Non-free SF on free systems
Filed in
Society,
Computers
Tags: free software, gnu/linux, photoshop, the gimp

People are ignorant, but we already know that. As usual, I’ve read something really stupid on Twitter this morning. It said: I hope Apple will develop for everyone [every OS]. I think it would be one of the worst things to ever happen. Why do people want to install non-free software on free systems? If we want a truly free system, we cannot accept non-free software in our system. If people keep installing, running or developing non-free components, GNU/Linux will be turned into a fuzzy combination of free and non-free software. And we also could find free software which depends on non-free packages. The freedom movement would have failed if this happens.
People wants to install non-free software on free systems because they have not idea. They have not been educated using the free software principles. They don’t understand why the software should be free. They are confused between the free software and the open source movement. The universities doesn’t teach anything about the free software principles, even many teachers don’t know anything about free software. People wants to install non-free software on free systems because they don’t know what the free software is.
The insistence of running Adobe Photoshop on GNU/Linux is a good example of this. I’m not going to talk about the Photoshop/The Gimp challenge, although I manage well myself using The Gimp. Each user should know that Adobe Photoshop has a horrible license which it doesn’t allow the freedom to run, modify and redistribute it. The Gimp (GNU Image Manipulation Program) is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL), so we have the freedom to run, copy, change, study, distribute, improve the software and release our improvements. That’s how the community gets benefits. The Gimp, like free software, contributes to human knowledge, whilst Adobe Photoshop, like non-free software does not.
I read a message in a mailing list that could not have shocked me more. It said: Google also sponsored some work by Codeweavers to improve [Wine] support for Photoshop (’cause so many people want it) What a bad news for the free software! That’s not what people want, that’s not what GNU/Linux was made for. Why don’t Google support The Gimp instead of a Wine support for Adobe Photoshop?



A new law has been passed in Norway which will make Government, state and regional agencies, authorities and services start publishing documents using the following open formats: HTML, ODF and PDF. They will be able also publish in other formats, but they must always publish in one of these formats from January 1st 2009. Futhermore, in 2014 the published documents by institutions must have been converted and made available in one of the three formats. These mandates will make every citizen able to feel free to choose which software they want to use to get access to public information. Using open formats in publication doesn’t force people to do use a particular software (in many cases private software).
Today is a special day. For many Andalusians, today is the true national day of Andalusia. Thirty years ago, Andalusian people went out to the streets to claim their rights of self-government. A 18-year-old boy called José Manuel García Caparrós was killed (4th December 1977) by a coward Spaniard in Málaga. José Manuel tried to put an Andalusian flag on an official building, but someone shoot him. Many people cried his death, and nowadays Andalusia is still crying for him. In the Carnival of Cádiz, many coplas have been written about him. I remember specially one called Un 4 de Diciembre muere un malagueño interpreted by Raza Mora.






