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LPI releases this week’s newsletter

Author: JT Smith

It’s at LWN.net. Among the items: We have finished collecting data and evaluating results of
the Level 2 JAS.
We are in the final stages of confirming the remaining budget
required for Level 2 development.
We are preparing the objective writing phase and will also soon
be collecting “critical incident” stories for both Level
1 and Level 2.

Denmark may legalize music sharing

Author: JT Smith

Slashdot readers talk about a report on InfoAnarchy.org saying that Denmark’s minister of culture is pushing for a law that
will legalize private music sharing.

New kdelibs 2.1.2 packages available

Author: JT Smith

From LWN.net: A problem exists with the kdesu component of kdelibs. It created a
world-readable temporary file to exchange authentication information
and delete it shortly after. This can be abused by a local user to
gain access to the X server and could result in a compromise of the
account that kdesu would access.

Category:

  • Linux

Mission Critical Linux to discuss high-availability clustering

Author: JT Smith

From BusinessWire via Wide Open News: Tom McNeal, Director of West Coast Engineering and Operations at Mission Critical Linux, Inc., a Linux
professional services and support company, will be speaking at the InterWorks Conference in San Francisco on
Tuesday, May 8, 2001 from 8:00 – 9:00 A.M. In his discussion, Mr. McNeal will highlight the importance of
insuring data integrity during a failover procedure, the design assumptions confronted when seeking to support
any software service, and how Linux enables the use of commodity hardware in a clustered solution. As
proof-of-concept, the implementation of a highly available NFS server solution will be explained.

Struggling over decoding digital locks

Author: JT Smith

The San Fransisco Chronicle reviews the DeCSS legal battle. The story feature’s a Carnegie Mellon professor’s 456-stanza haiku that’s actually a recipe for the DeCSS DVD-descrambler code.

Microsoft: Free Software licenses are the devil’s work

Author: JT Smith

Salon.com has a column on the latest Microsoft outburst against Open Source and the GPL. Here’s a good quote: “A more sensible strategy would have been for Microsoft to shut up and concentrate on making
attractive products. Instead, the company seems intent on whipping up its opponents into a
berserker-like frenzy.”

Category:

  • Open Source

OpenACS 3.2.5 released

Author: JT Smith

From LWN.net: The OpenACS community is happy to announce the release of OpenACS
3.2.5 today.

OpenACS is a full-featured free and open source toolkit for
creating “Web services with a collaborative dimension”. It is based
on the ArsDigita Community System (ACS) which uses Oracle as its
database. OpenACS uses the free open source database PostgreSQL
instead.

Security update to sgmltool

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: The sgmltool programs (“sgml2html” and others) are used to convert
SGML-files into various other formats.

During operation, the underlying SGML perlmodule creates temporary files
in an insecure way. This allows attackers to destroy arbitrary files owned
by the user who invoked the sgmltool program. The problem has been fixed
by creating temporary files with the exclusive (O_EXCL) option upon
opening them.

Category:

  • Linux

Stallman: GPL protects software freedom

Author: JT Smith

Bradley M. Kuhn sends this: Richard M. Stallman, president of the Free Software Foundation, and Professor Eben Moglen, general counsel for the Free Software Foundation, today issued statements addressing points raised in yesterday’s remarks by Craig Mundie of Microsoft. Stallman and Moglen focused on the importance of freedom for software users and programmers, how the GPL protects those freedoms, and Microsoft’s attempt to cast such freedoms in an unfavorable light.

Stallman, author of the GNU General Public License (GNU GPL), stated: “Microsoft describes the GNU GPL as an ‘open source’ license. To understand the GNU GPL, you must first be aware that the GPL was not designed for open source. The ideas and logic of the GPL stem from the deeper goals and values of the Free Software Movement”.

Stallman explained further: “The Free Software Movement was founded in 1984, but its inspiration comes from the ideals of 1776: freedom, community, and voluntary cooperation. This is what leads to free enterprise, to free speech, and to free software.” Stallman started GNU, a project to create a free software operating system, along with the Free Software Movement. He wrote the first GPL-style licenses for the GNU project, and released the first version of the GPL itself in 1989. The current version of the GPL was released in 1991, and today is used by thousands of software projects.

