2023.fossy.us/schedule/conference.json
Ben Sturmfels d4159fe51a
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wget --mirror --convert-links --adjust-extension --page-requisites --no-parent https://2023.fossy.us/
2024-03-05 22:40:56 +11:00

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{
"schedule": [
{
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"start": "2023-07-15T09:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 170,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
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"contact": [],
"name": "Keynote: Right to Repair Panel Discussion",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kyle Wiens",
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"biography": "Kyle Wiens is a software engineer and the CEO of iFixit, the repair community known for open source repair manuals and product teardowns. iFixit has empowered hundreds of millions of people to repair their broken stuff. Kyle led the international coalition that legalized Right to Repair, has testified before the US Copyright Office and the International Trade Commission, and he is involved in developing global environmental standards.\r\n\r\nKyle regularly speaks on design for repair, service documentation, and the environmental impact of manufacturing. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harvard Business Review, Wired, Popular Mechanics, and the Wall Street Journal.",
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{
"name": "Denver Gingerich",
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"code": "192",
"biography": "Denver is a software right-to-repair and standards activist who is currently Director of Compliance at Software Freedom Conservancy, where he enforces software right-to-repair licenses such as the GPL, and is also a director of the worker co-operative that runs JMP.chat, a FOSS phone number (texting/calling) service. Denver writes free software in his spare time: his patches have been accepted into Wine, Linux, and wdiff. Denver received his BMath in Computer Science from the University of Waterloo. He gives presentations about digital civil rights and how to ensure FOSS remains sustainable as a community and financially, having spoken at conferences such as CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.",
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{
"name": "Hilary Shohoney",
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"code": "250",
"biography": "Hilary Shohoney is an experienced nonprofit leader, movement builder and climate justice advocate. Early in her career, Hilary nearly exited the nonprofit industry out of frustration, but instead turned that frustration into action. Today, Hilary supports Bonneville Environmental Foundation as they seek to live their values internally as well as externally and has previously worked as the Executive Director of Free Geek championing their work on Right to Repair legislation.\r\n\r\nHilary\u2019s work on Right to Repair is driven by her deep desire to build just systems that support people and the environment. She\u2019s seen first hand how the inability to repair devices harms our community\u2019s most vulnerable members and the environment.",
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{
"name": "Juan Manuel Muro, Jr.",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"abstract": "Join us for an engaging Right to Repair panel discussion with experts in the field! We'll talk with activists Kyle Wiens of iFixit, Juan Muro of Free Geek, Hilary Shohoney of Bonneville Environmental Foundation, and Denver Gingerich of Software Freedom Conservancy about current topics in Right to Repair and how they impact free and open source software communities, from participating in the \"1201 process\" for Digital Millennium Copyright Act exemptions with the US Copyright Office, to strategies that might work to increase Right to Repair legislation and bringing lawsuits to compel companies to respect consumers' rights.\"",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/186/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "kwiens",
"mastodon_id": "kwiens"
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{
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"start": "2023-07-14T09:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 169,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
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"contact": [],
"name": "Keynote: RHEL Panel Discussion",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Bradley M. Kuhn",
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"biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) and editor-in-chief of copyleft.org. Kuhn began his work in the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, as an early adopter of Linux-based systems and contributor to various FOSS projects, including Perl. He worked during the 1990s as a system administrator and software developer for various companies, and taught AP Computer Science at Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati. Kuhn\u2019s non-profit career began in 2000, when he was hired by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). As FSF\u2019s Executive Director from 2001\u20132005, Kuhn led FSF\u2019s GPL enforcement, launched its Associate Member program, and invented the Affero GPL. Kuhn began as SFC\u2019s primary volunteer from 2006\u20132010, and became its first staff person in 2011. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude B.S. in Computer Science from Loyola University in Maryland, and an M.S. in Computer Science from the University of Cincinnati. Kuhn\u2019s Master\u2019s thesis discussed methods for dynamic interoperability of Free Software programming languages. Kuhn received the Open Source Award in 2012, and the Award for the Advancement of Free Software in 2021 \u2014 both in recognition for his lifelong policy work on copyleft licensing and its enforcement.",
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{
"name": "benny Vasquez",
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"mastodon": "@benny@social.linux.pizza",
"contact": "redacted",
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"biography": "benny Vasquez is the Chair of the Board of Directors at the AlmaLinux OS Foundation and brings more than a decade of experience in community management to the role. With experience as Manager of Community and Developer Relations at Progress, Manager of Community Engagement at cPanel, and Lead Evangelist at LiquidWeb Inc all before joining Microsoft as an Open Source Security Program Manager, benny boasts a successful track record in community building, customer engagement, and developer relations. With leadership roots in community management, product management, and business strategy, benny is a leading voice in the world of community-driven software and everything AlmaLinux. Moreover, benny is passionate about AlmaLinux OS and is dedicated to this innovative global community\u2019s commitment to complete transparency and community-focused development.",
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{
"name": "James (Jim) Wright",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"biography": "James (Jim) Wright is Oracle\u2019s Chief Architect, Open Source Policy, Strategy, Compliance, and Alliances. Jim is a well known software architect and attorney who has been working in and around open source for over 20 years. He is the author of the Universal Permissive License, and currently sits on the Board of Directors of both the Linux Foundation and the Eclipse Foundation.\r\n\r\nPrior to his time at Oracle, Jim was in private practice at Sidley Austin, where he handled a wide variety of technology transactional matters as well as patent litigation. Jim is a graduate of Harvard Law School, and in the decade before starting legal practice he worked in engineering and management capacities at a variety of different IT enterprises. When not at work, Jim enjoys traveling with his family and his service dog, Arrow, building and riding his collection of wheeled contraptions, and making, tasting, and talking about espresso.",
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{
"name": "Jeremy Allison",
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"abstract": "Join us for an in-depth discussion about Red Hat's recent announcements concerning Red Hat Enterprise Linux led by Bradley M. Kuhn with of a panel consisting of benny Vasquez of Alma, Jeremy Allison of CIQ/Rocky, Jim Wright of Oracle.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/182/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
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"start": "2023-07-16T09:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
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"contact": [],
"name": "Keynote: Outreachy Celebration",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Karen Sandler",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"biography": "Karen M. Sandler is an attorney and the executive director of Software Freedom Conservancy, a 501c3 nonprofit organization focused on ethical technology. As a patient deeply concerned with the technology in her own body, Karen is known as a cyborg lawyer for her advocacy for free software as a life-or-death issue, particularly in relation to the software on medical devices. She co-organizes Outreachy, the award-winning outreach program for people who face under-representation, systemic bias, or discrimination in tech. She is an adjunct Lecturer-In-Law of Columbia Law School and a visiting scholar at University of California Santa Cruz.\r\n\r\nPrior to joining Software Freedom Conservancy, Karen was the executive director of the GNOME Foundation. Before that, she was the general counsel of the Software Freedom Law Center. She began her career as a lawyer at Clifford Chance and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP.\r\n\r\nKaren received her law degree from Columbia Law School where she was a James Kent Scholar and co-founder of the Columbia Science and Technology Law Review. She also holds a bachelor of science in engineering from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art.\r\n\r\nSandler has won awards for her work on behalf of software freedom, including the O\u2019Reilly Open Source Award in 2011. She received an honorary doctorate from KU Leuven in 2023.",
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{
"name": "Anna e s\u00f3",
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"mastodon": "@anna@friend.camp",
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"biography": "Anna e s\u00f3 is one of the cool folks organizing Outreachy, a program that provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living. They wear many hats, but their main focus is studying, designing, implementing, and documenting organizational processes and information systems. Over the last couple of years, Anna has worked with (and learned from) the Wikimedia community, two Brazilian federal university laboratories (MediaLab/UFG, LAPPIS/UnB), and Open Collective. They take pride in offering open projects a unique point of view.",
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{
"name": "Sage Sharp",
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"mastodon": "@sphakos@toot.cat",
"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "91",
"biography": "Sage Sharp is the Senior Director of Diversity & Inclusion at Software Freedom Conservancy. Sage runs Conservancy's diversity initiative, Outreachy. Outreachy provides internships in open source and open science. Outreachy provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living.\r\n\r\nSage has been a free software contributor since 2007. Sage is known for their past work as the author and maintainer of the Linux kernel USB 3.0 driver. Today, Sage is involved in the Python community, and works as a Django web developer for the Outreachy website.\r\n\r\nSage founded their own company, Otter Tech, to provide Code of Conduct enforcement workshops. Sage has trained Code of Conduct teams for open source communities like Kubernetes, GNOME, Python, Drupal, WordPress, OpenStreetMap, Elastic, and Symfony.",
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"abstract": "This keynote celebrates an important milestone 13 years in the making: \r\nOutreachy surpassed 1000 interns with its current round of internships!\r\n\r\nTo deliver the celebratory keynote, some of the members of the Outreachy \r\norganizers (Anna e s\u00f3, Karen Sandler and Sage Sharp) will be on stage to \r\nreflect on the program's evolution, its successes and the people who \r\nhave made it possible. We invite all FOSSY attendees to come to the \r\nkeynote session to celebrate with us!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/160/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
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"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Security",
"conf_key": 105,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
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"contact": [],
"name": "Challenges in open, self-sovereign identity",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Tom Marble",
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"mastodon": "@tmarble@mstdn.io",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/924e827f49662e9da005e503a65368a3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "122",
"biography": "Tom Marble is best known for being the first \"OpenJDK Ambassador\" on\r\nthe Sun Microsystems core team that open sourced the Java programming\r\nlanguage. He continues to apply his community experiences in open\r\nsource projects and his interest in intellectual property by\r\nco-organizing the legal and policy issues track at Europe's largest\r\nopen source conference, FOSDEM as well as being a member of the\r\nSoftware Freedom Conservancy's Evaluation Committee.\r\n\r\nMarble is the founder of Informatique, Inc., a consultancy which leverages\r\nhis hardware, software and legal engineering background for client\r\nprojects as diverse as Enterprise IoT services, coaching Dojo\r\nimmersive learning experiences, automated mobile/web testing,\r\nautonomous cyber defense, AI prompt engineering, and open source\r\nbusiness strategy.",
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"abstract": "The promise of the Internet was a federation of cooperative services and users around open protocols. Ironically most of the essential services we use today -- including authenticating identity -- rely on large, proprietary, centralized services.\r\n\r\nUsers ought to be able to share messages and files securely with one another without relying an a third party such as Google or Facebook. Ideally we ought to be able to securely authenticate with service providers anonymously in order to truly prevent becoming the product of surveillance capitalism.\r\n\r\nThe traditional X.509 Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) has demonstrated weaknesses due to centralization. Mitigations such as Certificate Transparency only partially address these weaknesses.\r\n\r\nThe Web of trust based on Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) in theory offers a truly decentralized identity solution. However, in practice, broad success of PGP in identity has been stymied by overwhelming complexity, excruciatingly poor user experience design, and difficulty in integrating the required software with popular email providers.\r\n\r\nThere is promising W3C standards work in the areas of Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Verifiable Credentials, yet implementations often depend on proof-of-work based crypto or token exchanges with asymmetric ownership and control. What's more DID resolution (anchoring in non-repudiation framework) is often either closed or left as an exercise for the reader.\r\n\r\nThe purpose of this talk is to highlight the challenges in open source identity and brainstorm approaches which leverage the best parts of the Web of trust and the W3C standards work while preserving the values the FOSS community holds dear.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/117/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "tmarble",
"mastodon_id": "@tmarble@mstdn.io"
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{
"room": "E144",
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"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 148,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 117,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Onboarding Newcomers - More Than Just CONTRIBUTING.md",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Elizabeth Barron",
"twitter": "elizabethn",
"mastodon": "@elizabeth@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
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"biography": "Elizabeth has over 20 years of experience in open source community management, with a particular focus on improving diversity, equity, and inclusion and leveraging open source for social good. She currently works as a consultant and serves as the community manager for CHAOSS, an open source project that tracks and measures open source community health. She also helps out with the All In project, which aims to open source DEI collaboration. Elizabeth is an author, speaker, and award-winning nature photographer. She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio with her dogs and guinea pigs.",
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{
"name": "Justin W. Flory",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "130",
"biography": "Justin W. Flory is a creative maker. He is best known as an Open Source contributor and Free Culture advocate originally from the United States. Justin has participated in numerous Open Source communities and led different initiatives to build sustainable software and communities for over ten years.\r\n\r\nIn October 2022, Justin joined Red Hat as the fourth Fedora Community Architect (FCA). He works closely between the Fedora Project community and Red Hat to lead initiatives to grow the Fedora user and developer communities and to make Red Hat & Fedora interactions even more transparent and positive.",
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],
"abstract": "What is the secret for maintainers to sustain newcomers in their communities? Many maintainers know about adding a CONTRIBUTING.md file to their project, but is this enough to effectively support and integrate newcomers into your project? In this session, Elizabeth Barron and Justin W. Flory will provide a baseline for newcomer onboarding in today\u2019s landscape and a close look at the CHAOSS and Fedora projects as real communities of practice.\r\n\r\nWhile CONTRIBUTING.md files provide potential contributors with information and support to join the community, they have certain bounds. A poor onboarding experience can actually work against you and turn them away before their first contribution. Building an effective and inclusive onboarding process is crucial to ensuring a healthy open source community.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, you will learn about:\r\n\r\n- establishing a baseline for what \u201cnewcomer onboarding\u201d means in today\u2019s open source landscape\r\n- implementing actionable steps to ease onboarding for newcomers and maintainers\r\n- two communities and their next steps for improving the contributor onboarding experience.\r\n\r\nElizabeth and Justin will represent the CHAOSS Project and the Fedora Project as participants, maintainers, and leaders in the communities and how experiments with newcomer onboarding led to lessons learned and the growth of the contributor ecosystem.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/56/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "elizabethn",
"mastodon_id": "@elizabeth@fosstodon.org"
},
{
"room": "E145",
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"E145"
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"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 132,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Empowering Data Driven Strategies with Open Source Machine Learning: Tools, Techniques and Tips",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Hema Veeradhi",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f31ce765f18608e805f8320c526635d8?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "174",
"biography": "Hema Veeradhi is a Senior Data Scientist working in the Emerging Technologies team part of the office of the CTO at Red Hat. Her work primarily focuses on implementing innovative open AI and machine learning solutions to help solve business and engineering problems.",
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{
"name": "Surya Prakash Pathak",
"twitter": "meayrus",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "146",
"biography": "Surya is a Data Scientist, currently working on the Emerging Technologies team at Red Hat. He is experienced in the field of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence. He spent the past year developing models for gaining customer insights, navigating open source tools for data scientists, and doing NLP using transformers models.",
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],
"abstract": "We are living in a digital era where vast amounts of data is constantly being generated, evaluated, and updated. As a result, the need for enterprises to keep up with this pace has grown and we are rapidly moving towards a more data-driven society. With the help of AI/ML technology, we have the power to make knowledgeable data driven decisions and effectively identify new trends and patterns, leading to more creative solutions and innovative approaches to problem-solving.\r\n\r\nIn light of the recent advancements in AI, particularly in predictive modeling, we now have a powerful tool at our disposal to quickly consume and analyze vast amounts of data. By using open source time series forecasting ML models like ARIMA and Prophet, we can provide more accurate predictions and insights in real-time, enabling organizations and teams to streamline processes and increase efficiency, improve and manage customer risk, and adapt to changing market conditions. In this talk we will discuss:\r\n1. Open Source tooling for building predictive ML models (Python, Jupyter, MLFLow)\r\n2. Time series forecasting techniques\r\n3. Tips for managing ML workflows and model interpretations\r\n\r\nAttendees will leave this talk with a deeper understanding of predictive ML models and how open source can empower us to be more data driven.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/65/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
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"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-13T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T11:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Registration and Welcome Lunch",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 210,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Registration table open"
},
{
"room": "E143",
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"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 53,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Harnessing Open-Source Innovation for an Integrated, Student-Centric e-Content Development and Lear",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Carl White",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "257",
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},
{
"name": "David King",
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"contact": "redacted",
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}
],
"abstract": "This project aims to bridge the gap between technological advancements in Knowledge Management (KM), E-Learning (EL), and emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI), Virtual Reality (VR), and Augmented Reality (AR), and the lack of skilled users able to create 3D content and establish best online practices for VR/AR content teaching and sharing. Our solution is a student-centric e-content development platform based on the Pre-Freshman Accelerated Curriculum in Engineering (PACE) program's Virtual Interactive Learning, Training, and Performance platform (VILTA).\r\n\r\nThe PACE program, with a strong track record of promoting student advancement and retention (with a 55% four-year graduation rate and a 24% advanced STEM degree completion rate). PACE was established in 1987 as a face to face on campus program. The vision of the PACE program is to motivate and inspire students to obtain an advanced STEM degree. This program has evolved into a semi-immersive and entirely remote learning experience, PACE VILTA. This evolution motivates the application of open-source software to transform PACE VILTA into a comprehensive student-centric e-content development platform.\r\n\r\nBy integrating AI with KM and EL on this platform, we aim to automate knowledge extraction, categorization, and distribution. The platform will be designed to personalize EL content, adapt to individual learners' pace, and enable precise assessments.\r\n\r\nVR and AR technologies will be introduced via gaming tools into an open-source Learning Management System (LMS) creating immersive, interactive, and contextual EL environments. An open-source metaverse, a unique feature of this platform, will facilitate e-content usage and sharing. The LMS's built-in controls will track students' progress through the e-content development cycle, ensuring alignment with the implemented e-content framework.\r\n\r\nThis platform will serve as a testing ground for various e-content frameworks, simplify e-content creation with VR and AR tools, and promote collaborative constructivism learning. By enabling the integration of diverse investigative techniques, the platform targets the improvement of active learning models, encourages innovative e-content frameworks, and provides a medium for validating learning principles, theories, and concepts.\r\n\r\nThe proposed research will focus on these dynamic integrations, anticipating comprehensive insights into the innovative amalgamation of AI, VR, and AR with KM and EL, powered by open-source software. The findings will extend the body of knowledge, suggest future research directions, and provide valuable guidelines for organizations and educational institutions seeking to improve their KM and EL initiatives through open-source innovation.\r\n\r\nThe primary objective of this research is to foster advancements in Knowledge Management (KM) and E-Learning (EL) systems worldwide. It aims to make these systems not only economically feasible but also versatile and easily accessible to a broad spectrum of users. The anticipated influence of this study is extensive, encompassing a wide range of learners, from students at Morgan State University to those in K-12 education, adult learners, and participants in industry training programs. Furthermore, it aspires to have a transformative impact on governmental agencies across the globe, further broadening the reach and applicability of its findings",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/183/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 149,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Unconference: DEI and FOSS",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Georg Link",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/cb8650702c8ba4dca38c33d2b3f5359b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "39",
"biography": "Georg Link is an Open Source Strategist with touchpoints and perspectives on DEI from his own marginalized identities including being a gay married man who fosters youths and lives as an immigrant in a different country from his upbringing. Georg co-founded the Linux Foundation CHAOSS Project to advance analytics and metrics for open source project health. Georg has an MBA and a Ph.D. in Information Technology. Georg serves as the Director of Sales at Bitergia. In his spare time, Georg enjoys reading fiction and hot-air ballooning.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Sriram Ramkrishna",
"twitter": "sramkrishna",
"mastodon": "@sri@mastodon.social or @sri@floss.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/447062d346ca576f8745b0cae1255dfc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "217",
"biography": "Sriram Ramkrishna is an over 20 year veteran in open source. Specializing specifically in open source communities - Sri has a solid track record in building rapport in existing communities, building new communities and meta communities. Sri has held roles from IT engineering roles to marketing and everything in between. Currently, Sri works at Intel as the community manager for oneAPI, an open standard, multi-architecture programming model that provides an open, industry driven alternative for writing AI and high performance computing on accelerators. \r\n\r\nIn community work, Sri is the brain child behind Linux App Summit, a conference that brings developers from the desktop community, distributions, and third party developers to drive application development on the Linux platform. Sri also participates in the open compute project as a liaison between the open system firmware team and the sustainability team focusing on how to build sustainable platforms. Finally, Sri is really good at connecting people - if you need help with your project or need visibility, he loves helping out.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Join us for an unconference session on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) and Free and Open Source Software (FOSS). For this session, we have no topics prepared because we are following an unconference format. This means that we will have participant-driven discussions. Participants can offer to host a small-group discussion on a topic they care about; no expertise is required, only personal experience and interest. After the small-group discussions, we will have report-outs to all participants to share what we learned with everyone. Everyone can participate to their level of comfort and is not required to share experiences or talk. This session is open to everyone.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/159/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 155,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Contributor Growth Strategies for OSS Projects",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Dawn Foster",
"twitter": "geekygirldawn",
"mastodon": "https://hachyderm.io/@geekygirldawn",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/506e49a7dae9eb8bd05bb64a5169cfa4?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "57",
"biography": "Dr. Dawn Foster works as the Director of Data Science for the CHAOSS project where she is also a board member and maintainer. She is co-chair of CNCF TAG Contributor Strategy and an OpenUK board member. She has 20+ years of experience at companies like VMware and Intel with expertise in community building, strategy, open source, governance, metrics, and more. She has spoken at over 100 industry events and has a PhD, MBA, and BS in computer science. In her spare time she enjoys reading science fiction, running, and traveling.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Maintaining an open source project is hard work that often extends out over several years, and maintainer burnout is common within open source projects. It can be hard for already overworked maintainers to balance the day to day work required to keep the project running while investing in activities to increase future sustainability. The good news is that we have best practices, resources, and templates available to make it easier for maintainers and projects to build a contributor strategy that leads to a strong and growing community for an open source project over the long term. This talk will help you apply those resources in your project.\r\n\r\nThis talk will have several major sections. 1) Discussion about the major factors that impact contributor growth. 2) Developing and executing on a long-term contributor growth strategy, including governance, new contributor onboarding, and mentoring. 3) Using contributor ladders to promote contributors into leadership positions as more maintainers to share the workload can reduce maintainer burnout over time. 4) Metrics for measuring project sustainability.\r\n\r\nThe audience will walk away with a better understanding of how to grow their contributor base and build a community around their open source project.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/31/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "geekygirldawn",
"mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@geekygirldawn"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 17,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Inside Igalia: Scaling a Co-Op Beyond 100 Members",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Valerie Young",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d3b4753b08f6265ace426673b34ae684?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "11",
"biography": "Valerie Young works at Igalia, a worker-owned co-op, focusing on web standards related to accessibility. Her work there includes co-chairing the ARIA working group of the W3C and being an editor of the CORE-AAM specification. In the course of her career, she has worked up and down the web stack -- from building web apps to standards and standards testing in browsers, and more recently on the browsers themselves. From the moment she learned about the free software from fellow nerds in college, she has been an advocate for it.\r\n\r\nOutside of work, she has spent her whole adult life participating in non-hierarchical co-operative structures, from housing co-ops, to political projects, to academic conferences and community farms. Valerie is endless curious about ways to organize work that lead to empowerment, self actualization and joyful collaboration for individuals involved -- she has seen many successes and many failures and would love to hear from you about yours!",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Igalia is an open source tech co-op success story. We have been around for 22 years; we have 140 members. We play an essential role in several open web platform projects such as Chromium/Blink, WebKit (WPE & WebKitGTK), Firefox and Servo. We have contributed to GNOME / GTK+ / Maemo, WebKit / WebKitGtk+ / JSC, Blink / V8, Gecko / SpiderMonkey projects, amongst others.\r\n\r\nThe reason we started as a co-op and the reason the focus of our work is Free and Open Source software are one and the same. Both are implementations of our values, in a word: egalitarianism.\r\n\r\nIn this talk you will hear a bit about our history. We will focus on how we found our FOSS business niche and how we grew from a few friends to 140 people in more than 25 countries all the while maintaining our flat organization structure. You will learn what it's like to participate in a company that is run by an Assembly, the decision making body that includes every Igalian, instead of a hierarchy of bosses.\r\n\r\nWe hope that this talk will expand the limits of your imagination on what a company can look like, and that next time you think about starting your own company or looking for a new job, you consider a co-op!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/73/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 154,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Reserved"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T11:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 124,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "The Cloud Native Burrito",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Josh Berkus",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@m6n.io@fuzzychef",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a9bf741211c9717ed23f4680227b88e2?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "36",
"biography": "Josh Berkus has been containering since containers were a thing, going back to FreeBSD Jails. Currently he works for Red Hat's Open Source Practice Office, supporting the Kubernetes project. He is the founder of Cloud Native PDX meetup group, a former CNCF Ambassador, and the recently retired co-chair of Kubernetes SIG-Contributor Experience; quite the CV for someone who started out just trying to automate database deployments. Josh has also been invovled in open source communities since 1998, and currently sits on the OSI board. He lives in NE Portland with a librarian and a very large cat.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Containers! Orchestrators! Service Mesh! Serverless! PodSecurity! You've heard all the hype from the many, many projects that call themselves \"Cloud Native\", but what does it all mean? Why would you want to use any of this, and what tools do you actually need, and why does the CNCF have over 150 projects?\r\n\r\nWelcome to the Cloud Native Taqueria, where your questions will be answered. In this talk, we will give you a whirlwind orientation tour of Cloud Native technologies through the metaphor of the Burrito Bar, from Kubernetes to Istio to Tekton to Knative. We'll explain each part of the stack, and why you might or might not want to use it, and how to figure out what your options are. With guacamole and sour cream.\r\n\r\nYou'll complete this talk with a better understanding of the Cloud Native universe and what things you want to learn more about.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/139/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@m6n.io@fuzzychef"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "BSD Unix",
"conf_key": 32,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Falling in Love with FreeBSD, Again",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Michael Dexter",
"twitter": "michaeldexter",
"mastodon": "@dexter@bsd.network",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2940463bef733994c4ebf550290bb2c7?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "215",
"biography": "Michael has used BSD Unix since 1991 and advanced it through fundraising, community coordination, and dozens of conference talks around the world. He has also organized the Portland Linux/Unix Group since 2009, coordinating over 150 speakers. By day Michael provides support for Open Source storage solutions for users of all sizes. Michael lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife and three children, small dog, and five chickens.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "FOSS users generally have fall into three relationships with FreeBSD: They've heard of it and never tried it. They used it LONG ago, or they use it for every application they can. This talk follows Michael's journey using GNU/Linux and FreeBSD, with stops at OpenBSD, and NetBSD along the way. The unique features of FreeBSD range from subtle to obvious, and have arrived at a slow but steady pace that has allowed it to stay remarkably consistent but ever advancing over its thirty year history. These features include a permissive license, an exemplary network stack, multiple packet filters, the Jail container, the bhyve and Xen hypervisors, and the UFS and ZFS file systems. FreeBSD's consistency makes it a delight to work with and operate, with changes consistently adding value, rather than delivering change for change's sake. This approach has allowed user to develop \"muscle memory\" that can genuinely last decades. This talk will provide an overview of FreeBSD's compelling features big and small.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/90/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "michaeldexter",
"mastodon_id": "@dexter@bsd.network"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card / Right to Repair",
"conf_key": 72,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "FOSS Mirroring on a budget: how a question turned into 253gbps of worldwide bandwidth in under a yea",
"authors": [
{
"name": "John 'Warthog9' Hawley",
"twitter": "warty9",
"mastodon": "@warthog9@social.afront.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/915db096dbdc59a10780e1f6098bdc89?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "151",
"biography": "John 'Warthog9' Hawley led the system administration team on kernel.org for nearly a decade, leading a team including four other administrators. His other exploits include working on Syslinux, OpenSSI, a caching Gitweb, and patches to bind to enable GeoDNS. He's the author of PXE Knife, a set of interfaces around common utilities and diagnostics tools needed by an average systems administrator, as well as SyncDiff(erent) a state-full file synchronizer and file transfer mechanism. He currently works for VMware working on upstream Open Source Software. In his free time he enjoys cooking extravagant meals and watching bad movies.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Everyone makes use of the existing open source mirroring systems that are present to download their favorite bit of FOSS, be that Video Lan Client, Libreoffice, or your favorite Linux distribution. There are a lot of entities that donate these resources into the community from Universities, to ISPs. The reasons why entities put forth this effort varies a lot, but ultimately they all share the want to help make it easy, and accessible, to acquire FOSS.\r\n\r\nIn early 2022 Kenneth Finnegan approached John 'Warthog9' Hawley with an idea \"hey we should build up a new public mirror for the internet exchange since the one that was there seems to have left\". Once completed, Kenneth asked another question which set in motion much bigger things \"what if we made mirrors out of $20 surplus thin clients?\" which has turned into a cluster of 29 machines in a number of countries on 4 continents. This is a story of how FOSS mirroring works, the idea that was had behind the Micro Mirror (MM) project and how this helps the FOSS community from end to end, and what projects and users can do to help the entirety of the mirroring infrastructure out there.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/77/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "warty9",
"mastodon_id": "@warthog9@social.afront.org"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 25,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Diamond Open Education",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Dr. Cable Green",
"twitter": "cgreen",
"mastodon": "@cablegreen@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e52037262833bc2daa4b4dbaf91b8e6c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "237",
"biography": "Dr. Cable Green is Creative Commons\u2019 Director of Open Knowledge. He works with open education, science and research communities to leverage open licensing, content, practices and policies to expand equitable access and contributions to open knowledge. His work is focused on identifying complex problems (e.g., UN SDGs) where open knowledge is a critical part of the solution, and then opening that knowledge to help solve the problem. Cable is also a leading advocate for open licensing and procurement policies that ensure publicly funded education, science and research resources are freely and openly available to the public.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Open Education sustainability requires significant, stable public funding. Education is a public good and the production, reuse and revisions of educational resources - and the software to host and share them - should be publicly funded and openly licensed to ensure educational opportunities for all.\r\n\r\nThe Open Science movement is increasingly looking toward more equitable models for open access research; it is looking to move away from expensive subscription fees and article processing charges (APCs). One possible model is \"Diamond Open Access,\" a model for ensuring inclusive and equitable access to both read and submit research articles to community-driven, academic-led and -owned open access journals.\r\n\r\nCable will explore what \u201cDiamond Open Education\u201d might look like. What are the barriers to Diamond OE? What if funding currently spent on expensive commercial educational resources and software were redirected to support the creation and stewardship of quality OER and FOSS in every discipline, in every grade level in multiple languages? Join us.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/138/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "cgreen",
