---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Frederick Noronha (FN) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2005 23:18:55 +0530 (IST)
Subject: [little_league] The Free Software Foundation's Campaign for Free BIOS
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


 http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/free-bios.html
 
 Campaign for Free BIOS
 
 Chips and Motherboards that support LinuxBIOS
 
 The Free Software Foundation's Campaign for Free BIOS
 
 In 1984 the GNU Project set out to make it possible to operate a computer in 
 freedom--to operate it without any non-free software that would deny
the user's
 freedom
 
 At the time, the obstacle to this was simply the operating system. A computer 
 won't run without an operating system, but all the modern operating systems of 
 1983 were proprietary, user-subjugating software. There was no way to use 
 modern computers in freedom. We set out to change the situation by
developing a
 free software operating system, called GNU.
 
 When the kernel Linux became free software in 1992, it filled the last gap in 
 GNU. The combined GNU/Linux operating system achieved our goal: you could 
 install it in a bare PC, and run the computer without any installed non-free 
 software.
 
 Strictly speaking, there was a non-free program in that computer: the
BIOS. But
 that was impossible to replace, and by the same token, it didn't count.
 
 The BIOS was impossible to replace because it was stored in ROM: the only way 
 to to put in a different BIOS was by replacing part of the hardware.
In effect,
 the BIOS was itself hardware--and therefore didn't really count as
software. It
 was like the program that (we can suppose) exists in the computer that (we can 
 suppose) runs your watch or your microwave oven: since you can't install 
 software on it, it may as well be circuits, not a computer at all.
 
 The ethical issues of free software arise because users obtain programs and 
 install them in computers; they don't really apply to hidden embedded 
 computers, or the BIOS burned in a ROM, or the microcode inside a processor 
 chip, or the firmware that is wired into a processor in an I/O device. In 
 aspects that relate to their design, those things are software; but as regards 
 copying and modification, they may as well be hardware. The BIOS in ROM was, 
 indeed, not a problem.
 
 Since that time, the situation has changed. Today the BIOS is no longer burned 
 in ROM; it is stored in nonvolatile writable memory that users can rewrite. 
 Today the BIOS sits square on the edge of the line. It comes prewritten in our 
 computers, and normally we never install another. So far, that is just barely 
 enough to excuse treating it as hardware. But once in a while the manufacturer 
 suggests installing another BIOS, which is available only as an executable. 
 This, clearly, is installing a non-free program--it is just as bad as 
 installing Microsoft Windows, or Adobe Photoshop, or Sun's Java Platform. As 
 the unethical practice of installing another BIOS executable becomes common, 
 the version delivered inside the computer starts to raise an ethical problem 
 issue as well.
 
 The way to solve the problem is to run a free BIOS. And our community has 
 developed free BIOSes--for instance, LinuxBIOS, which is a modified version of 
 the kernel, Linux. However, few computers can run them. Whereas "PC clones" 
 were and are quite similar, and fully-documented as regards what the
kernel and
 user-space programs need to know, the commands that the BIOS must execute in 
 order to initialize the machine are varied, and in most cases secret. How to 
 install a new BIOS is also secret on many machines. And so far, most 
 manufacturers have not given us the necessary cooperation of providing these 
 specifications. Some desktop machines can run a free BIOS, but we
don't know of
 any laptop that can do so.
 
 The FSF uses laptops donated by IBM over the past few years. This was
one among
 several ways IBM cooperated with the GNU Project. But the cooperation is 
 incomplete: when I asked for the specifications necessary to make
LinuxBIOS run
 on these laptops, IBM refused--citing, as the reason, the enforcement of 
 "trusted computing" http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/can-you-trust.html 
 Treacherous computing is, itself, an attack on our freedom; it is also, it 
 seems, a motivation to obstruct our freedom in other ways.
 
 Not all of our community perceives the non-free BIOS as an acute problem. Much 
 of our community supports the open source philosophy, which says that
the issue
 at stake is choosing a development model that produces powerful, reliable 
 software. The open source philosophy doesn't say that "closed source" software 
 is unethical, only that it is likely not to be as reliable. People who hold 
 those views might care about the loss of freedom imposed by a non-free BIOS, 
 because in their philosophy, freedom is not the issue. For us in the free 
 software movement, freedom is the main issue; we have to solve this problem, 
 whether they help or not.
 
 How You Can Help
 
 
 Since requests for manufacturers' cooperation have not solved the problem, 
 another approach is needed. Now we are asking you to help.
 
 For instance, simply installing a new BIOS in the machine is a substantial 
 challenge. Most manufacturers don't publish the information on how to do this. 
 If you can figure this out for some recent model, especially a laptop, that 
 would be a substantial contribution.
 
 Cooperation from the manufacturers would make that work unnecessary. However, 
 to gain cooperation we need to press for it.
 
 The most uncooperative company is Intel, which has started a sham
"open source"
 BIOS project. The software consists of all the unimportant parts of of a BIOS, 
 without the hard parts. It won't run, and doesn't bring us any closer
to a BIOS
 that does run. It is just a distraction. By contrast, AMD cooperates pretty 
 well.
 
 You can help our campaign by buying AMD CPU chips and not buying Intel, and by 
 publishing statements about what you're doing. Likewise, buy motherboards that 
 support free BIOS. See http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/free-bios.html  for 
 information on which companies cooperate and which models and motherboards are 
 supported.
 
 When you do this, tell your friends and your coworkers. And please tell us, 
 too--please write to [EMAIL PROTECTED] to tell us that you have chosen what to 
buy 
 because it supports a free BIOS.
 
 You can also help our campaign by writing to manufacturers such as Intel, 
 saying they ought to cooperate with a fully free BIOS. Calm but strong 
 disapproval, coupled with stating an intention to take action accordingly, is 
 more effective than venting rage. Please send a copy of your message to 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED], so we can monitor the support for this campaign. The more 
mail 
 they get, the more effect, so please do add your voice to ours.
 
 We would like to offer positive inducements as well as pressure. Our
idea is to
 endorse, for a period of time, the first manufacturer in a given category of 
 machine (for instance, laptops) that cooperates fully with free BIOS. To make 
 this offer effective, we would like to collect a long list of people who say 
 they intend to make their choices according to our endorsements. See 
 http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/free-bios.html for how to add your name to this 
 campaign.
 
 Once this campaign has built up strength, we will publicize offers of 
 endorsements and begin inviting manufacturers to accept them. We will ask for 
 your help at every step.
 
 Created by peterb  Last modified  2005-02-28 10:27 AM
 
 FORWARDED VIA:
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Frederick Noronha (FN)                    Nr Convent Saligao 403511 GoaIndia
 Freelance Journalist                      P: 832-2409490 M: 9822122436
 http://fn.swiki.net                       http://fn-floss.notlong.com
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Where the needs of the world and your talents cross, there lies your
 vocation. --Aristotle
 
 
 Yahoo! Groups Sponsor 
 
 ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
 ________________________________
 Yahoo! Groups Links
 
To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/little_league/
  
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.

_______________________________________________
ilugd mailinglist -- ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
http://frodo.hserus.net/mailman/listinfo/ilugd
Archives at: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.user-groups.linux.delhi 
http://www.mail-archive.com/ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org/

Reply via email to