From ccc5466941e83802dd10ab369eb93ac7b14443f9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ben Sturmfels Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2025 17:19:32 +1100 Subject: [PATCH] Update 2024 archive after the event --- README.md | 12 + about/index.html | 2 +- .../index.html?next=%2Fdashboard%2F.html | 341 -- ...index.html?next=%2Ftickets%2Fregister.html | 341 -- attend/code-of-conduct.html | 4 +- attend/code-of-conduct/index.html | 4 +- attend/health-and-safety/index.html | 2 +- attend/terms-and-conditions/index.html | 2 +- attend/tickets/index.html | 4 +- attend/volunteer/index.html | 6 +- credits/index.html | 2 +- events/index.html | 4 +- index.html | 17 +- pages/tracks/index.html | 2 +- schedule/conference.ics | 2572 +++++++------- schedule/conference.json | 3036 +++++++++-------- schedule/index.html | 213 +- schedule/presentation/187/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/188/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/189/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/190/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/191/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/192/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/193/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/194/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/195/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/196/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/197/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/198/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/199/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/200/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/202/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/203/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/204/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/205/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/206/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/212/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/213/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/214/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/216/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/217/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/218/index.html | 12 +- schedule/presentation/219/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/220/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/222/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/223/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/224/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/226/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/228/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/229/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/231/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/232/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/233/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/236/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/237/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/238/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/239/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/240/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/242/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/243/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/244/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/245/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/246/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/247/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/248/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/250/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/253/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/254/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/255/index.html | 18 +- schedule/presentation/256/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/257/index.html | 46 +- schedule/presentation/259/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/260/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/261/index.html | 12 +- schedule/presentation/262/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/263/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/264/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/265/index.html | 24 +- schedule/presentation/266/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/268/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/269/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/271/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/272/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/273/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/274/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/275/index.html | 16 +- schedule/presentation/276/index.html | 14 +- schedule/presentation/277/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/278/index.html | 30 +- schedule/presentation/279/index.html | 2 +- schedule/presentation/280/index.html | 4 +- schedule/presentation/281/index.html | 280 ++ speaker/profile/264/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/265/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/266/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/268/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/271/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/273/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/274/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/276/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/279/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/281/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/282/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/284/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/286/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/287/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/290/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/292/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/293/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/295/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/297/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/298/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/299/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/300/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/303/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/304/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/305/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/308/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/310/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/313/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/314/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/316/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/317/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/318/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/320/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/321/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/322/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/323/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/326/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/327/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/328/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/331/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/332/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/333/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/335/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/336/index.html | 2 +- .../reset => speaker/profile/337}/index.html | 95 +- speaker/profile/338/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/340/index.html | 24 +- speaker/profile/343/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/344/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/345/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/346/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/350/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/352/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/353/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/356/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/357/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/358/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/359/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/360/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/361/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/362/index.html | 13 +- speaker/profile/363/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/366/index.html | 12 +- speaker/profile/367/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/368/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/370/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/371/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/372/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/373/index.html | 17 +- speaker/profile/375/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/376/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/377/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/379/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/380/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/381/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/383/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/391/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/392/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/394/index.html | 4 +- speaker/profile/396/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/397/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/398/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/399/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/400/index.html | 2 +- speaker/profile/402/index.html | 2 +- .../profile/404/index.html | 186 +- .../profile/406/index.html | 186 +- speaker/profile/9/index.html | 13 +- sponsorship/index.html | 2 +- travel/index.html | 4 +- 182 files changed, 4225 insertions(+), 4119 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 account/signup/index.html?next=%2Fdashboard%2F.html delete mode 100644 account/signup/index.html?next=%2Ftickets%2Fregister.html create mode 100644 schedule/presentation/281/index.html rename {account/password/reset => speaker/profile/337}/index.html (79%) rename dashboard.html => speaker/profile/404/index.html (50%) rename tickets/register.html => speaker/profile/406/index.html (50%) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index cdc0672..44be663 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -3,5 +3,17 @@ Generated with: ``` +cd .. wget --mirror --convert-links --adjust-extension --page-requisites --no-parent https://2024.fossy.us/ +cd 2024.fossy.us +``` + +You may then want to remove the dashboard links, since the login won't work, as well as the link to buy tickets. + +``` +find -name '*.html' -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i 's|.*Dashboard||g' +find -name '*.html' -print0 | xargs -0 sed -i 's|.*Get your ticket!.*||' attend/tickets/index.html +rm dashboard.html +rm -rf tickets/ +rm -rf account/ `` diff --git a/about/index.html b/about/index.html index 20977e5..3cf8da9 100644 --- a/about/index.html +++ b/about/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Fdashboard%2F.html b/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Fdashboard%2F.html deleted file mode 100644 index 8d67d8d..0000000 --- a/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Fdashboard%2F.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,341 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOSSY 2024 | Sign up - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - -
- - - -
-
- -
- - - -
-
- - -
-
- -
-
-
- - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - - - - -
- -
-
- -
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - diff --git a/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Ftickets%2Fregister.html b/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Ftickets%2Fregister.html deleted file mode 100644 index 2780551..0000000 --- a/account/signup/index.html?next=%2Ftickets%2Fregister.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,341 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FOSSY 2024 | Sign up - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - -
- - - -
-
- -
- - - -
-
- - -
-
- -
-
-
- - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - -
- - - - - -
- - - - - -
- -
- - - - - - - -
- -
-
- -
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - diff --git a/attend/code-of-conduct.html b/attend/code-of-conduct.html index 6aef939..fa5621c 100644 --- a/attend/code-of-conduct.html +++ b/attend/code-of-conduct.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -180,6 +180,8 @@ gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, physical origin, race, or religion or lack thereof. This code applies to everyone -- including attendees, speakers, volunteers and staff. We do not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form.

+

You can find our Code of Conduct team wearing blue hats, or you can disclose any concerns by email to conference@sfconservancy.org

+

Details

Please do not include sexualized imagery, off-color jokes or other materials that attendees may deem offensive diff --git a/attend/code-of-conduct/index.html b/attend/code-of-conduct/index.html index 58df923..eaa1c81 100644 --- a/attend/code-of-conduct/index.html +++ b/attend/code-of-conduct/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -180,6 +180,8 @@ gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, physical origin, race, or religion or lack thereof. This code applies to everyone -- including attendees, speakers, volunteers and staff. We do not tolerate harassment of conference participants in any form.

+

You can find our Code of Conduct team wearing blue hats, or you can disclose any concerns by email to conference@sfconservancy.org

+

Details

Please do not include sexualized imagery, off-color jokes or other materials that attendees may deem offensive diff --git a/attend/health-and-safety/index.html b/attend/health-and-safety/index.html index 7885877..a94c344 100644 --- a/attend/health-and-safety/index.html +++ b/attend/health-and-safety/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/attend/terms-and-conditions/index.html b/attend/terms-and-conditions/index.html index d116a5c..3fb2a01 100644 --- a/attend/terms-and-conditions/index.html +++ b/attend/terms-and-conditions/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/attend/tickets/index.html b/attend/tickets/index.html index 8328236..542b35a 100644 --- a/attend/tickets/index.html +++ b/attend/tickets/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ other badge indicator

If you have any financial hardship from this ticket price, please reach out to us at conference@sfconservancy.org. Please reach out, even if you are not sure if your situation qualifies as we'd like to help as many people as possible.

-

+ diff --git a/attend/volunteer/index.html b/attend/volunteer/index.html index ad13229..1865fa7 100644 --- a/attend/volunteer/index.html +++ b/attend/volunteer/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -171,8 +171,8 @@
-

Running FOSSY will take a lot of help from people like you! Volunteers receive free admission and lunch for all 4 days of the conference.