"mastodon_id": "@cablegreen@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 181,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Reserved"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 69,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Where does \"sustaining\" open source fall down?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Richard Littauer",
"twitter": "richlitt",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@richlitt",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/70123f2cb4af0d0b414ae9c4827fdf33?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "212",
"biography": "Richard Littauer is the Community Development Manager at Open Source Collective, a community facilitator for the Digital Infrastructure Fund, and an organizer of SustainOSS and the host of the Sustain Podcast. As a full-stack developer and open source community consultant, he has interfaced with hundreds of different projects in dozens of communities. He likes birds.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Open source sustainability is a frequently mentioned topic. We need to \"keep it going for the long haul\", develop a \"sustainable business model\", and occasionally even \"sustain sustainability conversations\". There's even a conference about it. It happened on Wednesday. But the entire discussion falls down upon close scrutiny. What does sustainability mean for open source? Does it apply to the licenses, to particular projects, to users, to the ecosystem? How do we understand the community health of open source on a temporal spectrum? Why \"sustain\" in the first place, and for what, and for whom?\r\n\r\nAnd what's at risk if we're not sustainable? Proprietary code eating the world? Burn-out? AI? All of us moving to San Francisco and working for ad tech, even though the rent is too darn high? \r\n\r\nI've held hundreds of conversations about sustaining open source over the past few years. I want to share the limits of the term, where it doesn't fit our abstractions, and how some of the models we use to understand open source sustainability could be updated or improved. This is a talk for skeptics. It's also a talk for dreamers - because without understanding where the gaps are, it's near impossible to bridge them. My hope is that this talk can show how we can start doing that, together.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/78/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "richlitt",
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@richlitt"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 178,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 91,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "How you write matters in open source",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kyle Davis",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@linux_mclinuxface@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fec0a5332c6c0ce0bb6d2a30c0e3829d?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "119",
"biography": "Kyle is the Senior Developer Advocate for Bottlerocket and Finch at AWS. Kyle has a long history with open source software development and was a founding contributor to the OpenSearch project. When not working, Kyle enjoys 3D printing and getting his hands dirty in his Edmonton, Alberta-based home garden.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Form follows function in writing: you compose a postcard to your Gran in a particular voice, attorneys draft contracts using specialized terms and grammatical structures, marketing pros formulate content with specific language to sell products, and you probably should write in a distinct way when the topic is open source. In this session, Kyle will go over some unique writing challenges presented by open source projects and how to overcome them to be inclusive and accurate in your communication. This session will dive into how seemingly innocuous terms and grammatical structures embed meaning that may be sending subtle, unintended messages. Additionally, time will be spent discussing how to select and use style guides to concretely establish a consistent voice and approach for both general writing and technical documentation.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/36/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@linux_mclinuxface@fosstodon.org"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Copyleft and Compliance",
"conf_key": 67,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Free Software Policy with Semi-Firm Firmware",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kyle Rankin",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@kyle@librem.one",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/452c661dbbebd63b11ce11f0dfe6f74a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "14",
"biography": "Kyle Rankin has over two decades of professional Linux experience. He is the author of The Best of Hack and /: Linux Admin Crash Course, Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks, DevOps Troubleshooting, The Official Ubuntu Server Book, Third Edition, Knoppix Hacks, 2nd Edition, and Ubuntu Hacks, among other books. Rankin was an award-winning columnist and tech editor for Linux Journal, and speaks frequently on Free and Open Source software including at SCALE, FOSDEM, O\u2019Reilly Security Conference, Linux Fest NorthWest, OpenWest, BSidesLV, CactusCon, OSCON, Linux World Expo, and Penguicon.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Somewhere between hardware and software, is firmware. It was originally called that precisely because it straddled those two worlds.\r\n\r\nYet most firmware is no longer firm, it's more like tofu and exists in firm, semi-firm, and soft states. Current FSF policy that allows proprietary firmware is based on burned-on-chip, write-once firmware from a few decades ago. Most firmware today is field-upgradable and closer to software. This talk will discuss how the modern state of \"firm\"ware demands new free software policy, and start a discussion on what that policy could be.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/86/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@kyle@librem.one"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 60,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Keeping Open Source in the public Interest",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stefano Maffulli",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@ed@opensource.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/92040048afc1a6a96d598f58acdca4be?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "18",
"biography": "Stefano is the executive director of the Open Source Initiative. An experienced leader of open source organizations, from non-profits advocacy groups and trade organizations to business ventures and community projects across countries. With a proven track record in community building, he\u2019s also an active contributor to open source projects. When not basking in front of a monitor, you\u2019ll find him teaching sailing or perfecting his pizza technique.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Following an explosion of growth in open collaboration in solving the world\u2019s most urgent problems related to the 2020 global Covid-19 pandemic, open source software moved from mainstream to the world's main stage. In 2022 the United Nation\u2019s Digital Public Goods (DPG) Alliance began formally certifying open source software as DPG; the European Union wrote open source into their road map; both the EU and the US began crafting Cybersecurity legislation in support of secure software - not targeting OSS as a specific concern but rather protecting and investing in it as critical to its own and its citizens\u2019 interest. \r\n\r\nOSI has recognized these important seachanges in the environment, including unprecedented interest in open source in public arenas. Stefano Maffulli\u2019s briefing will provide an overview of important trends in Open Source Software in public policy, philanthropy and research and talk about a new initiative at OSI designed to bring open voices to the discussion.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/63/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@ed@opensource.org"
},
{
"room": "E144",
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"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 84,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Positioning your Open Source Project and Commercial Product for Fun and Profit",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Emily Omier",
"twitter": "emilyomier",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "54",
"biography": "Emily Omier is a positioning consultant who helps open source startups accelerate revenue and community growth with killer positioning. She hosts The Business of Open Source, a podcast about building open source companies, and writes about entrepreneurship for engineers for The New Stack.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Open source businesses commit themselves to building both a vibrant community of open source users as well as a profitable customer base. Sure, the open source project can drive commercial adoption,but the profile and needs of open source users are fundamentally different from the profile and priorities of a good commercial customer. If, as an open source business, you want to effectively grow both community use and revenue, you need to understand the profile, needs and pain points unique to their open source software users as well as the profile, needs and pain points unique to their commercial customers \u2014 and understand how the two profiles both overlap and diverge. \r\n\r\nIn this talk, Emily Omier will show attendees how to position their open source project and commercial product(s) so that each one has a unique message and clearly defined ideal user profile, while also developing an umbrella positioning and narrative for the entire company. Attendees will leave with a framework for how to work out the positioning for both open source and commercial products, as well as an understanding of why it matters and what to do once they\u2019ve figured out the positioning basics.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/24/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "emilyomier"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T10:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Science of Community",
"conf_key": 73,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Can we combat maintainer burnout with proactive metrics?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sophia Vargas",
"twitter": "Sophia_IV",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/31c134b0d379040c73acd9bd31812b32?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "175",
"biography": "Sophia Vargas is a Program Manager in the research and operations team within Google\u2019s Open Source Programs Office. In this role she leads efforts that span project health, contributor experience, and open source economics. She is also on the Governing Board and an active contributor to the CHAOSS community. Prior to Google, Sophia was an analyst at Forrester Research, covering data center infrastructure and cloud strategy.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "While there are many ways that projects can define and measure what health means to their communities, this talk will focus on maintainers as they serve critical roles in the development, leadership and governance of their projects. As burnout continues to be a growing issue across roles, industries and communities, losing maintainers within small communities can have significant impact on the sustainability of that project.\r\n\r\nThis talk will discuss methods and metrics that could signal overloaded and overworked maintainers. While metrics alone cannot fix this problem, they may help to identify potential issues so your community can adjust before it's too late.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/116/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "Sophia_IV"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T11:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 125,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Getting Started with vcluster in Production",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Mike Petersen",
"twitter": "mpetason",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f1a77037bb9dad565701b7c184303193?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "179",
"biography": "Mike has been part of the Open Source world for the last 15+ years. He started out administering linux systems then progressed to OpenStack and is currently living in the Kubernetes world. He has contributed to different projects from Knative to Tekton to OpenStack. Now, Mike is working to spread awareness of Loft Labs, vcluster, DevPod and the Kubernetes ecosystem in general.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Carl Montanari",
"twitter": "https://twitter",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/8af29ef95bac5ebb4ebeaa6e676d5a1e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "180",
"biography": "Carl is a Senior Software Engineer at Loft Labs, ex-network engineer, and reasonably likable guy. He enjoys being very serious about not being serious, and most days can be found working on Loft's commercial and open source projects. Outside of work he loves hiking, and working on his kit car that will, probably, eventually be complete and running... maybe.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "This talk will provide guidance on how to get started with using vcluster in production. Users may have worked with vcluster for dev / test / preview environments but there are other use cases for vcluster including production environments. We will take a look at some of the considerations such as network policies and security, as well as autoscaling and other features available in cloud providers. There will even be demos!\r\n\r\nvcluster is Virtual Kubernetes Clusters that run inside regular namespaces. Virtual clusters have their own API server which makes them much more powerful and better isolated than namespaces, but they are also much cheaper than creating separate \"real\" Kubernetes clusters. If you are hitting the scalability limits of k8s because you are running a large-scale multi-tenant cluster, you can now split up and effectively shared your clusters into vclusters.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/142/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "mpetason"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-13T11:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T13:45:00",
"duration": 165,
"kind": "Registration and Welcome Lunch",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 161,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Welcome lunch"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Science of Community",
"conf_key": 74,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Lightning Talks - Science of Community",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Matthew Gaughan",
"twitter": "_gaugh",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5ac31bcad0ac6001ad8b27a23bd8a103?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "62",
"biography": "Matthew Gaughan is an incoming PhD student in Northwestern University's Technology and Social Behavior program. He currently lives in Seattle, where he works as a software developer.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "adam hyde",
"twitter": "CokoFoundation",
"mastodon": "esetera",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a353d5d73e6ca6aad4fe6bee09fa5d2a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "183",
"biography": "Open Source entrepreneur. Founder of Coko (https://coko.foundation).\r\nAlso founder of Open Publishing Fest, Open Publishing Awards, Book Sprints.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Anita Sarma",
"twitter": "asarma",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bad273932830237d5d21642e1cb240bb?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "65",
"biography": "Dr. Anita Sarma is a professor and Associate Head of Research in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. She received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Irvine and was a postdoctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research focuses on human factors in software development and how to design inclusive technology to help software developers. Her passion is in fostering DEI in Open Source. Her work crosscuts areas of SE, AI for SE, HCI, open source, and CSCW. She has co-authored more than 100 conference and journal articles, and has received numerous awards. She received the OSU Breaking Barriers Research award (2021) for her work in removing gender biases from software. She is a co-director of the GenderMag project. She is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award (2013) and Google Inclusion Research Award (2022).",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Kaylea Champion",
"twitter": "kayleachampion",
"mastodon": "@social.coop/@kayleachampion",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b8225a91a87dc7b27ae2e0303a87962c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "10",
"biography": "Kaylea Champion is a PhD Candidate in Communication at University of Washington. She studies how people cooperate to build public goods like GNU/Linux and Wikipedia, including what gets built and maintained (and what doesn't), who participates (and who is excluded), and how teams succeed (and fail). Prior to graduate school, she worked in IT as a consultant, system administrator and project manager. She holds an MS in Computer Science from the University of Chicago. A Linux user since 1994, she enjoys tromping through the woods, smashing goblins, and cooking for a crowd.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@shauna@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2bdf820f298588fef18a33de5779836a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "171",
"biography": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon is a writer, programmer and community organizer who focuses on the intersection of technology and governance. Her business, Galaxy Rise Consulting, works with free/open source projects, non-profits, progressive organizations and other clients to build better products for their communities, and stronger communities around their products.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "This session offers rapid talks by and for researchers. These short talks will provide brief insights into free and open source software development, use, and communities, as well as questions we need to be asking ourselves as community members and researchers.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/168/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "_gaugh"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 92,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "FreeBSD: Why This Open Source Project Has Endured",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Drew Gurkowski",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b14b6945a518715ed3717af01fe7da82?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "165",
"biography": "Drew started working for the foundation as an intern in 2015 and continued as a consultant starting in 2018. As a marketing coordinator, he has helped advocate for FreeBSD and Open Source technology.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "FreeBSD's 30th birthday offers an opportunity to look back and examine why this open source operating system has not only endured, but thrived across many organizations and use cases for so long. While open source projects are born out out different circumstances, FreeBSD certainly grew from a mold of its own. The path the project took has everything to do with its longevity and why, 30 years after it launched, you'll find FreeBSD code helping power everything from your content on Netflix to your games on PlayStation.\r\n\r\nThis talk will cover the roots of the Berkley Software Distributions, the project's approach to shared leadership, the benefits of remote development, and the ways FreeBSD has cultivated a strong community through open communication, consistent documentation, and an inclusive culture. We'll wrap up by taking a look forward for the next 30 years and how you can contribute to the future of FreeBSD.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/33/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 70,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "The Business Case for Open Source Laptops",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Mike Jang",
"twitter": "theMikeJang",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ee6f74a36fa8e02e7450e3e9607a205b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "78",
"biography": "Mike Jang is the Lead Technical Writer for Forescout, where he\u2019s helping to document their cybersecurity tools. In his past lives, he\u2019s helped UX designers and product managers learn best practices in UI text at ForgeRock, GitLab, and Cobalt. To figure out what to write, Mike spends much of his time analyzing and testing new software. Mike has written a couple of dozen technical books, including multiple editions of McGraw-Hill\u2019s RHCSA/ RHCE Red Hat Linux Certification Study Guide. He\u2019s also the author of O\u2019Reilly\u2019s Linux Annoyances for Geeks.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The tech company you've joined wants to give you a laptop for your work. Yay!\r\n\r\nBut they offer only Macs. Or if they offer Linux, they refuse to support it. What do you do?\r\n\r\nThis talk discusses strategies to help your companies accept and support Linux in development and administrative environments.\r\n\r\nif your company refuses to allow Linux on the \"Desktop\", what numbers can you put together to show how Linux is a better option? How do you show that Linux is cost-effective for users who are comfortable with it?\r\n\r\nIf your company will purchase a Linux laptop for your work, but refuses to support it internally, what do you do? How do you set up a community where you work where you can support each other?",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/87/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "theMikeJang"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 118,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source Your Inclusive Language Initiatives",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Monica Ayhens-Madon",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@communiteatime",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b6df33dc3847f082f13865074e5edcfc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "181",
"biography": "Monica is a community facilitator and nurturer who began her journey into open source software contributorhood in 2020 with documentation and website contributions to the Ubuntu MATE team and OpenMRS. In early 2021, she began working for Canonical on the Ubuntu Community Team, where she helped relaunch UbuntuOnAir, return Ubuntu (virtually!) to FOSDEM, and launch Canonical's inclusive language initiative. She left in August 2022. Since then, she has spoken as a panelist on burnout in the community profession at OSS Europe in Dublin, been elected to the Ubuntu Community Council for a two-year term, and helped organize things like a pre-SCALE JPL private tour and the FOSSY 'Community: Open Source in Service' track. \r\n\r\nMonica's background is in academia, with a B.A. in Ancient Greek and a M.A. in Maritime Studies. She loves travel, and the chance to meet new people all over the world - and bring tasty treats back home. She is also an occasional streamer on Twitch as 'communiteatime' where she can be found playing cozy games, painting, and sipping tea. She lives with her husband and fellow geek John in the Atlanta metro area.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Especially since 2020, numerous organizations and companies have sought to make the language used in their marketing, everyday communication, and their code more inclusive. There are numerous logistical hurdles, especially when there are thousands if not tens of thousands of artifacts that need changing. But one of the biggest hurdles is getting investment in the changes beyond your DEI team, which is key to making inclusive language become the norm.\r\n\r\nOne way to increase investment is to open source your glossary of terms to modify and their replacements. This talk will discuss the lessons learned from using this approach at Canonical, from initial planning to an established process. A transparent, collaborative approach can turn conflict into constructive dialogue, reduce the load on understaffed DEI teams and groups, and organically broaden the scope of your efforts. In addition to the talk, there will be time for discussion.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/131/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://fosstodon.org/@communiteatime"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 61,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Make The Commit \u2013 Community Best Practices for Patent Risk",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Keith Bergelt",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0825e15ed6ea2cf7cfc3feafe45200d6?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "203",
"biography": "Keith Bergelt is the CEO of Open Invention Network (OIN), the largest patent non-aggression community in history, created to support freedom of action in Linux as a key element of open source software. Funded by Google, IBM, NEC, Philips, Sony, SUSE, and Toyota, OIN has nearly 4,000 community members. In his capacity as CEO, he is directly responsible for enabling, influencing, and defending the integrity of Linux and adjacent open source software as it relates to threats from patent aggressors.\r\n\r\nPrior to joining OIN, Mr. Bergelt served as CEO of two Hedge Funds \u2013 Paradox Capital and IPI \u2013 formed to unlock the considerable asset value of intellectual property (IP) in middle- market companies. These were the first Funds to offer specialty lending products supported exclusively by IP.\r\n\r\nPreviously, he served as a senior advisor to TPG. He also headed business development, IP, and licensing for Cambridge Display Technology. Additionally, he served as GM of Strategic Intellectual Asset Management at Motorola and its director of Technology Strategy.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "All good Open Source developers and communities know that you have to address the issues. No one will show interest in contributing to an Open Source project if it doesn't address potential bugs, security issues, or feature additions to its repository. This is well understood by the Open Source community as part of the ethos which has driven the success of open as an innovation modality and spurred its growth into new technological areas such as AI/ML, Open Hardware, and others.\r\n\r\nHowever, many of today\u2019s most popular Open Source licenses do not adequately address patent risk for Open Source projects. As patent risk is a challenge that must be addressed, this presentation will discuss the key tenets around patent non-aggression in Open Source, key patent-related risks, and the best practices that Open Source projects should consider moving forward to \u201caddress the issue\u201d.\r\n\r\nKey Takeaways:\r\n\r\no\tWays patent litigation risks are rising & ways to reduce these risks\r\no\tThe relevance of patents and their future value in the \u201cOpen Work\u201d economy\r\no\tChallenges for the Open Source community as it expands into new technologies and encounters new patent-related threats\r\no\tBest practice solutions to mitigate these challenges",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/62/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 133,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Secure Data Sharing: Homomorphic Encryption and Confidential Computing",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Surya Prakash Pathak",
"twitter": "meayrus",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/39e20ae2d218c45c952442762b17a65a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "146",
"biography": "Surya is a Data Scientist, currently working on the Emerging Technologies team at Red Hat. He is experienced in the field of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence. He spent the past year developing models for gaining customer insights, navigating open source tools for data scientists, and doing NLP using transformers models.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "AAKANKSHA DUGGAL",
"twitter": "DuggalAakanksha",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/460d346e7bf6901a8bf7d62944eb54ed?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "150",
"biography": "Aakanksha Duggal is a Senior Data Scientist in the Emerging Technologies Group at Red Hat. She is a part of the Data Science team and works on developing open source software that uses AI and machine learning applications to solve engineering problems.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "There are over 5 trillion megabytes of data on the internet, and private information and data from phones and laptops are all over the internet. We often tend to accept the privacy policies of various websites without even looking and hence causing a transfer of information to the world. \r\n\r\nHowever, some websites and platforms allow you to anonymize your personal information and still allow these websites to make inferences and analyze the data via Data anonymization. Using this capability of securing and ensuring almost encrypting personally identifiable data in a dataset, we can make the data live in the open source world. \r\n\r\nSuch is the concept of Homomorphic Encryption, it allows us to eliminate the tradeoff between data usability and privacy, and keep it safe, secure, and private even in the most untrusted environments, like public clouds or external parties. In this session, we will cover what is Homomorphic Encryption and how this can change the outlook on Open Source Data. We will also demonstrate the intersection of AI and how holomorphic encryption can enable multi-party data sharing.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/71/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "meayrus"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 26,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "How to procure open source (you don't)",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Anne-Marie Scott",
"twitter": "ammienoot",
"mastodon": "@ammienoot@ds106.social.us",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9965d27f32cac497b1e48e28fda4db10?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "86",
"biography": "Anne-Marie Scott was Deputy Provost of Athabasca University, Canada's equivalent to the UK Open University until March 2023. Prior to her time in Canada she held a number of roles at the University of Edinburgh, including Deputy Director of Learning, Teaching and Web Services \r\n\r\nShe is the Board Chair of the Apereo Software Foundation and a member of the Board of the Open Source Initiative, who globally steward the license definitions for open source software. She has been part of the Government of British Columbia\u2019s Digital Advisory Committee since 2022, advising on how to embed and upscale digital learning across the province. She is a member of the After Surveillance network, a global group of scholars and practitioners concerned with surveillance practices in HE, part of the leadership team of the OpenETC, a shared set of open technologies for post-secondary institutions within British Columbia Canada, run along platform cooperative principles.\r\n\r\nAs a practitioner and leader she is committed to sharing openly her blog, along with presentations and publications. You can find her online at @ammienoot (Twittter) @ammienoot@ds106.social.us (Mastodon) and https://ammienoot.com",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "A common complaint in higher education has been that departments would consider open source options when purchasing software, but nobody ever bids into the formal procurement processes that public sector bodies are obliged to run. This response makes clear a fundamental mis-conception about how to approach the acquisition of open source; a competitive procurement process is in most cases inappropriate because no product purchase is being made. Instead a different kind of commitment of time and resources is required to adopt open source, and to facilitate decision making about that, a different kind of evaluation process is also required.\r\n\r\nThis talk will outline the kinds of evalution processes that should be used by higher education to acquire open source solutions, and how such processes can actively enhance commercial procurement practices if that is the eventual route taken. It will also cover what kinds of information open source projects should be providing to enable easy options evaluation and decision making.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/99/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "ammienoot",
"mastodon_id": "@ammienoot@ds106.social.us"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 85,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Dear Open Source, let\u2019s do a better job of asking for money",
"authors": [
{
"name": "John Robb",
"twitter": "johnrobbjr",
"mastodon": "@johnrobbjr@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/cef246bb271e2c5a8be32e5fb3d6c7fe?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "101",
"biography": "John is a community manager at React Flow, where he helps with all things un-code. Before React Flow, John was a UX Designer and Researcher, puzzle game designer, pizza delivery biker, and immersive event organizer. He is based in Berlin and likes looking at birds, listening to tabletop RPG live plays, improv comedy, and making music.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "It\u2019s common knowledge that many open source projects are underfunded. We think one reason for this is that\u00a0the open source world is doing a bad job of asking for the money that it deserves.\u00a0By telling the right organizations exactly why and how we want them to financially support our work, OSS projects can be compensated for more fairly, and result in a healthier open source ecosystem.\r\n\r\nIn this talk we will review our experiences at React Flow of making our MIT Licensed library financially sustainable. This includes:\r\n\r\n- Insights from user research about why our subscribers pay us\r\n- Inner workings of our thin-crust open-core model\r\n- How we used patterns from the SaaS world to more directly ask companies for money\r\n- How slow, intentional growth of our team lends to financial sustainability\r\n\r\nWe hope that folks leave this talk with practical methods to ask for money in their own OSS projects, as well as insights into the role of money (and the lack thereof) in the open source ecosystem.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/21/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "johnrobbjr",
"mastodon_id": "@johnrobbjr@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card / Right to Repair",
"conf_key": 71,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Tools for linking Wikidata and OpenStreetMap",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Edward Betts",
"twitter": "edwardbetts",
"mastodon": "@edward@octodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/1e64ab07e0faced09520a5c589deb70b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "74",
"biography": "Edward became a member of Debian in 1998, he maintains over 70 Debian packages.\r\n\r\nHe has written several tools for BusyBox, a software suite that provides several Unix utilities in a single executable file.\r\n\r\nEdward worked at the Internet Archive for five years as the original data librarian of the Open Library.\r\n\r\nHe builds tools for editing Wikipedia, Wikidata and OpenStreetMap.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Wikidata and OpenStreetMap are collaborative open data projects that contain structured data for real world places and things. Adding links between the projects makes the data more useful, but doing this by hand is laborious. I've written a software tool that automates much of the process.\r\n\r\nEditors of OpenStreetMap can use my software to search for a place or region, generating a list of candidate matches from Wikidata, which can then be checked and saved to OpenStreetMap.\r\n\r\nLinking the two projects isn't without controversy. They use different licenses which raises questions about what information from one project can be copied to the other.\r\nIn the presentation I will give details of a new version of the editing tool.\r\n\r\nI will talk about the benefits of linking, the process of finding matches, the community response - including the controversy - and how people can get involved.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/76/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "edwardbetts",
"mastodon_id": "@edward@octodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Copyleft and Compliance",
"conf_key": 68,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "What we really want: an enforcer's perspective",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Bradley M. Kuhn",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "227",
"biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC) and editor-in-chief of copyleft.org. Kuhn began his work in the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, as an early adopter of Linux-based systems and contributor to various FOSS projects, including Perl. He worked during the 1990s as a system administrator and software developer for various companies, and taught AP Computer Science at Walnut Hills High School in Cincinnati. Kuhn\u2019s non-profit career began in 2000, when he was hired by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). As FSF\u2019s Executive Director from 2001\u20132005, Kuhn led FSF\u2019s GPL enforcement, launched its Associate Member program, and invented the Affero GPL. Kuhn began as SFC\u2019s primary volunteer from 2006\u20132010, and became its first staff person in 2011. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude B.S. in Computer Science from Loyola University in Maryland, and an M.S. in Computer Science from the University of Cincinnati. Kuhn\u2019s Master\u2019s thesis discussed methods for dynamic interoperability of Free Software programming languages. Kuhn received the Open Source Award in 2012, and the Award for the Advancement of Free Software in 2021 \u2014 both in recognition for his lifelong policy work on copyleft licensing and its enforcement.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Copyleft is a tool to help give everyone the right to modify and fix the software they use. It has proven effective in many situations, giving us projects like OpenWrt, and growing various FOSS communities like Linux immensely. However, copyleft is not the thing that software freedom advocates ultimately want - rather, it is one way of achieving it, and works to varying degrees depending on the copyright and other laws of the country you happen to reside in.\r\n\r\nEarly writing on software freedom tended to focus on copyleft as the solution but, as we enter what many call a post-copyright age, fueled by AI startups and other dubious businesses, we need new tools to ensure that people's right to modify and fix the software they use is protected for current and future generations. This talk will explore some of the foundations of software freedom and how we can re-think the ways that these foundations are upheld through law and social norms.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/122/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 203,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Let's stop reinventing the wheel: Community management in 3 steps",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Karsten (quaid) Wade",
"twitter": "quaid",
"mastodon": "quaid@hachyderm.io",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6456ce62722aa89078d2d3596d88fb41?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "210",
"biography": "Karsten Wade aka `quaid` is a community architect of Free and Open projects who has almost thirty years in IT. Since 2008 Karsten has focused deeply on the people, principles, and practices of Open collaboration (aka \"the Open Source Way\"), especially around the caretaking and stewardship of people (aka \"community management\".) With a kind of accidental-purpose, Karsten found himself at the crossroads of doing meaningful work having a transformational effect on others. This is a wonderful spot to be for someone who just cares so much about the welfare of you and those around you.\r\n\r\nAfter working in a handful of IT roles, including 21 years at Red Hat largely as a community architect, Karsten formed the Open Community Architecture Group to provide professional services consulting around Open Source. The OCA Group intends to be a sustaining business for the ecosystem and its collective of domain consultants.\r\n\r\nHowever, what has Karsten excited and full of awe is his new concept \"Open Equity\", first presented this year. Karsten expects research on Open Equity to begin soon and is making invitations to participate.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "It's hard to be consistent with Free/Open Source practices, and it's a particular kind of hard when it's your role in the project to guide other people toward such consistency. In this session we'll share some compassion and then some ideas of how we can actually get together as a community of practice. And then we'll do some practice demos together! \r\n\r\nIn putting energy toward working on our practices together, we center the importance of Open Knowledge sharing and building communities for those and of those whose work includes enabling others to be successful in using and contributing to FOSS. We help ourselves fix our own leaky roofs, make shoes for our own friends and family, and help return time to everyone\u2019s days.\r\n\r\nTo engage in practice in this session, we'll explore a perspective on how to read and use the Open Source Way, the guidebook for community management. Written by a diverse group of more than a dozen FOSS expert practitioners, the guide extrapolates and distills knowledge of not just what to do and how to do it, but also why to do it. The chapters and checklists are ready to use and/or modify, and Karsten will chop and mix them live in the session.\r\n\r\nHow can this help you use the guidebook and practices? Whether you are leading or guiding a Free/Open project, an engineering team, or any group of humans looking to be successful working within FOSS projects, you are facing the need to teach and reteach (and reteach\u2026) the same information and practices. People need to know what to do, how to do it, and where to do it, while you hope you get them to understand a smattering of why it all matters in the short time you have their attention.\r\n\r\nThis practice demo follows 3 steps to take the detailed and specific practices in the guidebook, and remix them to fit your education and practice needs. The contributors you support then have a tool to guide them in successfully creating, building, and maintaining their FOSS projects.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/43/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "quaid",
