MESSAGE
DATE | 2022-11-18 |
FROM | From: "Greg Farough, FSF"
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SUBJECT | Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] FSF Giving Guide: Put freedom first in your
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From hangout-bounces-at-nylxs.com Sat Nov 19 17:55:58 2022 Return-Path: X-Original-To: archive-at-mrbrklyn.com Delivered-To: archive-at-mrbrklyn.com Received: from www2.mrbrklyn.com (www2.mrbrklyn.com [96.57.23.82]) by mrbrklyn.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id CACF116406A; Sat, 19 Nov 2022 17:55:51 -0500 (EST) X-Original-To: hangout-at-www2.mrbrklyn.com Delivered-To: hangout-at-www2.mrbrklyn.com Received: by mrbrklyn.com (Postfix, from userid 1000) id 8C47F164066; Sat, 19 Nov 2022 17:55:42 -0500 (EST) Resent-From: Ruben Safir Resent-Date: Sat, 19 Nov 2022 17:55:42 -0500 Resent-Message-ID: <20221119225542.GA14701-at-www2.mrbrklyn.com> Resent-To: hangout-at-mrbrklyn.com X-Original-To: ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com Delivered-To: ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com Received: from mailout0p.fsf.org (mailout0p.fsf.org [209.51.188.184]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (Client did not present a certificate) by mrbrklyn.com (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 3D04716406A for ; Fri, 18 Nov 2022 19:34:20 -0500 (EST) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; q=dns/txt; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=fsf.org; s=mailout0p-fsf-org; h=Date:To:Subject:From:MIME-Version:in-reply-to: references; bh=lIUOgjFhJ9KRPFhralP+KMPfeixVtwgosTlVOAz71LE=; b=l03OBpPecNAPGT fjoP/PIJ8nH4rWhJanzs+faLqVLNIEm/7+asKVqhZ+trXMmJ6Y5SHo0IyWaADebO4YuzsBSsslpqF BhjZ9CaBrcAJtXrpNJk8gbo8to+rekLbFiE4p/3WLPptopsBb7P/rxnrCZa38U1DDNN6I7xZuGryC bXYrKo7qJD8zbbICl53XQVWgbMjT/Zhb+Gv7uH2Gizwma0fMEtNJ3fZLvf1d/9HApGNV9/jGS3dV7 l1Sy4molwU1nyf8+D7+Bg6d24zghjsXw9yY/Q2q1bj+hwv8D26LKKSGk4DaQ7p3D0zLbII8zKbrxp Dwx9XnfZVxvVTJZHirhQ==; Received: from crmserver2p.fsf.org ([2001:470:142:5::223]) by mailout0p.fsf.org with esmtps (TLS1.2) tls TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (Exim 4.93) (envelope-from ) id 1owBoJ-0012dF-V9 for ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com; Fri, 18 Nov 2022 19:34:19 -0500 Received: from localhost ([::1] helo=my.fsf.org) by crmserver2p.fsf.org with esmtp (Exim 4.90_1) (envelope-from ) id 1owBoJ-0004e7-Lt for ruben-at-mrbrklyn.com; Fri, 18 Nov 2022 19:34:19 -0500 MIME-Version: 1.0 From: "Greg Farough, FSF" job_id: 166185 To: Ruben Safir Precedence: bulk X-CiviMail-Bounce: crmmailer+b.166185.78781594.b257b02d6be70de6-at-fsf.org Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2022 19:34:19 -0500 Message-Id: Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] FSF Giving Guide: Put freedom first in your giving this year X-BeenThere: hangout-at-nylxs.com X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.30rc1 List-Id: NYLXS Tech Talk and Politics List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Reply-To: "Greg Farough, FSF" Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="===============0701792322==" Errors-To: hangout-bounces-at-nylxs.com Sender: "Hangout"
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Dear Ruben Safir,
It's that time again. All the holiday decorations are out on full display. Ads are thrown across every screen, each one trying to convince you how much you *need* that new device. They're ready to give it to you at a cut rate, too, since they want to let you know how much your friends and loved ones *need* the same tech gadget in their pocket, lap, or monitoring their living room. But is the gift that you're about to give (or splurge on for yourself) respectful of a person's right to freedom? For the last thirteen years, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) has published our [Ethical Tech Giving Guide][1] as a way to guide concerned individuals towards gifts that do not deprive them of their freedom. The right to determine what a device you've purchased does or doesn't do is something too valuable to lose. It's the difference between having control over your digital life or *having someone else control you.*
[1]: https://www.fsf.org/givingguide/v13/?pk_campaign=fall22
Freedom is the best gift you can give, and the one that keeps on giving. Taking your [first steps to freedom][2] often doesn't just help you win back your digital autonomy: it provides an opportunity for you to deepen your relationship with the ones you care about through a shared experience, and inaugurates you into a worldwide community of users. If you're already technical and committed to furthering free software, we've also included a short list of devices that need developer attention to clear the last hurdles to freedom that stand between the chips they employ and full acceptability.
