these old-timers, I ultimately realized, to make sure we newbies in
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the journalism game recognized that the tools we prided ourselves in
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finally knowing how to use -- Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Internet
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Explorer, just to name a few popular offerings from a single oft-cited
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vendor -- were but a pale shadow of towering edifice the original
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architects of the personal computer set out to build.
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Nowadays, it's almost as if the opposite situation is at hand. The
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edifice is now a sprawling ecosystem, a jungle teeming with ideas but
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offering only a few stable niches for sustainable growth. While one
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can still find plenty of hackers willing to grumble about, say,
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Vista's ongoing structural flaws, Apple's dictatorial oversight of the
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iPhone App Store or Google's shifting definition of the word ``evil''
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-- each year brings with it a fresh crop of ``digital native''
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consumers willing to trust corporate guidance in this Hobbesian realm.
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Maybe that's because many of the problems that once made using your
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desktop computer such a teeth-grinding experience have largely been
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paved over with the help of free software.
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Whatever. As consumer software reliability has improved, the race to
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stay one step ahead of consumer taste has put application developers
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in an even tighter embrace with moneyed interests. I'm not saying that
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the hacker ethos no longer exists or that it has even weakened in any
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noticeable way. I'm just saying that I doubt the programmer who
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generated the Facebook algorithm that rewrites the ``info'' pages so
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that each keyword points to a sponsored page, with an 80-percent
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semantic error rate to boot, spends much time in his new Porsche
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grousing about what the program really could have achieved if only the
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``suits'' hadn't gotten in the way.
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True, millions of people now run mostly free software on their
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computers with many running free software exclusively. From an
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ordinary consumer perspective, however, terms like ``software'' and
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``computer'' have become increasingly distant. Many 2010-era cell
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phones could give a 2000-era laptop a run for its money in the
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functionality department. And yet, when it comes time to make a cell
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phone purchase, how many users lend any thought to the computer or
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software operating system making that functionality possible? The vast
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majority of modern phone users base their purchasing decisions almost
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entirely on the number of applications offered, the robustness of the
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network and, most important of all, the monthly service plan.
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Getting a consumer in this situation to view his or her software
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purchase through the lens of personal liberty, as opposed to personal
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convenience, is becoming, if not more difficult, certainly a more
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complex endeavor.
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Given this form of pessimistic introduction, why should anyone want go
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on and read this book?
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I can offer two major reasons.
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The first reason is a personal one. As noted in the Epilogue of
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\textit{Free as in Freedom}, Richard and I parted on less than cordial
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terms shortly before the publication of that book. The fault, in large
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part, was mine. Having worked with Richard to make sure that my
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biographical sketch didn't run afoul of free software principles -- an
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effort that, I'm proud to say, made \textit{Free as in Freedom} one of
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the first works to employ the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) as
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a copyright mechanism -- I abruptly ended the cooperative relationship
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when it came time to edit the work and incorporate Richard's lengthy
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list of error corrections and requests for clarification.
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Though able to duck behind my own principles of authorial independence
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and journalistic objectivity, I have since come to lament not begging
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the book's publisher -- O'Reilly and Associates -- for additional time.
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Because O'Reilly had already granted my one major stipulation -- the
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GFDL -- and had already put up with a heavy stream of last-minute
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changes on my part, however, I was hesitant to push my luck.
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In the years immediately following the publication of \textit{Free as
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in Freedom}, I was able to justify my decision by noting that the
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GFDL, just like the GNU General Public License in the software realm,
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makes it possible for any reader to modify the book and resell it as a
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competitive work. As Ernest Hemingway once put it, ``the first draft
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of anything is shit.'' If Stallman or others within the hacker
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community saw \textit{Free as in Freedom} as a first draft at best,
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well, at least I had spared them the time and labor of generating
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their own first draft.
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Now that Richard has indeed delivered what amounts to a significant
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rewrite, I can only but remain true to my younger self and endorse the
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effort. Indeed, I salute it. My only remaining hope is that, seeing as
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how Richard's work doesn't show any sign of slowing, additional
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documentation gets added to the mix.
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Before moving on to the next reason, I should note that one of the pleasant
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by-products of this book is a re-opening of email communication
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channels between Richard and myself. The resulting communication has
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reacquainted me with the razor-sharp Stallman writing style.
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An illustrative and perhaps amusing anecdote for anyone out there who
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has wrangled with Richard in text: In the course of discussing the
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passage in which I observe and document the process of Richard losing
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his cool amid the rush hour traffic of Kihei, Maui, a passage that
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served as the basis for Chapter 7 (``A Brief Journey through Hacker
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Hell'') in the original book, I acknowledged a common complaint among
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the book's reviewers -- namely, that the episode seemed out of place,
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a fragment of magazine-style profile interrupting a book-length
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biography. I told Richard that he could discard the episode for that
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reason alone but noted that my decision to include it was based on two
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justifications. First, it offered a glimpse of the Stallman temper,
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something I'd been warned about but had yet to experience in a
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firsthand manner. Second, I felt the overall scene possessed a certain
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metaphorical value. Hence the chapter title.