"mastodon_id": "quaid@hachyderm.io"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 18,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Agaric Technology Collective",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Keegan Rankin",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@social.coop@agaric",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e3b69eb4292b39e8c61706f7fb24ba5e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "27",
"biography": "Keegan is a Free Software user and contributor, and web developer. As a worker-owner of Agaric Technology Collective, Keegan has contributed to Drupal Core, a wide variety of contributed Drupal modules, and the Drutopia distribution, among several other Free Software projects. Independently, Keegan is an amorphous person with a constantly evolving set of interests, and a tendency to make music with the surrounding objects.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Louis Elkner-Alfaro",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4221bbad92e2f5d7804cbd287ab4131a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "115",
"biography": "Louis loves FOSS because he loves to see people empowered and he loves to see people empowered without having to pay so that empowerment isn't restricted to those who can buy it. Louis began working with Agaric earlier this year and is excited to have found a worker's-coop that centers the needs of its workers and gives their clients control over their digital lives.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Agaric is a worker-cooperative\u2014one person, one vote. Agaric builds websites with free software and a central goal of our work is to empower people to have control over their technology and content. As much as possible contribute our code back to the community. Agaric uses Drupal and has contributed to a plethora of Drupal modules and documentation.\r\n\r\nSome highlights of our current work and projects we are involved in are Drutopia and Visions Unite.\r\n\r\nDrutopia (https://drutopia.org/) is a Drupal distribution for organizations to be able to coordinate and share their work publicly. Drutopia is controlled by its users and therefore they are not disempowered and at the mercy of proprietary service providers who can take away service, raise prices, change terms and services and abuse user data.\r\n\r\nAnother project Agaric is involved in developing is Visions Unite (https://visionsunite.gigalixirapp.com/about). Vision Unite seeks to provide a neutral infrastructure for conversations and coordination to extend to many more people, as equals, than it traditionally has. Visions Unite uses sortition (random selection of participants) as a tool for participants to choose what messages are distributed to groups they represent so that quality information and ideas are surfaced in a democratic manner. Through sortition we avoid giving power to people who seek to concentrate it in their hands and instead equally spread decision making power throughout the network of participants.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/163/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@social.coop@agaric"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 54,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Hidden Gems: Enabling Open Source Communities & Building up Talent Pipelines Through Mentorship",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stephanie Lieggi",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9aa59dcf2fbc1b3642f73d14332a61ad?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "60",
"biography": "Stephanie Lieggi is assistant director for the Center for Research in Open Source Software (CROSS) and the UC Santa Cruz Open Source Program Office (OSPO). In her current roles she supports the work of academic-based open source projects and enables a sustainable contributor base through the establishment of hands-on mentorship programs. Stephanie promotes the use of open source in academic settings as well as increasing diversity and inclusion in open source ecosystems.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Carlos Maltzahn",
"twitter": "CarlosMaltzahn",
"mastodon": "@Carlos@discuss.systems",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ea8dfe7c7ee07fc27473acca51522d82?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "194",
"biography": "Carlos Maltzahn is the PI of the Open Source Program Office (OSPO), UC Santa Cruz and the founder and director of the UC Santa Cruz Center for Research in Open Source Software (CROSS). He also co-founded the Systems Research Lab, known for its cutting-edge work on programmable storage systems, big data storage & processing, scalable data management, distributed system performance management, and practical reproducible evaluation of computer systems. Carlos joined UC Santa Cruz in 2004, after five years at Netapp working on network-intermediaries and storage systems. In 2005 he co-founded and became a key mentor on Sage Weil\u2019s Ceph project. In 2008 Carlos became a member of the computer science faculty at UC Santa Cruz and has graduated nine Ph.D. students since. Carlos graduated with a M.S. and Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of Colorado at Boulder. His work is funded by nonprofits, government, and industry, including the National Science Foundation, US Department of Energy, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and CROSS.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Jayjeet Chakraborty",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6cd61c2b317aec408ba2df7cd8fdc353?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "193",
"biography": "Jayjeet is a 2nd Year PhD student at the University of California, Santa Cruz in the Computer Science and Engineering department. He is working on computer systems research especially in the field of Storage systems, Databases, Data management systems, and Computational storage. He has previously been part of several open source programs most notable of which is Google Summer of Code. Most of his research work is open-sourced and he tries to use open-source projects as much as possible as well. Previously, he has worked on building v2 of a programmable storage system called Skyhook which is maintained under another project in the Apache Software Foundation. Currently, he is working with Argonne National Labs on building faster data transport protocols that used modern networking technologies. Additionally, he is working with IRIS-HEP (Institute for Research in High Energy Physics) on building data management technologies for efficient processing of large High Energy Physics dataset. When not working, Jayjeet likes to explore new places, try new food, and gather new experiences.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Skilled, effective mentorship on open source research projects can provide an opportunity for faculty and researchers to identify and bolster the work of hidden gems \u2013 including talented and driven students who never considered graduate school as part of their career trajectory. Since 2018, the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Center for Research in Open Source Software (CROSS), and more recently the UCSC OSPO, has been matching talented student contributors with mentors and their open source research projects. Starting as a mentor organization for the Google Summer of Code (GSoC) and then expanding mentoring efforts to include additional sponsors within the Open Source Research Experience (OSRE), the team at UCSC has worked to seed open source communities across multiple University of California (UC) campuses by bringing in new contributors to UC research projects. This presentation will look at what the OSRE team has learned from these hands-on mentoring efforts, and propose practical ways these types of programs can be replicated elsewhere to support the work of more academic open source ecosystems. To further highlight how programs like these can have real-world impact on students and open source communities, the discussion will feature the story of UCSC PhD student Jayjeet Chakraborty, who first came to the attention of the UCSC mentors through the GSoC program then developed into a key contributor to a CROSS incubator project, and was ultimately recruited into the computer science PhD program at UCSC. The presentation will explore Jayjeet's evolution through these roles, and how his experience can provide inspiration for engaging and empowering contributors, and assist with improving a project\u2019s long-term impact and sustainability. The session will also focus on how this approach could be used to strengthen the pool of contributors supported by the OSRE and similar programs, including innovative ways of bringing open source education and relevant training to a broader cross-section of students.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/105/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Security",
"conf_key": 106,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Doing a TUF: Secure Any Shared Storage",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Nisha Kumar",
"twitter": "_ctlfsh",
"mastodon": "@nisha@social.afront.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/289a98c380a0ba0c05c19ceee863800a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "117",
"biography": "Nisha is a software developer at Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (not to be confused with the Open Container Initiative). Nisha is involved in the SPDX and CNCF communities, trying to improve software and service transparency.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The Update Framework (TUF) is an Open Source Framework used to secure software repository. OK, that's great. But what does that look in practice? A repository is just storage that is accessible to anyone other than you. Think about a shared Google folder. That's a repository. For software development, that's a database, an AWS S3 bucket, or even just a directory on disk. This talk will walk you through the steps to implement TUF on a typical data store you may use on a regular basis. Then we will see how TUF ensures the consumers of that data can verify your identity and the freshness of the things you share.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/125/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "_ctlfsh",
"mastodon_id": "@nisha@social.afront.org"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T11:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "BSD Unix",
"conf_key": 38,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "NetBSD on your home router",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Alexander Vasarab",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/85bce5bd88ee0fad467d7df515598548?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "177",
"biography": "Alexander has been a NetBSD user since the turn of the century with\r\ninterlacing periods of professional and personal use.\r\n\r\nIn the computing space, he has finally settled on the humble descriptor\r\nof \"systems facilitator\" to sum up his wide experience across many\r\ncontexts.\r\n\r\nWhen he's not interacting with a topography of silicon, he is a mountain\r\nguide and avalanche educator working in the west coast states of the US.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "NetBSD isn't commonly used in a visible way today, even though a smorgasbord of modern devices are leveraging NetBSD silently and opaquely. If you would like to harness the relevant and useful capabilities of NetBSD, then a good place to start is sending all of your packets through NetBSD on your home internet connection.\r\n\r\nThis talk will cover, as it pertains to a home server environment, the basic setup of a modern NetBSD installation; package management; npf, the NetBSD packet filter; and IPv6 considerations.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/88/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T12:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 172,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "How AI can help sustain open source, not destroy it",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Justin Dorfman",
"twitter": "jdorfman",
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"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/06bbced4bbd9a751c4f698cfc2a99b84?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "25",
"biography": "Justin Dorfman is Sourcegraph's Open Source Program Manager and is responsible for fostering the adoption of code intelligence in the open source community.\r\n\r\nJustin has contributed to Bootstrap, Font Awesome, jQuery, Nginx, CNCF, GNU Bash, Zsh, and many more. He also served on the selection committee for Mozilla's Open Source Support (MOSS) program. In 2017, he co-founded SustainOSS, which hosts events and podcasts for open source software Sustainers.\r\n\r\nHe serves on the Open Source Collective's board of directors and is an advisor for The Atlantic Council's Cyber Statecraft Initiative Working Group.",
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],
"abstract": "There are some concerns that AI could pose a threat to FOSS. For example, some worry that AI could be used to create proprietary software that is more powerful and efficient than OSS. Additionally, others worry that AI could be used to automate the development of FOSS, which could lead to a decline in the number of people willing to contribute to open source projects.\r\n\r\nHowever, there are also a number of ways in which AI can be used to help sustain open source. For example, AI can be used to:\r\n\r\n* Automate tasks: AI can be used to automate a number of tasks currently performed by humans, such as writing unit tests. This can free human developers to focus on more creative and strategic work.\r\n\r\n* Improve quality: AI can improve the quality of FOSS by identifying and fixing bugs as well as security vulnerabilities. \r\n\r\n* Attract new contributors: AI can attract new contributors to open source projects by making it easier for people to get involved. For example, AI can generate documentation and tutorials and then be improved by contributors to fix hallucinations.\r\n\r\nOverall, AI has the potential to both help and hurt open source. However, if used correctly, AI can be a powerful tool for sustaining and improving open source software.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/68/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "jdorfman",
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},
{
"room": "E147",
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"end": "2023-07-16T12:30:00",
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"kind": "Break",
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"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E146",
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"start": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
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"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 19,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Snowdrift.coop: sustainable funding for FLO projects",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Aaron Wolf",
"twitter": "awolftune",
"mastodon": "@wolftune@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b32ae4ca7b2465cc5b642eed9c285b06?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "239",
"biography": "Aaron is a FLO activist, co-founder of Snowdrift.coop, and community music teacher. He has worked for many years (mostly volunteering) on social, political, and economic aspects of technology and media.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Snowdrift.coop is a nonprofit cooperative run by an international team driven by a common goal:\r\n\r\nTo dramatically improve the ability of ordinary people to fund public goods \u2013 things like software, music, journalism, and research \u2013 that everyone can use and share without limitations.\r\n\r\nWe've continued to shovel the path towards that future without the use of proprietary tools. Come hear about our project and journey, assisting us in clearing the final feet!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/145/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "awolftune",
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},
{
"room": "E142",
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"start": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
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"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
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"track": "Science of Community",
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"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Research Data Management Skills Development Leveraged by an Open Source Portfolio",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Shoji Kajita",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "139",
"biography": "Shoji Kajita is currently a Professor of Kyoto University in Japan with two appointments, one in the IT Planning Office, a part of the Institute of Information Management and Communication, and the other in the Academic Center for Computing and Media Studies. Professor Kajita received his bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees in Information Engineering from Nagoya University in Japan in 1990, 1992, and 1998 respectively. At Nagoya University, he served as a Research Associate in the Graduate School of Engineering from 1995 to 1997 and an Assistant Professor in the Center for Information Media Studies (CIMS) from 1998 to 2001. During his work at CIMS, he localized WebCT into Japanese and took the role of WebCT evangelist in Japan as a means of promoting the use of ICT for teaching and learning. From 2002 to 2008, he was an Associate Professor at the Nagoya University Information Technology Center, where he developed the Nagoya University Portal and a next-generation Course Management System for Japanese universities. These works were contributed to the Jasig and Sakai communities for use with uPortal, CAS and the Sakai CLE. His contributions to Jasig and Sakai reflected on the participation in annual (formally semi-annual) Jasig Conferences since 2002 and Sakai Conferences since 2004. Before joining Kyoto University in 2011, his most recent position at Nagoya University was that of an Associate Professor in the Information Strategy Office, a part of the university's Information and Communications Headquarters. He currently serves on the Board of the Apereo Foundation.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Research Data Management (RDM) skills are \u201cmust-have\u201d skills required of any researcher in any discipline. Recent advances in digital technology have introduced new practices in Open Science and Research Integrity, requiring researchers to continuously develop their skills in systematic ways. This session uses a maturity model represented by rubrics and accessed via an open source e-Portfolio to develop RDM skills in new researchers. The rubrics identify specific skills required to plan for, organize, analyze, publish, and share research data. The e-Portfolio (developed using the Karuta Open Source Portfolio, a project of the Apereo Foundation, https://www.apereo.org/projects/karuta) invites new researchers to provide multimedia evidence demonstrating their RDM skills and accomplishments and to receive feedback on their progress from mentors.\r\n\r\nThe Academic Data and Innovation Unit at Kyoto University is currently developing three types of RDM rubrics for new researchers based on the RDM maturity model and the RDM guide for researchers developed by the California Digital Library:\r\n1. RDM Basic Skills Rubric\r\n2. Discipline-Specific RDM Skills Rubrics\r\n3. Interdisciplinary RDM Skills Rubric for Innovation\r\nBy pairing these rubrics with the open source ePortfolio system of \u201cApereo Karuta\u201d, we are creating a program to better prepare new researchers at Kyoto University and other universities in Japan for the emerging RDM requirement of publishing and sharing data along with research results.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/115/",
"cancelled": false,
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},
{
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"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
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"track": "Container Days",
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"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Incremental Arm64 migration with multi-arch containers and heterogeneous Kubernetes clusters",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Dave Neary",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "46",
"biography": "Dave is a long time free software and open source advocate, and contributor to multiple open source projects over the years. He currently leads the Developer Relations team at Ampere Computing, helping aise awareness and adoption of Ampere Arm64 processors in cloud computing. He previously spent a decade working on open source infrastructure projects and developer tooling as part of the Red Hat Open Source Program Office. He lives in the Boston area with his family.",
"username": ""
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],
"abstract": "In this presentation, we will share how to incrementally adopt Arm64 as a deplopyment architecture for parts of your Kubernetes applications using heterogeneous Kubernetes clusters, node tagging, and multi-architecture containers to take advantage of the best hardware platform for your application.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/46/",
"cancelled": false,
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},
{
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"start": "2023-07-16T12:00:00",
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"duration": 30,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
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"track": null,
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"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E144",
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"start": "2023-07-14T12:00:00",
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"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 86,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Safety and Ethical Considerations in Collecting OSS Usage Data",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Avi Press",
"twitter": "avi_press",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@aviaviavi",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/173cf426b12d824c828aabaa5d88db81?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "240",
"biography": "Avi Press is a developer tool author, functional programming language enthusiast, and founder/CEO of Scarf. Avi loves thinking about and discussing how people can solve problems by more effectively sharing data, and how that applies to building a sustainable open-source ecosystem. He is also a host on the Hacking Open Source Business Podcast.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Collecting and using metrics from your open source projects for business purposes is often required for the growth of your business. Navigating the ethical landscape of usage data collection in open source software presents complex challenges that businesses often grapple with, relating to privacy, security, community, and compliance. This talk, drawing from our hands-on experience as practitioners, aims to shine a spotlight on these multidimensional concerns.\r\nThe discussion will investigate the responsible handling of personally identifiable information, best practices for data storage and collection, and the pivotal role of user consent. Emphasizing community engagement and transparency, we will share our learned best practices, proposing a more accountable framework. The objective is to create a more data-driven OSS community while also fostering a greater understanding of best practices to promote safer, ethical usage data collection.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/173/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "avi_press",
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@aviaviavi"
},
{
"room": "E145",
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"start": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 205,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Lessons Learned From Scaling An Open Source Community By 10,000%",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Angie Byron",
"twitter": "webchick",
"mastodon": "@webchick@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/092d4f61adb5e12c32f1326997e2e274?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "195",
"biography": "Director of Community at Aiven, Core Maintainer and Product Manager for Drupal, O\u2019Reilly Author, Mom. Hobbies include nerding out about all things open source community health and sustainability, particularly in the data space. Oh and video games. Lots of video games. :)",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Drupal\u2014an open source CMS\u2014turned 20 years old recently, and has grown from a small student hobby project to an enterprise-grade digital experience platform running ~3% of the Internet. This talk will explore the many lessons learned (most of them the hard way ;)) in navigating an international open source developer community through various scalability challenges.\r\n\r\nTopics covered will include:\r\n\r\n* Contributor On-Boarding: Some clever and participatory ways to help new folks bootstrap quickly and feel included\r\n\r\n* Community Health: How to account for\u2014and encourage\u2014contributors stepping away? How to develop new leadership to take their place?\r\n\r\n* Project Sustainability: How to incentivize commercial sponsorship of open source contributions without selling your soul\r\n\r\n* Governance: What pain points emerge as you scale, what strategies help solve them, and how to \u201cright size\u201d your solutions to not cripple your ability to get things done\r\n\r\n* When Sh*t Hits The Fan: How do you handle a project fork? What if you need to remove a high profile contributor? Been there, done that; let my trauma be your guide. ;)\r\n\r\n* Community Bootstrapping: What if you\u2019re *not* a project with 100K+ contributors and 2M+ users? How do you build your first 100 / 1,000 / 100K?",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/30/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "webchick",
"mastodon_id": "@webchick@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T12:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 204,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "You're Doing Great! The underappreciated art of appreciation",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Loren Crary",
"twitter": "lorencrary",
"mastodon": "@lorenpy@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0d5a1519cd9a981aa5a1bb60c4025ce6?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "191",
"biography": "Loren is the Director of Resource Development for the Python Software Foundation. She has previously worked/volunteered/made coffee at a variety of nonprofit and other organizations including a farm in Boston, a hotel in Uganda, and a public interest law office in Manhattan. Most recently, she spent seven years at a social enterprise that works with teenagers in East Africa to practice soft skills and entrepreneurship. She is a graduate of Stanford Law School. She lives in New York City with her wee rescue dog, Penny.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Working with and building communities can feel like you are always short of resources - money, time, energy, and motivation - but there's a resource you can invest in your community that you already have in abundance. Injecting this resource into your work will increase participation, improve results, and support the longevity of your work. It will even make you happier every time you use it. You will never run out of it, and in fact the more you give away, the more you are likely to get. It's appreciation!\r\n\r\nWe all know thanking and acknowledging the people who contribute to our projects, events, and communities is important. But how many times can we say the words \"thank you\" before they start to feel empty or like a rote checking of a box? Sharing appreciation effectively is a skill you can improve and a simple habit you can build into your interactions that can have dramatic impacts. \r\n\r\nIn this session we will start by considering the (sometimes unexpected!) ways expressing appreciation more often and more effectively can improve any community you are a part of, including your person happiness. We'll then break down what makes a good compliment or thank you, and you'll get a few simple templates you can use right away. Finally, we'll talk about how to make appreciation a routine, reflexive part of your professional and personal life that you can take with you and pay forward.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/37/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "lorencrary",
"mastodon_id": "@lorenpy@fosstodon.org"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T12:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 27,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Introduction to Incubation at Apereo",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Benito Gonzalez",
"twitter": "bjagg69",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f432340096f3f8ef5501087274b18527?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "157",
"biography": "Benito Gonzalez is a Software Architect, with 30 years of professional experience. Benito has been at Unicon since 2015. Mr. Gonzalez has knowledge and experience in enterprise software development, especially around higher education. Supported clients range from community colleges up to major universities. He has experience with end-to-end management of institution web services.\r\n\r\nMr. Gonzalez's uPortal work supports a variety of higher-ed institutions, from community colleges to major universities such as University of California, Riverside, and Texas A&M. Work ranges widely as well. Some efforts are simple maintenance and small enhancements. Other client projects have included complete major upgrades and redesigns. With web development evolving quickly, Benito has become adept with the latest standards like Web Components. He is also a regular presenter at Apereo Foundation events. Mr. Gonzalez is also a member of the uPortal Steering Committee and the chair of the Apereo Incubation Work Group. Benito has branched out into Ed-Tech evaluations and technical due-diligence reviews, along with developing various technology rubrics to evaluation software systems.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Laura Fernandez Moran",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc3d5dcd7f287b5135404b2b56d7dda9?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "163",
"biography": "Laura is a Strategic Project Manager and Software Developer at Unicon. She specializes in strategic initiatives and joined the company in 2022. With over 15 years of experience in software development and academic administration in higher education, Laura has worked in various domains such as marketing technology, teaching and learning, student information systems, and identity management. Prior to joining Unicon, she held the position of Manager of Student Systems at Rice University. In this role, Laura was responsible for overseeing student administrative software and technical processes for multiple offices, including the Registrar, Cashier, Financial Aid, Admissions, and Academic Advising. Since 2008, Laura has been actively involved with the Apereo Foundation, contributing in various capacities as an advocate of Open Source Software and Communities. She has served on the Board of Directors, acted as Chair of the Conference Planning Committee, participated in the uPortal Steering Committee, and contributed to the Incubation Working Group. Her dedication and contributions to the foundation led to her receiving the Apereo Fellows Award in 2012.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Patrick Masson",
"twitter": "massonpj",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@massonpj",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fa1314a7ff59cc080caa13d08e8af83e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "21",
"biography": "Patrick joined Apereo as Executive Director in January 2023, serving previously as Interim General Manager of the Foundation. Prior to Apereo, Patrick served as General Manager for the Open Source Initiative after working within higher education IT for over twenty years, including roles as CIO within the State University of New York and CTO at the University of Massachusetts' Office of the President. Before these, he served as the Director of Technology at the SUNY Learning Network and Director of the UCLA Media Lab.\r\n\r\nPatrick is an adjunct instructor with SUNY Albany's College of Computing and Information and speaks frequently on topics related to open source software, open education, and educational technology. Patrick is the co-founder of EDUCAUSE's \"Openness\" Constituency Group and served on his local school board from 2014-2018.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The Apereo Incubation program\u2019s mission is to assist open source software projects in adopting sustainable practices. Attendees will take away strategies implemented by Apereo in Higher Education open source projects, with governance strategies, understanding incubation, evaluation of a project, and guidance of its progress. This session is for those who are interested in nurturing and/or implementing best practices in their own open source software projects and forming supportive connections within this open source community.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/130/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "bjagg69"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-16T12:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"duration": 90,
"kind": "Lunch",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 163,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "<em>Lunch</em>"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-14T12:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"duration": 90,
"kind": "Lunch",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 151,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
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"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-15T12:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"duration": 90,
"kind": "Lunch",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 147,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-13T13:45:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"duration": 15,
"kind": "Opening Remarks",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 200,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Opening Remarks - Ballroom"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 127,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Finch: simple/open/extensible",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Weike Qu",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/38d8a6bc3623bdfa61f5ef864ed8d884?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "198",
"biography": "Weike currently works on Finch as a Software Engineer at AWS. He joined AWS right after his internship to help launch Finch and spread some container-related open source goodness to the world. In his previous life, he was a professional structural engineer, designing cool physical things, now he designs cool virtual things instead!",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Kyle Davis",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@linux_mclinuxface@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fec0a5332c6c0ce0bb6d2a30c0e3829d?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "119",
"biography": "Kyle is the Senior Developer Advocate for Bottlerocket and Finch at AWS. Kyle has a long history with open source software development and was a founding contributor to the OpenSearch project. When not working, Kyle enjoys 3D printing and getting his hands dirty in his Edmonton, Alberta-based home garden.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "For years, building containerized applications on a desktop machine could be summed up as: \u201csimple/open/extensible: pick two.\u201d Finch, an open source project established in 2022, aims to make containerized development all three.\r\n\r\nIn this session, first attendees will be introduced to the project and how it can be used to both simplify and speed up their development workflows. Then it will dive into the other open source project that Finch integrates to create a modern, easy-to-use containerized application development system, along the way, we'll touch on Finch's upstream-first development model. Finally, we'll talk a little bit about where Finch is going in the future.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/49/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 87,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Embracing Building an Open Source Business: Balancing Profit and Community Without Compromise",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Matt Yonkovit",
"twitter": "myonkovit",
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"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "85",
"biography": "Matt Yonkovit is the Head of Open Source Strategy and Growth ( The HOSS!) at Scarf. He is a passionate open source professional with over 20 years of experience, where he has made a significant impact at open source companies like Percona, MySQL, StreamNative, Mattermost, and now Scarf. As a long-time veteran in the industry, Matt's passion lies in building sustainable open source businesses and bridging the gap between community and business objectives.\r\n\r\nWith a unique ability to engage both engineers and business professionals, Matt aims to make business topics approachable and appealing to those in the open source space. He wants to make engineers and open source professionals not cringe when thinking or talking about business topics. His focus on linking both technical innovation and business growth has played a crucial role in the success of the organizations he has been part of.\r\n\r\nMatt has held roles across the technical and leadership spectrum at open source companies, including VP of services (support, consulting, managed services), chief experience officer, chief customer officer, and now the HOSS. He is the co-host of the Hacking Open Source Business Podcast.",
"username": ""
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],
"abstract": "Open source maintainers and developers should never feel guilty about building a business around their projects. It is entirely possible to create a thriving open source business without sacrificing your community or your values. In this talk, we will reveal how, by sharing best practices, stories, ideas, and invaluable advice collected over the past seven years from some of the brightest founders, executives, and leaders in the open source space.\r\n\r\nWe will explore the challenges of building and growing an open source business, focusing on the transformation of free users into satisfied paying customers. With insights drawn from 20 years of experience and conversations with hundreds of business executives, maintainers, and product owners, we will discuss the best practices, metrics, and processes that can help drive growth and adoption in the open source space.\r\n\r\nJoin us as we delve into the unique nature of selling open source and how it differs from traditional business models. We will emphasize the importance of differentiating your paid-for offerings from freely available software, and guide you on how to navigate the open source landscape to build a sustainable, scalable, and profitable business around your project \u2013 all while fostering a strong community that supports both your commercial and technical objectives.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/20/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "myonkovit",
"mastodon_id": "@TheYonk@fosstodon.org"
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{
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"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "BSD Unix",
"conf_key": 35,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Panel Discussion: Ask us Anything",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Michael Dexter",
"twitter": "michaeldexter",
"mastodon": "@dexter@bsd.network",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2940463bef733994c4ebf550290bb2c7?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "215",
"biography": "Michael has used BSD Unix since 1991 and advanced it through fundraising, community coordination, and dozens of conference talks around the world. He has also organized the Portland Linux/Unix Group since 2009, coordinating over 150 speakers. By day Michael provides support for Open Source storage solutions for users of all sizes. Michael lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife and three children, small dog, and five chickens.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Alexander Vasarab",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/85bce5bd88ee0fad467d7df515598548?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "177",
"biography": "Alexander has been a NetBSD user since the turn of the century with\r\ninterlacing periods of professional and personal use.\r\n\r\nIn the computing space, he has finally settled on the humble descriptor\r\nof \"systems facilitator\" to sum up his wide experience across many\r\ncontexts.\r\n\r\nWhen he's not interacting with a topography of silicon, he is a mountain\r\nguide and avalanche educator working in the west coast states of the US.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Andrew Fresh",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6cd56a05a2e514c815927a5c24404285?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "248",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Bring your questions about OpenBSD, NetBSD, and FreeBSD to find out about how they compare and which one is right for you!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/177/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "michaeldexter",
"mastodon_id": "@dexter@bsd.network"
},
{
"room": "E148",
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"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 270,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 177,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
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"contact": [],
"name": "Reserved"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 56,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Developing Labs for Teaching Kids Webdev",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Matt Cengia",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@mattcen@aus.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/87844b868f9376511350d5bc119e5c0c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "209",
"biography": "Matt (they/them/their) is a queer, autistic nonbinary human with ADHD, from the lands of Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation (so-called Melbourne, Australia). They have a long background in Linux systems admin and software development, as well as strong interests in communication, empathy, consent, openness and transparency, privacy and security, diversity and inclusion. Matt identifies as a generalist, polymath, or multi-potentialite, and their breadth of interests often give them a unique perspective on how to relate to, and mediate between, people of different specialities.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Come listen to the tale of how I and a small team of Scout Leaders from Australia developed and delivered a weekend course that took 11-15-year-old young adults from knowing almost nothing about networking or code, to being able to follow along and build their own website, complete with static HTML, CSS, and then transitioning to a simple Python Flask app, requiring nothing more than a web browser and Visual Studio Code on the student computers.\r\n\r\nI'll cover how we gave each student full root access to their own \"server\", through to how we built the course material to be a manageable learning curve over such a tight timeline, the challenges we faced with content delivery, and ideas for improvements before we run our next course.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/101/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@mattcen@aus.social"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Grow Your Project Workshop",