-

If you are interested in volunteering in some capacity, please make an account on this site and fill out our form here.

+

Running FOSSY will take a lot of help from people like you! Volunteers receive free admission for all 4 days of the conference.

+

Here are some areas we need volunteers:

    diff --git a/credits/index.html b/credits/index.html index 2788e58..71f5b94 100644 --- a/credits/index.html +++ b/credits/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/events/index.html b/events/index.html index 07e0a10..3965bea 100644 --- a/events/index.html +++ b/events/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -178,7 +178,7 @@

    Thursday 7-10pm at Punch Bowl Social

    340 SW Morrison St Suite 4305, Portland, OR 97204
    -Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

    +Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! Make sure to bring your badge as proof of attendance.

    We are providing light dinner, and the bar will be open to purchase your choice of beverages. There will be all kind of games like bowling, ping pong, giant Scrabble, darts, shuffle board and karaoke!

diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 16dac71..e0bdd3a 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -180,23 +180,27 @@
Software Freedom Conservancy
-
-

FOSS is back in Portland, Oregon at Portland State University!!

+

FOSS is back in Portland, Oregon at the Smith Memorial Student Union at Portland State University!!


-

Get your Ticket here

+

Thank you, everyone who supported FOSSY 2024!


-

Software Freedom Conservancy is so proud to announce that we are again hosting a +

We will be posting videos of the talks in the next coming weeks. Stay tuned here for that and watch for our 2025 announcement!

+ +
+ +

Software Freedom Conservancy is so proud to announce that we are again hosting a community oriented conference this coming summer. FOSSY (Free and Open Source Software Yearly) is focused on the creation and impact of free and open source software, uplifting contributors of all experience.

@@ -230,7 +234,8 @@ proprietary software that is treated as default.

Aerial photograph of the Portland State University -
Portland State University's Smith Memorial Student Union (CC-BY 3.0)
+
Portland State University's Smith Memorial Student Union +

