The GNU Manifesto Turns Thirty (New Yorker)
The GNU Manifesto Turns Thirty (New Yorker)
The New Yorker notes
the 30th anniversary of the GNU Manifesto.
"Stallman was one of the first to grasp that, if commercial entities
were going to own the methods and technologies that controlled computers,
then computer users would inevitably become beholden to those
entities. This has come to pass, and in spades. Most computer users have
become dependent on proprietary code provided by companies like Apple,
Facebook, and Google, the use of which comes with conditions we may not
condone or even know about, and can’t control; we have forfeited the
freedom to adapt such code according to our needs, preferences, and
personal ethics.
"