On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 10:27:28AM -0400, Richard Stallman wrote: > Thinking about your answer, and a couple of others, I realize that I > didn't phrase my question clearly. > > You've made several _technical_ suggestions for how GNOME can be more > useful and thus do more to enhance GNU/Linux and the free world. They > are interesting ideas, and could make GNOME a better piece of free > software. However, the foundation board doesn't make technical > decisions, and the foundation couldn't implement ideas of this kind.
The first of the two items I mentioned was as much an issue of policy as technology, and the second was a high-level direction. The board does not make technical decisions, but the board and the foundation can offer general, non-binding guidance, as well as encourage development in specific areas or towards specific goals by various means (e.g. targeted hackathons, user studies, hardware availability). Nonetheless, I understand the distinction you're making. > Thus, what I really should ask the candidates is this. > > How do you suggest the GNOME Foundation could contribute more to > advance the cause of free software and users' freedom, over and above > what GNOME contributes by being useful free software? A few possibilities, more tailored towards what the Foundation could do rather than what GNOME software could do: - More direct partnership with organizations creating software that is commonly used with GNOME and built on GNOME technologies; not just between community members in each community, but taking advantage of the GNOME Foundation's organizational status to establish higher-level contacts with people setting direction for those organizations. For instance, the GNOME Foundation should have some relationship with Mozilla around Firefox and its use of GTK and GNOME technologies on Linux, and with the LibreOffice project. We should use such relationships for two purposes: to ensure that those projects integrate with GNOME as well as any "native" GNOME application, and to attempt to get projects commonly used with GNOME to maintain policies that align with the cause of Free Software. - More direct partnership and promotion with those working to bring Free Software to many more users, such as Endless. (*Not* suggesting a monetary partnership here.) - The GNOME Foundation, as an organization, could take a position on more issues related to Free Software. GNOME has issued position statements before (such as https://www.gnome.org/news/2015/03/gnome-supports-gpl-compliance-through-vmware-suit-2/); we could also work with other activism-centric organizations like the EFF, and ensure that we have processes in place to quickly determine which causes we'd want to sign on for. - I would suggest that the GNOME Foundation should take a position on the responsible hosting of Free Software. SourceForge has started demonstrating an utter lack of responsibility, bundling malware with installers for Free Software, including GNOME projects like the GIMP. I'm currently thinking of writing up a "Hosting Free Software Responsibly" statement for projects, organizations (FSF, GNOME, etc), and hosting sites to sign on to. - Josh Triplett _______________________________________________ foundation-list mailing list foundation-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-list