1825 SW Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 (CC-BY 3.0)

diff --git a/pages/tracks/index.html b/pages/tracks/index.html index d9ad18e..9f83221 100644 --- a/pages/tracks/index.html +++ b/pages/tracks/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/conference.ics b/schedule/conference.ics index 6a28ef0..4f9aa42 100644 --- a/schedule/conference.ics +++ b/schedule/conference.ics @@ -7,9 +7,19 @@ X-WR-CALDESC:FOSSY 2024 X-WR-TIMEZONE:US/Pacific BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T091500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T094500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214520Z +UID:233@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Breakfast and coffee break +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T091500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T094500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214520Z UID:234@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Breakfast and coffee break @@ -19,27 +29,17 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T091500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T094500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214520Z UID:232@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Breakfast and coffee break URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T091500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T094500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:233@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Breakfast and coffee break -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSS outside of corporations DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T094500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T103000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214520Z UID:231@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Karen Sandler\nAs free software has taken over the wo @@ -55,25 +55,10 @@ DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Karen Sandler\nAs free software has taken over the wo URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/278/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Open Source and AI -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T094500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T103000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:230@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bradley M. Kuhn\nBradley Kuhn will lead our panelists - in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different efforts - out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the technology\ - nactually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions. We\ - nmay even have a panelist or two willing to question whether the\ntechnolo - gy even should be held to such a definition. -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/275/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:20+ years of the OSU Open Source Lab DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T094500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T103000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214520Z UID:229@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Lance Albertson\nThe OSU Open Source Lab is a free ve @@ -92,20 +77,254 @@ DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Lance Albertson\nThe OSU Open Source Lab is a free ve URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/274/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Open Source and AI +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T094500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T103000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:230@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Denver Gingerich\nDenver Gingerich will lead our pane + lists in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different ef + forts out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the techno + logy\nactually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions + . +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/275/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Registration DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T101500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T131500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:239@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Registration Open URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:369@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:BoF for actors/creative types - writing and producing sketches +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:291@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Josh Berkus\nWhy are the non-discriminatory clauses ( + 5 and 6) part of the Open Source\nDefinition? Why does anyone care? Why sh + ouldn't project owners be able\nto limit where the software can be used or + prevent bad people from using\nthe software?\n\nThese two clauses are the + most poorly understood parts of the Open\nSource Definition\, and the one + s that would-be license writers most\nfrequently want to compromise. They + are not a moral requirement\;\ninstead\, they are compulsive in order to s + ustain how FOSS is packaged\,\ndistributed\, and used. An Open Source Init + iative board member will\nexplain\, in developer-friendly terms\, why you + should care about OSD5 and\nOSD6\, and an attorney will explain why they a + re legally required.\n\nAttendees will learn why to retain these freedoms + in their own\nlicense-writing\, and why the are important when consuming o + ther people's\nprojects. +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/263/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Balancing Innovation and Safety: Navigating the Dilemma of Open-So + urcing AI Models +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:360@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Abhishek Gupta\nThe recent trend of leading AI labs e + ither open-sourcing their models or restricting access has ignited a criti + cal debate: How should we share increasingly capable AI models? Open-sourc + ing\, the practice of making model architecture and weights freely accessi + ble\, has been a cornerstone of software and AI development\, fostering ex + ternal oversight\, accelerating progress\, and decentralizing control. Yet + \, as AI models become more powerful\, the risks of misuse and unintended + consequences escalate.\n\nThis talk scrutinizes the delicate balance betwe + en the benefits and risks of open-sourcing highly capable foundation model + s. While open-sourcing has historically been a boon\, we contend that for + certain future models\, the potential dangers may outweigh the advantages. + We propose that such models should not be open-sourced\, at least initial + ly\, to mitigate these risks.\n\nExploring alternative strategies\, we del + ve into non-open-source model sharing options that could safeguard the ben + efits of open-source while minimizing potential harms. Our recommendations + aim to guide developers\, standard-setting bodies\, and governments in es + tablishing safe and responsible model sharing practices\, ensuring that th + e progress of AI remains both open and secure. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/240/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:News Flash! You Are Enough. Let's Talk About Amplifying Your Value + & Authenticiy +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:345@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Shannon Rasimas\nHaving talked with 100's of people a + bout their careers\, whether it be a transition into something new or grow + th from within\, the default seems to be to focus on what you don't know o + r who you need to morph into to get to where you want to go. You don't nee + d to learn 5 new languages\, refactor all your code\, earn 3 new skills\, + and build 2 websites and an API to show you are good enough. Guess what\, + you already are enough. You also don't need to transform yourself into so + mebody you think you should be in order to fit in or find acceptance. You + are amazing just as you are. This is all hard work looking a little more d + eeply at ourselves\, but let's find strategies to elevate the way we think + and talk about ourselves\, connect to our why\, and be comfortable sharin + g the true essence of who we are. In a time where loneliness is at an all + time high\, how can we also build meaningful community and create spaces\, + interview practices\, and culture for everyone to find safety in bringing + their authentic selves\, connect to purpose\, and be valued. And finally\ + , why are we doing any of this if we can't find the joy in it. This talk i + s meant to inspire you to tap into the leadership qualities and value you + already have instead of focusing on the deficits\, and for all of us\, esp + ecially those with the power to do so\, to start building better spaces fo + r for all of us to exist in and start creating better community all around + . We all can use a little more belonging these days. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/244/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FreeBSD on ARM64 +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:285@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Michael Dexter\nFreeBSD is a compelling operating sys + tem for the ARM64 platform with its recent addition of bhyve ("beehive") h + ypervisor support and its traditional tightly-integrated features includin + g OpenZFS\, Jail\, DTrace\, Packet Filter\, and pkg.\n\nThis talk will pro + vide an authoritative introduction to FreeBSD features and uses with a foc + us on the ARM64 platform. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/194/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Co-Designing Sustainable Prosocial Digital Infrastructure +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:364@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: LX Cast\nTo build social tech infrastructure that sup + ports our collective well-being\, we need to include decentralized\, open + source\, and slow-growth options. However\, these approaches have historic + ally fallen outside traditional tech funding mechanisms. \n\nTech that sup + ports collective well-being should meet real needs\, solve real problems\, + be usable\, and be purpose-built\, not seeing people as an exploitable re + source or means to extract. So how can projects like these be sustainable\ + , secure\, and built in collaboration with communities? We think that peop + le putting money into projects should be part of the project design team\, + so that their expertise\, experience\, and motivations can be both repres + ented and explicitly weighed in the context of the problem the technology + hopes to solve. \n\nIn other words\, we need to co-design our financial mo + dels to find strategies that support the holistic goals of the makers\, co + mmunity\, and capital suppliers. In this workshop\, we will explore some o + f the mechanisms that might lead to co-design frameworks\, and surface str + ategies from participants. We will learn from one another what has worked + and what hasn’t\, and re-imagine how people putting money into FOSS migh + t be collaborators with us and the communities we’re designing and build + ing with. +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/223/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Steadfast Self-Hosting Workshop +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:338@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Adam Monsen\nJoin in a hands-on workshop all about se + lf-hosting! Bring your experiences and curiosity\, leave with inspiration + and ideas to try out. Together we'll help each other get unblocked whereve + r we're at\, from thinking about self-hosting to improving smooth-running + servers and services. This workshop will focus on fundamental concepts\, t + ools\, and techniques from the FOSS book Steadfast Self-Hosting\, although + having and having read the book is not required. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/219/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Open source training for reproducibility\, collaboration\, and com + munity in academic research +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:307@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Alex Marden\nResearch-focused data and software train + ing outside of the standard academic curriculum can play a crucial role in + university environments. Reproducibility and collaboration are fundamenta + l aspects of research\, creating an opportunity to incorporate open source + software development strategies and techniques into training workshops.