ACK! ACK! ACK!!

So I guess I owe a blog by now 😉 Things have been incredible! Crazy stuff getting organised, projects, travelling, and very little sleep. In a nutshell:

LA – new website is up, after much running about, and there is a fair bit of news and stuff happening. I’m pretty excited about the fact that open source has become an election platform in Australia with all the main parties having an opinion (usually positive) on open source. The way is certainly looking up, and it has been great! I have to say I really enjoy meeting up with people from the community. Right across Australia, and then the world there is this amazing group of like minded, independent, JFDI-driven people, to whom freedom, Quality (Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance reference), equality, and doing kick ass stuff is important. I really have felt quite honoured to be able to work for the community with the LA stuff, and I hope that I can continue to stay up the scratch, given I have so much on my plate atm. I feel pretty confident now that whatever happens with LA, there is a great precedent set, and it can only continue to rock on!

Jeff and the awesome Canonical guys have done the pre-release of Ubuntu, a distro based on Debian. I have to say I’m extremely impressed, not only with the distro, but with the company. Hiring some of the best heads in the open source community is a good start, but committing to working with the community, to contributing so much is awesome. I am however again in a situation where I need to seriously consider where my conflicts of interest lie and make sure I keep them well defined. A frustrating but necessary reality. Ah well 🙂

I head up to Brisbane to see the HUMBUG crew this weekend, which should be great! I’ve been promising this for at least a year now, and I’m looking forward to it 🙂 Especially since I am the QLD state person in our new drive to increase comms with all the LUGs.

I also go to the GNOME Boston Summit this year. There are several reasons for this, but mainly because I think that there is a gap in the accessibility development between users and societies that are wanting and able to help out with suggestions and testing, and the development people. I’m hoping to help bridge this gap, with the loose aim of getting Linux right up to scratch in this area. Why? Well it has occurred to me that in our world we have a very unique thing. We are able to create solutions that traditionally have never been financially viable for big companies to do, we have real Quality and care going into our stuff, rather than doing as many software companies do, putting something half-ass out there, and then relying on customer support income to make it stable and quality. Anyway, I want technology to be available to everyone. The whole equal opportunity argument, and using technology to help humans improve themselves, if they so wish, rather than using it purely to make some nameless corp more rich, or to make people slaves, or to further increase the divide between rich and poor in our world. Using technology to increase communication and participation across cultural, physical, religious, age and gender differences, thus leading to increased understanding, increased empathy and tolerance, a stronger focus on care, Quality, equality, community, sharing, and hopefully a less bullshit world all round 🙂

I’m working on a disaster recovery simulation, so anyone needing me, please call me 🙂 I’m keeping odd hours.

Melbourne trip!

I’m coming to Melbourne this weekend. I’m looking forward to catching up with the Computerbank crew, the new LUUV ctte, and any LUV-ers (or AUUG-ites, or MLUG-ers for that matter) that feel like a beer on the Saturday night. Welcome all! 🙂

Hugs on hold

Yep, Jeff is only a week away from being home again. It has been really frustrating not being together, especially not being able to easily share everything we are getting up to. Anyway, it is good to see he is putting the new camera to good use while he’s away. Ewww! David Hasselhoff!

FTA decision – down the black hole

For anyone who hasn’t heard yet, Labour has made a decision to back the FTA but only if two ammendments are made. One concerning the PBS, and the other concerning ensuring Australian content is not reduced on our air waves.

I have found it disturbing that even though there has been a lot of articles by people of many backgrounds about the issues surrounding IP (namely patents, copyright and anti-circumvention issues), these have never been mentioned as key issues by the government. Certain politicians have recognised the issues, and even encouraged us to fight them, however it never seemed to quite make it up the ranks. I’m concerned that we now are going to face incredible challenges just to create in this country (software, hardware, research, new technologies) because the new laws will lock in a personal and anti-competitive threat to developers, researchers, small companies and even the end users. The fact that the text of the FTA finds USERS of multi-zone DVD players criminally liable is ridiculous! So the the gov has agreed to make a special clause for that case, why the hell is it in there? We’re trying to develop some contingency plans that protect our community, but everyone should be looking carefully at how this affects them and their businesses.

We tried to get Lessig out here, but the Senate Enquiry committee, who originally were keen beans to hear him ended up saying they couldn’t wait till then. I mean what is the rush! We then tried to organise him to come earlier but being siuch a busy individual that didn’t happen.

