AS WE HAVE shown before, the FSF's latest campaign has been a smashing success [1, 2, 3] because it led to positive exposure. Ignoring the Microsoft crowd which tries to portray opposition to it as "terroristic", there is plenty of educational coverage out there. Here, for instance, is the Boston press covering the issues raised by the FSF:
Holmes Wilson, Campaigns Manager for the FSF, expounded on the chilling effect of proprietary software on education. "The fundamental role of schools is to encourage a level of curiosity and inquisitiveness and exploration in students that cultivates an engagement with the world, and with ideas. When you're using computers in the classroom that are running proprietary software, there's this barrier there that prevents students from understanding the machine they're using. It is a real, in some ways, an affront, to the natural inquisitiveness of any student. If somebody gets into computers, but then they can't dig into the computer that they're actually using there in the classroom, that's stifling a level of... That's stifling a desire to learn, that really, schools should be encouraging."
The Free Software Foundation has described the One Laptop per Child Project as one that will only help to "turn millions of children into Microsoft dependents."
[...]
It said, due to this dramatic change of policy, many FOSS volunteers quit in disgust.
"But Negroponte, desiring the financial support of Bill Gates and Microsoft, ignored them and proceeded with his decision. As a result, it is expected that the main effect of the OLPC project - if it succeeds - will be to turn millions of children into Microsoft dependents.
"That is a negative effect, to the point where the world would be better off if the OLPC project had never existed. The project tragically became yet another example of Microsoft exerting its control to ends harmful to society's freedom," the FSF said.
With phrases like "Nutty", or "doesn't have much chance of succeeding", even calling them extortionists, it's clear why you wrote this and to which audience. But since this was written in a gently concealed adversarial fashion, I allow my reply to be much the same. Your blog entry is not about the activities of the FSF in Boston, but really is about your shallow opinions, spin, and little else.
Now the neowin news site does seem to be a bubble of Microsoft lovers. fanatics that seem to put all rational discourse to one side while they savage the “opponent”. Their main argument seems to be “Well if you can serve me with the exact this I want, then I’ll be your friend”
--Richard Stallman
Comments
aeshna23
2009-08-31 13:16:36