Show more

“rms-open-letter” (against RMS) has 2720 signatures. “rms-support-letter” (in favor) has 3121 signatures!

To those who write about 's alleged transphobia, I offer this response.

Stallman is demonstrably not transphobic. If you believe otherwise, I wonder whether you have actually read Stallman's own writings on his use of pronouns, or merely formed an opinion from what secondary sources have reported. Stallman's stance on the subject can be found at stallman.org/articles/genderle

Regardless of Stallman's position on this issue, a transgender person's perceived right to be addressed using the pronouns of his or her choice does not compel another person to act in accordance with that perception. In most Western liberal democracies, most people enjoy a very real, i.e. legally protected, right to free speech; certainly to the extent that the speaker's choice of pronouns is concerned.

As such, rigid adherence to certain constructs of language can, at worst, be ascribed to self-interest, namely the assertion that the existent right to free speech trumps another's perceived right to be addressed in a particular way. That's a wholly reasonable attitude to take on principle alone, and garners more weight as one examines the pressure currently being placed on this central tenet of liberal society by regressive elements and their proclivity for cancel culture.

The suppression of free speech has far-reaching consequences for the whole of humanity; the inflexible use of pronouns affects a much smaller subset.

@anjum The conflation is the same all over Europe and cynically exploited for political capital.

In the Netherlands, our centrist and left-wing parties are careful to hide their supranational policies behind the guise of pro-European, because, well, we are in Europe after all, so how could any sane voter not be pro-European?

In reality, of course, many people across Europe won’t vote for any pro-EU party, precisely because the voters themselves are pro-European.

RMS 

@M0YNG Skills are just the tip of the iceberg.

What about RMS's unwavering lifelong commitment to the cause of free software? I don't see anyone else who even comes close.

The contribution of the GPL alone eclipses what most other hackers will achieve in their careers, and constitutes far more than a "handful of things" in itself.

I would contend that Stallman has, across 35 years in the service of free software, enabled and inspired far more people than he has scared off or otherwise demotivated. This cannot be quantified, of course, so I won't argue the point.

@freemo No, it was correct to delete them. Better to have the full message contained in a single posting and its content not duplicated.

I verified my Moa config before posting, but something still went wrong behind the scenes.

@freemo Yes, I did use Moa, but for whichever reason, it didn't work in the direction of Twitter; from which I drew the illogical and clearly wrong conclusion that it wouldn't work in the other direction, either.

Very cool that toots of arbitrary length are simply handled as one would hope across the Fediverse.

@freemo Incidentally, how do other instances deal with your huge and generous character limit? I assume that it's honoured, but I can see technical issues with not knowing that the length is immutable.

Has someone developed an efficient way of dealing with that dynamically?

@freemo The reason I did that was... incompetence.

After posting a single message on Qoto, I noted that cross-posting to Twitter had failed.

I then posted separately to Twitter, using a client that automatically split my message into ten parts, which then, thanks to Sod's Law (you may know him as Murphy in the US), **were** cross-posted to Mastodon.

I have deleted the ten individual postings. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.

Richard a.k.a. is the founder of the Free Software Foundation (), author of the original versions of gcc and Emacs, and perhaps best known for his creation of the GNU Public Licence a.k.a. .

Thanks to the pioneering work of Richard Stallman, Android has a freely available kernel that can boot it, and companies like Samsung are forced to release their augmented kernel source code to us every month, so that we can build — using Stallman’s compiler — a working custom recovery like TWRP.

Richard Stallman is currently under coordinated attack by the cancel culture mob. They have him firmly in their sights and have set their hearts on trying to get him removed from the board of the organisation he founded in 1985, and which has been his life’s work.

The reason for the attack is that Stallman is alleged to hold views that are “problematic” in the eyes of his detractors.

My own stance is that to even engage in debate of Stallman’s views would be to lend credence to the notion that they are somehow germane to the work that Stallman does in support of free software. I contend that they are not, which is not to imply that the accusations leveled at Stallman would otherwise require intellectual or moral contortion to refute. They would not. Stallman’s views, even if they were relevant, have been grossly misrepresented.

The attempted silencing of free speech is always painful to behold, but this ill-conceived attack on Stallman is particularly stomach-turning, given how much of his life he has devoted to the freedom of others, including those who accuse him now.

His contributions to free software and his consistent, uncompromising commitment to his beliefs regarding software freedom have made millionaires of others, including many among his accusers now, while Stallman himself continues to lead a life of subsistence.

would not exist if it hadn’t been for Stallman.

Without Stallman, we would not have the assurance that important software like will continue to exist long after the project’s creator has moved on.

Without Stallman, would not now exist.

Were it not for Richard Stallman, most of the cheap electronic appliances and gadgets in your home would simply not exist.

Without Richard Stallman’s groundbreaking work, the world would be a different and much worse place.

Now you can do something in return. Richard Stallman needs your support.