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Stallman, to my surprise, agreed on both counts. His concern lay more
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in the two off-key words. At one point I quote him accusing the lead
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driver of our two-vehicle caravan with ``deliberately'' leading us
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down a dead-end street, an accusation that, if true, suggested a level
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of malice outside the bounds of the actual situation. Without the
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benefit of a recorded transcript -- I only had a notebook at the time,
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I allowed that it was likely I'd mishandled Stallman's actual wording
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and had made it more hurtful than originally intended.
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On a separate issue, meanwhile, Stallman questioned his quoted use of
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the word ``fucking.'' Again, I didn't have the moment on tape, but I
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wrote back that I distinctly recalled an impressive display of
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profanity, a reminder of Richard's New York roots, and was willing to
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stand by that memory.
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An email response from Richard, received the next day, restated the
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critique in a way that forced me to go back and re-read the first
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message. As it turned out, Stallman wasn't so much objecting to the
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``fuck'' as the ``-ing'' portion of the quote.
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``Part of the reason I doubt [the words] is that they involve using
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fucking as an adverb,'' Stallman wrote. ``I have never spoken that
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way. So I am sure the words are somewhat altered.''
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Touché.
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The second reason a person should feel compelled to read this book
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cycles back to the opening theme of this preface -- how different a
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future we face in 2010 compared to the one we were still squinting our
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eyes to see back in 2000. I ll be honest: Like many Americans (and
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non-Americans), my worldview was altered by the events of September
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11, 2001, so much so that it wasn't much longer after the publication
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of \textit{Free as in Freedom} that my attention drifted sharply away
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from the free software movement and Stallman's efforts to keep it on
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course. While I have managed to follow the broad trends and major
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issues, the day-to-day drama surrounding software standards, software
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copyrights and software patents has become something I largely skip
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over -- the Internet news equivalent of the Water Board notes in the
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local daily newspaper, in other words.
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[RMS: The September 2001 attacks, not mentioned later in the book,
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deserve brief comment here. Far from ``changing everything,'' as
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many proclaim, the attacks have, in fact, changed very little in the
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U.S.: There are still scoundrels in power who hate our freedoms. The
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only major difference is that they can now cite ``terrorists'' as an
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excuse for laws to take them away. See the political notes on
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\url{stallman.org} for more about this.]
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This is a lamentable development in large part because, ten years in,
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I finally see the maturing 21st century in what I believe to be a
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clear light. Again, if this were a pitch letter to some editor, I'd
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call it ``The Process Century.''
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By that I mean I we stand at a rare point in history where, all
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cynicism aside, the power to change the world really does delegate
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down to the ordinary citizen's level. The catch, of course, is that
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the same power that belongs to you also belongs to everyone else.
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Where in past eras one might have secured change simply by winning the
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sympathies of a few well-placed insiders, today's reformer must bring
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into alignment an entire vector field of competitive ideas and
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interests. In short, being an effective reformer nowadays requires
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more than just titanic stamina and a willingness to cry out in the
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wilderness for a decade or more, it requires knowing how to articulate
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durable, scalable ideas, how to beat the system at its own game.
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On all counts, I would argue that Richard M. Stallman, while maybe not
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the archetype, is at the very least an ur-type of the successful
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reformer just described.
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While some might lament a future in which every problem seems to take
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a few decades of committee meetings and sub-committee hearings just to
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reach the correction stage, I, for one, see the alternative -- a
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future so responsive to individual or small group action that some
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self-appointed actor finally decides to put that responsiveness to the
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test -- as too chilling to contemplate.
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In short, if you are the type of person who, like me, hopes to see the
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21st century follow a less bloody course than the 20th century, the
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Water Board -- in its many frustrating guises -- is where that battle
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is currently being fought. As hinted by the Virgil-inspired epigraph
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introducing the book's first chapter, I've always held out hope that
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this book might in some way become a sort of epic poem for the
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Internet Age. Built around a heroic but flawed central figure, its
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authorial stamp should be allowed to blur with age.
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On that note, I would like to end this preface the same way I always
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end this preface -- with a request for changes and contributions from
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any reader wishing to improve the text. \nameref{Appendix B} offers a
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guide on your rights as a reader to submit changes, make corrections,
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or even create your own spin-off version of the book. If you prefer to
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simply run the changes through Richard or myself, you can find the
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pertinent contact information on the Free Software Foundation web site.
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In the meantime, good luck and enjoy the book!
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\vspace{0.5in}
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\noindent Sam Williams\\
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\noindent Staten Island, USA
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