[2]: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/the-journey-begins-with-a-single-step-climb-the-freedom-ladder
This year's Guide is replete with recommendations on DRM-free media for you and your loved ones to enjoy. In the time you have to yourself this holiday season, or your beach vacation to recover from it, consider going through a small (if invisible) stack of DRM-free ebooks. If you're the type to read with a soundtrack -- or who needs one to get through the season -- our DRM-free music recommendations are there for you as well. As publishers and storefronts putting out these works are increasingly fewer and further between, we encourage you to support them.
## Taking a step forward
The Giving Guide is a helpful and practical tool we create every year to highlight issues with technology that other tech gift guides don't even touch, such as "does the gift maintain the recipient's [freedom to share][3]?" **Can you support this effort as an [FSF associate member][4]?** You can start for as little as $10 per month ($5 for students), or $120 per year. With your support, we can continue to show people how the freedom to share can affect change in all areas where software touches modern life. Besides that, your membership gives strength to the *idea* of free software. Plus, your membership will count towards achieving our fall goal of 455 new associate members before December 31, and you will be eligible for this year's snazzy and secure webcam cover when you join as an annual associate member at $120 or more. You'll also be able to enjoy all the [member benefits][5], which include merchandise discounts, a 16GB bootable membership card, and use of our associate member videoconferencing server. And it's also worth pointing out that [an FSF associate membership makes a great gift][6] for any occasion.
[3]: https://www.fsf.org/appeal?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [4]: https://my.fsf.org/join?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [5]: https://fsf.org/associate/benefits?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [6]: https://my.fsf.org/gift-a-membership?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving
Please do take the time to [share][9] the Guide with the people you care about. More importantly, we hope that you'll commit to moving forward on your own individual [journey to freedom][10]. In our experience, one of the best ways to persuade others to use free software is simply by using it yourself, both by setting a moral example and showing those around you all that software freedom does for you. In the face of so many new and seemingly "dazzling" devices, the holiday season is one of the best times to get the free software message included in the conversations that happen around the kitchen table.
No matter if or how you'll be buying gifts this year, always keep in mind that retaining your freedom is the greatest gift of all.
[9]: https://u.fsf.org/guide23 [10]: https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Group:Freedom_Ladder
Happy holidays, and happy hacking,
Greg Farough Campaigns Manager
-- * Follow us on Mastodon at , GNU social at , PeerTube at , and on Twitter at -at-fsf. * Read about why we use Twitter, but only with caveats at . * Subscribe to our RSS feeds at . * Join us as an associate member at . * Read our Privacy Policy at .
Sent from the Free Software Foundation,
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Read and share online: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-giving-guide-put-freedom-first-in-your-giving-this-year
Dear Ruben Safir,
href="https://www.fsf.org/givingguide/v13/?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving/">src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/images/givingguide/gg-8172d1.png" width="40%" align="right" hspace="20" vspace="20">
It's that time again. All the holiday decorations are out on full display. Ads are thrown across every screen, each one trying to convince you how much you need that new device. They're ready to give it to you at a cut rate, too, since they want to let you know how much your friends and loved ones need the same tech gadget in their pocket, lap, or monitoring their living room. But is the gift that you're about to give (or splurge on for yourself) respectful of a person's right to freedom? For the last thirteen years, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) has published our Ethical Tech Giving Guide as a way to guide concerned individuals towards gifts that do not deprive them of their freedom. The right to determine what a device you've purchased does or doesn't do is something too valuable to lose. It's the difference between having control over your digital life or having someone else control you.
Freedom is the best gift you can give, and the one that keeps on giving. Taking your first steps to freedom often doesn't just help you win back your digital autonomy: it provides an opportunity for you to deepen your relationship with the ones you care about through a shared experience, and inaugurates you into a worldwide community of users. If you're already technical and committed to furthering free software, we've also included a short list of devices that need developer attention to clear the last hurdles to freedom that stand between the chips they employ and full acceptability.
This year's Guide is replete with recommendations on DRM-free media for you and your loved ones to enjoy. In the time you have to yourself this holiday season, or your beach vacation to recover from it, consider going through a small (if invisible) stack of DRM-free ebooks. If you're the type to read with a soundtrack -- or who needs one to get through the season -- our DRM-free music recommendations are there for you as well. As publishers and storefronts putting out these works are increasingly fewer and further between, we encourage you to support them.