Interestingly enough, “Mr Latham last night said he was holding Mr Howard to his word that the agreement did not open the prospect of US companies using “bodgy” patents”. They seem to be able to grasp the concept with drugs. I suppose they don’t recognise the incredible amount of Software IP this country develops. From the extensive Open Source network and home-grown projects, right through to the custom proprietary software developed by Australian companies. We are all at risk.

Goats, rats and SALSA!

I have had a pretty low couple of weeks. Between hospitalisation, car issues and leaving my house keys in Yass things have been frustrating and evidently cumulative. Thankfully I know K! 🙂 Tonight I got an hour Salsa lesson, and will be following it up with some sessions over the next few weeks. When Jeff gets home I am going to be rocking pretty hard!

The other interesting thing was finding out about Chinese Astrology. Astrology in our society is often seen as quacks and the naive looking for happiness in the stars. In China it was used in a very, well, practical sense. An astrologer could tell a persons personality to about 96% accuracy, and so emporers and leaders would consult them to determine who in their militia would be the best leaders, strategists, lemmings, etc. It is a pretty amazing thing. I turn out to be year of the ram, and hour of the rat. This means I have a free/dreamer/flighty part with a strategist/thinker/planner part. It explains a lot for anyone who knows me well 🙂 The kewl thing about the whole system, is as a mechanism to figure out the parts of the picture, and then transcend that box and all its limitations. That is all.

Christian and hospitals

Although not that type of Christian 😉 We had Christian, Jan and Etc come around for dinner the other evening, which was a fun combination of sausages (well done), steak (done), kangaroo (raw, and no i don’t mean rare) and politics (red and bloody). It was fun meeting Christian, comparing Aus with Norway, and getting another insight to things.

I was admitted to hospital Monday night with severe back pains on my right side that turned out to be a pretty ugly kidney infection. Luckily now it is almost all ok, I have more antibiotics to take, but I came home this evening. Jeff and I wondered what we’d have for dinner, and ended up rocking up to debsig, as the food there isn’t bad at any rate, and the company was fun 🙂 Many faces I haven’t seen for ages (mental note to go to more Debsigs). Unfortunately I overdid it a bit, I should have had dinner and left, but the chat daemon in me doesn’t always obey 🙂 Anyway, home now, straight to sleep, and probably some painkillers.

Evil Genius

“You are an SEDF–Sober Emotional Destructive Follower. This makes you an evil genius. You are extremely focused and difficult to distract from your tasks. With luck, you have learned to channel your energies into improving your intellect, rather than destroying the weak and unsuspecting.

Your friends may find you remote and a hard nut to crack. Few of your peers know you very well–even those you have known a long time–because you have expert control of the face you put forth to the world. You prefer to observe, calculate, discern and decide. Your decisions are final, and your desire to be right is impenetrable.

You are not to be messed with. You may explode.”

This is probably more indicative of my mood than anything else at the moment 🙂 although I do like the bit about destroying the weak and unsuspecting, oh hold on, I’m _not_ supposed to do that 😉

Scary few weeks

So the last three weeks have seen a lot of action:

FTA

I met with some of the Media industry reps last week, to discuss the FTA, and what they had been doing. We luckily were able to contribute some questions to the senate enquiry as part of a collaborative effort, that will be forwarded onto DFAT for review. That was pretty cool. Then Rusty, Brendan and I met with them as well as some PBS people down in Canberra (I have done a lot of driving in the last few days). We found out these groupd of people had been working on the FTA stuff for two years. Boy do we feel like the new kids on the block 🙂 Anyway, we are in a slightly more unfortunate position in that these groups we met with are the respected top people in their fields, and at least have a chance. We have organisations in Australia who have almost all US companies on the boards, making decision about IT in Australia. They approved the FTA, and continue to undermine our efforts to bring the issues to the eyes of the people unknowingly screwing us over. These other groups were at the table, so to speak for the FTA negotiations, and still didn’t get what they were promised. We’ve been told that drug prices _will_ go up, and that those who should be saying it are leant on, while others are paid to simply lie. It bothers me that money is placed way above life, and that most things we all work for is not for the benefit of anyone but a nameless, faceless, unaccountable machine. Anyway, we are all still determined to work on it, at any rate some serious contingency plans are needed.

So short term, to continue the ‘education’, we will be getting Lessig out here, and hopefully on a teleconference before the Senate Enquiry stop taking advice. We will put together some collaborate cross-industry press releases, and try to have a press conference with Lessig, if we can. This should give a lot of attention to the issues, we hope.

