The above statements sound as if they could have been written by Richard M. Stallman, founder of the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In fact, they come from the Vatican Report "Ethics in Internet" (EiI). The FSF position on the same issues is that society "needs information that is truly available to its citizens -- for example, programs that people can read, fix, adapt, and improve, not just operate."
Affinities between Catholic doctrine and Free Software
Technically (and ethically) speaking, Free Software, regardless of its price, can be freely modified and shared, and is free from per-seat costs, royalties, patents, and similar restrictions. The same definition can be applied to file formats and communication protocols. The term Free (with uppercase F) here indicates software and standards available under these conditions. In recent decades, the Catholic Church has published several documents that clearly match this approach to information technology. Here are some examples.
For the purposes of this article, we can regard software programs as a category of machinery. The 1967 Encyclical of Pope Paul VI on the development of peoples "Populorum Progressio" said, "Unless the existing machinery is modified, the disparity between rich and poor nations will increase rather than diminish."
Then in 1971, the Pastoral Instruction "Communio et Progressio" (CeP) on the means of social communication stated:
With the right to be informed goes the duty to seek information. Information does not simply occur; it has to be sought. On the other hand, in order to get it, the man who wants information must have access to the varied means of social communication.
Consequently, the Catholic Church should not use proprietary file formats and computer protocols, since they can become a way to prevent access to information, restrict it or lock end users to any specific (maybe too expensive) software program.
This is very similar to Stallman's request to put an end to proprietary email attachments.
This right to information is inseparable from freedom of communication.
When it comes to computer-based communication, this can be only guaranteed with Free formats and protocols. It also implies that computer users should be free to choose which programs to use for such communication. The same wish was expressed by Stallman.
This freedom of communication also implies that individuals and groups must be free to seek out and spread information. It also means that they should have free access to the media....
An example of the cultural potential of the media can be found in their service to the traditional folk arts of countries where stories, plays, song and dance still express an ancient national inheritance. Because of their modern techniques, the media can make these achievements known more widely. They can record them so that they can be seen and heard again and again and make them accessible even in districts where the old traditions have vanished. In this way, the media help to impress on a nation a proper sense of its cultural identity and by expressing this, delight and enrich other cultures and countries as well.
Many developing countries are already successfully using free software and formats to preserve their cultural heritage since free software can be adapted quickly, at the smallest possible cost, to any language or dialect. Catholic missionaries worldwide should be informed that such tools exist.
Ten years after CeP, Pope John Paul II wrote in the Encyclical "Laborem exercens" that through work, man not only transforms nature, adapting it to his own needs, but he also achieves fulfillment as a human being and indeed, in a sense, becomes "more a human being." As long as he
intends his work also to increase the common good developed together with his compatriots, thus realizing that in this way work serves to add to the heritage of the whole human family, of all the people living in the world....
In Christian tradition, the right to private property is subordinated to the right to common use, to the fact that goods are meant for everyone....
The Church has always proclaimed that "when a man works he not only alters things and society, he develops himself as well. He learns much, he cultivates his resources, he goes outside of himself and beyond himself."
The GNU Manifesto of the Free Software movement only talks about programming and programmers, but there we can find a vision of work (programming in this case) as a way to become a better person and help others: "The fundamental act of friendship among programmers is the sharing of programs.... GNU serves as an example to inspire and a banner to rally others to join us in sharing. This can give us a feeling of harmony which is impossible if we use software that is not free. For about half the programmers I talk to, this is an important happiness that money cannot replace."
In 2002, besides the above quoted EiI, the Vatican published "The Church and Internet," which reminds us that "Church leaders are obliged to use the full potential of the computer age to serve the human and transcendent vocation of every person" because the Internet "offers people direct and immediate access to important religious and spiritual resources." The same document points out that, as early as 1992, the Pastoral Instruction Aetatis Novae had called two-way communication and public opinion "one of the ways of realizing in a concrete manner the Church's character as communio." The Catholic Church is expected (EiI) "to have a visible, active presence on the Internet and be a partner in the public dialogue about its development" and "be of help by indicating ethical and moral criteria which are relevant to the process."
What about the file formats? The format used to store Church files is even more important than the programs used to access them. Official Church records should last and remain available for millennia. Nothing less durable than parchment, or less freely readable, should be used for these purposes, especially if its availability depends on the survival on any single private company.
Technology recommendations for the Church
The Catholic Church has acknowledged that the Internet is an opportunity too important for all humanity to be missed. However, to the best of my knowledge, the Church has not yet realized (at least officially) that Her concerns and recommendations on social communications should be reflected in the software, file formats, and computer protocols She uses.
The Free Software movement, albeit unintentionally, has already created software "machinery" that fully conforms to all the guidelines cited above. The Catholic Church's vision on means of social communication can be fully realized with free protocols and file formats such as OpenDocument. By itself, choosing the right technology will never be enough to achieve common good, but it is a necessary step in the right direction.