Taking a step forward
The Giving Guide is a helpful and practical tool we create every year to highlight issues with technology that other tech gift guides don't even touch, such as "does the gift maintain the recipient's freedom to share?" Can you support this effort as an FSF associate member? You can start for as little as $10 per month ($5 for students), or $120 per year. With your support, we can continue to show people how the freedom to share can affect change in all areas where software touches modern life. Besides that, your membership gives strength to the idea of free software. Plus, your membership will count towards achieving our fall goal of 455 new associate members before December 31, and you will be eligible for this year's snazzy and secure webcam cover when you join as an annual associate member at $120 or more. You'll also be able to enjoy all the member benefits, which include merchandise discounts, a 16GB bootable membership card, and use of our associate member videoconferencing server. And it's also worth pointing out that an FSF associate membership makes a great gift for any occasion.
Please do take the time to share the Guide with the people you care about. More importantly, we hope that you'll commit to moving forward on your own individual journey to freedom. In our experience, one of the best ways to persuade others to use free software is simply by using it yourself, both by setting a moral example and showing those around you all that software freedom does for you. In the face of so many new and seemingly "dazzling" devices, the holiday season is one of the best times to get the free software message included in the conversations that happen around the kitchen table.
No matter if or how you'll be buying gifts this year, always keep in mind that retaining your freedom is the greatest gift of all.
Happy holidays, and happy hacking,
Greg Farough
Campaigns Manager
Illustration Copyright © 2022, Free Software Foundation, Inc. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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_______________________________________________ Hangout mailing list Hangout-at-nylxs.com http://lists.mrbrklyn.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout
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*Please consider adding to your address book, which will ensure that our messages reach you and not your spam box.*
*Read and share online: *
Dear Ruben Safir,
It's that time again. All the holiday decorations are out on full display. Ads are thrown across every screen, each one trying to convince you how much you *need* that new device. They're ready to give it to you at a cut rate, too, since they want to let you know how much your friends and loved ones *need* the same tech gadget in their pocket, lap, or monitoring their living room. But is the gift that you're about to give (or splurge on for yourself) respectful of a person's right to freedom? For the last thirteen years, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) has published our [Ethical Tech Giving Guide][1] as a way to guide concerned individuals towards gifts that do not deprive them of their freedom. The right to determine what a device you've purchased does or doesn't do is something too valuable to lose. It's the difference between having control over your digital life or *having someone else control you.*
[1]: https://www.fsf.org/givingguide/v13/?pk_campaign=fall22
Freedom is the best gift you can give, and the one that keeps on giving. Taking your [first steps to freedom][2] often doesn't just help you win back your digital autonomy: it provides an opportunity for you to deepen your relationship with the ones you care about through a shared experience, and inaugurates you into a worldwide community of users. If you're already technical and committed to furthering free software, we've also included a short list of devices that need developer attention to clear the last hurdles to freedom that stand between the chips they employ and full acceptability.
[2]: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/the-journey-begins-with-a-single-step-climb-the-freedom-ladder
This year's Guide is replete with recommendations on DRM-free media for you and your loved ones to enjoy. In the time you have to yourself this holiday season, or your beach vacation to recover from it, consider going through a small (if invisible) stack of DRM-free ebooks. If you're the type to read with a soundtrack -- or who needs one to get through the season -- our DRM-free music recommendations are there for you as well. As publishers and storefronts putting out these works are increasingly fewer and further between, we encourage you to support them.
## Taking a step forward
The Giving Guide is a helpful and practical tool we create every year to highlight issues with technology that other tech gift guides don't even touch, such as "does the gift maintain the recipient's [freedom to share][3]?" **Can you support this effort as an [FSF associate member][4]?** You can start for as little as $10 per month ($5 for students), or $120 per year. With your support, we can continue to show people how the freedom to share can affect change in all areas where software touches modern life. Besides that, your membership gives strength to the *idea* of free software. Plus, your membership will count towards achieving our fall goal of 455 new associate members before December 31, and you will be eligible for this year's snazzy and secure webcam cover when you join as an annual associate member at $120 or more. You'll also be able to enjoy all the [member benefits][5], which include merchandise discounts, a 16GB bootable membership card, and use of our associate member videoconferencing server. And it's also worth pointing out that [an FSF associate membership makes a great gift][6] for any occasion.
[3]: https://www.fsf.org/appeal?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [4]: https://my.fsf.org/join?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [5]: https://fsf.org/associate/benefits?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving [6]: https://my.fsf.org/gift-a-membership?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving
Please do take the time to [share][9] the Guide with the people you care about. More importantly, we hope that you'll commit to moving forward on your own individual [journey to freedom][10]. In our experience, one of the best ways to persuade others to use free software is simply by using it yourself, both by setting a moral example and showing those around you all that software freedom does for you. In the face of so many new and seemingly "dazzling" devices, the holiday season is one of the best times to get the free software message included in the conversations that happen around the kitchen table.