"conf_key": 146,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Growth: Accelerate your project\u2019s adoption, usage and community engagement",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Emily Omier",
"twitter": "emilyomier",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b05c8c76f71f78b2fdd27c2c679cc0dd?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "54",
"biography": "Emily Omier is a positioning consultant who helps open source startups accelerate revenue and community growth with killer positioning. She hosts The Business of Open Source, a podcast about building open source companies, and writes about entrepreneurship for engineers for The New Stack.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Matt Yonkovit",
"twitter": "myonkovit",
"mastodon": "@TheYonk@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/42541175006a2cee34d56ed9e58714ff?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "85",
"biography": "Matt Yonkovit is the Head of Open Source Strategy and Growth ( The HOSS!) at Scarf. He is a passionate open source professional with over 20 years of experience, where he has made a significant impact at open source companies like Percona, MySQL, StreamNative, Mattermost, and now Scarf. As a long-time veteran in the industry, Matt's passion lies in building sustainable open source businesses and bridging the gap between community and business objectives.\r\n\r\nWith a unique ability to engage both engineers and business professionals, Matt aims to make business topics approachable and appealing to those in the open source space. He wants to make engineers and open source professionals not cringe when thinking or talking about business topics. His focus on linking both technical innovation and business growth has played a crucial role in the success of the organizations he has been part of.\r\n\r\nMatt has held roles across the technical and leadership spectrum at open source companies, including VP of services (support, consulting, managed services), chief experience officer, chief customer officer, and now the HOSS. He is the co-host of the Hacking Open Source Business Podcast.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Though open source maintainers have many different goals, most of those goals depend on growing the project\u2019s usage and community engagement. As projects get larger, they are able to attract new contributors and new funding opportunities, allowing maintainers to fix bugs and add features more quickly. A larger, more engaged community of users also decreases the risk that an open source project will be abandoned, creating a virtuous cycle of trust as more organizations feel comfortable using the project in mission-critical applications. Whether a project is a hobby side project or backed by a Fortune 10 company, growth matters. This half-day workshop is for any maintainer who cares about their projects\u2019 growth, both in terms of number of users and engagement of existing users. Attendees will learn about the strategies and tactics to increase downloads, active user base, project stickiness, and community engagement. \r\n\r\nTopics we will explore include but are not limited to:\r\nProject positioning & messaging\r\nNon-slimy marketing techniques\r\nCollecting and acting on user feedback\r\nDevRel activities and optimization\r\nKeeping users happy via support, fixes, and education\r\nTracking and measuring project growth\r\nCommunity management \r\n\r\n\r\nAttendees will leave with concrete ideas for how to accelerate their projects\u2019 growth.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/134/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "emilyomier"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T14:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Science of Community",
"conf_key": 220,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Rules of Engagement: Why and How Companies Participate in OSS.",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Mariam Guizani",
"twitter": "mariam_gui",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/8314ea63545477d0bb049e49422b500c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "249",
"biography": "Mariam Guizani is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Oregon State University and an upcoming Assistant Professor at Queen's University. Her research centers around improving the state of Diversity and Inclusion in complex socio-technical ecosystems by empowering communities to dismantle cognitive and social barriers that introduce inequities. More specifically, she focuses on designing processes and tools to help Open-Source Software (OSS) communities make their projects more inclusive and attract and retain contributors. During her time at Oregon State University, Mariam has collaborated with the Apache Software Foundation (ASF). She has interned at Microsoft Research where she designed a maintainer dashboard that is now built into two GitHub products and is now working closely with ASF and Google on implementing interventions for sustainable communities.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Open Source Software (OSS) is no longer a \u201cweekend warrior\u2019s endeavor\".\r\nOver the last 20 years, the OSSecosystem composition has changed\r\ndrastically. OSS is nowfundamental to company operations\u2013not only for\r\nthe code thatthey depend on, but also for their role in an ecosystem\r\ntowhich they actively contribute. This is a paradigm shift from the\r\nearly days when OSS was viewed as a threatthat commoditized software to\r\ntoday where individuals andcompanies work symbiotically.\r\n\r\nFrom large technology companies to startups, companies are\r\nparticipating in the OSS ecosystem by open-sourcing their technology\r\nand sponsoring projects through funding or paid developer time.\r\nHowever, our understanding of the OSS ecosystem is rooted in the \u201cold\r\nworld\u201d model where individual contributors sustain OSS projects.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, we will discuss our findings on what motivates companies\r\nto contribute to OSS, the multifaceted ways they contribute to OSS, and\r\nthe lessons learned. We hope these findings help nudge more companies\r\nto participate in the OSS ecosystem and continue to foster a symbiotic\r\nOSS and company relationship, ultimately creating a sustainable open-\r\nsource community. Join us!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/184/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "mariam_gui"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 49,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Plom: A free solution for paperless open marking",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Elizabeth Xiao",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fce07316c01d0449780990f1db15efbc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "206",
"biography": "Elizabeth is a mathematics student who occasionally ventures into programming. Her TA work at the University of British Columbia has primarily involved the maintenance and support of Plom, an in-house free and open-source marking software. This summer she is collaborating with a hydrology research group at UBC to develop mathematical models simulating the flow of water in watersheds. She completed her BSc and MSc in mathematics at the University of British Columbia and will be starting a PhD at Caltech the fall. She lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Plom is a system for giving tests on paper, but marking and returning them online. Several commercial and proprietary solutions for online exam marking exist, but are prohibitively expensive for academic institutions with small budgets, and collect and/or use students' data in ways that may be objectionable. Plom, however, is Free and Open Source Software licensed under the AGPL-v3, and gives users full control over the marking process and student data.\r\n\r\nPlom has been in use in the Mathematics Department of the University of British Columbia since October 2018, and is still under active development. Our current goal is to scale-up the project so it can be easily adopted by other departments across UBC and at other institutions. This presentation will be an overview of the current state of the Plom system and instructions on how to use the software or contribute to the project.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/150/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 120,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Discussion: Mentoring and internship challenges",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sage Sharp",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@sphakos@toot.cat",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c1793afbfdb12b39bee6b0f6254e2b66?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "91",
"biography": "Sage Sharp is the Senior Director of Diversity & Inclusion at Software Freedom Conservancy. Sage runs Conservancy's diversity initiative, Outreachy. Outreachy provides internships in open source and open science. Outreachy provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living.\r\n\r\nSage has been a free software contributor since 2007. Sage is known for their past work as the author and maintainer of the Linux kernel USB 3.0 driver. Today, Sage is involved in the Python community, and works as a Django web developer for the Outreachy website.\r\n\r\nSage founded their own company, Otter Tech, to provide Code of Conduct enforcement workshops. Sage has trained Code of Conduct teams for open source communities like Kubernetes, GNOME, Python, Drupal, WordPress, OpenStreetMap, Elastic, and Symfony.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Come discuss your challenges and victories in mentoring new open source contributors!\r\n\r\nMentoring and internship programs are now common in open source. From Google Summer of Code and Outreachy, to programs run by individual open source communities, internships are every where. Yet these internship and mentoring programs are often run in silos, with little knowledge sharing across open source communities.\r\n\r\nThis group discussion session aims to break down silos between different mentoring and internship programs. Attendees are invited to bring their triumphs and challenges to discuss with others.\r\n\r\nTopics of discussion may include:\r\n\r\n- successfully advertising internship programs\r\n- challenges in finding mentors\r\n- how to craft meaningful internship projects\r\n- issues with paying interns around the world\r\n- dealing with community backlash to diversity internships\r\n- the rise of ChatGPT use among internship applicants\r\n- when trolls apply for your internship program\r\n- avoiding mentor burn-out\r\n- creating a path for interns to become community leaders\r\n\r\nThis discussion will be tailored to the attendees who come to this talk. Bring your challenges and victories to share!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/129/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@sphakos@toot.cat"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS at Play: Games, creative development, and open technology",
"conf_key": 184,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Language Tools For Creators",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Paco Xander Nathan",
"twitter": "pacoid",
"mastodon": "@pacoid@mastodon.green",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0d4185c6a9a097bb078bbcb09e1e12ec?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "111",
"biography": "Paco Nathan is the Managing Partner at Derwen, Inc. Known as a \"player/coach\", with core expertise in graph technologies, natural language, data science, cloud computing. Paco has ~40 years tech industry experience, ranging from Bell Labs to early-stage start-ups. Board member for Argilla.io; Advisor for KUNGFU.AI. Lead committer on PyTextRank, kglab. Formerly: Director, Community Evangelism for Apache Spark at Databricks; Director, Learning Group at O'Reilly Media.\r\n\r\nSee: https://derwen.ai/paco",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "There's been an explosion in the space of language models, generative AI, and other machine learning related to natural language. Going \"beyond the headlines\", this talk shows how to leverage open source libraries in Python to work with text and image content, from the perspective of an author, editor, or illustrator. We'll look at how to leverage advanced and \"AI-adjacent\" tooling such as language models, data annotation, graph technologies, interactive visualizations, etc., for assisting creators to understand the content better and collaborate more effectively. For example: What are the themes discussed? Who are the characters? What are the relationships between the characters? Where was concept \"XYZZY\" first introduced? Did the \"Blarg\" character actually purchase a quantum transmogrifier before its first use in the story? How do the themes within the content map to the beats in the story arc? What is the \"concept density\" per chapter, in terms of the pace of new ideas being introduced? How can language models help suggest or refine the prompt engineering used for illustrating a story? Where are illustrations needed?\r\n\r\nThese approaches apply in the production of fiction, as well as games, movie scripts, plays, documentaries, and various non-fiction as well.\r\n\r\nWe'll review an example: development of an ebook in the style of Japanese Light Novels (a cli-fy novel \"Latent Space\") where artists experimented with collages using components from generative AI, prompts needed to be tracked, themes images needed to be aligned with text themes, and so on.\r\n\r\nPython provides a wide range of available tooling (`spaCy`, `argilla`, `huggingface`, `pyvis`, and so on) as well as data infrastructure tooling to support content work at scale.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/120/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "pacoid",
"mastodon_id": "@pacoid@mastodon.green"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T14:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 97,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "You don't carry a phone?! Improving societal acceptance of abnormal people",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Denver Gingerich",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0adc60a96b41045e2c677455df574154?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "192",
"biography": "Denver is a software right-to-repair and standards activist who is currently Director of Compliance at Software Freedom Conservancy, where he enforces software right-to-repair licenses such as the GPL, and is also a director of the worker co-operative that runs JMP.chat, a FOSS phone number (texting/calling) service. Denver writes free software in his spare time: his patches have been accepted into Wine, Linux, and wdiff. Denver received his BMath in Computer Science from the University of Waterloo. He gives presentations about digital civil rights and how to ensure FOSS remains sustainable as a community and financially, having spoken at conferences such as CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Originally borne out of a desire to use only FOSS, my refusal to carry a smartphone, or a cell phone of any kind in most situations, is perplexing to many. While this decision provides many benefits, including increased ability to focus, quality time with friends and family, and an effective opt-out from real-time location tracking, it is not widely accepted by society.\r\n\r\nThis talk will explore some of the ways that society has evolved over the past two decades that make it much more difficult for people who make certain technology-related choices, and how we can be more accepting of people who make different choices than us, not just with phone usage, but in other FOSS-related areas and beyond.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/84/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "AArch64/ARM64 Servers and Open Source - The Who, What, Why, and How",
"conf_key": 44,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "What is it like to run a datacenter with AArch64?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Lance Albertson",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@ramereth",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fdd76b88c53bc0051e9a25d6b99efae3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "208",
"biography": "Lance Albertson is the Director for the Oregon State University Open Source Lab (OSUOSL) and has been involved with many open source projects since 2003. The OSUOSL provides hosting for more than 160 projects, including those of worldwide leaders like Debian Linux, the Linux Foundation and AlmaLinux. The most active organization of its kind, the OSUOSL offers world-class hosting services, professional software development and on-the-ground training for promising students interested in open source management and programming.\r\n\r\nSince joining the OSUOSL in 2007, Lance has managed all of the hosting activities that the OSL provides for more than 160 high-profile open source projects. He was promoted to Director in early 2013 after being the Lead Systems Administration and Architect since 2007.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Data centers are a crucial part of any IT organization that still needs on premise hosting. Running a datacenter requires attention to power, cooling, networking, rack space, cabling among many other aspects. But how does running AArch64 in a data center differ from traditional x86? This session will discuss the differences between AArch64 and x86 in the scope of hosting it in a data center. Long are the days of just sticking raspberry Pi\u2019s in a rack!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/29/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://fosstodon.org/@ramereth"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 80,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source Insomnia: What Keeps Us Up at Night",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Julia Ferraioli",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/cac4506c09175542ca4bafd255e6eaa9?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "252",
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"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Josh Simmons",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@josh@josh.tel",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e55a9bf1f0e9eb0fddb9368b21319f36?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "72",
"biography": "Josh Simmons is a community organizer, nonprofit leader, and open source strategist who builds up people, programs, communities, and organizations around the commons. Passionate about mission-driven work, inclusive organizing, and tackling systemic issues, Josh has worked across for-profits, nonprofits, and public institutions.\r\n\r\nJosh is a Partner in Open Chapters, Vice President for Petaluma Pride, Director of DEI for Independent Federated Trust and Safety, and Co-organizer of North Bay Python. He is best known for his six-year tenure with Open Source Initiative and leading the organization to a new stage of maturity as its President then Chair.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Monica Ayhens-Madon",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@communiteatime",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b6df33dc3847f082f13865074e5edcfc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "181",
"biography": "Monica is a community facilitator and nurturer who began her journey into open source software contributorhood in 2020 with documentation and website contributions to the Ubuntu MATE team and OpenMRS. In early 2021, she began working for Canonical on the Ubuntu Community Team, where she helped relaunch UbuntuOnAir, return Ubuntu (virtually!) to FOSDEM, and launch Canonical's inclusive language initiative. She left in August 2022. Since then, she has spoken as a panelist on burnout in the community profession at OSS Europe in Dublin, been elected to the Ubuntu Community Council for a two-year term, and helped organize things like a pre-SCALE JPL private tour and the FOSSY 'Community: Open Source in Service' track. \r\n\r\nMonica's background is in academia, with a B.A. in Ancient Greek and a M.A. in Maritime Studies. She loves travel, and the chance to meet new people all over the world - and bring tasty treats back home. She is also an occasional streamer on Twitch as 'communiteatime' where she can be found playing cozy games, painting, and sipping tea. She lives with her husband and fellow geek John in the Atlanta metro area.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In this panel and facilitated discussion, we\u2019ll gaze cautiously into the abyss and confront the realities and possibilities that keep us up at night. We\u2019ll share our concerns and fears together, shine a little light for one another to help us on our journeys, and carry forward having named the beasts that haunt us.\r\n\r\nWe may not be able to solve all that ails us in this session, but through naming them and creating shared understanding, we hope that our communities of practice will be better prepared to support one another.\r\n\r\nFlashlights, spooky stories, and actual insomnia are optional.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/175/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 150,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 28,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "We shared some open ed tech. YOU WON'T BELIEVE WHAT HAPPENED NEXT!",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Clint Lalonde",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.oeru.org/@clintlalonde",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/082f1ad8cbb198969c8e01ab3d59a851?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "173",
"biography": "Clint is an educational technologist and advocate for the use of open educational resources and open education practices in higher education. Clint has worked in the British Columbia post-secondary system for 25 years and is currently the Acting Director of Open Education for BCcampus, a government-funded non-profit organization that provides teaching, learning, educational technology, and open education support to the 25 publicly funded post-secondary institutions of British Columbia. A founding member of the BC Open EdTech Collaborative, Clint is also on the Board of Directors for the Apereo Foundation and is an Associate Faculty in the School of Education & Technology at Royal Roads University.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Anne-Marie Scott",
"twitter": "ammienoot",
"mastodon": "@ammienoot@ds106.social.us",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9965d27f32cac497b1e48e28fda4db10?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "86",
"biography": "Anne-Marie Scott was Deputy Provost of Athabasca University, Canada's equivalent to the UK Open University until March 2023. Prior to her time in Canada she held a number of roles at the University of Edinburgh, including Deputy Director of Learning, Teaching and Web Services \r\n\r\nShe is the Board Chair of the Apereo Software Foundation and a member of the Board of the Open Source Initiative, who globally steward the license definitions for open source software. She has been part of the Government of British Columbia\u2019s Digital Advisory Committee since 2022, advising on how to embed and upscale digital learning across the province. She is a member of the After Surveillance network, a global group of scholars and practitioners concerned with surveillance practices in HE, part of the leadership team of the OpenETC, a shared set of open technologies for post-secondary institutions within British Columbia Canada, run along platform cooperative principles.\r\n\r\nAs a practitioner and leader she is committed to sharing openly her blog, along with presentations and publications. You can find her online at @ammienoot (Twittter) @ammienoot@ds106.social.us (Mastodon) and https://ammienoot.com",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The OpenETC is a community of educators, technologists, and designers sharing their expertise to foster and support open infrastructure for the British Columbia advanced education sector. The OpenETC provides free open source educational technology services to teachers and students at post-secondary institutions in British Columbia, Canada. \r\n\r\nOperating since 2016 via a unique cooperative-style model of \u201ccontributions, not contracts\u201d inspired by the platform cooperative movement, the OpenETC offers more than services, but also provides a community space for advancing our flavor of \u201cFree Range Open EdTech.\u201d\r\n\r\nIn this session we will discuss how the OpenETC uses open source software to encourage technological autonomy for both educators and students, and how working at the level of the whole province helps smooth out resourcing disparities between institutions, most especially during the pandemic. We will us examples from our community to illustrate how the community-based services and supports we offer support the development of digital literacies and skills among educators and students as well as the sharing of open educational resources, and how our use of open source software has proven to be a catalyst that sparks bigger conversations within the BC post-secondary system about the role of technology in teaching and learning. \r\n\r\nWe will also reflect on the governance model that we use, and some of the challenges and opportunities that have presented themselves over the 7 years that we have been operating.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/103/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.oeru.org/@clintlalonde"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 179,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T14:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "XMPP",
"conf_key": 39,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "XMPP Introduction and Overview",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sam Whited",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@sam@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bd8002cba56274a8c85538e036ee54a3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "16",
"biography": "Sam is a former software engineer who left the field to fix bicycles. He is now much happier, but also much broker. He hails from Atlanta, GA where he advocates for cycling, cyclist and pedestrian first infrastructure, expanded public transit, unionizing the software industry (and every other industry), co-housing, and worker-owned co-ops.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "A brief history and introduction to the XMPP protocol and its use for beginners with a background in programming but no protocol experience. If you are new to XMPP or want to better understand the other presentations in the XMPP track, this is the place to start! This talk will include an overview of the federation and routing model used by XMPP, specific protocol examples, coverage of the initial handshake and security model of XMPP, and common uses and extensions used by the XMPP community. It will provide background information that can be used by those new to the XMPP protocol to more fully understand the rest of the XMPP track.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/127/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@sam@social.coop"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 152,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 93,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "\"I didn't sign up for this\": The invisible work of maintaining and scaling FOSS projects",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stuart Geiger",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3d3128af99d88d3d823c1e98cc705fb7?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "166",
"biography": "Stuart Geiger is an Assistant Professor at the University of California, San Diego, in the Department of Communication and the Hal\u0131c\u0131o\u011flu Data Science Institute. Geiger is a disciplinary nomad: an interpretive social scientist by training, with a background in the humanities, and just enough expertise in computer science and data science to make trouble. Their work is grounded in the idea that science and technology are inherently social activities that are shaped by people and institutions. Geiger uses qualitative, quantitative, and computational methods to study the development of science and technology. They particularly study decentralized and/or volunteer-based projects, such as free and open source software, peer production platforms like Wikipedia, user-generated / social media platforms, and scientific research. Their past research has examined topics including: community sustainability; newcomer retention and newcomer-veteran interactions; governance and leadership; quality control and content moderation; the roles of support staff; invisible work, 'glue' work, and other work seen as 'non-technical'; motivation and burnout; bias and discrimination; and diversity and inclusion.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Free and open-source software has become critical infrastructure for many sectors, including academic research, industry, governments, non-profits, activism, and more. In this talk, I share findings and insights from our research team\u2019s mixed-method research into the social and technical maintenance of free and open-source software. This is based on interviews with maintainers and stakeholders across a wide variety of FOSS projects, as well as quantitative analyses of code repositories. In particular, I discuss the often-invisible and non-technical work that maintainers do to support their projects as they grow and scale. The work of maintaining these projects is no small feat, particularly given the many different kinds of work expected of maintainers. This is especially the case for projects that achieve \u201ccatastrophic success\u201d in being relied upon by more and more users and institutions. \r\n\r\nMaintainers must maintain not only code, but a community around that code. These communities are constantly changing, and maintainers can find themselves needing to mediate competing visions of how the project ought to operate and where it may go in the future. I particularly focus on the invisible work of scaling projects and managing projects as they grow \u2013 not just in terms of their own size, but also in terms of their integration within complex and ever-changing networks of other FOSS projects and ecosystems, corporate and academic user-institutions, foundations and funders, and other stakeholders. \r\n\r\nThis work is often quite different to the more-visible software engineering work that maintainers do early in their projects. There is often little training or resources for community-based work, which is often not tracked or made visible in the way software engineering work is. I discuss how this invisible work can impact maintainers' mental health, with many cases of burnout arising from maintainers finding themselves overwhelmed with their expanded roles. Invisible work also intersects with other relevant issues to the sustainability of FOSS projects, including funding models, corporate relations, project governance, and diversity & inclusion. I conclude with recommendations for FOSS maintainers, contributors, funders, end-users, institutional users, and other stakeholders in the broad ecosystems supported by FOSS.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/41/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 20,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Co-ops: 'Open Source' Capitalism",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Joel Brock",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "social.coop/@joelbrock",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fe8b14882585b4fc355d509b144c71ad?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "45",
"biography": "Joel is a founding member of the Tech Support Cooperative, a worker-owned IT services co-op working extensively with free and open source solutions. The Tech Support Co-op grew around an open source Point of Sale software that was being developed and propagated throughout the national food co-op industry. The Tech Support Co-op formed among key collaborators within that software development community to address a lack of any formal support for the software, and to better coordinate future development. \r\n\r\nJoel has 20+ years experience working at the intersection of technology and cooperation. He brings a unique dedication to the cooperative business model and hopes that he can share some of his enthusiasm for co-ops with you.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Do you really know what a co-op is? Come to learn what it means to be in business cooperatively and why the co-op business model is unique the world over. \r\nAnd what (if anything) that has to do with Open Source software.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/72/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "social.coop/@joelbrock"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Coffee/tea break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 75,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Reserved"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Security",
"conf_key": 108,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Breaking the Chains of Trusting Trust: Reproducible Builds and More!",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Vagrant Cascadian",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@vagrantc@floss.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f3de796d6473451dfc362d3e5e0a250b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "61",
"biography": "Vagrant strives to make Reproducible Builds a best practices reality for everyone. Vagrant discovered free software late last millenia and has been contributing to free software since the beginning of this millenia. A long-time Debian Developer and contributor to Guix, tinkering with ARM and RISC-V systems. At Portland's Free Geek, Vagrant dove into life as a free software developer, rebuilding electronic waste with FOSS, modifying or developing new software as needed. That led to exciting work helping coordinate LTSP development shared between several different operating systems. That sense of open collaboration has been a life-long habit. Vagrant contrasts spending too much time on computers with bicycle commuting, aikido and a DIY solar hobby.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Corrupted build environments can deliver compromised cryptographically\r\nsigned binaries. Several exploits in in critical supply chains have\r\nbeen demonstrated in recent years, proving that this is not just\r\ntheoretical. The most well secured build environments are still single\r\npoints of failure when they fail.\r\n\r\nIn 1984, Ken Thompson presented \"Reflections on trusting trust\" which\r\ndescribed an attack on a build toolchain that would be impossible to\r\ndetect through source code review ... in the decades since, what has\r\nbeen done to actually mitigate these types of attacks?\r\n\r\nWork in the Reproducible Builds and Bootstrappable Builds communities\r\nhas been progressing steadily in recent years, and can be used to\r\nsignificantly reduce the risks of \"Trusting Trust\" and other supply\r\nchain attacks, by making it possible to independently review not only\r\nthe end result, but the entire toolchain used to build a given\r\nartifact.\r\n\r\nThis talk will focus on the state of the art from several angles in\r\nrelated Free and Open Source Software projects, what works, current\r\nchallenges and future plans for building trustworthy toolchains you do\r\nnot need to trust.\r\n\r\nhttps://reproducible-builds.org\r\nhttps://bootstrappable.org",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/118/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@vagrantc@floss.social"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 63,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Driving Sustainable Digital Public Goods: Lessons from Guiding Companies to Embrace Open Source",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Vipul Siddharth",
"twitter": "siddharthvipul",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/53b891c86dcb8017ad21a07e5a1ae86c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "87",
"biography": "Vipul is the Open Source Technical Advisor at UNICEF, helping innovators understand and leverage power of Open Source. He is passionate about sustainability and DEI in \"open\" spaces (community).",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The UNICEF Office of Innovation Venture Fund collaborates with innovators on the ground in UNICEF programme countries to build and test new solutions at the pace required to keep up with the rapidly evolving challenges facing children.\r\n\r\nThe UNICEF Venture Fund makes $50\u2013100K early stage investments in technologies for children developed by UNICEF country offices or companies in UNICEF programme countries. By providing flexible funding to early-stage innovators, it allows UNICEF to quickly assess, fund and grow open source technology solutions that show potential to positively impact the lives of vulnerable children.\r\n\r\nDigital public goods (DPG) are open-source software, open data, open AI models, open standards, and open content that adhere to privacy and other applicable laws and best practices, do no harm by design, and help attain the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This definition is operationalised through the DPG Standard, a set of nine indicators that is used to determine whether a solution is a digital public good. Once a solution is recognised as a digital public good it is discoverable on the DPG Registry. \r\n\r\nIn this talk, we will explore the challenges and learnings from guiding companies to embrace Open Source and become sustainable digital public goods (DPGs). We will discuss how UNICEF promotes Open Source methodologies and culture within its portfolio companies and the broader community. Attendees will gain insights into the strategies and best practices that UNICEF uses to overcome challenges in Open Source adoption and work toward long-term viability of DPGs.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/60/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "siddharthvipul"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 112,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "The Hidden Challenges of Inclusive Collaboration",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Ildik\u00f3 V\u00e1ncsa",
"twitter": "IldikoVancsa",
"mastodon": "@ildikov@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e3052f66453467f546e59c30557da592?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "126",
"biography": "Ildik\u00f3 is working for the Open Infrastructure Foundation as Director of Community. As part of her role, she is the Community Manager for the StarlingX open source edge cloud project and a co-leader of the OpenInfra Edge Computing Group. Ildik\u00f3 has been contributing to projects like OpenStack, Anuket and State of the Edge for over 10 years with focus areas of Edge Computing, Telecommunications and NFV. She is an open source evangelist and is using her experience to help individuals, companies and organizations to learn and get more involved and active in communities.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "This talk is an emphasis on the importance of open and inclusive collaboration, and a call to action to ensure balance, diversity and sustainability of the global open source ecosystem.\r\n\r\nOpen source is currently living through its own hype cycle with new projects and foundations popping up on a daily basis. This phenomenon is great, as it shows the popularity and adoption of the concept. And this phenomenon is harmful, as it creates a fast paced environment that leaves people, who try to participate, with a false idea of what open source is or a bad experience.\r\n\r\nThis session will explore the struggles of the current, rapidly growing open source ecosystem, with a focus on diversity and inclusion, and invites everyone in the audience to participate in providing solutions to them. Do you have an experience where you didn\u2019t feel invited to participate? At the same time, there are also examples to follow. Do you have one to share?\r\n\r\nThe audience will learn about a new initiative called Community Blueprint, which highlights issues, suggests solutions and introduces good practices through individuals sharing their open source experience. Bring your story to share!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/149/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "IldikoVancsa",
"mastodon_id": "@ildikov@fosstodon.org"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 135,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Using Python with Proprietary Compute Power to Leverage Big Data Analytics",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Joseph Castle, PhD",
"twitter": "https://twitter",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fd07bc9b21afb98def078f4cbc8b4a4d?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "138",
"biography": "Dr. Castle builds strategic relationships with the U.S. public sector with SAS. This involves educating current and potential customers about data analytics, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), cloud-based environments, development operations (DevOps), and open source software (OSS). \r\n\r\nDr. Castle served over twenty years in the U.S. federal government. In the General Services Administration (GSA), he led numerous programs for the office of the Chief Information Officer and Technology Transformation Services. Highlights included forming and managing the GSA Digital Service, a high-performing technology team who implemented federal digital government strategy initiatives: open government, data, and code. He directed the federal government\u2019s Open Source Program Office (OSPO), or Code.gov, to implement the federal source code policy by educating and collaborating with cabinet-level federal agencies to publish OSS. He also served in the Obama Administration at The White House in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). A veteran, Dr. Castle served in the U.S. Army\u2019s 10th Mountain Division. He is a Fed100 recipient and a GitHub Star.\r\n\r\nDr. Castle holds numerous advanced academic degrees including an MBA, MS in information systems, and a PhD in public administration and public affairs. He lives in Maryland with his wife and two children.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Organizations rely on computer software to aid in the accurate and timely analysis of data. Open source software (OSS) is becoming more prevalent in all organizations from academia to industry to government. Utilizing Python with proprietary compute power (e.g., SAS Viya) enables users of all levels to apply advanced analytics, data visualizations, and complex statistical modeling capabilities to aspects of the analytics lifecycle, producing descriptive and predictive data artifacts.\r\n\r\nThis session will provide an overview of OSS with proprietary compute power as it pertains to business organizational analysis, the analytics lifecycle, and it gives participants a better understanding of how to leverage software for higher quality decision making.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/67/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "https://twitter"