\n + \nThe University of Texas at Austin Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO) h + as co-sponsored numerous workshops that emphasize the interplay among open + source software\, reproducibility\, and collaboration. A key focus is eng + aging researchers across diverse use-case scenarios along the open source + participation pathway – from introducing participants to the benefits of + using open source software to managing collaborative open source software + ecosystems.\n\nThis session will explore the UT-OSPO’s cross-department + al initiative\, integrating open source software training into research wo + rkshops and events. We will discuss pedagogical and administrative strateg + ies for appealing to a wide range of researchers and fostering an open sou + rce community within a large university. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/204/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:297@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Thinking Beyond 0's and 1's +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:353@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Nisha Kumar\nOpen Source won. We see it in the large + number of software projects created and used by other software projects. M + ost of our modern day software\, including AI\, runs on a large number of + open source software projects. Working in a cloud company that produces an + d deploys software at scale\, I see a lot of phenomenon that look very muc + h like what I used to see when I worked in semiconductor manufacturing an + age ago. Examples of these are drift from the norm\, heisenbugs\, emergent + properties\, and just ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ things.\n\nThe physical world is ful + l of these types of phenomenon. We deal with it by using probability and s + tatistics - accepting that we can't give a "true" or "false" answer\, but + settling for a continuous "maybe". This is a talk about looking at softwar + e production at a larger scale than just the single artisanal "app". We wi + ll apply probability and statistics to open source software at scale\, and + use some "Machine Learning" to get some insights into how the single app + is the product of\, and part of a somewhat unknowable whole. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/266/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:From Data to Action: Using Metrics to Improve FOSS Communities DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:327@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Dawn Foster\nSustaining FOSS projects and communities @@ -136,193 +355,20 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/253/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:297@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Steadfast Self-Hosting Workshop DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:338@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Adam Monsen\nJoin in a hands-on workshop all about se - lf-hosting! Bring your experiences and curiosity\, leave with inspiration - and ideas to try out. Together we'll help each other get unblocked whereve - r we're at\, from thinking about self-hosting to improving smooth-running - servers and services. This workshop will focus on fundamental concepts\, t - ools\, and techniques from the FOSS book Steadfast Self-Hosting\, although - having and having read the book is not required. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/219/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:374@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Mapping the UN's Sustainable Development Goals and their Relations - hips with FOSS -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:347@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jonathan Starr\nAs we continue to map the digital kno - wledge and tooling ecosystems\, we keep asking ourselves\, "who will use w - hat we're building." FOSS contributors\, funders\, supporters\, organizati - ons\, and users all come immediately to mind\, and we've built for their u - ses. \n\nThe recent addition of over 10\,000 papers as well as their relat - ionships with FOSS software\, researchers\, and research institutions\, ho - wever\, has led us to begin exploring the relationships between knowledge - discovery outputs\, the tools used in the knowledge discovery process\, an - d the UN's 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs).\n\nWe are asking ourse - lves the questions:\n\nWhat knowledge\, discovered recently or decades ago - \, supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWhat FOSS tools are used in kno - wledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWho develops - \, maintains\, and grows the communities behind the FOSS tools used in kno - wledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWhat communi - ties\, organizations\, institutions\, and industries support the people wh - o develop\, maintain\, and grow the communities behind the FOSS tools used - in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs?\nWhat i - s the impact of a change (addition of funding\, loss of funding\, tooling - innovations\, etc.) in the network of actors and infrastructure behind SDG - progress?\nWhat data points are most valuable for answering these questio - ns?\nUltimately\, how can we track\, analyze\, and visualize the data\, da - ta that we know exists\, in a way that can inform actionable\, sustainable - outcomes in the advancement of the SDGs?\n\nAnd in this room at FOSSY\, w - e'll be asking them out loud and discussing them with whoever cares to joi - n. -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/277/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Open source training for reproducibility\, collaboration\, and com - munity in academic research -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z -UID:307@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Alex Marden\nResearch-focused data and software train - ing outside of the standard academic curriculum can play a crucial role in - university environments. Reproducibility and collaboration are fundamenta - l aspects of research\, creating an opportunity to incorporate open source - software development strategies and techniques into training workshops.\n - \nThe University of Texas at Austin Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO) h - as co-sponsored numerous workshops that emphasize the interplay among open - source software\, reproducibility\, and collaboration. A key focus is eng - aging researchers across diverse use-case scenarios along the open source - participation pathway – from introducing participants to the benefits of - using open source software to managing collaborative open source software - ecosystems.\n\nThis session will explore the UT-OSPO’s cross-department - al initiative\, integrating open source software training into research wo - rkshops and events. We will discuss pedagogical and administrative strateg - ies for appealing to a wide range of researchers and fostering an open sou - rce community within a large university. -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/204/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Things I've Learned as a Linux Kernel Maintainer -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205017Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:331@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Darrick J. Wong\nI spent seven years serving as the m - aintainer of the XFS filesystem and iomap filesystem library in the Linux - kernel. Whilst on that journey\, I learned a lot about steering technical - direction of those two projects\, but also the limitations of managing a - community without authority. I intend this talk to be most helpful for pe - ople who are current FOSS maintainers or are mid to senior level developer - s contemplating taking on such roles.\n\nThese are the six skills that I f - ound most helpful and grew the most in those seven years:\n * Concocting a - strategy from which to build a development roadmap\n * Defining roles for - people to take on\n * Negotiating staffing and budgets with managers\n * - Coaching people who are trying to get their efforts across the finish line - \n * Dealing with external shocks in as principled a manner as possible\n - * Steering your way out of burnout\, aka Replacing Yourself\n\nFor each of - these areas\, I'll share how that skill fits into the Linux community (th - ey didn't always fit well!) and what happened when I tried to make things - happen in those areas. I will target spending about 4-5 minutes talking a - bout each of those points and leave 20-25 minutes at the end for an audien - ce discussion. +DESCRIPTION:No description LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/246/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Thinking Beyond 0's and 1's -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:353@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Nisha Kumar\nOpen Source won. We see it in the large - number of software projects created and used by other software projects. M - ost of our modern day software\, including AI\, runs on a large number of - open source software projects. Working in a cloud company that produces an - d deploys software at scale\, I see a lot of phenomenon that look very muc - h like what I used to see when I worked in semiconductor manufacturing an - age ago. Examples of these are drift from the norm\, heisenbugs\, emergent - properties\, and just ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ things.\n\nThe physical world is ful - l of these types of phenomenon. We deal with it by using probability and s - tatistics - accepting that we can't give a "true" or "false" answer\, but - settling for a continuous "maybe". This is a talk about looking at softwar - e production at a larger scale than just the single artisanal "app". We wi - ll apply probability and statistics to open source software at scale\, and - use some "Machine Learning" to get some insights into how the single app - is the product of\, and part of a somewhat unknowable whole. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/266/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Balancing Innovation and Safety: Navigating the Dilemma of Open-So - urcing AI Models -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:360@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Abhishek Gupta\nThe recent trend of leading AI labs e - ither open-sourcing their models or restricting access has ignited a criti - cal debate: How should we share increasingly capable AI models? Open-sourc - ing\, the practice of making model architecture and weights freely accessi - ble\, has been a cornerstone of software and AI development\, fostering ex - ternal oversight\, accelerating progress\, and decentralizing control. Yet - \, as AI models become more powerful\, the risks of misuse and unintended - consequences escalate.\n\nThis talk scrutinizes the delicate balance betwe - en the benefits and risks of open-sourcing highly capable foundation model - s. While open-sourcing has historically been a boon\, we contend that for - certain future models\, the potential dangers may outweigh the advantages. - We propose that such models should not be open-sourced\, at least initial - ly\, to mitigate these risks.