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This paper is published as part of our call for community whitepapers on Copilot. The papers contain opinions with which the FSF may or may not agree, and any views expressed by the authors do not ...
Knowing which hardware devices support GNU/Linux is important not only for practical reasons — you want your hardware to work with the software that you want to use — but also for ethical and ...
As the Free Software Foundation (FSF) board sets about the work of strengthening the Foundation's governance structure, here are answers to some frequently asked questions about this initiative. This ...
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In the lead up to its Switch 2 console release, Nintendo updated its user agreement and asserted broad authority to make consoles owned by its customers permanently unusable. Under Nintendo's most ...
The GNU Affero General Public License version 3 (AGPLv3) is the most protective of computer user freedom, yet it remains the most misunderstood of the GNU family of licenses. The AGPLv3 was created to ...
This page was last updated in March 2021. Single-board computers normally run the GNU/Linux system, but that doesn't mean that all is well for software freedom on these boards. Many require ...
In times like these it becomes all the more important to remember that tools like Zoom, Slack, and Facebook Messenger are not benign public services, and while the sentiment they've expressed to the ...
This article explains some issues about the meaning and enforcement of the GNU General Public License. The specific occasion for this article is the violation of combining Linux with ZFS, and that ...
Machine learning (ML) applications raise the issue of whether they respect users' software freedom. The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is preparing a statement of criteria to determine when a machine ...
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