},
{
"room": "E148",
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"E148"
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"start": "2023-07-14T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 198,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Winning Over Compliance Skeptics",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Aaron Williams",
"twitter": "_arw_",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0e5445639d8bd349c896e2b6d3f31f71?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "148",
"biography": "Aaron is VP Marketing for FOSSA, the audit-grade open source risk management company. He comes to FOSSA with more than two decades of previous success at startups, running developer-focused marketing, and building technical communities for companies including HEAVY.ai, D2iQ, and Sun Microsystems. Aaron has also served as the founding CEO of two startups in the entertainment technology space. Aaron has an MS in Computer Science and BS in Computer Engineering from Case Western Reserve University.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Kenaz Kwa",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4bbe8b3a650d98537a004fc2b2dbe259?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "149",
"biography": "Kenaz is the VP Product for FOSSA, the audit-grade open source risk management company.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Unfortunately, not every team or organization views open source license compliance as something that should be prioritized. Some perceive it as a costly inconvenience that gets in the way of development efficiency and product quality. \r\n\r\nThe good news: While it\u2019s impossible to change opinions overnight, our experience supporting compliance initiatives for numerous open source projects and companies has made clear that the right mix of messaging, processes, and strategies can make a difference. \r\n\r\nJoin FOSSA Head of Product Kenaz Kwa and Chief Advocate Aaron Williams in this session as we highlight learnings from working with engineering leaders who have won over compliance skeptics. We\u2019ll share information that you can use to help make compliance more of a priority across your organization, including:\r\n\r\nStrategies for successfully implementing compliance policies\r\n- How and why simplicity is often the right approach to a compliance program\r\n- Underappreciated benefits of a compliance-minded culture\r\n- The real risks of non-compliance\r\n- How to reduce engineering time spent on compliance\r\n- Why it\u2019s important to pay attention to community licenses\r\n\r\nWe\u2019ll also discuss how to apply these takeaways to specific areas where compliance skepticism manifests, like when organizations: \r\n- Are reluctant to create policies governing license compliance \r\n- Are reluctant to dedicate the resources (engineering time and/or automation) to manage license compliance\r\n- Have compliance policies in place \u2014 but certain teams are unable or unwilling to implement them\r\n\r\nAttendees will come away from the session with new tactics, messaging, and insights that you can present to colleagues to make the case for prioritizing compliance initiatives.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/119/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "_arw_"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
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"start": "2023-07-16T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 207,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "BOF: FOSS Advocates in Higher Education",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Patrick Masson",
"twitter": "massonpj",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@massonpj",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fa1314a7ff59cc080caa13d08e8af83e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "21",
"biography": "Patrick joined Apereo as Executive Director in January 2023, serving previously as Interim General Manager of the Foundation. Prior to Apereo, Patrick served as General Manager for the Open Source Initiative after working within higher education IT for over twenty years, including roles as CIO within the State University of New York and CTO at the University of Massachusetts' Office of the President. Before these, he served as the Director of Technology at the SUNY Learning Network and Director of the UCLA Media Lab.\r\n\r\nPatrick is an adjunct instructor with SUNY Albany's College of Computing and Information and speaks frequently on topics related to open source software, open education, and educational technology. Patrick is the co-founder of EDUCAUSE's \"Openness\" Constituency Group and served on his local school board from 2014-2018.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Birds of a feather discussing building and enabling capacity within institutions of higher education though open initiatives. Join us to share how you and your institution are supporting and promoting (or would like to) the development and use of free and open source software, open educational resources, open content, open research, open access and journals, or any other FOSS initiative in highered.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/153/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "massonpj",
"mastodon_id": "https://fosstodon.org/@massonpj"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Free BSD Workshop",
"conf_key": 145,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Free BSD Workshop",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Deb Goodkin",
"twitter": "dgoodkin",
"mastodon": "@dgoodkin@hachyderm.io",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/157ab0e2e2e6095d0378e4cdf910f228?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "236",
"biography": "Deb is the Executive Director of the FreeBSD Foundation, joining as the first employee back in August 2005. Before venturing into the world of open source and operating systems, she spent two decades working as an embedded firmware engineer, technical marketer, and technical sales engineer in the data storage industry. Deb now focuses on learning more about operating systems while advocating for FreeBSD around the world. Besides supporting the FreeBSD Project, she's been working on introducing more girls and women to STEM. Deb grew up in California and earned her undergraduate degree in Computer Engineering from the University of California, San Diego, and her Master's Degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Santa Clara.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Drew Gurkowski",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b14b6945a518715ed3717af01fe7da82?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "165",
"biography": "Drew started working for the foundation as an intern in 2015 and continued as a consultant starting in 2018. As a marketing coordinator, he has helped advocate for FreeBSD and Open Source technology.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Now in its 30th year, the FreeBSD Open Source Operating System is one of the oldest, largest, and most successful open source projects, with a long history of innovation. It is a free Unix-like operating system descended from Research Unix via the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), also known as \u201cBerkeley Unix.\u201d Known for its reliability, stability, and advanced networking and performance, FreeBSD also provides an opportunity to dive into the workings of a complete operating system as well as the chance to collaborate with a welcoming and inclusive community in a flat development model.\r\n\r\nIn this track, we would like to begin with a brief \u201cIntroduction to FreeBSD\u201d presentation followed by a hands-on, getting started workshop. The workshop portion will cover setting up FreeBSD with a desktop environment and how to get a web browser installed. Next, we\u2019ll walk through the FreeBSD Jail system for managing separate FreeBSD environments within an existing FreeBSD install that allows folks to isolate programs from one another. The goal of the workshop is for everyone to leave with their own FreeBSD virtual machine that they can continue to learn on/develop on.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/135/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "dgoodkin",
"mastodon_id": "@dgoodkin@hachyderm.io"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 98,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Nature adventures with FOSS",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sage Sharp",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@sphakos@toot.cat",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c1793afbfdb12b39bee6b0f6254e2b66?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "91",
"biography": "Sage Sharp is the Senior Director of Diversity & Inclusion at Software Freedom Conservancy. Sage runs Conservancy's diversity initiative, Outreachy. Outreachy provides internships in open source and open science. Outreachy provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living.\r\n\r\nSage has been a free software contributor since 2007. Sage is known for their past work as the author and maintainer of the Linux kernel USB 3.0 driver. Today, Sage is involved in the Python community, and works as a Django web developer for the Outreachy website.\r\n\r\nSage founded their own company, Otter Tech, to provide Code of Conduct enforcement workshops. Sage has trained Code of Conduct teams for open source communities like Kubernetes, GNOME, Python, Drupal, WordPress, OpenStreetMap, Elastic, and Symfony.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Do you like being outdoors? Do you have a favorite animal or plant? Come learn how to use FOSS tools to track down and photograph your favorite creatures!\r\n\r\nThis presentation will cover a set of FOSS tools I use to locate ocean creatures in the Oregon coast's tidepools. I'll share some of the photographs I've taken, and the FOSS tools used to create those photographs.\r\n\r\nAlong the way, I'll talk about the limitations of these FOSS tools. I'll note when these tools start to touch proprietary software and proprietary assets. I'll also note the tools that modify the GPL v3 license, and the developer's reasoning behind those modifications.\r\n\r\nTools covered:\r\n\r\n - iNaturalist - a citizen science tool for recording nature sightings and location data. iNaturalist is licensed under the permissive MIT license. iNaturalist allows people to upload photos under a variety of licenses, including both copyleft Creative Commons license and restrictive copyright licenses.\r\n\r\n - OpenStreetMap Android app (OSMAnd) - a great way to trek to the right location in remote areas with no cell signal. OSMAnd is licensed GPL v3. I will mention the proprietary Microsoft Earth OSM map overlay for viewing satellite imagery.\r\n\r\n - XTide 2 - a tide prediction tool. This tool uses a modified GPL v3 license with licensing restrictions to not use in ocean navigation, and disclaimers about extreme weather impacting tide predictions.\r\n\r\n - Darktable - a DNG photo editing tool that is licensed GPL v3. I will mention that some camera models may not be supported because you need extract the camera's color matrix using proprietary tools.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/85/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@sphakos@toot.cat"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T14:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "XMPP",
"conf_key": 43,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Setting Up A Snikket Server",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Root",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5b2b58c93321529b9daf5353f51cf4c3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "69",
"biography": "Root has been a long time advocate in the privacy and security space, and enjoys teaching others how to stay safe and secure while online and to avoid common pitfalls. Root is a beginner developer and enjoys breaking things while learning what makes it tick ;) this has lead to a wide range of experience across many different subjects. Root is also part of the team that runs Soprani.ca, Cheogram.com and JMP.chat and is heavily focused on their acceptance and success, in both the freedom-ware communities and beyond.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "This talk will showcase the simplicity and ease of setting up your own XMPP server using the Snikket software, walking step-by-step through the process on a live machine. The end result will be a fully functioning XMPP server that can be used throughout the remainder of the conference between all attendees. Once setup, there will be a demonstration of the features available to a Snikket Instance including, but not limited to, inviting others to join your server, group chats that are private or public, adding contacts, managing and updating the instance as the admin, creating limited accounts for kids, and steps for more secure end-to-end encryption.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/17/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T14:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 197,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Break"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "XMPP",
"conf_key": 40,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Building open standards-based ecosystems",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Matthew Wild",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@mattj@floss.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/48204a5c8a92e90d7c0a436ee3f21612?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "70",
"biography": "Matthew Wild is an open-source developer and proponent of decentralized communication platforms. Founder of the Prosody, Snikket and Modern XMPP projects. Executive Director of the XMPP Standards Foundation.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The XMPP Standards Foundation (XSF) is a community-governed non-profit organization. It has been at the helm of the XMPP ecosystem for more than two decades. During this period, the internet and how we communicate online has changed beyond recognition.\r\n\r\nThis talk is about how XMPP adapted to change, and the role that the XSF played in its continuity. We will also discuss the benefits, challenges and sustainability of open ecosystems and open networks.\r\n\r\nThe second half of the talk will focus on the XMPP network. Any successful network will attract spam and abuse as it grows, and XMPP is no exception. Unfortunately, open networks are at a natural disadvantage here compared to proprietary platforms. We will share the various kinds of abuse we've seen on the XMPP network, and what the community has done to tackle each of them.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/19/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@mattj@floss.social"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 81,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source Anti-Patterns",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Tom \"spot\" Callaway",
"twitter": "spotfoss",
"mastodon": "@spot@social.afront.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6318a246b849dc68e643fd5e6563c72b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "43",
"biography": "Tom is a Principal Open Source Strategist for AWS. He has been a part of the FOSS community since 1997, when he skipped his last day of junior high to go to Linux Expo. During college, he worked for a high-availability startup to cover tuition, and when they crashed along with the majority of the IT sector, he dropped out of college and went to work for Red Hat full-time. He worked for Red Hat for almost twenty years, in Support, Sales Engineering, Release Engineering, Engineering Management, University Outreach (CTO's office), and Employment Brand. He\u2019s an active contributor to Fedora and helped to write the Fedora Packaging and Legal Guidelines which are still in use today. He is co-author of Raspberry Pi Hacks (2013, O\u2019Reilly). When he\u2019s not working, he finds enjoyment in 3D printing, pinball, hockey, games (board & video), geocaching, craft beer, B-movies, science fiction, trivia, traveling, and his wife and two boys.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "An anti-pattern is a process which seems appropriate, but has more bad consequences than good ones. Many companies who are trying to run their open source efforts in the same way that they would manage projects internally are suffering from having their internal best-practices become open source anti-patterns. While the code quality of the technical work is generally unaffected by these, they can have a chilling effect on community growth, health, diversity, and sustainability. \r\n\r\nIn this talk, I'll discuss some of the common mistakes that \"corporate\" open source efforts make in their own open source projects and in their attempts to contribute to the upstreams they depend on. This session might give you some tips as to why your Pull Requests are not getting answered and why your open source projects are still entirely built by your internal development team.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/42/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "spotfoss",
"mastodon_id": "@spot@social.afront.org"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 113,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Thinking about FOSS, systemically",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Anna e s\u00f3",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@anna@friend.camp",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9e0827e22af8c612c6105e5afda7058b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "81",
"biography": "Anna e s\u00f3 is one of the cool folks organizing Outreachy, a program that provides internships to people subject to systemic bias and impacted by underrepresentation in the technical industry where they are living. They wear many hats, but their main focus is studying, designing, implementing, and documenting organizational processes and information systems. Over the last couple of years, Anna has worked with (and learned from) the Wikimedia community, two Brazilian federal university laboratories (MediaLab/UFG, LAPPIS/UnB), and Open Collective. They take pride in offering open projects a unique point of view.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The free software movement is not an isolated community\u2014it exists within political, social, and economic systems. Its concepts, models, abstractions were and continue to be built through the cultural lenses of its founders and subsequent creators and maintainers; its structures were inherited from spaces inaccessible for many. To promote true transformation within the free software space, we need to avoid the traps of reductionism and dogmatism by adopting a new approach: systems thinking. We'll examine the problems with conventional thinking in FOSS, discussing how it fails the most vulnerable, and work towards new strategies for change.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/53/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@anna@friend.camp"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 21,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "The Open Source Demos: Who is Entitled to Vote in an Open Source Organization?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Watson",
"twitter": "elementwatson",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/948834ad4e53729174215329475df7eb?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "225",
"biography": "W. Watson has been professionally developing software for 30 years. He has spent numerous years studying game theory and other business expertise in pursuit of the perfect organizational structure for software co-operatives. He also founded the Austin Software Cooperatives meetup group and Vulk Coop as an alternative way to work on software as a group. He has a diverse background that includes service in the Marine Corps as a computer programmer, and software development in numerous industries including defense, medical, education, and insurance. He has spent the last couple of years developing complementary cloud native systems such as the cncf.ci dashboard. He currently works on the Cloud Native Network Function (CNF) Certification and the Cloud Native Network Function (CNF) Test Suite.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "There are multiple types of open source governance models that are suitable for larger institutions, organizations, and communities. In the democratically run open source organization, the question of \u2018who is entitled to vote\u2019 arises. This problem is known as the \u2018boundary problem\u2019 within political philosophy [Whelan,1983]. The principle of affected interests, loosely stated as \u201cThose who are affected by a decision making process, should have input into that decision making process.\u201d is one way to approach this problem.\r\n\r\nGiven the affected interests principle, the short answer to \u201cWho is entitled to vote\u201d within an open source organization is the contributors and users. But as soon as we answer the voting entitlement question, several other questions concerning the boundary problem arise, such as: 1) Should the votes of contributors be weighted based on contribution size?; 2) Should the vote of the user be implicit, i.e., should the user\u2019s vote be based on consumption or the market?; 3) What constitutes a contributor or user?; and 4) Who gets to initially decide the answers to all of these questions?\r\n\r\nWhile discussion of whether to even be a democratically run organization is covered elsewhere [Ellerman, 1990], the difficulty associated with answering questions are used as disincentives against democratizing in general and against democratizing open source organizations specifically, so we will address them here.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/74/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "elementwatson"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 29,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source in Higher Ed is Different",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Patrick Masson",
"twitter": "massonpj",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@massonpj",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fa1314a7ff59cc080caa13d08e8af83e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "21",
"biography": "Patrick joined Apereo as Executive Director in January 2023, serving previously as Interim General Manager of the Foundation. Prior to Apereo, Patrick served as General Manager for the Open Source Initiative after working within higher education IT for over twenty years, including roles as CIO within the State University of New York and CTO at the University of Massachusetts' Office of the President. Before these, he served as the Director of Technology at the SUNY Learning Network and Director of the UCLA Media Lab.\r\n\r\nPatrick is an adjunct instructor with SUNY Albany's College of Computing and Information and speaks frequently on topics related to open source software, open education, and educational technology. Patrick is the co-founder of EDUCAUSE's \"Openness\" Constituency Group and served on his local school board from 2014-2018.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Open source projects that emerge from within institutions of higher education are notably different from those with corporate roots or even founded by individual developers or communities. Indeed, higher education's open source projects most align with the movement's original mantra of \"scratching a personal itch\" when compared to other projects developed to support commercial interests or ventures. \r\n\r\nThis session will present the unique motivations, attributes, practices, and principles found in academically oriented and research-driven free and open source software projects and, thus, how development, community, governance, funding, and all the other requirements to grow and maintain a project successfully differ from many of today's most notable--non-educational--projects and communities. While this session will reference software projects specifically, attendees with experience with other open educational initiatives will recognize a common theme and, thus, find applicable takeaways applicable to their own work.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/102/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "massonpj",
"mastodon_id": "https://fosstodon.org/@massonpj"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Security",
"conf_key": 109,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "FOSS in World Affairs",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Delib",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@delib@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0c95e8d73c30b3de2dca949dd768972a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "207",
"biography": "Daily Linux user since 2003; grass-roots community co-organizer; free software advocate; co-operatives advocate; DIY tinker.\r\n\r\nDelib left a small collectively-owned health food store to go back to the land, then left the land. They focused on effects of nutrition and environmental substances on the brain and behavior for a nutrition degree, but switched to graduate with a BS in Human Development from a college of human resources and family studies. Then did two years of graduate study and research on environmental toxins in a school of Community Health Education. After some years with grass-roots community groups, they went back to earn an interdisciplinary PhD with a more political-philosopy approach, from a college of urban and public affairs, concentrating on interdisciplinary fields of Cummunity Health and Development, and Normative Policy Analysis. Their dissertation explored deliberative democracy in successful co-operatives.",
"username": ""
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],
"abstract": "This talk tells a story of FOSS as it is centered in current trends of world-affairs, for FOSS is not merely technical coding. It is a social contract. One of FOSS' most important possibilities might be countering perverse incentives in today's internet financing models. With the current model, privacy, democracy and supply-chain security are risked. Yet no matter what solutions are feasible, the goal of this talk is to broaden our perspectives out onto the world at large.\r\n\r\nThe first step is outlining some contemporary problem policy-issues (such as privacy, encryption, democracy, walled gardens, inter-cultural warfare, social profiling, online moderation and left-right divides). Then the second step is outlining potentials for strategic leverage points, places where FOSS and its related co-operative ecosystems might make large positive contributions to our futures. \r\n\r\nSoftware is at the center of a broad range of topics and ethical concerns affecting every facet of human and non-human life. The stakes are large, but there are so many places to make a positive difference: civil infrastructure, human-scale interactions, the four freedoms (to use, study, alter and share FOSS), the fediverse, supply chain audits and especially the feasibility of co-operative service models that address questions of ownership and control beyond licensure.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/75/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@delib@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 94,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Forging Strong Open Source Communities: Insights and Lessons from the Sakai LMS Community",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Joshua Wilson",
"twitter": "jmwilson1",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@jmwilson",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/47258f018146d3e7a87f867c65c5de65?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "32",
"biography": "Joshua Wilson is Longsight\u2019s Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, where he is known for his product, process, and people leadership as well as his exceptional mentoring skills. At Longsight, he leads client relations, business operations, project management, product development, and strategic planning. Josh chairs the Sakai Community\u2019s Marketing Team, leads the development of Sakai\u2019s 3-year roadmap, participates on Sakai\u2019s Project Management Committee, and serves as Vice Chair of the Apereo Foundation\u2019s Board of Directors. Josh is the organizer of SakaiCon, the Sakai Community's annual user conference.\r\n\r\nJosh has been a leader in instructional technology for more than fifteen years, serving most recently as Associate CIO for Academic Technology at Brandeis University, where he directed the strategic and client-centered renewal of the University\u2019s academic technology environment, including its open source LMS. Josh has served for nearly two decades on the management team for the nationwide MISO Survey, which measures the effectiveness of IT and libraries at more than 150 higher education institutions. Josh is a principal at leadership consulting firm B.Cognition Labs.",
"username": ""
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],
"abstract": "Often it\u2019s easier to keep your codebase in alignment than it is to forge lasting agreement within your open source community about how best to move forward. You\u2019re not alone \u2014 we all face the challenge of getting the human beings in your community onto the same page. Join us for a conversation about how to make your community\u2019s governance as inclusive, open, transparent, and thoughtful as it can be. Along the way, you\u2019ll hear stories about how the Sakai LMS OSS Community intentionally transformed its governance processes and the work we\u2019ve still got in front of us. You\u2019ll also explore an approach for looking carefully at the organizational health of your own OSS community.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/35/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "jmwilson1",
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@jmwilson"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "AArch64/ARM64 Servers and Open Source - The Who, What, Why, and How",
"conf_key": 45,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "ARMing yourself for the future!",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Erik Benner",
"twitter": "erikbenner",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b3f1b1850899349331294d17a45c3324?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "52",
"biography": "Erik is currently VP of Enterprise Transformation, serving as a lead strategist for Federal, State and Local Government and Commercial customers throughout the United States. These customer engagements include enterprise cloud transformations, data center consolidation and modernization efforts, Big Data projects and implementations of Oracle Engineered Systems. He is the President of the Quest Users Group Cloud Computing Special Interest Group (SIG), Co Chair of the OATUG Oracle Enterprise Manager SIG and a habitual volunteer with user groups. Erik frequently presents at conferences, including Oracle OpenWorld and CloudWorld, Oracle FedForum, ASCEND, Blueprint4d, COLLABORATE and other user groups and conferences around the United States. He has worked with Oracle and Sun Systems since the mid 90s, and is experienced with most of the core Oracle technologies, including Oracle Cloud, Oracle Linux and Oracle Databases.\r\n\r\nWhen not flying to the far points of the country from the Atlanta Metro area, he enjoys spending time with his family at their Observatory, where the telescopes outnumber the people.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "ARM is the up and coming computing technology, an open platform that competing CPU architectures, with many manufacturers building systems from the size of a stamp to datacenter servers with 256cores stuffed in only 2RUs. There is a wide variety of ARM systems and operating systems that can run on these platforms. But despite all of this diversity, you still have binary compatibility across all the systems. The same Operating system that runs on a small 4-core Raspberry PI can also run on an ARM system in the cloud powered by a high-density 128-core Ampere processor. In this session, learn not only what you can run on ARM, but also the scale of the applications and its data storage. You will also see how easy it is to move to ARM.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/126/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "erikbenner"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 50,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Music Blocks: Computation in and through music",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Devin Ulibarri",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.education/@musicblocks",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/48323dccbd7efe0ec7cf6f1d5c3fc9a4?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "186",
"biography": "Devin Ulibarri is a versatile musician with a diverse portfolio. He has compositions published in Conceptions Southwest magazine, a range of teaching experience\u2014from preschool to college-level\u2014and has performed with artists such as Silk Road Ensemble with Yo-Yo Ma.\r\n\r\nFrom 2016-18, Devin served as faculty for the Preparatory and Continuing Education schools at New England Conservatory and is co-creator of Music Blocks, a visual programming language for exploring music\u2019s fundamental concepts. Music Blocks is currently being considered for Japan\u2019s national coding curriculum in 2020. Music Blocks development for 2020 is being done in partnership with Gakken, a major Japanese publishing company with funding from Japan\u2019s Ministry of Economics Trade and Industry.\r\n\r\nCurrently, Devin runs an out-of-school time (OST) program called MAP Family Learning Center (MAPFLC), where students explore music, art, and programming (hence \"MAP\"). Led by professional teaching artists, MAPFLC serves both as a place for learning these three subjects in an integrated way, as well as a laboratory for new curriculum ideas, such as our Music+Code curriculum, to be tested and refined in an supportive, structured environment.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Walter Bender",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@walterbender",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/43b174d56662e78b3edf599faaf75920?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "188",
"biography": "Walter Bender is co-founder and Chief Scientist at Sorcero, a knowledge-management and learning solutions company in the life-science space.\r\n\r\nBender is also co-founder of Sugar Labs, which develops and maintains educational software used by millions children in more than forty countries. Sugar Labs is a member project of the non-profit foundation Software Freedom Conservancy. In 2006, Bender co-founded the One Laptop per Child, a non-profit association with Nicholas Negroponte and Seymour Papert. Bender was executive director of the MIT Media Lab from 2000-2006.\r\n\r\nBender and Devin Ullibari are the primary authors of Music Blocks, a Visual Programming Language and collection of manipulative tools for exploring musical and mathematical concepts in an integrative and fun way.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Learn programming in a fun way with Music Blocks! This workshop will get you started with the basics of Music Blocks visual programming, as well as introduce you to some inspirational projects that combine computation and music in a beautiful, authentic way. For the best experience, please bring your laptops!\r\n\r\n\u201cAll musicians are subconsciously mathematicians.\u201d \u2014 Monk\r\n\r\n\u201cMusic is a hidden arithmetic exercise of the soul, which does not know that it is counting.\u201d \u2014 Leibniz\r\n\r\nMusic Blocks is a Visual Programming Language and collection of manipulative tools for exploring musical and mathematical concepts in an integrative and fun way.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/104/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.education/@musicblocks"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "BSD Unix",
"conf_key": 36,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Panel Discussion: Getting Involved",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Andrew Fresh",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6cd56a05a2e514c815927a5c24404285?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "248",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Alexander Vasarab",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/85bce5bd88ee0fad467d7df515598548?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "177",
"biography": "Alexander has been a NetBSD user since the turn of the century with\r\ninterlacing periods of professional and personal use.\r\n\r\nIn the computing space, he has finally settled on the humble descriptor\r\nof \"systems facilitator\" to sum up his wide experience across many\r\ncontexts.\r\n\r\nWhen he's not interacting with a topography of silicon, he is a mountain\r\nguide and avalanche educator working in the west coast states of the US.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Michael Dexter",
"twitter": "michaeldexter",
"mastodon": "@dexter@bsd.network",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2940463bef733994c4ebf550290bb2c7?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "215",
"biography": "Michael has used BSD Unix since 1991 and advanced it through fundraising, community coordination, and dozens of conference talks around the world. He has also organized the Portland Linux/Unix Group since 2009, coordinating over 150 speakers. By day Michael provides support for Open Source storage solutions for users of all sizes. Michael lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife and three children, small dog, and five chickens.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Come to this discussion to find out how you can get more involved in using or contributing to BSD Unix.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/166/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 121,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Conflu, con crud, and COVID-19: the time for Health and Safety policies is yesterday",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Josh Simmons",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@josh@josh.tel",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e55a9bf1f0e9eb0fddb9368b21319f36?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "72",
"biography": "Josh Simmons is a community organizer, nonprofit leader, and open source strategist who builds up people, programs, communities, and organizations around the commons. Passionate about mission-driven work, inclusive organizing, and tackling systemic issues, Josh has worked across for-profits, nonprofits, and public institutions.\r\n\r\nJosh is a Partner in Open Chapters, Vice President for Petaluma Pride, Director of DEI for Independent Federated Trust and Safety, and Co-organizer of North Bay Python. He is best known for his six-year tenure with Open Source Initiative and leading the organization to a new stage of maturity as its President then Chair.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "\u201cConflu\u201d and \u201ccon crud\u201d are nothing new to people who attend in-person conferences, and the tendency to come home sick has long been treated as unavoidable, and as an acceptable risk. The COVID-19 pandemic put a finer point on the health risks of in-person events, and presents executives, leaders, and organizers with a choice: \r\n\r\nDo we seize this opportunity to better understand our duty of care and run more inclusive events? Or do we fall back on a status quo that calcified inequities and excluded people with disabilities, chronic illness, caregivers, and those who live with them?\r\n\r\nThe choice is clear. We aim to rise to the challenge of running safer and more inclusive events. Let\u2019s draw on the lessons we learned as community leaders and influencers pushed Codes of Conduct into the mainstream, and raise the bar together \u2013 again.\r\n\r\nIn this presentation, we will explore lessons learned amid the pandemic, dive deep on the evolving practice of Health and Safety policies, and prepare our communities for a world racked by the climate crisis in which contagious diseases are growing in number and frequency.\r\n\r\nTake heart: this talk is a hopeful one. Attendees will leave with a vision of a more inclusive future, mental models to navigate newfound complexity, and good examples to draw on for events of every size and shape.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/58/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@josh@josh.tel"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS at Play: Games, creative development, and open technology",
"conf_key": 185,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Developing games with Godot Engine and other open source software",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Tom Lechner",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@tomsart",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/49c733dd94c6a53e2c79b3c7bab5ac24?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "199",
"biography": "Tom Lechner has been using open source software to produce his artwork since the early 2000s. He created the desktop publishing program Laidout to quickly lay out his comic books, and is currently using various open source software to work on video game projects, including VR with the Godot Engine. Tom is based in the Portland, Oregon area.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Come explore how to use an entirely open source pipeline to make games! We will discuss why one might choose an open source pipeline in the first place, including issues of source code accessibility, licensing, and ease of use. Everything from game engine to asset creation is completely possible with open source software by using tools such as Blender, Krita, Meshroom, Bespoke Synth, and more. As a case study, we will talk about how to use Godot to make a VR based game on a large rotating space station, touching on general pipeline, making Godot addons, character controllers, and VR complications.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/95/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@tomsart"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 57,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Helping Faculty Bring Students into Open Source - Kits and Education-Oriented Projects",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Grant Braught",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ceae02dde30ec78c42195d644031056?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "116",
