this post was submitted on 29 Oct 2024
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[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

FYI, DeVault’s Stallman Report explicitly attacks the FSF as well as Stallman.

I read the report. You are free to show me exactly where it criticizes the FSF beyond their interactions with Stallman.

I took it mean that the report was such a deceitful and irrational work, presented in such a duplicitous manner as to constitute an attack on the senses of the community.

I'll just copy my older comment, and put it here

Begin quote:

Stallman doesn’t seem to get that pedophilia is wrong because of the hierarchy of power, and the power imbalances between older/younger people, not because of some inherent wrongness about being attracted to a prepubescent person. This is shown by how he condemns some pedophilia, but is accepting of 12+/past puberty. (I despise this logic, because it would also make gay sex and sodomy wrong, as well).

I find this deeply ironic, because his primary issue with proprietary software is the way that it gives developers levels of power over users. From his article Why Open Source Misses the Point

But software can be said to serve its users only if it respects their freedom. What if the software is designed to put chains on its users? Then powerfulness means the chains are more constricting, and reliability that they are harder to remove.

You would expect someone who is so in tune with the hierarchies that appear with software developers, publishers, and users, to also see those same hierarchies echoed in relationships between people of vastly different ages, but instead, we get this. I’m extremely disappointed.

These failures to understand hierarchy and power, are exactly why Stallman shouldn’t be in a position of power. Leaders should continually prove that they understand hierarchy and the effects of their actions on those below them. Someone who doesn’t understand how their power could affect another, shouldn’t be a leader.

End quote.

And I'll add onto this a little bit: Although Stallman seems to have redacted his earlier claim about pederasty, continuing to defend the legality of the possession of CSAM (beyond safe harbor/hospitality provisions), is very problematic, and clearly shows that he hasn't learned his lesson. CSAM ownership should be heavily disincentivized, to disincentivize the selling/buying of CSAM, as that's one of the most effective ways to stop more CSAM production.

I don't view pointing out that Stallman is not fit for a position of leadership to be an "attack" on the FSF or the free software community. And although the information gathering of the linked post is very, very impressive, it doesn't really invalidate what was said in the Stallman Report, or the Stallman Report's core points.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

You are free to show me exactly where it criticizes the FSF beyond their interactions with stallman.

I'm glad we agree that DeVault's Stallman Report attacks the FSF.

I don't view pointing out that Stallman is not fit for a position of leadership to be an "attack" on the FSF or the free software community.

OP didn't say which of the many attacks in the report they were referring to, they just said the report was "an attack". I've no idea why you believe OP was referring to DeVault's claim that Stallman is not fit for a position of leadership. That doesn't make any sense. If one were being uncharitable, one might even say it was.. irrational.

Edit: corrected quote, clarified wording