Richard Stallman's Free Software Speech in 2020 (FSF Turning 35)
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2021-05-09 14:11:36 UTC
- Modified: 2021-05-09 14:59:05 UTC
Video download link
Summary: We've re-encoded (as WebM) the likely sole/only speech Richard Stallman gave about his movement last year; today seems like a suitable time to republish it because tomorrow a British university/group will replatform him (to use their term)
THE portions of the speech, as shown above, may be relevant. This was probably the only time between September 2019 and March 2021 that
Dr. RMS spoke
publicly about Free software
in particular. Tomorrow evening he
plans to do so again and
the title of his talk (with a 1.5-hour slot) is
"Free Software: the Foundation of Freedom in Your Computing".
When Richard Stallman
announced his return (to the FSF's Board) back in March of this year we also linked to some video segments/clips of him announcing his return, but those were (and
still are) remotely hosted, so we've prepared
a local copy below. Those are historically significant/important, so we don't wish to rely on availability/access to third parties.
RMS isn't deserving of
this bad treatment. There have been
many videos
in his support since then (or videos condemning the 'cancel mob'), but corporate media simply ignores voices that don't suit its agenda.
⬆
Update: Partial transcript of the main video (at the top):
[00:00]
Hello. I'm Richard Stallman. Thirty seven years ago, I launched the development of the GNU operating system. The aim was to develop a complete operating system, including applications and utilities as well as the basic
[00:30]
core, so that users would be able to all their computing without ever running a non-free program. They would be able to do all their computing in Freedom.
[00:45]
Thirty five years ago, I launched the Free Software Foundation to raise funds to support GNU developments. Of course nowadays the Free Software Foundation does other things
[01:00]
to support Free Software and the Free Software Movement, in addition to supporting the development of GNU. Thirty seven years ago the way you did computing was by loading programs into your computer, applications, utilities, games, and so on and each of these programs was at least somewhat general purpose.