"biography": "Grant Braught is a Professor of Computer Science at Dickinson College where he has taught courses across the undergraduate computer science curriculum for 25 years. He led a curricular revision of Dickinson\u2019s computer science program to incorporate a focus on FOSS and Humanitarian FOSS (HFOSS) with the goals of deepening student engagement, broadening participation in computing, raising awareness of the power of computing for social good and enhancing student\u2019s technical career-ready skills. He has guided student engagement with HFOSS communities including OpenMRS, SugarLabs, Sahana Eden, FreeCodeCamp, Oden, and Oppia. He is a lead maintainer of the FarmData2 project, which engages primarily student developers to build an application supporting small organic vegetable farmers. In 2017 he was recognized by Red Hat as among the \u201cInstructors Who Champion Open Source Education in the U.S.\u201d In 2020 he led a project centered around integrating FOSS in the undergraduate curriculum that was a finalist in the Gnome Community Engagement Challenge. He also works closely with The Non-Profit FOSS Institute, Teaching Open Source and Foss2Serve to promote HFOSS in computing education. He is an advocate of liberal arts education and has been active in the forthcoming ACM/IEEE/AAAI CS2023 curricular recommendations for undergraduate computer science programs.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Karl R. Wurst",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@kwurst",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/42da1a2c865fc22bcf4caeecebb1a6f0?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "196",
"biography": "Karl R. Wurst, PhD, is a Professor of Computer Science at Worcester State University in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA where he teaches primarily Software Development courses. He has had students work in open source projects for the last 10 years. He is a member of the Coordinating Committee for Teaching Open Source (a Software Freedom Conservancy member project), and a founder and Coordinating Committee member of LibreFoodPantry, a community building free and open source software for campus food pantries. He was one of 21 educators who received the 2017 Red Hat Honors Instructors Who Champion Open Source Education in the U.S., and received the 2014 George I. Alden Excellence in Teaching award.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Engaging students in free and open source software (FOSS) projects is educationally rewarding, however experience shows that it is challenging for both students and faculty. Engagement in FOSS fosters students\u2019 technical, professional and personal development in ways that \"class-size\" projects cannot. Students can study and interact with large, complex, real-world software artifacts, tools, and development processes central to modern software development and in high demand. They can observe and practice professional skills including communication, collaboration, critical thinking, question asking, and technical writing. In addition, growing evidence suggests that a context of social good, such as in FOSS projects with humanitarian goals (HFOSS), may attract more women and other underrepresented student groups to computing. However, these advantages come with a number of practical and cultural challenges. Work in FOSS communities is often less structured, even chaotic, as compared to traditional academic assignments. The content and timing of community responses to student inquiries and contributions may not align well with student background or assignment due dates. Assignments created around a project can be rendered quickly obsolete as the project evolves. As a result, faculty doing this work have found it difficult to transition students from classroom activities to participating in open source projects \u201cin the wild.\u201d\r\n\r\nThis talk will present our work on two intermediate steps, HFOSS Kits and Education-Oriented HFOSS Projects, designed to bridge the gap between classroom activities and student participation in FOSS \u201cin the wild.\u201d An HFOSS kit is a snapshot of an active HFOSS project\u2019s artifacts (code-base(s), issues, documentation, communications, etc.), taken at a particular point in time and packaged with student learning activities, an instructor guide, and a containerized development environment. Using a snapshot that is independent of the live project creates an authentic environment, while enabling the creation of reusable educational activities and providing a more comfortable space for students to experiment and learn. Using a containerized development environment minimizes startup time, allows automated context-sensitive feedback, and the simulation of community interaction. Education-Oriented HFOSS Projects, have real clients and are consciously designed and managed to facilitate faculty and undergraduate student engagement. Some examples managed by our team include LibreFoodPantry, FarmData2, Open Energy Dashboard, and Open Circuits. These are ongoing projects that continue across semesters and welcome outside participation. They are often humanitarian in nature and connect to causes or communities that align with institutional mission and student experiences. They use modern technologies but are architected, scoped and managed to facilitate student learning, support specific curricular goals, accommodate academic schedules, and understand that these objectives will slow project development. As entire new cohorts of students engage each term, particular attention is paid to onboarding, including documentation at the appropriate level and fully containerized development environments that make the process as easy as possible.\r\n\r\nWe have talked about these approaches at computing education conferences and are excited to hear different perspectives on our approaches from FOSS practitioners and educators in this community. Thus, significant time will be allocated for feedback and discussion with the audience.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/106/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T15:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 130,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source Dev Containers with DevPod",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Rich Burroughs",
"twitter": "richburroughs",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b5cf908e2b7df89a801dfbb0f541801b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "201",
"biography": "Rich Burroughs is a Staff Developer Advocate at Loft Labs where he's focused on improving the happiness of teams using Kubernetes. He's the creator and host of the Kube Cuddle podcast, where he interviews members of the Kubernetes community. Rich was one of the founding organizers of DevOpsDays Portland, and he's helped organize other community events. Rich also has a strong interest in how working in tech impacts mental health. He has ADHD and has documented his journey on Twitter since being diagnosed, and he moderated a panel on ADHD at KubeCon Detroit.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Many developers are excited about dev containers, but until now, people needed to use a managed service like Codespaces or Gitpod to feel that dev container magic. DevPod is a new open source tool that allows users to launch dev containers with any infrastructure that they have available.\r\n\r\nDevPod uses a provider model like Terraform's, and there are currently providers for many different infrastructures, like local Docker daemons, Kubernetes, AWS, and several other cloud providers. It's also possible to develop providers if you don't find one that fits your needs.\r\n\r\nWhile you can choose the infra you want to use with DevPod, you don't have to manage it. DevPod handles the lifecycle of the infrastructure it runs on, and it can even suspend cloud resources automatically to save on costs. DevPod uses the open devcontainer.json standard, so it's compatible with VS Code and many other IDEs, as well as tools like Codespaces.\r\n\r\nWe'll look at how DevPod works and get into a quick demo that showcases how it can help developers and teams standardize their dev environments.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/47/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "richburroughs"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T15:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 99,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Running an Open Source Hackerspace",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Tracy Homer",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/2941756_smallpreview_cropped_50876.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg",
"code": "6",
"biography": "Tracy Homer works as the Operations Manager for Software Freedom Conservancy. Tracy also serves on the board of her local hackerspace, an organization committed to teaching and promoting open technology exclusively. In addition to being the first point of contact for interested members, she also authorizes people to use the laser cutter, and 2d design classes in Inkscape. She is passionate about accessible technology so that people are able to have the tools they need to be creative and successful without restrictions. Tracy is also pursuing a degree in GIS at the University of Tennessee.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Knox Makers in Knoxville, TN is the area's premier hackerspace. In existence for almost 12 years, it boasts over 325 members and its base operations are fully supported by membership dues. It also has a commitment to open hardware and software, running all of its tools, behind the scenes operations, and teaching classes exclusively with FOSS. In this talk, Tracy will talk about why Knox Makers has chosen open source, some of the technologies they use, and what the challenges are to this commitment.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/124/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 128,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Accelerate Model Training with an Easy to Use High-Performance AI/ML Stack for the Cloud",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Michael Clifford",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/7107fa7943c29d9edd9aa9e58eec6ece?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "143",
"biography": "Michael Clifford is a Data Scientist at Red Hat working in the Office of the CTO on Emerging Technologies, where he works primarily on exploring tools, methodologies and use cases for cloud native data science.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Erik Erlandson",
"twitter": "manyangled",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f89cb542bde76dbb47506ee87493bf11?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "144",
"biography": "Erik Erlandson is the Data Science team lead at Red Hat Emerging Technologies, where he explores tools, methodologies and use cases at the intersection of data science workloads and the Kubernetes ecosystem.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The advent of large scale machine learning models has exacerbated the ongoing problem of resource and infrastructure management for ML practitioners. How can a data scientist, who has little or no DevOps knowledge, train and deploy models that require compute clusters with dozens or hundreds of nodes and GPU resources? In this talk, Michael Clifford will discuss how members of Red Hat\u2019s Emerging Technologies team leverage two open source projects, Ray and Open Data Hub, to simplify their distributed training and cloud based resource allocation for their team. We will cover: \r\n\r\n* An overview of Open Data Hub and Ray \r\n* A detailed discussion on how we\u2019ve integrated Ray with Open Data Hub to improve the user experience for developing large machine learning models \r\n* A demonstration of a real-world use case where Ray is used to accelerate an AI/ML workload on Open Data Hub \r\n* A discussion on the open source project developing this work to improve ML workflow tooling in the cloud, project CodeFlare \r\n\r\nBy the end of this talk, attendees will have a better understanding of how to build high-performance and scalable AI/ML systems.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/69/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 182,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 88,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Case Study: Zig Software Foundation",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Andrew Kelley",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@andrewrk",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/7745d1f9519ecdb116c5b70c38863351?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "154",
"biography": "Andrew is the president and lead developer of Zig Software Foundation. He has been contributing to free and open source software since university, working on a diverse set of areas: games, music software, web development, compilers, and databases. When AFK, Andrew enjoys playing competitive arcade games, skateboarding, and \u65e5\u672c\u8a9e\u3092\u52c9\u5f37\u3057\u307e\u3059.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Zig is a free and open source software project backed by Zig Software Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. It sustainably funds 4 people full-time. The project is active and has a rapidly growing user base.\r\n\r\nI'll share briefly about the story of how it came to be, and then focus the presentation on what lessons I think are transferable to others looking to make similar ventures, make note of which things might be unique to ZSF in particular, and share some other observations I've made along the way, as I dipped my feet into business.\r\n\r\nIn particular this talk will focus on the practical aspects of running a non-profit for a software project.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/25/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@andrewrk"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 64,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source and Automated Science",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sayeed Choudhury",
"twitter": "eSayeed",
"mastodon": "@eSayeed@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3b867d2cd42e0a64d4f368f72ea012e1?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "63",
"biography": "G. Sayeed Choudhury is the Director of the Open Source Programs Office (OSPO) at Carnegie Mellon Libraries. He is a Co-Investigator for the Black Beyond Data Project. Previously, he was Associate Dean for Digital Infrastructure, Applications, and Services and Hodson Director of the Digital Research and Curation Center at the Sheridan Libraries of Johns Hopkins University (JHU). Choudhury led the JHU Library team that supported the Covid-19 dashboard. He launched the JHU's open source programs office (OSPO), the first of its kind within a US university. Choudhury was a President Obama appointee to the National Museum and Library Services Board. He was a member of the National Academies Committee on Forecasting Costs for Preserving, Archiving, and Promoting Access to Biomedical Data and a member of the National Academies Board on Research Data and Information. He was also a member of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access. He has testified for the Research Subcommittee of the Congressional Committee on Science, Space and Technology.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Carnegie Mellon University's (CMU) CloudLab (https://cloudlab.cmu.edu/) is an example of the growing movement toward automated science -- the \"practice of scientific research without the need for significant human intervention\" (https://cbd.cmu.edu/about-us/what-is-automated-science.html). This recent piece in Science describes another automated science facility at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory focused on \"recipes\" for materials used in batteries. In some cases, these facilities are built for start-up or private companies that explicitly do not want to share their trade secrets, proprietary information, etc. The opportunity at hand with CMU's CloudLab is redesigning and re-engineering the workflows to be more open and conducive for cooperation within and perhaps beyond the walls of a university. Working with the originators and CMU leadership of CloudLab, the CMU OSPO has identified important questions regarding this redesign and re-engineering process including the different types of artifacts with varying degrees of possible IP issues, workflows connecting software and hardware artifacts, and questions regarding interoperability with external systems. Perhaps most interestingly, this work affirms a phrase stated by Josh Greenberg from the Sloan Foundation regarding \"rolling wall of openness\" rather than a binary view of open or closed with the prospects of embargoes in a new context. This talk will outline these issues and proposed approaches for addressing them with an objective of engaging the broader community who will eventually encounter similar issues at various institutions including universities.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/64/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "eSayeed",
"mastodon_id": "@eSayeed@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Science of Community",
"conf_key": 193,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Interactive Session -- Let's Get Real: Putting Research Findings into Practice",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kaylea Champion",
"twitter": "kayleachampion",
"mastodon": "@social.coop/@kayleachampion",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b8225a91a87dc7b27ae2e0303a87962c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "10",
"biography": "Kaylea Champion is a PhD Candidate in Communication at University of Washington. She studies how people cooperate to build public goods like GNU/Linux and Wikipedia, including what gets built and maintained (and what doesn't), who participates (and who is excluded), and how teams succeed (and fail). Prior to graduate school, she worked in IT as a consultant, system administrator and project manager. She holds an MS in Computer Science from the University of Chicago. A Linux user since 1994, she enjoys tromping through the woods, smashing goblins, and cooking for a crowd.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Aaron Shaw",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/575f02d9140e43fae5566917ce030f40?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "244",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Mako Hill",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c765934363224852356e0d9a992b3a23?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "245",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "There is a huge academic community of researchers focused on FOSS but\r\nmuch of this work has little impact in the communities that could\r\nbenefit the most from it. How can you, as FOSS community members and\r\nleaders, get the most out of research? How can you find relevant\r\nresearch or researchers, assess research quality, or figure out what to\r\ndo with research results once you find them? In these interactive,\r\nworkshop-style session, experts will help practitioners learn to\r\nsearch, select, and unpack research. Additional topics will include\r\npublications, journals, and academic conferences FOSS practioners\r\nshould pay attention to, partnering with academic researchers, as well\r\nas practical techniques for how to apply research to your own work.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/178/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "kayleachampion",
"mastodon_id": "@social.coop/@kayleachampion"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card / Right to Repair",
"conf_key": 211,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Right to Repair, FOSS, and restoring hardware ownership",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kevin O'Reilly",
"twitter": "kevin_oreilly7",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/NFU_Headshot.png.120x120_q85_crop.png",
"code": "136",
"biography": "Kevin O'Reilly is a leader in the Right to Repair movement. As the Right to Repair campaign director at the Public Interest Research Group, or PIRG, he leads the group's work on medical and agricultural Right to Repair. Kevin's research has demonstrated how modern tractors are engineered to restrict independent repair, how dealership consolidation further erodes farmers' repair choices, and how Right to Repair would save U.S. farmers $4.2 billion per year. He has organized hundreds of farmers and medical repair technicians from all over the country to push for change at all levels of government, and worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level to develop and advance effective legislation. Most recently, he was a leader in the coalition that passed the country's first agricultural Right to Repair law in Colorado. Kevin's work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, NPR, Politico and more.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "\u200b\u200bIn the evolving landscape of the digital world, the Right to Repair movement has made substantial strides towards restoring consumer control and promoting sustainable practices when it comes to our devices. Coming off a breakthrough year with numerous legislative breakthroughs, it's important that we understand the building blocks of our campaign's success and look to the challenges that lie ahead, particularly in the realm of free and open-source software (FOSS).\r\n\r\nSo far, 2023 has seen governors in three states sign Right to Repair bills into law: a consumer electronics focused bill in New York, a Minnesota law that improved upon the New York bill and added in enterprise electronics, and a first-of-its kind Colorado law targeting tractors and other farm equipment. We'll talk about the problems that those bills solve, the industries that we still need to address, and our plan to make translate those state-level victories into nationwide change.\r\n\r\nAll this progress didn't occur overnight. We'll explore the strategic and tactical building blocks that contributed to the success of the Right to Repair movement, and dissect the combination of advocacy, legislation, and public education campaigns that were instrumental turning our policy ideas into concrete change.\r\n\r\nThe conversation will then shift to discuss the next push for this movement: breaking free from the confines of proprietary software. As our focus expands from hardware to software, the talk will illuminate the importance of FOSS in establishing full ownership of devices and how FOSS can help bridge the gap between physical and digital repairability. In particular, we'll discuss the infrastructure that we need to build\u2014coalitions, research, legal arguments, and engineering capacity\u2014and the incremental steps we need to take to bring about our vision, all with an eye toward the model that the Right to Repair movement has established.\r\n\r\nFinally, this talk will address the role of the FOSS community in pushing for the same level of success as the Right to Repair movement. It will shed light on how the community needs to rethink and intensify its efforts to promote open-source software, ensure user freedom, and counter the monopolistic practices of proprietary software developers. Suggestions will be offered for actionable steps that the FOSS community can take to leverage their resources, foster collaborative innovation, and drive significant change in this space.\r\n\r\nThis talk promises to offer a holistic view of the Right to Repair movement, its intersection with FOSS, and a call to action for the open-source community. By looking at where we've been, where we stand, and where we need to go, we can chart our path into the next frontier for our digital rights and ownership.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/79/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "kevin_oreilly7"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T15:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 156,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Workshop - Defining Open Source AI",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stefano Maffulli",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@ed@opensource.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/92040048afc1a6a96d598f58acdca4be?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "18",
"biography": "Stefano is the executive director of the Open Source Initiative. An experienced leader of open source organizations, from non-profits advocacy groups and trade organizations to business ventures and community projects across countries. With a proven track record in community building, he\u2019s also an active contributor to open source projects. When not basking in front of a monitor, you\u2019ll find him teaching sailing or perfecting his pizza technique.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Join this in-promptu meeting to share your thoughts on what it means for Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning systems to be \"open\". The Open Source Initiative will host this lunch break to hear from the FOSSY participants what they think should be the shared set of principles that can recreate the permissionless, pragmatic and simplified collaboration for AI practitioners, similar to what the Open Source Definition has done.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/151/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@ed@opensource.org"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T15:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 201,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Where should my K8s Dev Environment Be?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Debo Ray",
"twitter": "debosmitr",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/064736ec61a56df282590b64b9a4f434?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "120",
"biography": "Debosmit (Debo) Ray is the Cofounder and Chief Executive Officer of DevZero, a platform that boosts developer productivity via cloud-based software development environments. In 2013, he founded Genie, an image-searching company. In 2016, after Twitter integrated Genie into its ad engine, Debo started his almost six-year journey working as a staff engineer at Uber, where his focus areas included infrastructure and cloud security. In January 2022, he founded DevZero to fix the productivity challenges he observed in the software development world when he was a developer. He formally launched DevZero in January 2023. Today, he leads a team of 25 employees who are passionate about closing productivity gaps in developers\u2019 current workflows. When he\u2019s not working on DevZero, Ray enjoys playing tennis, cooking, and learning how to fly planes.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In this session, we will delve into strategies for development environments when production is running in Kubernetes. Those include local dev with Docker Compose, local dev with Kubernetes, and remote dev with Kubernetes, and their effects on the SDLC.\r\n\r\nAttendees will gain insights on:\r\n- Pros and cons of each development approach.\r\n- How to align their K8s dev environment with their team's unique needs.\r\n- Strategies for optimizing workflows with the right Kubernetes development environment choice.\r\n\r\nWe'll also discuss the benefits and challenges of coding and testing in production-like environments and examine potential obstacles to using remote Kubernetes environments directly. By the end of the session, attendees will be empowered with the knowledge and tools to seamlessly transition their local development to prod-like environments in the world of K8s.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/146/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "debosmitr"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T15:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 100,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "IndieWeb 101: owning your content and identity",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Wm Salt Hale",
"twitter": "altsalt",
"mastodon": "@salt@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3e18e58f206ab70b6ebd6c8cde5a37c4?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "33",
"biography": "Salt is a Seattle local who has been involved with the Free Software movement since 1996. Currently, he works at IEEE SA Open while volunteering as Impresario of SeaGL and Community Director of Snowdrift.coop. Open to opportunities, Salt attended five years of graduate studies at the University of Washington where he focused on the intersection between communication, computer science, and law. Salt tries to be very approachable and will always be found wearing a kilt.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "With the upheaval of Twitter many folks have been forced to wonder what would happen if their platform were taken away. Will all of your witty Tweets be lost to time or attributed to someone else? What about your Swarm check-ins, Instagram stories, and other social shares? And why do we have to decide which walled garden to post our thoughts in?\r\n\r\nThe IndieWeb has been growing since 2013 and strives to create an alternative to content silos and the 'corporate web'. This is achieved through creating a single source of truth for your content and identity aka a personal domain. There are three core concepts that are important to understanding this movement: 'Your content is yours' not FB/Twitter/etc, 'You are better connected' by pushing to multiple services, and 'You are in control' of the content, format, and permanence of your links.\r\n\r\nLet's explore what a small-web might look like, discuss questions of content ownership, and see what steps one has to take to join the IndieWeb, together!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/83/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "altsalt",
"mastodon_id": "@salt@social.coop"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T16:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Coffee/tea break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 153,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Coffee/tea break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 159,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Coffee/tea break"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Coffee/tea break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 160,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Coffee/tea break"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 150,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 37,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Break"
},
{
"room": "E147, E142, E143, E144, E146, E145",
"rooms": [
"E147",
"E142",
"E143",
"E144",
"E146",
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Coffee/tea break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 190,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Coffee/tea break"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "XMPP",
"conf_key": 41,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "My XMPP Past, Present, and Future",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stephen Paul Weber",
"twitter": "singpolyma",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ab4d3a66e470ce10eb7ec812fab3c46?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "12",
"biography": "Stephen is a long-time software freedom enthusiast, semi-retired from industry to focus on promoting freedomware solutions to problems faced by everyday people. Stephen currently helps run the Soprani.ca project and the related JMP.chat freedomware-based telephony provider.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "A point-of-view journey through the evolution of the Jabber/XMPP ecosystem from about 2004 and how it was affected by various major events such as: Google Talk, the decline of traditional IM services, the Nokia N900, the smartphone era, the rise of new chat services, and more. Learn how the extensability of the protocol comes into play as the world changes. See how one community's long-term changes may be similar to what you see in your own freedomware community. Hear the exciting opportunities we are now presented with, and how we might all work together for a more user-empowered future of communications technology.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/16/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "singpolyma"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 208,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source AI Exploration or How to Start Engaging in the Space from an Open Source Standpoint",
"authors": [
{
"name": "JJ Asghar",
"twitter": "jjasghar",
"mastodon": "jjasghar@mastodon.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e667c0b7aa0e84a428ff1c1b5ee8473d?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "242",
"biography": "JJ works as a Developer Advocate representing the IBM worldwide. He focuses on the IBM\u2019s watsonx service, the Open Source AI ecosystem, and Kubernetes x with a core focus on OpenShift. He is always trying to make companies and users have a successful onboarding to the AI and Cloud Native ecosystem. He\u2019s also been known in the DevOps ecosystem and generalized Linux communities. If he isn\u2019t building automation to streamline his work, he\u2019s building the groundwork to do just that. He\u2019s been an avid homelab and self-hoster of open source software for years and gives back to that community as much as physically possible.\r\n\r\nHe lives and grew up in Austin, Texas. A father and husband, trying to learn to balance his natural nerdiness with family life. He enjoys a good strong dark ale, hoppy IPA, some team building Artemis, and epic Gloomhaven campaigning.\r\n\r\nHe has dove headfirst into Fedora since IBM buying Redhat, but still secretly wants FreeBSD everywhere. He\u2019s always trying to become a better web technology developer, though normally just uses bash to get the job done.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Engaging in the AI ecosystem can be a daunting task. There are multiple options to start engaging, but no one gives you a clear path to some level of success. There are stories of advanced math or massive computing required; there must be an easier way. Or, in another way to describe it, we all don\u2019t need to develop Microsoft Word, but it\u2019s essential to know how to use Microsoft Word.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, I\u2019ll be walking through an Open Source project called Caikit which is an Open Source wrapper around multiple AI portions of the ecosystem, so you can see the flexibility that it can give you. We will start with a simple whistle-stop tour of how to understand the AI space then how to access public Open Source models. Then we will move over to my laptop live demoing the Caikit via local containers and cached models to show how easy it is to play with it locally. From there, we will take the demo to the cloud and show a way to deploy it to OpenShift and be able to have an API that can respond with said model(s).\r\n\r\nWalking out of this room, you\u2019ll see how easy it can be with Open Source software; with a little effort on your computer and downloading some Open Source models, you can start leveraging AI with confidence.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/154/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "jjasghar",
"mastodon_id": "jjasghar@mastodon.social"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 199,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Power Up with Podman",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Paige Cruz",
"twitter": "paigerduty",
"mastodon": "paigerduty@hachyderm.io",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/726d62b06cc87ce5df6afdec2caba620?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "90",
"biography": "Paige Cruz is a Senior Developer Advocate at Chronosphere passionate about cultivating sustainable on-call practices and bringing folks their aha moment with observability. She started as a software engineer at New Relic before switching to Site Reliability Engineering holding the pager for InVision, Lightstep, and Weedmaps. Off-the-clock you can find her spinning yarn, swooning over alpacas, or watching trash TV on Bravo.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Curious about containers? There\u2019s a new generation of containers on the scene, Podman! Supporting secure, rootless containers for Kubernetes microservices, it was designed and built with the cloud in mind. Benefitting from the lessons learned out in the open from Docker, this next generation of containers will quickly become a trusted daily driver in your dev workflow.\r\n\r\nCovering what you need to know as an end-user from the UI to the backend, sharing a real world use case leveraging Podman for open source observability workshops https://o11y-workshops.gitlab.io. Paige will share how Podman and the adorable seal mascots Caitl\u00edn, Maighr\u00e9ad and R\u00f3is\u00edn have transformed her local development!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/141/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "paigerduty",
"mastodon_id": "paigerduty@hachyderm.io"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T17:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "AArch64/ARM64 Servers and Open Source - The Who, What, Why, and How",
"conf_key": 46,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "How Changing Your Server Architecture Can Help Save the World",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Aaron Williams",
"twitter": "aarondonw",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/857c454bcb2403844c47067740e1d8a3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "17",
"biography": "Aaron is a Developer Advocate and Community manager for Ampere Computing and runs the AArch64 Server community (bit.ly/ampComm). He has held similar roles for various ASF and LF projects, including LF Edge. He started his career as a Java developer and worked for many companies including SAP, where he work on SAP Retail, IoT, and connect vehicles. Outside of work, he is married and has two teenage sons and love to build IoT projects.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Data Centers are one of the largest consumers of energy in the US, accounting for 6% of all power generated in 2019. As DCs continue to grow, this energy consumption is becoming increasingly unsustainable. Despite this, the energy usage of legacy x86 processors have not been a priority. While some producers have started to talk about including energy efficiency in their future projects, this transition is slow and years away. Urgent action is needed to address climate change and the solution is available today and easier than you might think: switching to OCI's Ampere A1 instances. This talk will explore the benefits of a cloud native architecture and its ability to combat climate change by reducing energy consumption in data centers.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/27/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "aarondonw"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card / Right to Repair",
"conf_key": 174,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Right to Repair Discussion",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kyle Wiens",
"twitter": "kwiens",
"mastodon": "kwiens",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/33b717fdf44e65d11cdfa1b3c1ccde0a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "246",
"biography": "Kyle Wiens is a software engineer and the CEO of iFixit, the repair community known for open source repair manuals and product teardowns. iFixit has empowered hundreds of millions of people to repair their broken stuff. Kyle led the international coalition that legalized Right to Repair, has testified before the US Copyright Office and the International Trade Commission, and he is involved in developing global environmental standards.\r\n\r\nKyle regularly speaks on design for repair, service documentation, and the environmental impact of manufacturing. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harvard Business Review, Wired, Popular Mechanics, and the Wall Street Journal.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Kevin O'Reilly",
"twitter": "kevin_oreilly7",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/NFU_Headshot.png.120x120_q85_crop.png",
"code": "136",
"biography": "Kevin O'Reilly is a leader in the Right to Repair movement. As the Right to Repair campaign director at the Public Interest Research Group, or PIRG, he leads the group's work on medical and agricultural Right to Repair. Kevin's research has demonstrated how modern tractors are engineered to restrict independent repair, how dealership consolidation further erodes farmers' repair choices, and how Right to Repair would save U.S. farmers $4.2 billion per year. He has organized hundreds of farmers and medical repair technicians from all over the country to push for change at all levels of government, and worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level to develop and advance effective legislation. Most recently, he was a leader in the coalition that passed the country's first agricultural Right to Repair law in Colorado. Kevin's work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, NPR, Politico and more.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Right to repair advocates built a grassroots movement around a problem that everyone has. For free software to go mainstream, we need to reach people where they're at. Let's discuss strategies that will work for any social movement. \r\n\r\nWhat social movements have been effective, and why? What tactics have worked particularly well?\r\nWhen has the internet rabble been best activated to agitate for political change?\r\nWhat problems do people have with the technology in their lives?\r\nWhat small, incremental FOSS-friendly steps forward are possible now?\r\nThe internet of things is made up of outdated linux distros riddled with vulnerabilities. How can we solve this?\r\nHow can we incentivize hardware manufacturers to contribute to FOSS communities?",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/174/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "kwiens",
"mastodon_id": "kwiens"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T17:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS at Play: Games, creative development, and open technology",
"conf_key": 186,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "'Space Station 13': Transitioning to Open Source",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kai Richardson",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a701c435037c3adba77ec8e7544a6b6c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "75",
"biography": "Kai is one of the maintainers and designers behind one of the largest free and open-source videogames, Space Station 13.\r\nHe works on the classic Goonstation flavor of the game. Most of his time is spent easing contributor onboarding, managing development, and coordinating with other development teams.\r\n\r\nKai also enjoys doing large amounts of cooking when he's not working on Space Station 13 (or waiting for it to compile \ud83d\ude43). He can be found most days listening to all sorts of music in his Portland, OR home.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Transitioning from a closed-source codebase to an open source model of contribution can present significant challenges. This talk aims to showcase the strategies implemented by our team to navigate this transition successfully. Furthermore, we will delve into the benefits we discovered by embracing community involvement in the development process.\r\n\r\nSpace Station 13 stands out as one of the largest open source game development communities, attracting thousands of individual contributors over the course of a decade. Through active player participation, Space Station 13 has transformed into a collaborative development community where anyone can make their mark on the game. Players-turned-contributors are the forefront of development, constantly adding more unique features (and bugs). These efforts have resulted in a high velocity of 10-20 contributions per day, underscoring the power of open source and community development on a large scale.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, I will focus on the Goonstation flavor of the game, examining the development community\u2019s progression after open-sourcing the codebase in 2020. By sharing the strategies we employed to better connect with and hear from our community, I aim to provide insights into the growth and management of a thriving development community with a focus on player contributions. Additionally, I will cover our failures along the way, highlighting the lessons we gleaned from the things we tried that ultimately just didn't work out for us.\r\n\r\nBy delving into both successes and failures, this talk aims to provide a comprehensive retrospective on the process of transitioning from a closed-source model to a community-developed open-source one. Attendees will gain practical knowledge on fostering community involvement, managing collaboration at scale, and navigating the unique dynamics of open-source game development.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/92/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 90,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 180,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 90,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 183,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 114,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "The Open Social Compact: A Citizenship Model for Digital Communities",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Coraline Ada Ehmke",