\n\nExploring alternative strategies\, we del - ve into non-open-source model sharing options that could safeguard the ben - efits of open-source while minimizing potential harms. Our recommendations - aim to guide developers\, standard-setting bodies\, and governments in es - tablishing safe and responsible model sharing practices\, ensuring that th - e progress of AI remains both open and secure. -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/240/ +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:An ideal education with Open Source\, a Recent Grad's Perspective. DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:314@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Onexi\nThe open source world is one filled with oppor @@ -371,121 +417,67 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/205/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Co-Designing Sustainable Prosocial Digital Infrastructure -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:364@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: LX Cast\nTo build social tech infrastructure that sup - ports our collective well-being\, we need to include decentralized\, open - source\, and slow-growth options. However\, these approaches have historic - ally fallen outside traditional tech funding mechanisms. \n\nTech that sup - ports collective well-being should meet real needs\, solve real problems\, - be usable\, and be purpose-built\, not seeing people as an exploitable re - source or means to extract. So how can projects like these be sustainable\ - , secure\, and built in collaboration with communities? We think that peop - le putting money into projects should be part of the project design team\, - so that their expertise\, experience\, and motivations can be both repres - ented and explicitly weighed in the context of the problem the technology - hopes to solve. \n\nIn other words\, we need to co-design our financial mo - dels to find strategies that support the holistic goals of the makers\, co - mmunity\, and capital suppliers. In this workshop\, we will explore some o - f the mechanisms that might lead to co-design frameworks\, and surface str - ategies from participants. We will learn from one another what has worked - and what hasn’t\, and re-imagine how people putting money into FOSS migh - t be collaborators with us and the communities we’re designing and build - ing with. -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/223/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:369@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:374@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 +LOCATION:329 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:News Flash! You Are Enough. Let's Talk About Amplifying Your Value - & Authenticiy -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:345@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:Mapping the UN's Sustainable Development Goals and their Relations + hips with FOSS +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T104500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:347@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Shannon Rasimas\nHaving talked with 100's of people a - bout their careers\, whether it be a transition into something new or grow - th from within\, the default seems to be to focus on what you don't know o - r who you need to morph into to get to where you want to go. You don't nee - d to learn 5 new languages\, refactor all your code\, earn 3 new skills\, - and build 2 websites and an API to show you are good enough. Guess what\, - you already are enough. You also don't need to transform yourself into so - mebody you think you should be in order to fit in or find acceptance. You - are amazing just as you are. This is all hard work looking a little more d - eeply at ourselves\, but let's find strategies to elevate the way we think - and talk about ourselves\, connect to our why\, and be comfortable sharin - g the true essence of who we are. In a time where loneliness is at an all - time high\, how can we also build meaningful community and create spaces\, - interview practices\, and culture for everyone to find safety in bringing - their authentic selves\, connect to purpose\, and be valued. And finally\ - , why are we doing any of this if we can't find the joy in it. This talk i - s meant to inspire you to tap into the leadership qualities and value you - already have instead of focusing on the deficits\, and for all of us\, esp - ecially those with the power to do so\, to start building better spaces fo - r for all of us to exist in and start creating better community all around - . We all can use a little more belonging these days. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/244/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FreeBSD on ARM64 -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:285@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Michael Dexter\nFreeBSD is a compelling operating sys - tem for the ARM64 platform with its recent addition of bhyve ("beehive") h - ypervisor support and its traditional tightly-integrated features includin - g OpenZFS\, Jail\, DTrace\, Packet Filter\, and pkg.\n\nThis talk will pro - vide an authoritative introduction to FreeBSD features and uses with a foc - us on the ARM64 platform. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/194/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T104500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:291@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Josh Berkus\nWhy are the non-discriminatory clauses ( - 5 and 6) part of the Open Source\nDefinition? Why does anyone care? Why sh - ouldn't project owners be able\nto limit where the software can be used or - prevent bad people from using\nthe software?\n\nThese two clauses are the - most poorly understood parts of the Open\nSource Definition\, and the one - s that would-be license writers most\nfrequently want to compromise. They - are not a moral requirement\;\ninstead\, they are compulsive in order to s - ustain how FOSS is packaged\,\ndistributed\, and used. An Open Source Init - iative board member will\nexplain\, in developer-friendly terms\, why you - should care about OSD5 and\nOSD6\, and an attorney will explain why they a - re legally required.\n\nAttendees will learn why to retain these freedoms - in their own\nlicense-writing\, and why the are important when consuming o - ther people's\nprojects. +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jonathan Starr\nAs we continue to map the digital kno + wledge and tooling ecosystems\, we keep asking ourselves\, "who will use w + hat we're building." FOSS contributors\, funders\, supporters\, organizati + ons\, and users all come immediately to mind\, and we've built for their u + ses. \n\nThe recent addition of over 10\,000 papers as well as their relat + ionships with FOSS software\, researchers\, and research institutions\, ho + wever\, has led us to begin exploring the relationships between knowledge + discovery outputs\, the tools used in the knowledge discovery process\, an + d the UN's 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs).\n\nWe are asking ourse + lves the questions:\n\nWhat knowledge\, discovered recently or decades ago + \, supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWhat FOSS tools are used in kno + wledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWho develops + \, maintains\, and grows the communities behind the FOSS tools used in kno + wledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \nWhat communi + ties\, organizations\, institutions\, and industries support the people wh + o develop\, maintain\, and grow the communities behind the FOSS tools used + in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs?\nWhat i + s the impact of a change (addition of funding\, loss of funding\, tooling + innovations\, etc.) in the network of actors and infrastructure behind SDG + progress?\nWhat data points are most valuable for answering these questio + ns?\nUltimately\, how can we track\, analyze\, and visualize the data\, da + ta that we know exists\, in a way that can inform actionable\, sustainable + outcomes in the advancement of the SDGs?\n\nAnd in this room at FOSSY\, w + e'll be asking them out loud and discussing them with whoever cares to joi + n. LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/263/ +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/277/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:270@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T113000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:271@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -495,27 +487,35 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T113000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:269@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T113000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:270@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z +UID:292@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -URL:http://2024.fossy.us +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bradley M. Kuhn\nCome to this session to receive a wh + irlwind opportunity to dive deep into one of the most heavily discussed is + sues in the GPLv2 family of licenses. Namely\, what is it that one must p + rovide to meet the requirements to provide "the scripts used to control + installation of the executable"? Why do some feel that the plain meaning + of the word "install" doesn't really mean "install"?\nFinally see the big + debate that we've all been awaiting for years on this question. Time perm + itting\, we'll cover other issues. +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/280/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Workshop: Developing Your First Nextcloud App DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214521Z UID:354@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Edward Ly\nNextcloud is an on-premises\, free softwar @@ -532,157 +532,48 @@ LOCATION:327 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/273/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:326@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:292@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Maps as Art using FOSS -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:337@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tracy Homer\nTracy will show several different artist - ic maps she has made\, and go through the different software tools used to - make them. She will discuss what datasets and formats work for each type - of map and how you can make your own artistic maps using freely licensed s - oftware. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/187/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +SUMMARY:The State of FOSS Funding DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:365@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Kara Sowles\nJoin me in taking a look at the current + state of free and open source software funding\, what the potential paths + to financial sustainability currently look like for maintainers\, and what + new models are being explored. \n\n- What options do projects have when l + ooking to be financially sustainable long-term?\n- What organizations are + funding free and open source software\, and how do they allocate it?\n- Wh + at does it looks like to have funding that isn't subject to unstable corpo + rate budgets and interests? \n- What’s missing from our current models o + f funding? \n\nI’ll include info from some of the top Open Source Progra + m Offices currently funding corporate dependencies\; government-funded ini + tiatives aimed at sustaining digital public goods we all rely on\; and use + r-sustained projects that rely on the goodwill of individuals. We’ll tou + ch on what place Accelerators and Grants have in this\, and peeling away t + he growth-curve expectations from investors who may\, or may not\, underst + and the needs of free and open source. \n\nIt's essential we ask ourselves + : how do we ensure the software our societies depend on is sustainable lon + g-term? +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/222/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:370@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description +DESCRIPTION:Music Blocks Workshop LOCATION:333 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:375@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Development of a Nation-wide Research Data Management Platform Le - veraged by Open Science Framework -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:306@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Shoji Kajita\nThis session shares our experiences on - a nation-wide Research Data Management (RDM) platform in Japan by using Op - en Science Framework developed by Center for Open Science in U.S.A. The su - rrounding contexts of RDM like Open Science and Research Integrity have be - en quickly changing and the supporting technologies of RDM have been drama - tically changing due to the speed of Dog Year for digital technologies. To - tackle these situations\, National Institute of Infomatics (NII) has been - developing and operating a nation-wide RDM platform "Gakunin RDM" for the - entire Japanese higher educational institutions. Currently over 100 insti - tutions have been using Gakunin RDM since 2022. Through the course\, sever - al challenges are emerging due to the major customizations requested by in - stitutional users. These are common to any Open Source projects. In this t - alk\, we will introduce the challenges by the following three parts:\n1. W - hat is Open Science Framework\n2. Current status of Gakunin RDM\n3. Curren - t major challenges -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/206/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:305@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Java Performance on ARM64 and Ampere -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:286@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Mikael Vidstedt\nFor close to three decades the Java - technology stack has been powering the world\, running everything from edg - e device to enterprise server-side workloads. The Java Platform Group at O - racle is heavily investing in ARM64\, working closely with Ampere to ensur - e that current and future applications run securely and with high performa - nce. In addition to designing and implementing new features to leverage th - e natural strengths of the hardware\, the team has also delivered a long l - ist of performance enhancements to future and existing versions of Java th - rough OpenJDK. This session will cover key projects and features in the Ja - va platform\, how they relate to ARM64\, and showcase the performance impr - ovements they have resulted in. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/193/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How to Chart your own Career Path in Open Source - A Panel Discuss - ion -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205018Z -UID:298@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ray Paik\nThere isn’t one way to build your career - in open source as there are a variety of roles beyond writing code and man - y different routes into those roles. It’s also important for individuals - to chart their own path that aligns with their unique experience and inte - rest.\n\nIn this panel discussion\, panelists will share how they got star - ted in their career and their journey over the past two decades. For peopl - e looking for jobs in open source\, we’ll discuss what we look for in ca - ndidates and why it’s not necessary to check all the boxes in job descri - ptions. We’ll also discuss challenges in balancing your day jobs vs. ope - n source activities during your career.\n\nIn addition\, we’ll also delv - e into other challenges and opportunities of an open source career that ra - nge from dealing with the impostor syndrome\, DEI (Diversity\, Equity\, an - d Inclusion) challenges\, exploring open source communities for self growt - h\, and more.\n\nThe goal of this session is to help attendees feel more c - omfortable exploring opportunities in open source and be confident in char - ting their own path. Our panel members will share what contributed to thei - r success and the lessons learned throughout their extensive experience in - open source. This session is meant to be interactive\, and we’ll encour - age attendees to ask questions and engage in the conversation. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/224/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Getting ML Right in a Complex Data World DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:361@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Oz Katz\nMachine learning workflows are iterative & r @@ -708,10 +599,152 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/237/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Development of a Nation-wide Research Data Management Platform Le + veraged by Open Science Framework +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:306@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Shoji Kajita\nThis session shares our experiences on + a nation-wide Research Data Management (RDM) platform in Japan by using Op + en Science Framework developed by Center for Open Science in U.S.A. The su + rrounding contexts of RDM like Open Science and Research Integrity have be + en quickly changing and the supporting technologies of RDM have been drama + tically changing due to the speed of Dog Year for digital technologies. To + tackle these situations\, National Institute of Infomatics (NII) has been + developing and operating a nation-wide RDM platform "Gakunin RDM" for the + entire Japanese higher educational institutions. Currently over 100 insti + tutions have been using Gakunin RDM since 2022. Through the course\, sever + al challenges are emerging due to the major customizations requested by in + stitutional users. These are common to any Open Source projects. In this t + alk\, we will introduce the challenges by the following three parts:\n1. W + hat is Open Science Framework\n2. Current status of Gakunin RDM\n3. Curren + t major challenges +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/206/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:305@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Java Performance on ARM64 and Ampere +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:286@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Mikael Vidstedt\nFor close to three decades the Java + technology stack has been powering the world\, running everything from edg + e device to enterprise server-side workloads. The Java Platform Group at O + racle is heavily investing in ARM64\, working closely with Ampere to ensur + e that current and future applications run securely and with high performa + nce. In addition to designing and implementing new features to leverage th + e natural strengths of the hardware\, the team has also delivered a long l + ist of performance enhancements to future and existing versions of Java th + rough OpenJDK. This session will cover key projects and features in the Ja + va platform\, how they relate to ARM64\, and showcase the performance impr + ovements they have resulted in. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/193/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Maps as Art using FOSS +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:337@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tracy Homer\nTracy will show several different artist + ic maps she has made\, and go through the different software tools used to + make them. She will discuss what datasets and formats work for each type + of map and how you can make your own artistic maps using freely licensed s + oftware. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/187/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:375@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Making new tools for open source graphics software +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T121500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:344@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tom Lechner\nLet's discuss various ways that tools su + ch as Godot\, Blender\, Inkscape\, and Krita let you extend them\, such as + non-destructive procedural generation from Blender's Geometry Nodes\, cus + tom utilities with Inkscape extensions\, or hacking right in source code f + or crazier things. We will also talk about the importance of open standard + s for art resources\, to be able to share resources across different softw + are that might otherwise have very different internals and purposes. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/242/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:How to Chart your own Career Path in Open Source - A Panel Discuss + ion +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:298@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ray Paik\nThere isn’t one way to build your career + in open source as there are a variety of roles beyond writing code and man + y different routes into those roles. It’s also important for individuals + to chart their own path that aligns with their unique experience and inte + rest.\n\nIn this panel discussion\, panelists will share how they got star + ted in their career and their journey over the past two decades. For peopl + e looking for jobs in open source\, we’ll discuss what we look for in ca + ndidates and why it’s not necessary to check all the boxes in job descri + ptions. We’ll also discuss challenges in balancing your day jobs vs. ope + n source activities during your career.\n\nIn addition\, we’ll also delv + e into other challenges and opportunities of an open source career that ra + nge from dealing with the impostor syndrome\, DEI (Diversity\, Equity\, an + d Inclusion) challenges\, exploring open source communities for self growt + h\, and more.\n\nThe goal of this session is to help attendees feel more c + omfortable exploring opportunities in open source and be confident in char + ting their own path. Our panel members will share what contributed to thei + r success and the lessons learned throughout their extensive experience in + open source. This session is meant to be interactive\, and we’ll encour + age attendees to ask questions and engage in the conversation. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/224/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:326@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:How do FOSS projects actually use new README documents? DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T114500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:325@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Matt Gaughan\nWithout safeguards or redundancies\, FO @@ -741,199 +774,83 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/254/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T114500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:348@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description +DESCRIPTION:BoF: Web tools and link sharing LOCATION:333 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Making new tools for open source graphics software -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T121500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:344@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tom Lechner\nLet's discuss various ways that tools su - ch as Godot\, Blender\, Inkscape\, and Krita let you extend them\, such as - non-destructive procedural generation from Blender's Geometry Nodes\, cus - tom utilities with Inkscape extensions\, or hacking right in source code f - or crazier things. We will also talk about the importance of open standard - s for art resources\, to be able to share resources across different softw - are that might otherwise have very different internals and purposes. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/242/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:The State of FOSS Funding -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T114500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:365@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Kara Sowles\nJoin me in taking a look at the current - state of free and open source software funding\, what the potential paths - to financial sustainability currently look like for maintainers\, and what - new models are being explored. \n\n- What options do projects have when l - ooking to be financially sustainable long-term?\n- What organizations are - funding free and open source software\, and how do they allocate it?\n- Wh - at does it looks like to have funding that isn't subject to unstable corpo - rate budgets and interests? \n- What’s missing from our current models o - f funding? \n\nI’ll include info from some of the top Open Source Progra - m Offices currently funding corporate dependencies\; government-funded ini - tiatives aimed at sustaining digital public goods we all rely on\; and use - r-sustained projects that rely on the goodwill of individuals. We’ll tou - ch on what place Accelerators and Grants have in this\, and peeling away t - he growth-curve expectations from investors who may\, or may not\, underst - and the needs of free and open source. \n\nIt's essential we ask ourselves - : how do we ensure the software our societies depend on is sustainable lon - g-term? -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/222/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:224@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Lunch -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break (on your own) DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T123000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:225@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Lunch +DESCRIPTION:Lunch break (on your own) URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break (on your own) +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T123000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:224@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Lunch break (on your own) +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Lunch break (on your own) DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T123000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:226@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Lunch +DESCRIPTION:Lunch break (on your own) URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Opening Remarks DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T134500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:227@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Opening Remarks URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +SUMMARY:Setting Up A Simple XMPP Server DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:315@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:240@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Your FOSS Productive Life! - The Vibrant Ecosystem around Applicat - ions -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:339@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Sriram Ramkrishna\nFree and Open Source Software ecos - ystems evolve in curious ways. In the beginning\, when we thought about op - en source software\, we limited ourselves to applying it to the desktop an - d the web. \n\nKernel\, user-space\, and application frameworks worked tog - ether closely to recreate the user experience that we\, as nerds\, grew up - on. Over time as the utility of open source software became a part of ent - erprise and business\, we moved away from the desktop into the data center - . Then\, came the myriad of technologies... from databases to containers.. - ..we are all familiar with today. The Linux-based desktop was relegated to - the tinkerer\, the curious\, and the nostalgic. Developers moved to MacOS - as the serious developer tool of choice. As investment moved away from th - e desktop and application ecosystem\, it seemed that the bright light of t - his ecosystem had been diminished.