Moglen noted that Microsoft’s confusion about the GPL’s origins is not
surprising. He said that “taking advice on what the GPL means from Microsoft is like taking Stalin’s word on the meaning of the US Constitution. They don’t understand and they’re not trying to understand: “they’re simply trying to scare people out of dealing with a competitor they can’t buy, can’t intimidate, and can’t stop.”

Stallman also addressed the propagating nature of the GPL, saying:
“Whoever wishes to copy parts of our software into his program must let us use parts of that program in our programs. Nobody is forced to join our club, but those who wish to participate must offer us the same cooperation they receive from us. That makes the system fair.”

“Microsoft surely would like to have the benefit of our code without the responsibilities. But it has another, more specific purpose in attacking the GNU GPL. Microsoft is known generally for imitation rather than innovation. Its purpose is strategic–not to improve computing for its users, but to close off alternatives for them.”

“Hence their campaign to persuade us to abandon the license that protects our community, the license that won’t let them say, ‘What’s yours is mine,and what’s mine is mine.’ They want us to let them take whatever they want, without ever giving anything back. They want us to abandon our defenses,” concluded Stallman.

Finally, Moglen added that Microsoft is threatened by the power of free software: “Microsoft, which used to say all the time that the software business was ruthlessly competitive, is now matched against a competitor whose model of production and distribution is so much better that Microsoft stands no chance of prevailing in the long run.”

Stallman’s essay about Microsoft’s attacks on the GPL is available online at http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/gpl-american-way.htm l. Other comments by Stallman on Microsoft are available online at http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/microsoft.html. One of Moglen’s essays on the Free Software Movement is available online at
http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/publications/anarch ism.html.

About Richard M. Stallman:

Richard Stallman is the founder of the GNU project, launched in 1984 to develop the free operating system GNU (an acronym for “GNU’s Not Unix”), and thereby give computer users the freedom that most of them have lost. GNU is free software: everyone is free to copy it and redistribute it, as well as to make changes either large or small.

Today, Linux-based variants of the GNU system, based on the kernel
Linux developed by Linus Torvalds, are in widespread use. There are estimated to be over 17 million users of GNU/Linux systems today. These systems are often mistakenly called just “Linux”; calling them “GNU/Linux” corrects this confusion.

Stallman received the Grace Hopper Award from the Association for
Computing Machinery for 1991 for his development of the first Emacs editor in the 1970s. In 1990 he was awarded a MacArthur Foundation fellowship, and in 1996 an honorary doctorate from the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden. In 1998 he received the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Pioneer award along with Linus Torvalds; in 1999 he received the Yuri Rubinski memorial award.

About Eben Moglen:

Eben Moglen holds a PhD. in history and a J.D. from Yale University. Moglen is currently a professor of law and legal history at Columbia University Law School, and serves as general counsel for the Free Software Foundation.

About the Free Software Foundation:

The Free Software Foundation, founded in 1985, is dedicated to promoting computer users’ right to use, study, copy, modify, and redistribute computer programs. The FSF promotes the development and use of free (as in freedom) software—particularly the GNU operating system (used widely today in its GNU/Linux variant)— and free documentation. The FSF also helps to spread awareness of the ethical and political issues of freedom in the use of software. Their web site, located at http://www.gnu.org, is an important source of information about GNU/Linux. They are headquartered in Boston, MA, USA.

Media Contact: Free Software Foundation
Bradley M. Kuhn
Phone: +1-617-542-5942

Software group responds to Microsoft speech on Open Source

Author: JT Smith

NZheretic writes, “The most scathing commentary on Microsoft executive Craig
Mundie speech, comes not from the Open Source ‘zealots,’
but from Ken Wasch, president of the Software & Information
Industry Association (SIIA), who represent a fair sized
chunk of the software industry.” Here’s a list of group members, and the statement’s also at SIIA.net.

Category:

  • Open Source