"twitter": "CoralineAda",
"mastodon": "@CoralineAda@ruby.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4900754dfff6786e747438a703e0d791?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "89",
"biography": "Coraline Ada Ehmke is an internationally recognized speaker, writer, activist, and software engineer. For more than a decade, she's been working on practical approaches to promoting the values of diversity, equity, and justice in the technology industry, with a particular focus on open source. She is the creator of Contributor Covenant, the first and most popular code of conduct for open source communities, and the Hippocratic License, an innovative open source license designed to promote and protect human rights. Coraline co-founded the Organization for Ethical Source and currently serves as its Executive Director.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "A code of conduct makes a community\u2019s norms and values explicit and enforceable. Governance makes decision-making mechanisms transparent and accountable. A license makes the conditions of adoption and reuse of the community\u2019s work explicit and legally binding. What\u2019s missing is a kind of \u201cconnective tissue\u201d bringing norms, governance, adoptions, and use together into a cohesive whole.\r\n\r\nSocial contracts are all around us, and have always been a natural part of our communities. They're an important part of how we ensure that general expectations of human behavior are met. \r\n\r\nThe Open Social Compact (OSC) is a new social governance tool for digital communities. It's used to establish unique \"citizenship models\" for digital communities, supported by a robust ethical framework that promotes just, equitable, and pro-social outcomes for everyone who participates.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/55/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "CoralineAda",
"mastodon_id": "@CoralineAda@ruby.social"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 95,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Let's talk about Non-profit Boards",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Deb Nicholson",
"twitter": "baconandcoconut",
"mastodon": "baconandcoconut",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/20190601_DebatMeowWolf.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg",
"code": "114",
"biography": "Deb Nicholson is the Executive Director at the Python Software Foundation, the non-profit steward of the Python programming language. She is a free software policy expert and a passionate community advocate. After years of local organizing on free speech, marriage equality, government transparency and access to the political process, she joined the free software movement in 2006. She has previously served the open source ecosystem through her work at the Open Source Initiative, Software Freedom Conservancy, and the Open Invention Network. She\u2019s won the O\u2019Reilly Open Source Award and the Award for the Advancement of Free Software for her efforts to broaden the free and open source software movement. She is also a founding organizer of the Seattle GNU/Linux Conference, an annual event dedicated to surfacing new voices and welcoming new people to the free software community. She lives with her husband and her lucky black cat in Cambridge, Massachusetts.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Where do non-profit boards come from? Who serves on them and why? More importantly, if you are on a board or you are setting up a board, how do you make sure you get great people who will serve your mission and keep your organization healthy and growing? While there's no one grand plan that fits every organization, there is a large body of knowledge on this topic. \r\n\r\nBoard members are at their best when they feel supported and have a clear sense of purpose. This talk will go through the different kinds of non-profit boards, long-term strategies for success and some ways to course correct when it feels like things could be better.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/32/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "baconandcoconut",
"mastodon_id": "baconandcoconut"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 65,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Identifying Common Issues, and Potential Solutions, Across Sectors Doing Open Work",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stephen Jacobs",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d4b13fc137a9667556ded7a25f30d85e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "241",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Those of us pursuing or performing Open Work in Industry, Academia and Government face common challenges around getting support for, incetinization of and credit around Open Work practices. The problems of \u201cInvisible Work\u201d needing to demonstrate ROI and KPI for non software engineering efforts, getting evaluated for \u201cinvisible work.\u201d Etc. Though there are shared issues across these sectors, the language and processes are often different, leading to difficulty in identifying and applying best practices from one sector to the other. This session will discuss the common challenges and related best practices in each sector and seek common ground in addressing them",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/152/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 110,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 221,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 89,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "YES YOU CAN - Creating a profitable open source company without venture capital",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Ann Schlemmer",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f7c4d123dcff9dcdb7f0e9ecd843aea0?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "129",
"biography": "Ann is a seasoned leader & advocate for open source with over 15 years experience in open source. CEO of Percona, a world-class open source database software firm, she is driven by passion for people & belief in open source's power to create an inclusive tech industry. Her authenticity and caring approach earns respect & admiration. Ann is a speaker who embodies the values of open source and inspires action through authenticity.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In this session, Ann Schlemmer, CEO of Percona, will share her experiences and insights on the trade-offs of being a bootstrapped, customer funded company vs taking outside capital.\r\nWe will go over:\r\nAdvantages and disadvantages of customer funding and bootstrapping, including flexibility, control, and scalability\r\nBenefits of leveraging the power of an open source community \r\nStrategies to attract and retain customers and generate sustainable revenue streams\r\nLessons learned from Ann's journey leading a customer-funded and bootstrapped business\r\nQuestions from the audience for further discussion and exploration of the topic\r\n\r\nThis presentation will particularly interest entrepreneurs, small business owners, and anyone interested in alternative funding models for open source startups. The audience will leave with a better understanding of the pros and cons of bootstrapping and customer funding, as well as actionable steps to make the most of these strategies.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/23/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 137,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Enabling Accelerated AI and Data Workflows on CPUs, GPUs and FPGAs through oneAPI",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Sriram Ramkrishna",
"twitter": "sramkrishna",
"mastodon": "@sri@mastodon.social or @sri@floss.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/447062d346ca576f8745b0cae1255dfc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "217",
"biography": "Sriram Ramkrishna is an over 20 year veteran in open source. Specializing specifically in open source communities - Sri has a solid track record in building rapport in existing communities, building new communities and meta communities. Sri has held roles from IT engineering roles to marketing and everything in between. Currently, Sri works at Intel as the community manager for oneAPI, an open standard, multi-architecture programming model that provides an open, industry driven alternative for writing AI and high performance computing on accelerators. \r\n\r\nIn community work, Sri is the brain child behind Linux App Summit, a conference that brings developers from the desktop community, distributions, and third party developers to drive application development on the Linux platform. Sri also participates in the open compute project as a liaison between the open system firmware team and the sustainability team focusing on how to build sustainable platforms. Finally, Sri is really good at connecting people - if you need help with your project or need visibility, he loves helping out.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "AI workloads and data pipelines are rapidly growing in their demand for computing power. Accelerated computing can help maximize our ability to not just run AI models, but also maximize how quickly we can capture and extract useful information from data sources. Until recently, accelerated programming has been focused on proprietary programming models, but this is changing.\r\n\r\noneAPI is an open, cross-industry, standards-based, unified, multiarchitecture, multi-vendor programming model that allows you to write code and target all accelerators - GPUs, CPUs and FPGAs. oneAPI is already used to accelerate AI frameworks. With oneAPI it is also possible to write accelerated data processing code to rapidly capture and transform your data.\r\n\r\nThis talk will provide examples of how oneAPI enables performant data processing, how the project is organized and the open governance model. We will also discuss the oneAPI community. You should expect to come away with a sense of what oneAPI is and fresh ideas on what new capabilities it enables.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/70/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "sramkrishna",
"mastodon_id": "@sri@mastodon.social or @sri@floss.social"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 101,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Thoughts after daily driving postmarketOS for 3 years",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Anjan Momi",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@anjan@pleroma.debian.social",
"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "110",
"biography": "Anjan is a free software hacker that was troubled by the proprietary smartphone operating system duopoly formed by Google and Apple. He learned about postmarketOS, a FOSS project founded by Oliver Smith to install the GNU/Linux desktop FOSS activists enjoy onto old Android phones. Persuaded by the ethics behind postmarketOS - Anjan uses a device with postmarketOS as his primary phone, co-maintains a UI called Sxmo, and helps improve the wider FOSS ecosystem.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "PostmarketOS is a \"sustainable, privacy and security focused free software mobile OS that is modeled after traditional Linux distributions\". PostmarketOS protects users' rights on one of their most personal devices. However, https://postmarketos.org warns that it is \"for Linux enthusiasts\". For the last 3 years, Anjan has been using Sxmo with postmarketOS as his primary mobile device. In this talk, Anjan shows how he does his mobile computing using a Xiaomi Poco f1 (SDM845 device) and why he can't imagine using a different OS for his phone.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/81/",
"cancelled": false,
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},
{
"room": "E143",
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],
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"end": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 58,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Academic OSPO as RSE Group: Harnessing Student Developers for Collaborative Innovation",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Daniel Shown",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://c.im/@DenialShown",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b364e6a050bb1e486c522b85eb3e9447?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "153",
"biography": "Daniel serves as the Program Director for Open Source with SLU, an academic open source program office started in July 2022. He handles the program's daily operations, builds connections with industry partners, works with internal and external clients of the program, and guides and supports graduate students. He ensures that the program follows its mission. Open Source with SLU has a three-fold mission of giving students real world software development experience, developing software that supports research, and supporting open scholarship (including open source software, open source hardware, open data, and open work) by sustaining digital infrastructure and fostering innovation. Daniel is an artist, technologist and symmathesist. With multiple decades of professional experience in software development and operations for academia, finance, aerospace, retail, and renewable energy he has maintained parallel careers as a technologist and artist. As both an artist and a technologist he engages symmathesy, learning systems made of learning parts, as a theoretical lens and an evolving pragmatic toolset for developing both people and technologies that enable them. He is also an adjunct instructor in Computer Science for courses in Multimedia, Web Technologies, Principles of Software Development, and Open Source and Community Service.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Integration of an Academic Open Source Program Office (OSPO) as a Research Software Engineering (RSE) group within a university environment offers a distinctive approach to fostering open source collaboration and enhancing research software engineering practices. The utilization of students as developers within such a program highlights their unique contributions, benefits, and the challenges involved.\r\n\r\nThe growing recognition of research software as a fundamental component of the scientific process has led to the establishment of both academic OSPOs and RSE groups. These groups aim to enhance software engineering practices within research projects, enabling robust and sustainable software solutions. The integration of an OSPO into an RSE group within a university environment provides an intriguing fusion of open source principles and research software engineering expertise.\r\n\r\nEngaging students as developers in an OSPO-RSE group brings numerous advantages. It provides students with valuable experience in real-world software development, enabling them to bridge the gap between academia and industry. By actively participating in open source projects, students can refine their technical skills, learn industry best practices, and gain exposure to collaborative software development workflows. Involving students in open source projects enhances their educational experience. They have the opportunity to work on meaningful research software projects alongside experienced professionals, tackling real-world challenges and making tangible contributions to the scientific community. This exposure to open source principles and practices fosters a culture of innovation, collaboration, and knowledge sharing.\r\n\r\nThis approach also raises questions. How can the objectives and metrics of success for an academic OSPO-RSE group be defined and evaluated? What governance models and collaboration mechanisms are required to balance the academic freedom of researchers with the community-driven nature of open source? How can the potential conflicts between traditional academic practices and the open source ethos be effectively addressed? How can teams balance academic commitments with project timelines? These questions highlight the need for careful consideration and exploration of the organizational, cultural, and ethical aspects associated with an OSPO acting as an RSE group within a university.\r\n\r\nLeveraging student developers in an OSPO-RSE group also presents challenges that need careful consideration. Students may have limited experience in software engineering practices, requiring mentoring and guidance to ensure the quality and sustainability of the research software they contribute to. Balancing academic commitments with project timelines and expectations can also be a challenge, necessitating effective project management strategies and clear communication channels. Furthermore, the ethical considerations of involving students as developers in open source projects must be addressed, ensuring the protection of intellectual property, respecting licensing requirements, and maintaining data privacy.\r\n\r\nThe involvement of students as developers within an OSPO-RSE group offers valuable benefits. The effective integration of students in this context requires thoughtful planning, mentorship, and attention to ethical considerations. This talk will examine the experience of the Open Source with SLU program to explore the dynamic role of student developers in an OSPO-RSE program and engage in discussions on best practices, challenges, and the future potential of this distinctive approach to research software engineering within academia.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/108/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://c.im/@DenialShown"
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{
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"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
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"track": null,
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"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E143",
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"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 51,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "UniTime - Born of Research, Now Fostering Open Research Through Competition",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stephanie Youngman",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
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"code": "133",
"biography": "Stephanie Youngman is a graduate of Purdue University, after graduation she spent several years at Bell Labs before returning to Purdue.\u00a0 She currently works for Purdue University focused on improving course and student scheduling processes.\u00a0 Ms. Youngman is a founding member of UniTime LLC, a company that develops and consults on open source solutions to advanced course timetabling and scheduling problems.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "UniTime was born from a collaborative research project many years ago and has always strived to move both the course timetabling and the student scheduling research communities forward.\u00a0 With the help of Apereo sponsorship we have done this by being one of the organizers of the 2019 International Timetabling Competition. By leveraging the community of UniTime users to gather the benchmark data sets for that competition, more real world data is now available and actively being used for the next generation of research. This presentation will discuss thoughts on how other open source projects could use this approach.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/110/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Science of Community",
"conf_key": 222,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Discussion: Open Source Governance",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@shauna@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2bdf820f298588fef18a33de5779836a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "171",
"biography": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon is a writer, programmer and community organizer who focuses on the intersection of technology and governance. Her business, Galaxy Rise Consulting, works with free/open source projects, non-profits, progressive organizations and other clients to build better products for their communities, and stronger communities around their products.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Interested in chatting about governance challenges faced by your open source project or open source as a whole? Join us for an informal discussion of topics such as defining your governance, resisting corporate influence, technical decision making, and whatever governance challenges have been on your mind.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/185/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@shauna@social.coop"
},
{
"room": "E146",
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"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Software Worker Coops",
"conf_key": 22,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Panel: Let's talk about co-ops!",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Clayton Craft",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9819b7855e70793591b49fd21694a800?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "243",
"biography": "",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Aaron Wolf",
"twitter": "awolftune",
"mastodon": "@wolftune@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b32ae4ca7b2465cc5b642eed9c285b06?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "239",
"biography": "Aaron is a FLO activist, co-founder of Snowdrift.coop, and community music teacher. He has worked for many years (mostly volunteering) on social, political, and economic aspects of technology and media.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Dan Fourie",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a594d6dc5090f96234f2e91331e02b62?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "220",
"biography": "Dan Fourie is a worker-owner at Interstitial.coop, a full-stack engineering consulting firm that builds solutions for a just and sustainable future. His experience is in mechanical/chemical systems design. \r\n\r\nHe is excited and curious about organizational design, from worker cooperatives to living communities to activist movements, and how these networks can be spaces for healing and growth.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Denver Gingerich",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0adc60a96b41045e2c677455df574154?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "192",
"biography": "Denver is a software right-to-repair and standards activist who is currently Director of Compliance at Software Freedom Conservancy, where he enforces software right-to-repair licenses such as the GPL, and is also a director of the worker co-operative that runs JMP.chat, a FOSS phone number (texting/calling) service. Denver writes free software in his spare time: his patches have been accepted into Wine, Linux, and wdiff. Denver received his BMath in Computer Science from the University of Waterloo. He gives presentations about digital civil rights and how to ensure FOSS remains sustainable as a community and financially, having spoken at conferences such as CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Joel Brock",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "social.coop/@joelbrock",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fe8b14882585b4fc355d509b144c71ad?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "45",
"biography": "Joel is a founding member of the Tech Support Cooperative, a worker-owned IT services co-op working extensively with free and open source solutions. The Tech Support Co-op grew around an open source Point of Sale software that was being developed and propagated throughout the national food co-op industry. The Tech Support Co-op formed among key collaborators within that software development community to address a lack of any formal support for the software, and to better coordinate future development. \r\n\r\nJoel has 20+ years experience working at the intersection of technology and cooperation. He brings a unique dedication to the cooperative business model and hopes that he can share some of his enthusiasm for co-ops with you.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Keegan Rankin",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@social.coop@agaric",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e3b69eb4292b39e8c61706f7fb24ba5e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "27",
"biography": "Keegan is a Free Software user and contributor, and web developer. As a worker-owner of Agaric Technology Collective, Keegan has contributed to Drupal Core, a wide variety of contributed Drupal modules, and the Drutopia distribution, among several other Free Software projects. Independently, Keegan is an amorphous person with a constantly evolving set of interests, and a tendency to make music with the surrounding objects.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Valerie Young",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d3b4753b08f6265ace426673b34ae684?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "11",
"biography": "Valerie Young works at Igalia, a worker-owned co-op, focusing on web standards related to accessibility. Her work there includes co-chairing the ARIA working group of the W3C and being an editor of the CORE-AAM specification. In the course of her career, she has worked up and down the web stack -- from building web apps to standards and standards testing in browsers, and more recently on the browsers themselves. From the moment she learned about the free software from fellow nerds in college, she has been an advocate for it.\r\n\r\nOutside of work, she has spent her whole adult life participating in non-hierarchical co-operative structures, from housing co-ops, to political projects, to academic conferences and community farms. Valerie is endless curious about ways to organize work that lead to empowerment, self actualization and joyful collaboration for individuals involved -- she has seen many successes and many failures and would love to hear from you about yours!",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Watson",
"twitter": "elementwatson",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/948834ad4e53729174215329475df7eb?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "225",
"biography": "W. Watson has been professionally developing software for 30 years. He has spent numerous years studying game theory and other business expertise in pursuit of the perfect organizational structure for software co-operatives. He also founded the Austin Software Cooperatives meetup group and Vulk Coop as an alternative way to work on software as a group. He has a diverse background that includes service in the Marine Corps as a computer programmer, and software development in numerous industries including defense, medical, education, and insurance. He has spent the last couple of years developing complementary cloud native systems such as the cncf.ci dashboard. He currently works on the Cloud Native Network Function (CNF) Certification and the Cloud Native Network Function (CNF) Test Suite.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Join co-op representatives as they swap stories, compare notes, discuss tactics\r\nand problems with each other, and answer any questions you have about what it's\r\nlike to work with free software in a co-op--a relative rarity--in the tech\r\nindustry.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/180/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 82,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Building and Supporting Open Source Communities Through Metrics",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Georg Link",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/cb8650702c8ba4dca38c33d2b3f5359b?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "39",
"biography": "Georg Link is an Open Source Strategist with touchpoints and perspectives on DEI from his own marginalized identities including being a gay married man who fosters youths and lives as an immigrant in a different country from his upbringing. Georg co-founded the Linux Foundation CHAOSS Project to advance analytics and metrics for open source project health. Georg has an MBA and a Ph.D. in Information Technology. Georg serves as the Director of Sales at Bitergia. In his spare time, Georg enjoys reading fiction and hot-air ballooning.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Each open source community is different and therefore requires different metrics for data-driven decisions about building and supporting it. What makes it so tricky is that everyone pays attention to different aspects of communities. In this talk, we will explore what metrics are available to look at communities and to track the impact of changes we make as we build and support them. \r\n\r\nWe will look at real-world examples of how metrics have been used to build and support open source communities. This is based on conversations in the CHAOSS Project, an open source community that defined metrics and developed software to get these metrics. This talk will share what we have learned in the CHAOSS Project about having metrics for open source communities. Once the right metrics have been decided on, both technical and organizational challenges need to be overcome, which we discuss how to do.\r\n\r\nThis is an interactive session. The three sections of the talk introduce the topic to everyone. The majority of the time will be available for discussion among the participants.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/34/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 122,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 212,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Free BSD Workshop Continuation"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 120,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 213,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Growth Workshop Continuation"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T16:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 30,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Standards in Higher Ed and the Challenges of Interoperability",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Benito Gonzalez",
"twitter": "bjagg69",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f432340096f3f8ef5501087274b18527?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "157",
"biography": "Benito Gonzalez is a Software Architect, with 30 years of professional experience. Benito has been at Unicon since 2015. Mr. Gonzalez has knowledge and experience in enterprise software development, especially around higher education. Supported clients range from community colleges up to major universities. He has experience with end-to-end management of institution web services.\r\n\r\nMr. Gonzalez's uPortal work supports a variety of higher-ed institutions, from community colleges to major universities such as University of California, Riverside, and Texas A&M. Work ranges widely as well. Some efforts are simple maintenance and small enhancements. Other client projects have included complete major upgrades and redesigns. With web development evolving quickly, Benito has become adept with the latest standards like Web Components. He is also a regular presenter at Apereo Foundation events. Mr. Gonzalez is also a member of the uPortal Steering Committee and the chair of the Apereo Incubation Work Group. Benito has branched out into Ed-Tech evaluations and technical due-diligence reviews, along with developing various technology rubrics to evaluation software systems.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Laura Fernandez Moran",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fc3d5dcd7f287b5135404b2b56d7dda9?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "163",
"biography": "Laura is a Strategic Project Manager and Software Developer at Unicon. She specializes in strategic initiatives and joined the company in 2022. With over 15 years of experience in software development and academic administration in higher education, Laura has worked in various domains such as marketing technology, teaching and learning, student information systems, and identity management. Prior to joining Unicon, she held the position of Manager of Student Systems at Rice University. In this role, Laura was responsible for overseeing student administrative software and technical processes for multiple offices, including the Registrar, Cashier, Financial Aid, Admissions, and Academic Advising. Since 2008, Laura has been actively involved with the Apereo Foundation, contributing in various capacities as an advocate of Open Source Software and Communities. She has served on the Board of Directors, acted as Chair of the Conference Planning Committee, participated in the uPortal Steering Committee, and contributed to the Incubation Working Group. Her dedication and contributions to the foundation led to her receiving the Apereo Fellows Award in 2012.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In this session, we will explore the impact of open standards and their absence on interoperability and vendor lock-in within higher education. When there is a lack of standards, vendors and open source projects must develop custom integrations for different systems. However, without these standards, these integrations may break whenever a connected system undergoes an upgrade. Standards allow for innovation. A prime example is LTI, which originated from open source and has facilitated seamless integrations with Learning Management Systems (LMS). Additionally, we will discuss some of the standard bodies that govern widely adopted standards in the field.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/100/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "bjagg69"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T17:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "AArch64/ARM64 Servers and Open Source - The Who, What, Why, and How",
"conf_key": 47,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Panel: How AArch64/ARM64 is taking over the Data Center?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Aaron Williams",
"twitter": "aarondonw",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/857c454bcb2403844c47067740e1d8a3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "17",
"biography": "Aaron is a Developer Advocate and Community manager for Ampere Computing and runs the AArch64 Server community (bit.ly/ampComm). He has held similar roles for various ASF and LF projects, including LF Edge. He started his career as a Java developer and worked for many companies including SAP, where he work on SAP Retail, IoT, and connect vehicles. Outside of work, he is married and has two teenage sons and love to build IoT projects.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Andrew Kelley",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@andrewrk",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/7745d1f9519ecdb116c5b70c38863351?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "154",
"biography": "Andrew is the president and lead developer of Zig Software Foundation. He has been contributing to free and open source software since university, working on a diverse set of areas: games, music software, web development, compilers, and databases. When AFK, Andrew enjoys playing competitive arcade games, skateboarding, and \u65e5\u672c\u8a9e\u3092\u52c9\u5f37\u3057\u307e\u3059.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Dave Neary",
"twitter": "nearyd",
"mastodon": "@dneary@mastodon.ie",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d90e3da2571915be8b53ffccb2a52105?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "46",
"biography": "Dave is a long time free software and open source advocate, and contributor to multiple open source projects over the years. He currently leads the Developer Relations team at Ampere Computing, helping aise awareness and adoption of Ampere Arm64 processors in cloud computing. He previously spent a decade working on open source infrastructure projects and developer tooling as part of the Red Hat Open Source Program Office. He lives in the Boston area with his family.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Erik Benner",
"twitter": "erikbenner",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b3f1b1850899349331294d17a45c3324?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "52",
"biography": "Erik is currently VP of Enterprise Transformation, serving as a lead strategist for Federal, State and Local Government and Commercial customers throughout the United States. These customer engagements include enterprise cloud transformations, data center consolidation and modernization efforts, Big Data projects and implementations of Oracle Engineered Systems. He is the President of the Quest Users Group Cloud Computing Special Interest Group (SIG), Co Chair of the OATUG Oracle Enterprise Manager SIG and a habitual volunteer with user groups. Erik frequently presents at conferences, including Oracle OpenWorld and CloudWorld, Oracle FedForum, ASCEND, Blueprint4d, COLLABORATE and other user groups and conferences around the United States. He has worked with Oracle and Sun Systems since the mid 90s, and is experienced with most of the core Oracle technologies, including Oracle Cloud, Oracle Linux and Oracle Databases.\r\n\r\nWhen not flying to the far points of the country from the Atlanta Metro area, he enjoys spending time with his family at their Observatory, where the telescopes outnumber the people.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Lance Albertson",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://fosstodon.org/@ramereth",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fdd76b88c53bc0051e9a25d6b99efae3?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "208",
"biography": "Lance Albertson is the Director for the Oregon State University Open Source Lab (OSUOSL) and has been involved with many open source projects since 2003. The OSUOSL provides hosting for more than 160 projects, including those of worldwide leaders like Debian Linux, the Linux Foundation and AlmaLinux. The most active organization of its kind, the OSUOSL offers world-class hosting services, professional software development and on-the-ground training for promising students interested in open source management and programming.\r\n\r\nSince joining the OSUOSL in 2007, Lance has managed all of the hosting activities that the OSL provides for more than 160 high-profile open source projects. He was promoted to Director in early 2013 after being the Lead Systems Administration and Architect since 2007.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Ampere Computing has grown in the public cloud by 297% over the last year, combined with AWS\u2019s Graviton, ARM64 server instances have grown over 23%. Yet, the first one came out over 10 years ago. Why the explosion in growth today? Environmental concerns? Language support? Tools? Awareness? What still needs to happen to continue this growth?\r\n \r\nJoin us for a panel discussion about the status of ARM64 Servers and their future in the data center.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/156/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "aarondonw"
},
{
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"start": "2023-07-13T17:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
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"license": "CC-BY-SA",
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"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "FOSS at Play Short Talk"
},
{
"room": "E144",
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"start": "2023-07-15T17:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 102,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Resiliency Maps: Open source tools and open data for disaster risk reduction",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Nicole Martinelli",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://hachyderm.io/@nmar , https://mapstodon.space/@resiliencymaps",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/76123e7319058fce15b1015ccb61d84a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "158",
"biography": "Nicole Martinelli dedicates both her work and free time to open source. An OpenStreetMap volunteer since 2015, she founded [Resiliency Maps] (http://www.resliencymaps.org), a community project that aims to put assets and hazards in clear view using open source tools and open collaboration. She has over seven years experience managing open source publications, both corporate and non-profit.\r\n\r\nAs a freelance tech journalist her work has appeared in the Economist.com, Wired, the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal Europe, BBC2, Newsweek, Discovery Channel and the Italian-language editions of Linux Magazine, Wired and Vanity Fair. Having worn so many hats and talked to so many different kinds of people about open source over the years helped her \u201csell\u201d the idea of using these tools to make prototype maps for the San Francisco Fire Department\u2019s Neighborhood Emergency Response Team and convince the United Nations to feature the project in \u201cWords into Action\u201d guidelines.\r\nA San Francisco native, she\u2019s spent about half her life in Italy, which means she\u2019s always on time but still clock-watches when cooking pasta.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Neighborhoods that prepare for emergencies and disaster situations save lives, reduce the severity of injuries and trauma and reduce property damage. Police and emergency personnel often live outside the communities they serve, making citizen response crucial. \r\nOpen data and open source tools are crucial to community safety - but perceptions around \u201cusability\u201d and \u201cuser friendliness\u201d are still obstacles to wider adoption. \r\n\r\nThe Resiliency Maps project, launched in San Francisco, aims to build a city-wide map that:\r\n *Makes use of existing open data and open source tools (including OpenStreetMap, Field Papers, QGIS)\r\n *Stores information about assets and hazards\r\n * Can be printed and stored offline\r\n * Can be added to or edited by people across the city to provide information specific to their neighborhood\r\n * Does not require a stable group of technical administrators\r\n * Creates a replicable process that other cities can use to build their own maps\r\n\r\nI\u2019ll share insights from our collaboration with the SFFD NERT (Neighborhood Emergency Response Team) program as well as from mapathons in the U.S. and Italy.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/82/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@nmar , https://mapstodon.space/@resiliencymaps"