\n\n Away from center stage\, amazing th - ings are happening in the app ecosystem. A greater sense of collaboration - prevails\, and this not quite hidden from view ecosystem is flourishing.\n - \nThe Flathub App store has 2600 apps and is adding 40 new apps a month. - By the end of 2024\, it’s projected that Flathub will have over 3000 app - s ranging from developer oriented apps to apps on the go. Let's look at ho - w this ecosystem is thriving and ushering in a renaissance. Expect to hear - a short history lesson on the app ecosystem's influence on the Linux plat - form before focusing on the apps and where we are today. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/218/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:371@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:GNU/Linux Loves All: Free Software in Music -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:342@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Timmy James Barnett\nThe music industry is cluttered - with proprietary software and hardware. Musicians get locked into non-free - technologies. There is even a professional pressure to use proprietary to - ols as though it is just part of making music in today's modern society. A - pple computers are even seen by many as a default for beginner and profess - ional musicians. When someone says they don't regularly use MacOS\, Window - s is assumed. But you can make great music without compromising Human Tech - Rights by using Free Software and GNU/Linux\, a far superior operating sy - stem to proprietary alternatives.\n\nTechnology is such a great tool for m - usic. The development of technology supports the development of music. Thi - s is why musicians should be using Free Software and supporting a Free com - munity. Philosophers\, mathematicians\, music performers and theorists hav - e been coming up with many different ways of how to tune instruments for t - housands of years. With the Internet\, musicians can find out so much of w - hat has been done in the past as well as what is possible now. The world o - f tuning keeps coming up with exciting new and innovative ways to organize - possible pitches. \n\nHowever\, even with something as exciting as new mo - dern instruments and software that can inspire so much great music\, we se - e so many new things that are proprietary. This world of proprietary puts - unnecessary restrictions on what should be an open and creative process th - at is inviting for both amateurs and professionals. Why are companies maki - ng non-free software tools just for users to be able to even experience th - e sounds of notes that are decades\, centuries or millennia old? Why shoul - d we have restrictions on the great notes both historic and modern from Af - rica\, India\, and the Middle East\, that are not found on standard Wester - n instruments in the local Western music store? We have such a great tool - all around us\, the computer. Computers should come to our aid in a way th - at inspires more music and community on a global scale. \n\nThis talk show - s some great Free technologies\, instruments and software. All software is - run on a GNU/Linux Laptop. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/243/ +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Root\nThis talk will showcase the simplicity and ease + of setting up your own XMPP server using the Snikket software\, walking s + tep-by-step through the process using slides. The end result will be a ful + ly functioning XMPP server that can be used throughout the remainder of th + e conference between all attendees. There will be a demonstration of the f + eatures available to a Snikket Instance including\, but not limited to\, i + nviting others to join your server\, group chats that are private or publi + c\, adding contacts\, managing and updating the instance as the admin\, cr + eating limited accounts for kids\, and steps for more secure end-to-end en + cryption. This talk will also dive into some personal privacy\, security\, + and persona considerations and how they will be affected by your threat m + odel. +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/233/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Mentoring youth: The FOSS strategy we've been looking for DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:310@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Devin Ulibarri\nFree software enthusiasts are eager f @@ -967,24 +884,10 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/202/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:293@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bradley M. Kuhn\nSo much has happened recently with e - nforcement of copyleft licenses\, such as the GPL and LGPL. This session - will give you an update on all that's happened in the last year regarding - GPL compliance and enforcement. -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/257/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:You've been laid off. Now what? DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T142500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:355@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Mike Jang\nI've survived two layoffs. I've also found @@ -1009,77 +912,10 @@ LOCATION:327 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/268/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Report from the AI-Assisted Programming and Copyleft Committee -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:362@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stefano Zacchiroli\nAt the onset of AI-assisted progr - amming\, Software Freedom Conservancy convened a committee to investigate - the implications of such assistance \nfor copyleft and software freedom mo - re broadly. \nIn this session\, members of the committee will report back - to the FOSSY audience about their work and discuss recommendations for the - use and development of AI assistants that are compatible with free softwa - re goals. -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/236/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:30 Years and Counting: Secrets to enduring user groups -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205019Z -UID:277@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Michael Dexter\nWhy do some user groups endure for de - cades while others do not? What organizational structures and personalitie - s are needed to maintain interest\, attendance and participation? The Port - land Linux/Unix Group was founded over 30 years ago and is still going str - ong\, hosting some of the top open source speakers in the world including - Linus Torvalds\, Kelsey Hightower and Bradley M. Kuhn. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/213/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:The University of California OSPO Network: Building a Multi-Campus - Efforts to Promote Open Source th -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:308@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stephanie Lieggi\nThe growth of Open Source Program O - ffices (OSPOs) in institutions of higher education has helped advance the - development\, use and long-term stewardship of open source software and pr - actice. This new movement is also enabling new and unique pathways to furt - her the impact of university research and improving the educational opport - unities for the next generation of open source leaders. Since 2020\, more - than a dozen universities in the US\, as well as a number in Europe\, have - piloted OSPO efforts on their campuses with promising results. One of the - first OSPOs in a public university was at the University of California\, - Santa Cruz (UCSC). Building on the experience gained at UCSC\, in May 202 - 4\, six out of the ten University of California (UC) campuses began workin - g to build the first of its kind systemwide OSPO network. This ambitious e - ffort\, funded through the Alfred P Sloan Foundation\, allows each campus - to develop infrastructure that promotes individual areas of excellence whi - le leveraging the expertise of the entire network. \n\nThis presentation w - ill showcase the foundational work of UCSC in building an OSPO over the pa - st three years and will discuss the early work of the other campuses in wo - rking together to build the first of its kind\, systemwide OSPO. It will - also provide an initial blueprint for other educators looking to work coll - aboratively to promote open source approaches in academia. Participants wi - ll learn the benefits of creating a networked set of OSPOs as well as hear - about methodologies the UC network plans to employ for creating and maint - aining a system-wide open source community of practice. -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/200/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:376@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1087,48 +923,35 @@ LOCATION:329 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Empowering FOSS projects on ARM64 at the OSUOSL -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:281@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:FOSS-related legislation +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z +UID:349@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Lance Albertson\nAt the OSU Open Source Lab\, we prov - ide a variety of services\, including access to ARM64 for FOSS projects. T - his session will discuss what we can provide to FOSS projects\, how the in - frastructure underneath is setup and some user stories from some of our ho - sted projects. This will also include some brief discussion about the nuis - ances of hosting ARM64 hardware in a data center. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/192/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Setting Up A Simple XMPP Server -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:240@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Root\nThis talk will showcase the simplicity and ease - of setting up your own XMPP server using the Snikket software\, walking s - tep-by-step through the process using slides. The end result will be a ful - ly functioning XMPP server that can be used throughout the remainder of th - e conference between all attendees. There will be a demonstration of the f - eatures available to a Snikket Instance including\, but not limited to\, i - nviting others to join your server\, group chats that are private or publi - c\, adding contacts\, managing and updating the instance as the admin\, cr - eating limited accounts for kids\, and steps for more secure end-to-end en - cryption. This talk will also dive into some personal privacy\, security\, - and persona considerations and how they will be affected by your threat m - odel. -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/233/ +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Eric Gallager\nA discussion around FOSS-related legis + lation and doing markup on NH RSA 21-R: https://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/r + sa/html/I/21-R/21-R-mrg.htm\n\nOther possible topics to discuss:\n * New + Right-to-Repair proposals\, including one for bionics: https://spectrum.ie + ee.org/bionic-right-to-repair\n * Giving "Right to Inspect Source Code in + Court" another try\, now with some additional sources\, such as: https:// + kb.osu.