User: k2307 |
Eben Moglen: "the be very afraid tour" Filmed at Red Hat Summit 2007 during his breakout session Tags: microsoft red hat redhat patents lawsuits copyright gpl v3 summit eben moglen |
User: jondstahl |
Software and Community in the Early 21st Century Keynote address given at Plone Conference 2006 by Eben Moglen of the Software Freedom Law Center Tags: open-source free-software software community eben-moglen plone ploneconf2006 |
User: roblimo |
Eben Moglen: How I discovered Free Software and met RMS Professor Moglen grew up in an era where software was more free than it is today. In this clip he talks about his path eventually crossed that of Richard Stallman, and how they came to work together to make software free once more. Tags: Stallman Eben Moglen GPL Joe Barr free software FSF linux roblimo |
User: darkapitude |
Eben Moglen: A message about the Free Software Foundation Eben Moglen: A message about the Free Software Foundation (2006 Foundation (http://www.fsf.org) appeals to free software community to support the upcoming work of the Free Software Foundation. Eben covers the Novell and Microsoft deal, GPLv3, FSF's campaign against DRM DefectiveByDesign.org and software patents. Tags: Eben Moglen free media software open source fsf foundation linux gnu GPL patents |
User: UNCChapelHill |
Eben Moglen - The dotCommunist Manifesto - How Culture Becam Eben Moglen gives a talk about the rise of free information, the problems with current copyright laws, and how various powers are conspiring to keep free information from becoming reality. Tags: SILS UNC-CH culture copyright economics information globalism free |
User: uoc |
Eben Moglen - IV Congrés Internet, dret i política Conferència inaugural del IV Congrés Internet, dret i política per part del Sr. Eben Moglen, professor de Dret i Història del dret a la Facultat de Dret de la Universitat de Colúmbia i president del Software Freedom Law Center (Nova York) del dia 2 de juny de 2008 Tags: UOC IV Congrés Internet dret política Eben Moglen |
User: roblimo |
Eben Moglen: How to change the world Part of a wide-ranging interview with Joe Barr on the last day of the Red Hat Summit in San Diego, during which he covered GPLv3; described his personal and professional history with Microsoft's General Counsel, Brad Smith; revealed his geek side describing his years as a programmer; and told the real story behind the very successful Phil Zimmerman defense team, which stared down the NSA and why it was the feds which blinked, Eben shared with me a lesson he had learned from Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Tags: Eben Moglen free software linux GPL Joe Barr roblimo |
User: simuove |
The system of ownership of ideas - #2 This video was recorded in 2004 at the ITC-ILO in Turin, during the closure conference of the Master on Intellectual Property. Duration is 27 minutes, it was divided in 3 pieces of 9 minutes each to fit in YouTube. This is part #2. We make things and we give them away. Here we made this, would you like it? Take some, it's free, free as in "freedom"... Tags: Eben-Moglen FSF Free-Software Open-source Freedom Spectrum |
User: OnOpenSource |
The Software Freedom Law Center- Eben Moglen- Part 1 Eben Moglen, Founder of the Software Freedom Law Center and Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, speaks about Open Source technology and the law in this two part series. For part 2, and many other FREE OnOpenSource Podcasts visit their Vidcast site: http://www.informit.com/podcasts/channel.aspx?c=1977eb71-4a34-42dd-a7d0-7952a08c527e or subscribe to their show at iTunes. www.informIT.com/podcasts Tags: Software Freedom Law Center Eben Moglen Open Source Technology OnOpenSource Podcast www.informit.com |
User: vnunet |
Eben Moglen discusses GPL 3 and patents Watch the full video here: http://tinyurl.com/2kbe8r GPLv3 co-author Eben Moglen shares his vision on the future of software patents Tags: eben moglen gpl3 gplv3 open source gpl software license |
User: Google |
Thoughts on the World's Largest Possible Computer & What... Google Tech Talks March 27, 2007 ABSTRACT The relation between Google and the free software movement is one of the most important diplomatic relationships in the 21st century. But it is largely invisible, even to the principals. In this talk I will try and make some of what we have taken for granted less implicit, so we can progress with mutual confidence and collective security. Speaker: Eben Moglen, Software Freedom Law Center Chairman of the Software Freedom Law Center, professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University Law School, and General Counsel of the Free Software Foundation. In addition to FSF, Professor Moglen has represented many of the world's leading free software... Tags: google howto thoughts world largest possible |