Please consider signing the petition below:

github.com/rms-support-letter/

If you need more background before signing, please take the time to do your own research and reach your own conclusions.

@sjw

The app user, not the poster on spinster.xyz, is Tusky's customer.

This is absolutely tantamount to censorship, not to mention the arrogance and condescension involved, because Tusky's author is forcing his morality on the user.

It's a great shame and not a little ironic that so many people in the Fediverse are intent on reintroducing the problems that decentralisation fixes.

@trinsec Het gaat mij eerder om de partij en haar politiek dan om de lijsttrekker. Voor mijn part zou Van Haga ook een prima leider zijn.

Bijkomend probleem is dat er ondanks die 37 partijen over rechts toch weinig te kiezen valt. Het zijn net tv-zenders: heel veel van hetgeen men niet wil.

Maar goed, een groot deel van het land kan er blijkbaar toch geen genoeg van krijgen.

The quest to rid my life of and reduce my reliance on centralised services continues.

So let's see if this is properly crossposed from to .

Ik heb mijn steentje bijgedragen, maar het lijkt erop dat we nog 4 jaar Rutte in het verschiet hebben.

Het is zo te zien op weg naar de 8 zetels. Hulde! Waren het er maar meer. Volgende keer beter.

This is a long shot, but I want to put the power of social media and federation to the test.

My son wants to become a commercial airline pilot when he’s grown up. It would be awesome if we could find a commercial pilot in the fediverse that we can follow and ask questions of.

If everyone who reads this could boost it, it would be much appreciated and it would mean the world to my son if he could get in touch with a real-life commercial pilot! ✈️

#pilot #flying #airline #jet #boeing #airbus

@moaparty @foozmeat Trying to authorise Moa for Twitter is returning a 500 at the moment.

@freemo That's great. You've managed to strike a very delicate balance in a philosophical minefield that is constantly contracting.

And how ironic that the safety of the LGBT community was threatened not by maintaining a link with the perceived threat, but by breaking that very link and becoming unable to keep a spotlight shone on it.

'Know thy enemy' didn't become an adage for nothing.

This is the myopia of censorship, and it's as applicable to the digital world as it's ever been to the corporeal.

You can ban speech, but speech is merely the verbal expression of thought; and you simply cannot eradicate thought, no matter how repugnant you might find the doctrines it sometimes espouses. All you achieve is driving it from scrutiny into the shadows, where it festers and grows with ever greater resentment.

More importantly, you drive a stake through the heart of constructive discourse, too; which is why it's tragic to witness the succumbing of so many academic institutions in the West to the practice of creating safe spaces, where ideas can and must go unchallenged, and anyone foolhardy enough to issue such a challenge is punished by being summarily deplatformed.

This is how the USSR used to operate, and for reasons I will never understand and would not even believe possible, had I not witnessed the emergence of the phenomenon first-hand, this is what many people in the West now also aspire to: a culture in which free thought is suppressed, either semi-voluntarily via peer pressure, or under direct duress.

The town square has undergone a seismic shift in recent years, a process catalysed by the Covid-19 pandemic. Public discussion no longer takes place in open spaces, be they physical or virtual, but has slowly moved, one brick at a time, behind the walled gardens of big tech.

And people have foolishly done it to themselves over the last 15 to 20 years, shifting all of their content away from the public digital space onto platforms that require an account to read it, and/or editorial control over it before they will print it.

A few powerful companies in Silicon Valley are now very much the arbiters of free speech, with no government or even industry oversight to prevent the abuse of that power. And these are not neutral entities, but corporations with a very well-defined agenda run by demagogues with delusions of grandeur.

Most people have yet to even wake up and realise just how much freedom they have surrendered.

I always imagined that people would go screaming into the night when Big Brother finally came to assert total control over their lives. Never did I consider the possibility that they would surrender without a fight in exchange for the illusion of a free lunch. A Faustian bargain if ever there was one.

Anyway, I'll rant all night if I build up a head of steam, so I'd better quit here and save the rest for an endless diatribe of toots some other day.

@khird @freemo Ah yeah, I hadn't seen that list on their site.

OK, it's not exactly in the spirit of federation, but hey, it's their service so their call, too.

Thanks for clarifying.

Nice chatting with you.

I'll close by thanking you for providing this instance.

It's great that there's a place that a) allows unfettered access to the entire Fediverse; b) hasn't descended into complete chaos because of it; and c) most surprisingly of all, hasn't been widely blocked due to it.

It seems to me that by far the most important thing about Mastodon is now sadly overlooked in this age of censorship and general intolerance of open discussion; and that ironically even includes the network's creator.

Thanks for providing a safe haven for the open exchange of ideas. Only in such an environment can ideas flourish and the human race truly progress.

For that reason, I feel very strongly about free speech, and I consider the worst excesses of free speech a very small price to pay for its benefits. The alternative is unthinkable. This seems to be an unpopular opinion nowadays.

Have a good day and thanks for the crossposting tip.

Show more
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.