Contingency plans? Still working on them. Someone gave me the AWESOME idea, of rallying the community to show prior art for a heap of patents in Australia, and then publicly saying the system needs some work and we’d be happy to assist the patents office with their research or prior art. One of the problems, as many people know, is that the patents are not getting due research, one reason why such trivial patents keep getting granted. We could potentially be a part of taming the process. Ultimately, trying to prove that software methodologies really shouldn’t be patented in the same way that math or art can’t be patented, but in the meantime we need other things to do. We need to beat this by going over it, under it, around it and through it. (A Maureen quote 🙂

Personal

Over the last few weeks, I have been screwed over by work, to the tune of $12k, I have been working night and day on either work, LA, FTA, wedding stuff, university, and getting really angry about Australian politics. The thing that I have realised is that the reason so much bad stuff is happening is simply because Australians are too lax, too complacent and self-centred, too proud to think there is a problem, and to bother doing anything about it. I’ve been trying to plan how to make the world better, possibly through increased communications, independent media and Free Knowledge, and trying to figure out where I fit in and how I can contribute. My parents went overseas, Jeff was overseas, I have driven all over the place, continued with Kung Fu and my eternal search for ‘truth’ and ‘clarity’.

Oh, and I nearly died this morning. All the activity, all the planning, all the crap going on drained me and I was listening to a lot of aggressive music to get the energy for each day. I drove too fast around a corner on a wet corner, lost control and thought I saw myself dead a few minutes into the future. I regained control, and it was fine, however being on a bridge meant that if I hadn’t it would have been a lot worse than a little prang. I was quite shaken up, and didn’t really realise it till this afternoon. I’m not really scared of dying so much as the complete lack of control I had let myself get to. I think we need a holiday, one of those no mobile and no email holidays, even just for a few days 🙂

WSIS Vs FISL

This is a big one, get a coffee or something 🙂

In the past 6 months there have been two conferences of particular interest. December 2003 was WSIS, the ongoing World Summit of Information Technology, in Geneva, Switzerland. WSIS is United Nations initiative exploring ICT and how it can improve our societies. June 2004 was FISL, the International Free Software Conference in Porto Alegre, Brazil. A lively conference based around Free Software, with a bit of a twist. Both conferences had a strong Free Software (Open Source) presence, and the many attitudes on Free Software at WSIS particularly, were very interesting.

At WSIS, there were around eleven thousand participants, representatives from 175 states of the world, 50 international organisations, 481 NGOs, lots of businesses and media. I was there with LPI (Linux Professional Institute), a Linux certification non-profit organisation, and one of very few non-profit Free Software organisations represented at WSIS, another was the Free Software Foundation. Many NGOs there had success stories of Free Software being used for the public good, from sustainable telecentres, education, and technical training to the concept of Free Knowledge. Free Knowledge is the idea that the more information in the public domain, the better it is for closing the Digital Divide, and protecting information from monopolisation. There was an incredible amount of interest in Free Software to the point of it being included in the Civil Society Declaration, which was significant outcomes of the Geneva phase of WSIS. Other Civil Society documents came out with such remarks as “Software is the cultural technique of the digital age and access to it determines who may participate in a digital world. Free Software with its freedoms of use for any purpose, studying, modification and redistribution is an essential building block for an empowering, sustainable and inclusive information society. No software model should be forbidden or negatively regulated, but Free Software should be promoted for its unique social, educational, scientific, political and economic benefits and opportunities.” Post the actual conference, was a two day exhibition, with booths and many, many talks. As I walked around the exhibition hall with my Linux Professional Institute badge, I had people from all walks stop me and shake my hand, just for having Linux on my badge, an unexpected gesture of support. The talks ranged from Free Software workshops and case studies, e-Democracy, the Digital Divide, poverty, sustainability plans, security, e-Learning, child helplines, peace and war. There were many companies pushing products, and many non-profits helping shape a plan to improve upon all of these areas.

One of the most interesting panel discussions I attended was one between several representatives from ‘developing’ countries, and a proprietary software representative. Represented from the left, was Malaysia, Cuba, the mediator, CompTIA, an African country and Peru. I believe the major software company originally planned for the panel did not show, and so Robert Kramer from CompTIA took their place. It was interesting because each of these countries have invested a lot of time and commitment to Free Software, and all of them had successful implementations that have had real, tangible benefits. The countries spoke of booming export economies, the Government’s responsibility to ensure all the ‘peoples’ data, the Government is kept on Open Standards, and are not able to be controlled by a company, foreign or otherwise. About ensuring all people can access the data without having to own a proprietary piece of software, education, transparency of systems, especially in Government, sustainability, education, security, viruses and many other factors. CompTIA spent the panel trying to rebutt statements made by the country representatives. It was quite a massacre.