After I started writing this article I discovered two Christian pastors who have, each independently, come to similar conclusions. The first one is Rev. Parris of the Matheteuo Christian Fellowship, a Baptist Church, who has also published several manuals to help churches (and other non-profit institutions) to switch to Free Software. His "Penguin Driven Church Office" is almost exclusively a technical report, but also notes that "Richard Stallman ... may be an atheist, but his view of software has close theological parallels to Christian theology. Proprietary software limits my ability to help my neighbor, one of the cornerstone of the Christian faith."
I also came across a Catholic priest in Italy, Don Paolo La Terra, who is the director of the Diocesan Office of Ragusa (Sicily) for Catholic Education, Culture, School and University, besides teaching in several institutions. In his home page, Don Paolo declares he is convinced that "both the formulation and the philosophy of Open Source are very evangelic" and dedicates to his the readers "a verse which, I think, really is a theological foundation of Free Software: 'Simply I learned about her, and ungrudgingly do I share -- her riches I do not hide away' (The Book of Wisdom 7,13)".
The whole Catholic Church should steer in this direction. Remember the request contained in EiI: "Determined action in the private and public sectors is needed to close and eventually eliminate the digital divide." To this aim, the Church should officially adopt only free (in the sense explained above) file formats and computer protocols, both internally and for any communication with third parties. Practically speaking, this means, at least:
Marco Fioretti is the author of The Family Guide to Digital Freedom and contributes regularly to Linux.com and other IT magazines.
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Yeah. It really forces one to wonder if things really still stand as it's trendy and progressist to say they are, right?
Get real, Buddhism? Christianity would be a much better comparison IMHO, since Christianity is all about being selfless and looking out for others.
Interesting choice of words though, because without religion's that teach good moral values and humanity unto others there would be no *civilized* mankind.
I would disagree with this, strongly. There's a very rational basis for a system of ethics that does not posit a higher being, life after death, or potential punishment for behavior during life -- mainly, ethics based on self-interest.
Most people don't want to have people stealing from them -- so most people can agree that stealing is Bad. Most people don't want to be murdered, so they can all agree that being murdered is Bad, and shouldn't be done. Etc. No higher power is necessary to arrive at a system of ethics.
Why must our species continue to exist? For what end? If what you say is true, you'll eventually die and cease to exist. You will not experience anything further, so why bother to live, or worse yet, procreate. You believe your ultimate destiny is annihilation. Why should we, as a species, seek to perpetuate nothingness?
The life of an atheist is a very depressing life indeed. For you, earth is as good at it ever gets. As sad as that is, regrettably for some of them that ignore Truth until the end, earth is as good as it FOREVER gets.
Further, no one is forced to be a Catholic. The 1,000,000,000+ Catholics in the world choose to be so, sometimes even to the point of martyrdom.
Yet you lump the US generally into the same pile with no regard for the complexity of this nation and it's huge number of differing opinions.
Here is a newflash for you I just know you will flame me for:
It is true that there is still the chance for companies like Microsoft to turn into monopolies, and I believe that the courts made a BIG mistake by not breaking MS up, but the market forces involving Linux and business is proving to scare the crap out of MS. They know where this is leading. The market will do what the DOJ didn't.
Oh, one more piece of flame bait.... I am a Bush supporter, and a Christian... Flame away....
How is this mutually exclusive? Have you not seen, or heard any of the religious labeling and bashing of Bush or the administration. I would have thought his opponents and all of these "intellectual" types around here to have seen that and tossed that bone around the yard a bit...
Typical Modern American. Didn't watch the recent election did you... There isn't much of a "Typical" American. This country is built on it's diversity and your ability to lump me and every other American in to one full sum, to paint with one broad stroke, shows a lack of understanding or an ability to divest your observations from your conclusions.
As to our success. I guess it's all relative. When you complain about the Monopolies and evil corporations of the US that seem to keep eveyone else in the world from reaching the top of the mountain, I guess your argument looses merit. You are then complaining about a level of success. You have a singular, circular logic.
Boring Litany of Blah Blah Blah... Predictable and mutually implicating views... Interesting argument here. Implicating.... Yes, I guess you were right. I implicated my views... The list was just for that. It was meant too.
You use those negative terms to describe my list to reinforce your "superior" logic and thought. I stand by those points, but if you think that is every American, you are sorely mistaken. And again it brings me back to your need to generalize to make your point.
I think you also miss my point. I have a broad range of views (that you see as being typical of all Americans, which it is not, at least not anymore) and I was simply trying to state that your generalization misses the point that your characature of the US denies that a true capitalist can be as much of an Open Source proponant as anyone. In fact, open models are decisively NOT socialist in nature. So go on with your general slurs against the big bad US. You and your type... those who are intellectually above others, whether by geography, political leaning, 'theism, or just disdain for the US, can go blow...
Hows that for another Typical Amercian?
What role do vendor ethics play?
Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 11, 2005 05:51 PMI'm not just talking about M$ lobbying to pass pro-homophile laws in the US. I'm talking about a 30 year history of deception, lies, stealing, over charging, breaking contracts and other illegal practices. M$ has not been punished for breaking the law, but has nonetheless been found guilty on numerous occasions. It's an ongoing problem and appears part of that company's corporate culture. Buying into M$ is then buying into that system of values and ethics.
But does that matter? (yes/no)?
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