},
{
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"start": "2023-07-15T17:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:00:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Issues in Open Work",
"conf_key": 66,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Academic Open Source and Open Work BOF",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Stephen Jacobs",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d4b13fc137a9667556ded7a25f30d85e?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "241",
"biography": "",
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},
{
"name": "Richard Littauer",
"twitter": "richlitt",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@richlitt",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/70123f2cb4af0d0b414ae9c4827fdf33?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "212",
"biography": "Richard Littauer is the Community Development Manager at Open Source Collective, a community facilitator for the Digital Infrastructure Fund, and an organizer of SustainOSS and the host of the Sustain Podcast. As a full-stack developer and open source community consultant, he has interfaced with hundreds of different projects in dozens of communities. He likes birds.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "There is a growing interest in university-based open source software, and broader questions of Open Work. as reflected by many trends in research, education, and translation including the development of university open source programs offices (OSPOs) and discussions related to other research outputs under the framework of open work. Richard Littauer from SustainOSS will facilitate this session seeking input from those working on or interested in university open source. What topics related to university open source are of most interest? What gaps exist, particularly relating to barriers for advancing university open source? What resources needs to be developed? What other questions are relevant? The feedback from this session will help re-launch the SustainOSS Academia working group.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/181/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
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"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 194,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Break"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 52,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Hands-On Teaching with JupyterLab",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Moshe Zadka",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "https://mastodon.social/@moshez",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f1b9eda8229c1ce71bcef8d6fd5eb804?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "79",
"biography": "Moshe has been involved in Open Source since 1995 and in Python since 1998. They have contributed to core Python, are a founding member and a fellow of the Python Software Foundation, and a founding member of the Twisted project.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Jupyter has a well-deserved reputation for being a research tool. The same properties that make it well suited for research make it a powerful tool for hands-on teaching. Whether it is abstract math, computer science, software development, physics, or many other subjects, Jupyter can be a powerful tool for teaching with integrated hands-on exercises.\r\n\r\nThe talk will show how JupyterLab can be used both for assigning independent work as well as to help follow along with traditional frontal teaching. It will cover concrete examples from math, software development, and physics, to show how to put it into practice.\r\n\r\nThe talk will also cover how to export Jupyter notebooks in a way suitable for students to download them and how to use Jupyter to grade work assigned as notebooks.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/96/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@moshez"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
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"start": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 83,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "From Commit Bits to Bylaws: Governing Your Open Source Project",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@shauna@social.coop",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/2bdf820f298588fef18a33de5779836a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "171",
"biography": "Shauna Gordon-McKeon is a writer, programmer and community organizer who focuses on the intersection of technology and governance. Her business, Galaxy Rise Consulting, works with free/open source projects, non-profits, progressive organizations and other clients to build better products for their communities, and stronger communities around their products.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "When most people hear the word \u201cgovernance\u201d they think of formal documents like bylaws and big questions like \u201cwho calls the shots?\u201d While those elements can be important, governance is actually much more common than that. It\u2019s part of any project\u2019s everyday work - but, like many unacknowledged dependencies, many people only notice when there\u2019s a critical bug.\r\n\r\nThis talk will introduce a basic framework for thinking about governance as well as a few common governance models in open source. Then, we\u2019ll talk about a few of those \u2018critical bugs\u2019 that projects face and how a governance lens can help us fix them. We\u2019ll discuss:\r\n\r\n- maintainer burnout\r\n- growing new community leaders\r\n- roadmapping and other kinds of technical decision-making\r\n- formalizing and transitioning governance structures\r\n\r\nAudience members will walk away with a new appreciation for governance and a suite of tools, ideas, and resources that they can use to help their open source projects flourish.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/40/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@shauna@social.coop"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card / Right to Repair",
"conf_key": 167,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Advocacy 101: Your role in passing pro-FOSS legislation",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Kevin O'Reilly",
"twitter": "kevin_oreilly7",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/NFU_Headshot.png.120x120_q85_crop.png",
"code": "136",
"biography": "Kevin O'Reilly is a leader in the Right to Repair movement. As the Right to Repair campaign director at the Public Interest Research Group, or PIRG, he leads the group's work on medical and agricultural Right to Repair. Kevin's research has demonstrated how modern tractors are engineered to restrict independent repair, how dealership consolidation further erodes farmers' repair choices, and how Right to Repair would save U.S. farmers $4.2 billion per year. He has organized hundreds of farmers and medical repair technicians from all over the country to push for change at all levels of government, and worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level to develop and advance effective legislation. Most recently, he was a leader in the coalition that passed the country's first agricultural Right to Repair law in Colorado. Kevin's work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, NPR, Politico and more.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Kyle Wiens",
"twitter": "kwiens",
"mastodon": "kwiens",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/33b717fdf44e65d11cdfa1b3c1ccde0a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "246",
"biography": "Kyle Wiens is a software engineer and the CEO of iFixit, the repair community known for open source repair manuals and product teardowns. iFixit has empowered hundreds of millions of people to repair their broken stuff. Kyle led the international coalition that legalized Right to Repair, has testified before the US Copyright Office and the International Trade Commission, and he is involved in developing global environmental standards.\r\n\r\nKyle regularly speaks on design for repair, service documentation, and the environmental impact of manufacturing. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harvard Business Review, Wired, Popular Mechanics, and the Wall Street Journal.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "We've discussed and dissected how we can piggyback on the success of the Right to Repair movement to advance FOSS and take back control of the software in our stuff. Dialogue is important\u2014but we'll need to take action to cement our ideas into concrete, lasting change.\r\n\r\nIn this workshop, we'll discuss some of the first steps needed to build an effective campaign and equip attendees with the basic organizing and advocacy skills needed to start building a movement.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/169/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "kevin_oreilly7"
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Container Days",
"conf_key": 131,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Automating Day 2 Operations with Kubebuilder and Operator SDK",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Steve Sklar",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/8fe6ae714c4892a9429c239e3ed4f7f2?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "53",
"biography": "Coming from a background in finance and economics, Steve taught himself how to code on a bond trading desk and hasn't looked back since! He's architected, developed, deployed, and maintained critical software systems for financial firms, and ML/AI startups. Currently, Steve works for QuestDB, an open source time-series database company with a focus on high performance and usability. His hobbies include playing music, learning how to golf, and spending time with his dog, Nacho.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "We all know how powerful Kubernetes is when it comes to orchestrating cloud infrastructure. So how can we use it to automate higher-level tasks, like upgrades, snapshots, or data migrations? Using tools like Kubebuilder and Operator SDK, we can leverage core k8s building blocks to safely automate these \"Day 2 Operations.\"\r\n\r\nIn this talk, I will first provide a brief overview of operator mechanics before taking a deep dive into a sample use-case: managing database snapshots and restores. I will explore key design decisions behind the API objects that are used to model the problem, followed by a discussion of how Kubebuilder and Operator SDK can help us write an operator to manage the complete snapshot lifecycle using familiar tools like yaml and kubectl.\r\n\r\nBy the end of the talk, the audience should feel more comfortable around custom operators, and may even be inspired to automate some their own operations!",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/51/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 23,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Open Source AI + Data: Short talk"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Community: Open Source in Practice",
"conf_key": 96,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "How To Steal From Maintainers",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Richard Schneeman",
"twitter": "schneems",
"mastodon": "@Schneems@ruby.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5797643442ec33fbac3b2d8b607aa43d?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "131",
"biography": "Richard delivers rich, immersive experiences that delight and educate. He has spoken at ~34 conferences across 17 countries, including !!Con, OCSON, and RubyConf. His philosophy, \"You can't learn if you're not paying attention,\" produces talks that are a fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. \r\n\r\nRichard is the author of \"How to Open Source\" (dot dev) and the creator of CodeTriage.com. A free, open source tool that helps coders get started contributing. He is a Ruby core contributor and author of the `syntax_suggest`, which helps developers find and fix Ruby syntax errors. He writes Rust full-time for his job at Heroku, where he maintains the Ruby Cloud Native Buildpack (CNB). Oh, and he's married to Ruby, literally.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Maintainers all over the world are loaded. They're loaded with tech debt, support requests, and a million things to do each and every day. In this talk, we'll learn about actionable strategies for lightening their loads. And the beauty of the situation: they'll never see it coming.\r\n\r\nA lot of open source talks end with \"Contributing to open source is great. Good luck.\" So now what? That's where this talk comes in. If you know a coder willing to contribute but not ready or able, then this talk is for you.\r\n\r\nWe do this 'one last job' before I retire, and we'll be rolling in the green stuff. That's right. We're talking open source commits on GitHub \ud83d\udfe9. Join the crew. This is one heist you won't want to miss.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/38/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "schneems",
"mastodon_id": "@Schneems@ruby.social"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Sustainable Open Source Business",
"conf_key": 90,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Discussion: If we had money, what FOSS would we build?",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Denver Gingerich",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0adc60a96b41045e2c677455df574154?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "192",
"biography": "Denver is a software right-to-repair and standards activist who is currently Director of Compliance at Software Freedom Conservancy, where he enforces software right-to-repair licenses such as the GPL, and is also a director of the worker co-operative that runs JMP.chat, a FOSS phone number (texting/calling) service. Denver writes free software in his spare time: his patches have been accepted into Wine, Linux, and wdiff. Denver received his BMath in Computer Science from the University of Waterloo. He gives presentations about digital civil rights and how to ensure FOSS remains sustainable as a community and financially, having spoken at conferences such as CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Stephen Paul Weber",
"twitter": "singpolyma",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ab4d3a66e470ce10eb7ec812fab3c46?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "12",
"biography": "Stephen is a long-time software freedom enthusiast, semi-retired from industry to focus on promoting freedomware solutions to problems faced by everyday people. Stephen currently helps run the Soprani.ca project and the related JMP.chat freedomware-based telephony provider.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "We often hear that the main thing FOSS needs to be successful is more money. But what concrete steps would we take if we had money? Who should we give it to and what should they spend it on?\r\n\r\nBring your ideas to this Q&A hosted by two FOSS business leaders, who have seen what money can (and can't) do for FOSS. We will briefly describe our experiences, and then open it up for discussion to dive into actionable plans for using money to improve software freedom, through non-profit, worker co-operative, and/or for-profit endeavors.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/144/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 111,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS for Education",
"conf_key": 31,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Improving Diversity in Computing by Teaching Humanitarian Free and Open Source",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Heid Ellis",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c0e63406b256d1d0ba2aadb8a0c9c40a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "159",
"biography": "Heidi Ellis is Professor of Computer Science and Information Technology at Western New England University. Dr. Ellis\u2019 research interests include software engineering education and learning in open source software projects. Dr. Ellis is one of the founding members of the Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software project which focuses on involving students in open source projects that improve the human condition. She has been involving students in HFOSS projects since 2006 and she has been PI on five NSF projects related to student learning in HFOSS. Heidi has been active in computing education for over 20 years and has multiple publications related to involving students in HFOSS projects.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Grant Braught",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ceae02dde30ec78c42195d644031056?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "116",
"biography": "Grant Braught is a Professor of Computer Science at Dickinson College where he has taught courses across the undergraduate computer science curriculum for 25 years. He led a curricular revision of Dickinson\u2019s computer science program to incorporate a focus on FOSS and Humanitarian FOSS (HFOSS) with the goals of deepening student engagement, broadening participation in computing, raising awareness of the power of computing for social good and enhancing student\u2019s technical career-ready skills. He has guided student engagement with HFOSS communities including OpenMRS, SugarLabs, Sahana Eden, FreeCodeCamp, Oden, and Oppia. He is a lead maintainer of the FarmData2 project, which engages primarily student developers to build an application supporting small organic vegetable farmers. In 2017 he was recognized by Red Hat as among the \u201cInstructors Who Champion Open Source Education in the U.S.\u201d In 2020 he led a project centered around integrating FOSS in the undergraduate curriculum that was a finalist in the Gnome Community Engagement Challenge. He also works closely with The Non-Profit FOSS Institute, Teaching Open Source and Foss2Serve to promote HFOSS in computing education. He is an advocate of liberal arts education and has been active in the forthcoming ACM/IEEE/AAAI CS2023 curricular recommendations for undergraduate computer science programs.",
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},
{
"name": "Heid Ellis",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c0e63406b256d1d0ba2aadb8a0c9c40a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "159",
"biography": "Heidi Ellis is Professor of Computer Science and Information Technology at Western New England University. Dr. Ellis\u2019 research interests include software engineering education and learning in open source software projects. Dr. Ellis is one of the founding members of the Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software project which focuses on involving students in open source projects that improve the human condition. She has been involving students in HFOSS projects since 2006 and she has been PI on five NSF projects related to student learning in HFOSS. Heidi has been active in computing education for over 20 years and has multiple publications related to involving students in HFOSS projects.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Meeting the strong demand for computing professionals will require attracting and retaining more students in computing degree programs. Women and people of color are significantly underrepresented among computing students, and these groups provide an opportunity to both create a more equitable discipline and meet the need for more computing graduates. In order to attract more of these students, computing educators must improve the quality, appeal and student success rate in computing degree programs.\r\n\r\nThis presentation discusses an education effort that helps to address this challenge by expanding the community of faculty incorporating Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software (HFOSS) into computing education. HFOSS education provides a collaborative environment that supports active learning with real-world tasks. Students gain both technical and professional skills while also acquiring a first-hand understanding of the potential for computing to have both social relevance and positive societal impact. The ability of computing to \u201cdo good\u201d has been shown to attract women and other underrepresented groups into computing disciplines.\r\n\r\nThe project is intended to have broader impact in the following areas: a) improving student retention and expanding appeal to women and underrepresented groups; b) providing real-world learning of professional and technical skills in a complex, authentic environment that prepares students for professional practice; c) extending understanding of the impact of HFOSS pedagogy and approaches on student and instructor role and identities; and d) increasing student understanding of the potential of computing to improve the human condition and in student awareness of professional responsibility.\r\n\r\nInitial work has included several surveys of undergraduate students (209 and 360 participants) that indicate women and underrepresented groups are more strongly motivated by the humanitarian nature of HFOSS projects. The presentation will include results of these surveys and discussion of HFOSS education as an approach to making computing more diverse while also advancing student knowledge of open source.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/112/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
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"start": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Open Source AI + Data",
"conf_key": 139,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Dashboards are dead, long live dashboards!",
"authors": [
{
"name": "James Kunstle",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/47849742893bef2f66914ff86c877a27?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "106",
"biography": "James is a software engineer in the OSPO Community Data team at Red Hat. He's passionate about sustainability in open source and about data science technologies. Outside of work, James loves cycling and running, and is a proud graduate of the Seattle Barista Academy.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The lifecycle of data projects is involved. Responsibility for data, properly storing and retrieving data, scalably processing data\u2026 it can be a bit much. This talk will focus on a later-stage of the data lifecycle: serving data visualizations and analysis with sustainability in mind.\r\nAbout a year ago, our team had to pick which tool we wanted to use to serve data visualizations and metrics to stakeholders. We had a laundry-list of requirements, some being deal-breakers while others were nice-to-haves. Our final verdict was a project that fit specific needs for us as a data science team, but in the process of choosing, we piloted a diverse variety of other alternative projects.\r\nThe framework for this talk is simple: introduce a collection of stand-out data visualization projects and discuss the pros and cons of each as we see them for a variety of use cases. \r\nAll considered projects are open source. They will be introduced in ascending order of interface complexity- and perhaps descending order of customizability. For example, the first project provides the user with a UI for doing data analysis- a later project will require a Python back-end. \r\nThe intended take-away of this talk is to provide attendees with a survey of projects that could serve them, and to shortcut the attendees own path toward finding a solution that works best for their team, minimizing platform-churn and saving time.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/66/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E142",
"rooms": [
"E142"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "XMPP",
"conf_key": 42,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "XMPP Connectivity & Security",
"authors": [
{
"name": "moparisthebest",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "moparisthebest@moparisthe.best",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6b2f63b95aeb4eec0ba83cc3200fc9ad?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "19",
"biography": "Dad, Programmer, Tinkerer, moparisthebest likes Open Source Software, Linux, Rust, Java, XMPP, Dodge trucks and cars",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "A brief introduction into how I got into XMPP, a dive into some security vulnerabilities I\u2019ve found over the years, and an in depth look at my focus in XMPP, connectivity! After all, none of the UX or whiz bang shiny things matter at all if you can\u2019t get connected or stay connected to the network. We\u2019ll cover some of my connectivity related XEPs, 0368 (Direct TLS), 0467 (QUIC), 0468 (WebSocket S2s). Then we\u2019ll head deep into the internals of xmpp-proxy, a forward+reverse proxy and general connectivity library for XMPP, written in Rust, including a few of the projects that use it so far, like Converse-Tauri. If we have time at the end after any questions we might get into my next semi-secret project based on xmpp-proxy to further enable people to connect via XMPP.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/18/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "moparisthebest@moparisthe.best"
},
{
"room": "E144",
"rooms": [
"E144"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS in Daily Life",
"conf_key": 103,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Steadfast Self-Hosting: Rapid-Rise Personal Cloud",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Adam Monsen",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/efd087b3c1ac43def6e3e926ad633c25?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "107",
"biography": "Adam is a kind and savvy FOSS enthusiast. He has been in tech for over 20 years: building, producing, coding, debugging, architecting, leading, managing, debugging some more, lecturing, writing, administering and securing systems and processes, ensuring privacy and compliance; in markets of all maturities, sizes, and scales; startups to big enterprise. He's most proud of his family, growing Mifos (mifos.org), founding SeaGL (seagl.org), selling C-SATS (csats.com), and writing a FOSS book about self-hosting FOSS.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Your data are essential to your life, your agency, and your future. Come learn how to save, serve, and safely share your data at home with a smorgasbord of FOSS. I'll cover rapid setup and basic use of tools such as Traefik, Nextcloud, Wallabag, Jellyfin, and more. With these powerful and private services at your disposal you can collaboratively edit documents in realtime online, stream music and video, and future-proof your digital assets.\r\n\r\nThis talk pairs well with a soon-to-be released book of the same topic and title. Both the book and talk are about self-hosting FOSS, were created with FOSS, and *are* FOSS themselves (open source, free to copy, free to modify and redistribute).",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/80/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 59,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Students Favor Open Source, but Don\u2019t Really Understand It",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Gregory W. Hislop",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c655aa5ab7e6c228581c64c51b72f7bc?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "82",
"biography": "Gregory Hislop is a Professor in the College of Computing and Informatics at Drexel University where he primarily teaches software engineering. His current research focuses on the educational value of student participation in humanitarian open source software projects (HFOSS). He is a strong advocate for the educational and societal benefits of the open source movement. He serves on the coordinating committee for TeachingOpenSource.org, a member project of the Software Freedom Conservancy. His work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, Red Hat, Google, and the Mellon and Sloan Foundations. Prior to Drexel, Gregory spent almost 20 years working in the software and IT industry.",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Heid Ellis",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c0e63406b256d1d0ba2aadb8a0c9c40a?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "159",
"biography": "Heidi Ellis is Professor of Computer Science and Information Technology at Western New England University. Dr. Ellis\u2019 research interests include software engineering education and learning in open source software projects. Dr. Ellis is one of the founding members of the Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software project which focuses on involving students in open source projects that improve the human condition. She has been involving students in HFOSS projects since 2006 and she has been PI on five NSF projects related to student learning in HFOSS. Heidi has been active in computing education for over 20 years and has multiple publications related to involving students in HFOSS projects.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In an ideal world, students would graduate from college with a comprehensive understanding of open source and an ability to contribute to an open source community in some significant way. In reality, while all students know about open source and most students use open source products, very few students have much understanding of open source. Students do not know how large open source is, they have no idea that open source can be a career, and little awareness of the tools and processes that make open source communities successful. This presentation will present results of surveys that exemplify the very shallow student understanding of open source. \r\n\r\nImproving open source education would benefit both students and open source communities. Student benefits from open source participation include exposure to an evolving, complex software system, development of professional skills, improved technical skills, better understanding of team-based development in a distributed environment and more.\r\n\r\nOpen source communities can also benefit from student participation. Students can relieve more experienced developers from routine tasks such as bug verification and documentation, and they have added incentive to participate due to class requirements. In addition, students can be supported by academic infrastructure so that they are not relying solely on the OSS community for learning. Finally, open source education will help ensure a continuing flow of professional developers into open source projects.\r\n\r\nIn order to prepare students for open source, students must learn about open source culture, tools, and processes.. Unfortunately, many schools are not teaching even basic open source tools such as version control, issue trackers, and CI/CD pipelines, and only a small number of schools are covering open source processes or culture. How can educators better prepare students for open source by incorporating these necessary skills and information into an undergraduate program? This talk will discuss the gap between undergraduate computing education and open source community expectations, the reasons for this gap, and approaches for bridging the gap.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/97/",
"cancelled": false
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-16T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 123,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Room Break"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 115,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS: Short talk"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:00:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS at Play: Games, creative development, and open technology",
"conf_key": 188,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Create your own crossword puzzles",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Rosanna Yuen",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "@zana@sfba.social",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ed2308540ee6221d0630273eaa6bb35c?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "182",
"biography": "Rosanna Yuen is the Director of Operations of the GNOME Foundation. She has been a long-time GNOME user dating back to the 0.12 days and wrote many of the card games in AisleRiot thereby earning her the distinction of being the first female contributor to GNOME. \r\nThese days, she spends her days keeping the GNOME Foundation running. In her spare time, she knits and does crossword puzzles. Now, with the Crossword editor, she has started creating puzzles as well for even more word fun.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Crossword puzzles are a fun pastime enjoyed around the world. Last year at GUADEC, the GNOME Crosswords app was introduced with much fanfare. Part of this app is a crossword editor that gives you the tools to create your own crosswords. Over the past year, we\u2019ve been trying to get a free-software crossword community off the ground.\r\n\r\nThis talk will go through some of the various types of crosswords, their history, and their differences. It will cover the steps of how and how to create puzzles using Crosswords. We will cover hints on how to build grids and hopefully inspire people to try their hand at creating more crosswords we can all enjoy.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/93/",
"cancelled": false,
"mastodon_id": "@zana@sfba.social"
},
{
"room": "E148",
"rooms": [
"E148"
],
"start": "2023-07-14T17:30:00",
"end": "2023-07-14T18:30:00",
"duration": 60,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Wild card",
"conf_key": 157,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Community lead user research and usability in Science and Research OSS: What we learned",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Eriol Fox",
"twitter": "erioldoesdesig",
"mastodon": "https://hachyderm.io/@erioldoesdesign",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f2500f0f4dd3a2148c7d7d17817fabd5?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "93",
"biography": "Eriol has been working as a designer for 10+ years working in for-profits and then NGO's and open-source software organisations, working on complex problems like sustainable food systems, peace-building and crisis response technology. Eriol now works at Superbloom design, research, open-source and technology projects. \r\n\r\nEriol is a part-time funded PhD researcher at Newcastle University's Open Lab looking at how designers participate in humanitarian and human rights focussed open-source software projects.\r\n\r\nThey are also part of the core teams at Open Source Design (http://opensourcedesign.net/) and Human Rights Centred Design working group (https://hrcd.pubpub.org/) and Sustain UX & Design working group (https://sustainoss.org/working-groups/design-and-ux/) and help hosts podcast about open source and design (https://sosdesign.sustainoss.org/)\r\n\r\nEriol is a non-binary, queer person who uses they/them pronouns.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "The Usable Software Ecosystem Research (USER) project was initiated by Superbloom Design and funded by the Sloan Foundation. It explores how Scientific & Research open- source software teams understand, consider, and undertake usability and design opportunities in their projects.\r\n\r\nThrough a variety of design research methods such as literature reviews, semi- structured interviews, surveys, and ecosystem mapping, the research aims to obtain a better understanding of:\r\n\r\n1. How norms in academic, science, and/or open- source working environments affect the choices teams make around their users and different kinds of design interventions.\r\n\r\n2. How team dynamics and trust affects those choices.\r\n\r\n3. What teams would need to be interested in or able to prioritize usability and design in their work.\r\n\r\nIn this short talk, we'll give an overview of our findings but specifically zoom in on the ways in which Scientific and Research OSS (S&R OSS) contributors/teams leverage community spaces, interactions and documents to make user-informed choices about how to make their documentation and tools better. There will then be a critical review of how design research trained individuals might iterate and improve on these practices to make usability and design even better in S&R OSS.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/113/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "erioldoesdesig",
"mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@erioldoesdesign"
},
{
"room": "E143",
"rooms": [
"E143"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T18:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "FOSS For Education",
"conf_key": 168,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "Advanced Video for your Campus: The Opencast Video Ecosystem",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Carlos Turr\u00f3-Ribalta",
"twitter": "TurroCarlos",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3bc5a77a862378f8e852508f28433d94?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "184",
"biography": "Carlos Turro is M.D. and Ph.D. from the Universitat Politecnica de Valencia (UPV). He is working there since 1992 and, since 2000, has been Head of its Media Services unit. From there, he has been working in different responsible Open Source projects related to Education, and also coordinating the MOOC project of UPV. \r\nCurrent interests involve video for education, within the Apereo Opencast project, where UPV is developing the OS video player for lectures \u201cPaella Player\u201d, used by more than 100 Higher educational institutions in the world, and Content production, where UPV\u2019s MOOC project has been running since 2013 and has developed more than 150 different courses, 600 editions and 3 million student enrollments, both on the edX and UPV[x] platforms.\r\nMore information at https://www.linkedin.com/in/carlos-turro-ribalta/",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "Opencast is an open-source video recording and distribution system specifically designed for academic institutions and organizations that want to capture, process, and distribute educational video content. It provides tools and services for recording conferences, presentations, classes, and other events in video format and then processing and distributing the resulting content in various formats.\r\nOpencast offers features such as automatic video and audio capture, metadata management, content indexing, basic video editing, and integration with learning management systems (LMS) and media repositories. It allows educational institutions to create online video content libraries and facilitate access through digital platforms.\r\nIt has been deployed in more than one hundred Higher education institutions and has a vibrant ecosystem of tools. Recently the community has developed a new video portal (Tobira) an updated player focusing in accessibility (Paella Player), a new personal recorder, and an updated video editor. Being an open-source platform, Opencast also enables collaboration and customization according to the needs of each institution. It also has an active community of developers and users who contribute to the ongoing development and improvement of the system.\r\nIn my talk I will present the new & updated capabilities of the system, and I will argue about how important is to have an Open Source video platform specially targeted for lectures.",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/98/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "TurroCarlos"
},
{
"room": "",
"rooms": [],
"start": "2023-07-16T18:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-16T18:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Opening Remarks",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 209,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Closing Remarks"
},
{
"room": "E147",
"rooms": [
"E147"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T18:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "talk",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": "Diversity Equity and Inclusion and FOSS",
"conf_key": 116,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": true,
"contact": [],
"name": "From Conversations to Action: Creating a healthy, diverse open source community.",
"authors": [
{
"name": "Anita Sarma",
"twitter": "asarma",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bad273932830237d5d21642e1cb240bb?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "65",
"biography": "Dr. Anita Sarma is a professor and Associate Head of Research in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. She received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of California, Irvine and was a postdoctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon University. Her research focuses on human factors in software development and how to design inclusive technology to help software developers. Her passion is in fostering DEI in Open Source. Her work crosscuts areas of SE, AI for SE, HCI, open source, and CSCW. She has co-authored more than 100 conference and journal articles, and has received numerous awards. She received the OSU Breaking Barriers Research award (2021) for her work in removing gender biases from software. She is a co-director of the GenderMag project. She is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award (2013) and Google Inclusion Research Award (2022).",
"username": ""
},
{
"name": "Zixuan Steve Feng",
"twitter": "",
"mastodon": "",
"contact": "redacted",
"picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/bd9486c92ee22645203ee8e57cd39227?s=120&d=mp",
"code": "95",
"biography": "My name is Zixuan (Steve) Feng. I am pursing Ph.D., advised by Anita Sarma in the Department of Electrical Engineering Computer Science and Statistics at Oregon State University (OSU). I work at the intersection of Software Engineering (SE), Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), and Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). I am particularly interested in developing an empirical understanding of the collaboration in OSS and the challenges that this socio-technical ecosystem faces in attracting and retaining contributors and designing interventions to improve the state of Diversity and Inclusion in OSS and increase contributor recruitment and retention.",
"username": ""
}
],
"abstract": "In the world of open source software (OSS) development, attracting and retaining motivated developers is key to a project's sustainability and long-term survival. \r\nMany of us recognize the lack of diversity in OSS projects and the barriers that individuals from underrepresented groups face, but what can we do to retain diverse contributors? In this talk, I will present two evidence-based dashboards to help attract and retain diverse contributors. The first dashboard provides a set of real-time insights to track community turnover and diversity, and focuses on gender and affiliation diversity. The second dashboard determines contributors\u2019 survivability likelihood in the project. These dashboards can empower project leaders to assess the diverse state of their projects and take relevant action to promote diversity in their projects",
"conf_url": "http://2023.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/52/",
"cancelled": false,
"twitter_id": "asarma"
},
{
"room": "E145",
"rooms": [
"E145"
],
"start": "2023-07-13T18:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-13T18:30:00",
"duration": 30,
"kind": "Break",
"section": "fossy-2023",
"section_name": "FOSSY 2023",
"track": null,
"conf_key": 189,
"license": "CC-BY-SA",
"tags": "",
"released": false,
"contact": [],
"name": "Slot"
},
{
"room": "E146",
"rooms": [
"E146"
],
"start": "2023-07-15T18:00:00",
"end": "2023-07-15T18:30:00",
"duration": 30,
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}