Panel Discussion

WSIS is an ongoing conference, it will continue into Tunis next year, and by the end it is hoped a collaborative global plan for ICT and the part it plays in society, plus supporting Action plans and government support. There are three very informative documents that interested parties should read. Firstly is as mentioned the Civil Society Declaration, secondly is the Draft Action plan which has such suggested actions as “Development and deployment of open-source software, multi-platform and open platforms, should be encouraged to provide freedom of choice and to facilitate access to ICTs by all citizens, at an affordable cost” compared to the Final Action plan and Declaration of Principles, thirdly the Australian response to the draft Action plan will give some insight to any input we had, and our projected viewpoints to the international community.

The Brazilians are a unique people. Open, fun-loving, cheeky and passionate, any Australian would love the place. Politically they are exactly the same including the open component, a fascinating thing to see. There was the President of the IT ministry, Sergio Amadeu, who is one of the most impressive politicians I have seen. He cares about his people, and about the best thing for them. He is an active advocate for Free Software in Brazil, as were many other politicians there. In Brazil there is a support and implementation of Free Software all the way from the bottom to the top. The yearly conference FISL attracts well known Free Software people from all around the globe, and the Free Software plan in Brazil is amazing. They have progressive ideas about Free Knowledge, Free Software, an individuals digital rights, and development. They plan on migrating 300,000 federal government computers to Linux, integrating Linux into the 200,000 public schools, and to export around 2 billion USD worth of software per year. For a country that currently spends 1.2 billion dollars in licensing per year, turning the import economy into an export economy, as well as trying to better distribute the skills and wealth within the country is an excellent goal. Many of the Government ministries are already changing over, and the initial plan is to have 40% of the ministries migrated by 2005, at a saving of 5.8 million over 5 years. (C/O an article on the FISL site. Thanks Pedro!) There were several organisations at FISL speaking about massive telecentre and school deployments of Free Software in Brazil and other countries. 80,000 Linux desktops were deployed in Extremadura, Spain, 1 for every 2 children in the schools.

Both events had a women in ICT track, and it was great to see real progress being made there. Education is so important. In ‘Western’ societies ICT is currently a male dominated industry, when computers are fundamentally not a male oriented device. Over 70% of people in ICT in Malaysia are women, and it was inspiring to find that Malaysia used to be very similar to Australia, with less than 10% women in technical roles. The issue of women in ICT in Australia is not limited to ICT, it is across the board in our community. Women in high profile or technical roles are expected to forget their femininity and be more masculine, often by the men and women they work with. Free Software offers an equal platform for people, with a reasonably low barrier to entry. When you see someone online, they could be any race, culture, religion and either sex, so there is a level of acceptance necessary to be effective. Women, children, the aged all have potentially more opportunities than online, than is offered within their culture.

One of the highlights of FISL was a play. It was a simple script, and one we can all initially relate to. Some admins faced with the Blue Screen of Death, panicking, trying to fix the problem with little support and less available documentation. The admins find Linux, and after research, then a migration period are very happy admins. Needless to say both were Matrix style gurus by the end of the play 😉 While trying to find the flaws in Free Software, often people forget to weigh up the issues they currently deal with, and the Brazilians had a good, lighthearted way of looking at it. The world is watching Brazil and can certainly learn from its example. It was a priviledge and a pleasure to be involved in such an event and I hope to return in coming years.

Maddog wrapped FISL up with a wonderful talk, he finished with 3000 of us yelling “software livre, software livre” into his video recorder. Make sure you bug him for it, and look out for me in the second row to Maddogs left 🙂

Some extra cool stuff:

Videos: http://portal.softwarelivre.org/news/2637
http://portal.softwarelivre.org/news/2510

Talks: http://people.debian.org/~enrico/talks

Photos: http://lento.uncasino.it/enrico/galleries/2004-05-Brasile

Governments and Free Software

“They understand the real issue – it’s about sovereignty. They no longer want to funnel Brazil’s wealth abroad when they have a growing and excellent software community of their own. They want local people to provide service and write software for the government and industry. They want local skills to enrich the F/OSS world and build exportable skills. They have a vision for how to both enrich the culture and skills of their country while creating a power-house for the export of services in the future.” The reaction to the Microsoft Rep there when he was trying to say that “I don’t know if this is the best way to attract investment into the country. I know this is not the best way to create a base of development from which to export because there’s no revenue from something free.”

Rock on Brazil 🙂