No matter if or how you'll be buying gifts this year, always keep in mind that retaining your freedom is the greatest gift of all.
[9]: https://u.fsf.org/guide23 [10]: https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Group:Freedom_Ladder
Happy holidays, and happy hacking,
Greg Farough Campaigns Manager
-- * Follow us on Mastodon at , GNU social at , PeerTube at , and on Twitter at -at-fsf. * Read about why we use Twitter, but only with caveats at . * Subscribe to our RSS feeds at . * Join us as an associate member at . * Read our Privacy Policy at .
Sent from the Free Software Foundation,
51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor Boston, Massachusetts 02110-1335 United States
You can unsubscribe from this mailing list by visiting
https://my.fsf.org/civicrm/mailing/unsubscribe?reset=1&jid=166185&qid=78781594&h=b257b02d6be70de6.
To stop all email from the Free Software Foundation, including Defective by Design, and the Free Software Supporter newsletter, visit
https://my.fsf.org/civicrm/mailing/optout?reset=1&jid=166185&qid=78781594&h=b257b02d6be70de6. --=_04296da118aad86cc9ed141cbd00f624 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
|
Please consider adding info@fsf.org to your address book, which will ensure that our messages reach you and not your spam box.
Read and share online: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-giving-guide-put-freedom-first-in-your-giving-this-year
Dear Ruben Safir,
href="https://www.fsf.org/givingguide/v13/?pk_campaign=fall22&pk_source=giving/">src="https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/images/givingguide/gg-8172d1.png" width="40%" align="right" hspace="20" vspace="20">
It's that time again. All the holiday decorations are out on full display. Ads are thrown across every screen, each one trying to convince you how much you need that new device. They're ready to give it to you at a cut rate, too, since they want to let you know how much your friends and loved ones need the same tech gadget in their pocket, lap, or monitoring their living room. But is the gift that you're about to give (or splurge on for yourself) respectful of a person's right to freedom? For the last thirteen years, the Free Software Foundation (FSF) has published our Ethical Tech Giving Guide as a way to guide concerned individuals towards gifts that do not deprive them of their freedom. The right to determine what a device you've purchased does or doesn't do is something too valuable to lose. It's the difference between having control over your digital life or having someone else control you.
Freedom is the best gift you can give, and the one that keeps on giving. Taking your first steps to freedom often doesn't just help you win back your digital autonomy: it provides an opportunity for you to deepen your relationship with the ones you care about through a shared experience, and inaugurates you into a worldwide community of users. If you're already technical and committed to furthering free software, we've also included a short list of devices that need developer attention to clear the last hurdles to freedom that stand between the chips they employ and full acceptability.
This year's Guide is replete with recommendations on DRM-free media for you and your loved ones to enjoy. In the time you have to yourself this holiday season, or your beach vacation to recover from it, consider going through a small (if invisible) stack of DRM-free ebooks. If you're the type to read with a soundtrack -- or who needs one to get through the season -- our DRM-free music recommendations are there for you as well. As publishers and storefronts putting out these works are increasingly fewer and further between, we encourage you to support them.
Taking a step forward
The Giving Guide is a helpful and practical tool we create every year to highlight issues with technology that other tech gift guides don't even touch, such as "does the gift maintain the recipient's freedom to share?" Can you support this effort as an FSF associate member? You can start for as little as $10 per month ($5 for students), or $120 per year. With your support, we can continue to show people how the freedom to share can affect change in all areas where software touches modern life. Besides that, your membership gives strength to the idea of free software. Plus, your membership will count towards achieving our fall goal of 455 new associate members before December 31, and you will be eligible for this year's snazzy and secure webcam cover when you join as an annual associate member at $120 or more. You'll also be able to enjoy all the member benefits, which include merchandise discounts, a 16GB bootable membership card, and use of our associate member videoconferencing server. And it's also worth pointing out that an FSF associate membership makes a great gift for any occasion.
Please do take the time to share the Guide with the people you care about. More importantly, we hope that you'll commit to moving forward on your own individual journey to freedom. In our experience, one of the best ways to persuade others to use free software is simply by using it yourself, both by setting a moral example and showing those around you all that software freedom does for you. In the face of so many new and seemingly "dazzling" devices, the holiday season is one of the best times to get the free software message included in the conversations that happen around the kitchen table.
No matter if or how you'll be buying gifts this year, always keep in mind that retaining your freedom is the greatest gift of all.
Happy holidays, and happy hacking,
Greg Farough
Campaigns Manager
Illustration Copyright © 2022, Free Software Foundation, Inc. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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_______________________________________________ Hangout mailing list Hangout-at-nylxs.com http://lists.mrbrklyn.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout
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