Past Engagements

(Page 7 of 12)


Bradley M. Kuhn will participate in and moderate a panel discussion on Cloud Computing, Software as a Service, and the software freedom community response to both. The panel will also include Benjamin ‘Mako’ Hill, Evan Prodromou, Nathan Yergler, and Tim O’Reilly.

The panel discussion will take place at the 2009 Open Source Software Convention (OSCON).






Eben Moglen will be speaking to the attendees of the NTEN (http://www.nten.org/), Nonprofit Technology Network, conference in San Francisco at the Hilton San Francisco hotel. He will be giving the Plenary session presentation.


  • Bossa Conference ’09

  • Karen M. Sandler
  • Summerville Resort, Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco, Brazil

Introduction to Licensing: The Basics of FOSS Licensing and Compliance


  • SCALE 7x Keynote

  • Bradley M. Kuhn
  • Westin Los Angeles Airport, 5400 West Century Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA

Kuhn will deliver the Saturday keynote at the Scale 7x: The 2009 Southern California Linux Expo. His keynote is titled, When Software Is a Service, Will Only the Network Luddite Be Free?.

Abstract

So-called Application Service Providers, who provide “Software as a Service” (SaaS), are now the rule rather than the exception in the software industry. The freedom implications of ubiquitous, high-bandwidth networking and AJAX-based application delivery are not yet fully understood nor adequately addressed by the Software Freedom Movement, such that even those of us who have been paying attention during SaaS’ rise remain befuddled by the freedom implications of the new environment.

Our Movement must develop a multi-front response to this proprietary threat that will make the 1980s and 1990s battle against proprietary operating system vendors look easy. The challenge is specifically centered around two complex issues: (a) traditional user-freedom-protecting licenses (i.e., the copyleft) fail to protect the freedoms of SaaS users, and (b) even if users have the source code to the application they are using, they cannot run it themselves and generate the same network-effect available in the canonical instance.

In this talk, Kuhn will frame and introduce the key questions introduced by these new issues. He will discuss the Affero GPL, which is one of few FLOSS licenses that address this concern from the software licensing perspective, and explain how our traditional solutions cannot succeed as easily in this new context.

Available records

  • Video posted March 17, 2009
  • Audio posted April 27, 2009
  • Audio posted November 9, 2009

Next » « Previous