User: freemedvd |
Indian Knowledge Symposium Packed into eight and half minutes are comments from Jimmy Wales (founder of Wikipedia), Dr. Vandana Shiva (from the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology), Eben Moglen (of the Software Freedom Law Foundation)--even representitves from the governments of India and Sri Lanka. CC-BY-NC-ND 2.5 Tags: knowledge india red hat culture free |
User: InfoWorld |
Don't Be Your Competitor's Free Lunch Eben Moglen, Chairman of the Software Freedom Law Center and Professor, Columbia University Law School, explains why smaller software-focused businesses will soon be deserting Apache- and BSD-style permissive licenses for GPL [2 3] and their successors. Tags: Open Source OSBC InfoWorld infoworld infoworld.com |
User: FinanMart |
Commenting on the historical impact of the Java open source Eben Moglen 11/13/06 Founder, Software Freedom Law Center Commenting on the historical impact of the Java open source project. 'Sun's policy of open sourcing Java under the GPL is an extraordinary achievement in returning programming technology to that state of freely available knowledge.' Tags: Commenting on historical impact of the Java open source project |
User: darkapitude |
The Free Software Foundation needs your Help Dear free software supporter, At the 2007 annual Associate Members meeting held in March at MIT in Cambridge, the FSF board and staff gathered with members from around the world to discuss our activities and the tremendous successes we have had together in the past year. We fought Digital Restrictions Management through our DefectiveByDesign.org campaign, released version 3 of the GNU General Public License to help neutralize anti-free-software laws like the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and defend against Microsoft's attempts to make free software proprietary through patent promises, released the GNU Affero GPL to support developers building network server software, supported fully free software distributions like gNewSense, backed high-priority software development projects like the free Flash player Gnash, and saw the continued success of our campaign to lift the "Java trap" with Sun's ongoing release of the Java platform under the GPL. Finally, following on from our discussion at the beginning of 2007 with major manufacturers and our release of the white paper, "Hardware Free From Restrictions," general-purpose computers are now available from major retailers with free software preloaded. But we weren't just looking backward. We also discussed the many challenges facing the free software movement, and what our priorities should be in 2008 to ensure everyone's ability to run a completely free operating system. The major issue we isolated is the threat of software patents. Beyond individual patent claims that can make developing any software program akin to crossing a field of landmines, there is the very dangerous threat posed by Microsoft and the broad unspecified claims they are making against free software in an effort to pressure corporations and free software distributors to pay them a tax for the distribution of free software. I can tell you, that the Free Software Foundation has received many tip-offs of companies being strong-armed by Microsoft to pay to use free software--the software our community created. During our meeting, associate member Jack Whitley highlighted a book on software patents written by Ben Klemens, titled Math you Can't Use. Jack suggested we send a copy to every US lawmaker, and key judges. He said the book was a powerful argument for how the accepted understanding--that there was little anyone could do about software patents in the US--was wrong. I read the book and was also convinced that there are actions we can take and that the elimination of software patents is in fact possible. I am pleased to say that Klemens is now the director of EndSoftPatents.org, and inside the current issue of the Bulletin he introduces our supporters to the history of software patents. The EndSoftPatents.org campaign will educate the public to the truth about software patents: how we can abolish them through legal action, and how we can campaign with others to push for legislative action. It is your financial support that will make this campaign a success. If you have a website of your own, please also encourage others to contribute by adding the member sign-up widget available at fsf.org to your pages. Funds will enable us to support necessary legal action and to rally public support behind this campaign's message and our broader message in support of the freedoms all computer users should have. Tags: GNU Linux Free Software Foundation opensource open-source GPL richard stallman eben moglen linus torwalds |