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/ccdce761-3689-477b-918a-920a11ca9435 + /content\n * Setting up an official "Open Data Policy" for NH: https://gi + thub.com/opendata/Open-Data-Policies (RSA 21-R may already count\, but I w + ant to be sure)\n * Relatedly\, but slightly differently\, setting up an + Open Source Program Office for NH: https://github.com/github/github-ospo\n + * Setting up a sovereign tech fund for FOSS like Germany has: https://ww + w.phoronix.com/news/Germany-STF-For-FFmpeg\n * Including an inspection of + automotive software as part of the automobile inspections that the state + already requires people to get for their cars +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/281/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Video Encoding on Arm64 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214522Z UID:287@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: John J. O'Neill\, Ph.D.\nThis session provides a brie @@ -1144,102 +967,11 @@ LOCATION:327 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/256/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:349@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Private Equity companies only want one thing and it's....... -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:332@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ben Ford\nThe experience of being acquired by a priva - te equity company is often traumatic. There are layoffs and reorgs and can - celed projects and nobody knows who's working on what and the back office - suite always changes so you're off balance to begin with and... and the co - mmunity. Who's keeping the community engaged through the process? How do y - ou even keep a community alive\, when all the metrics seem to be up in the - air and nobody seems to care about what's important? Complaints are pilin - g up\, community members feel unappreciated\, and we keep stepping on them - . Don't they know that community is what built this company?\n\nIt doesn't - have to end here. This talk will go through our experiences with this sit - uation and how we learned from it and are coming through the other side. I - will talk about how we learned to communicate our business value and how - we had to reset some of our expectations. Most importantly\, I'll talk abo - ut how we taught the new company to look at our community\, not with greed - \, but with appreciation. -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/245/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:333@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:"The Power of Belonging: go beyond DEI " -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:299@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Aarti Ramkrishna\nOpen source communities have long b - een heralded as the bastions of innovation\, collaboration\, and shared pr - ogress. These communities thrive on the contributions of individuals from - all walks of life\, bringing a plethora of ideas and perspectives to the t - able. However\, the reality of achieving genuine diversity\, equity\, and - inclusion (DEI) within these spaces remains elusive.\n\nAarti Ramkrishna\, - an educator from the global majority and a dedicated equity advocate\, in - vites you to a compelling and transformative discussion on how we can cult - ivate a culture of belonging in open source environments. Drawing on her e - xtensive background in education administration\, curriculum development\, - and DEI\, Aarti offers a deeply personal and professional insight into th - e intricacies of fostering inclusive communities.\n\nIn her journey as an - instructional leader and equity facilitator\, Aarti has consistently champ - ioned the importance of diversity and inclusion. Her work in developing cu - lturally responsive curricula and facilitating professional development ha - s significantly enhanced educational outcomes and fostered a more inclusiv - e learning environment. She brings this wealth of experience to the open s - ource arena\, highlighting the parallels and unique challenges faced by th - ese communities.\n\nDuring this talk\, Aarti will delve into the importanc - e of recognizing and addressing implicit biases\, creating equitable parti - cipation opportunities\, and ensuring that every contributor feels seen an - d valued. She will share practical strategies and tools that open source e - ngineers can use to embed DEI principles into their projects\, from the in - itial stages of development to ongoing community engagement.\n\nThrough vi - vid storytelling and real-world examples\, Aarti will illustrate the trans - formative power of belonging. Attendees will leave with a deeper understan - ding of how to bridge gaps within their communities\, promote fairness\, a - nd cultivate an environment where innovation and inclusivity go hand in ha - nd.\n\nThis talk is a powerful call to action for all members of the open - source community. By committing to DEI\, we not only enrich our projects b - ut also ensure that the future of technology is shaped by a truly diverse - and inclusive set of voices. Join us in this crucial conversation and be p - art of the movement to build a more inclusive and innovative open source e - cosystem. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/228/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Toward an Economy of Open Abundance: Why FLO funding needs donor c oordination and how to do it DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:366@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Aaron Wolf\nThere are four categories of economic goo @@ -1282,10 +1014,206 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/272/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Your FOSS Productive Life! - The Vibrant Ecosystem around Applicat + ions +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:339@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Sriram Ramkrishna\nFree and Open Source Software ecos + ystems evolve in curious ways. In the beginning\, when we thought about op + en source software\, we limited ourselves to applying it to the desktop an + d the web. \n\nKernel\, user-space\, and application frameworks worked tog + ether closely to recreate the user experience that we\, as nerds\, grew up + on. Over time as the utility of open source software became a part of ent + erprise and business\, we moved away from the desktop into the data center + . Then\, came the myriad of technologies... from databases to containers.. + ..we are all familiar with today. The Linux-based desktop was relegated to + the tinkerer\, the curious\, and the nostalgic. Developers moved to MacOS + as the serious developer tool of choice. As investment moved away from th + e desktop and application ecosystem\, it seemed that the bright light of t + his ecosystem had been diminished.\n\n Away from center stage\, amazing th + ings are happening in the app ecosystem. A greater sense of collaboration + prevails\, and this not quite hidden from view ecosystem is flourishing.\n + \nThe Flathub App store has 2600 apps and is adding 40 new apps a month. + By the end of 2024\, it’s projected that Flathub will have over 3000 app + s ranging from developer oriented apps to apps on the go. Let's look at ho + w this ecosystem is thriving and ushering in a renaissance. Expect to hear + a short history lesson on the app ecosystem's influence on the Linux plat + form before focusing on the apps and where we are today. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/218/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:30 Years and Counting: Secrets to enduring user groups +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:277@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Michael Dexter\nWhy do some user groups endure for de + cades while others do not? What organizational structures and personalitie + s are needed to maintain interest\, attendance and participation? The Port + land Linux/Unix Group was founded over 30 years ago and is still going str + ong\, hosting some of the top open source speakers in the world including + Linus Torvalds\, Kelsey Hightower and Bradley M. Kuhn. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/213/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:The University of California OSPO Network: Building a Multi-Campus + Efforts to Promote Open Source th +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:308@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stephanie Lieggi\nThe growth of Open Source Program O + ffices (OSPOs) in institutions of higher education has helped advance the + development\, use and long-term stewardship of open source software and pr + actice. This new movement is also enabling new and unique pathways to furt + her the impact of university research and improving the educational opport + unities for the next generation of open source leaders. Since 2020\, more + than a dozen universities in the US\, as well as a number in Europe\, have + piloted OSPO efforts on their campuses with promising results. One of the + first OSPOs in a public university was at the University of California\, + Santa Cruz (UCSC). Building on the experience gained at UCSC\, in May 202 + 4\, six out of the ten University of California (UC) campuses began workin + g to build the first of its kind systemwide OSPO network. This ambitious e + ffort\, funded through the Alfred P Sloan Foundation\, allows each campus + to develop infrastructure that promotes individual areas of excellence whi + le leveraging the expertise of the entire network. \n\nThis presentation w + ill showcase the foundational work of UCSC in building an OSPO over the pa + st three years and will discuss the early work of the other campuses in wo + rking together to build the first of its kind\, systemwide OSPO. It will + also provide an initial blueprint for other educators looking to work coll + aboratively to promote open source approaches in academia. Participants wi + ll learn the benefits of creating a networked set of OSPOs as well as hear + about methodologies the UC network plans to employ for creating and maint + aining a system-wide open source community of practice. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/200/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Empowering FOSS projects on ARM64 at the OSUOSL +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:281@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Lance Albertson\nAt the OSU Open Source Lab\, we prov + ide a variety of services\, including access to ARM64 for FOSS projects. T + his session will discuss what we can provide to FOSS projects\, how the in + frastructure underneath is setup and some user stories from some of our ho + sted projects. This will also include some brief discussion about the nuis + ances of hosting ARM64 hardware in a data center. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/192/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:GNU/Linux Loves All: Free Software in Music +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:342@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Timmy James Barnett\nThe music industry is cluttered + with proprietary software and hardware. Musicians get locked into non-free + technologies. There is even a professional pressure to use proprietary to + ols as though it is just part of making music in today's modern society. A + pple computers are even seen by many as a default for beginner and profess + ional musicians. When someone says they don't regularly use MacOS\, Window + s is assumed. But you can make great music without compromising Human Tech + Rights by using Free Software and GNU/Linux\, a far superior operating sy + stem to proprietary alternatives.\n\nTechnology is such a great tool for m + usic. The development of technology supports the development of music. Thi + s is why musicians should be using Free Software and supporting a Free com + munity. Philosophers\, mathematicians\, music performers and theorists hav + e been coming up with many different ways of how to tune instruments for t + housands of years. With the Internet\, musicians can find out so much of w + hat has been done in the past as well as what is possible now. The world o + f tuning keeps coming up with exciting new and innovative ways to organize + possible pitches. \n\nHowever\, even with something as exciting as new mo + dern instruments and software that can inspire so much great music\, we se + e so many new things that are proprietary. This world of proprietary puts + unnecessary restrictions on what should be an open and creative process th + at is inviting for both amateurs and professionals. Why are companies maki + ng non-free software tools just for users to be able to even experience th + e sounds of notes that are decades\, centuries or millennia old? Why shoul + d we have restrictions on the great notes both historic and modern from Af + rica\, India\, and the Middle East\, that are not found on standard Wester + n instruments in the local Western music store? We have such a great tool + all around us\, the computer. Computers should come to our aid in a way th + at inspires more music and community on a global scale. \n\nThis talk show + s some great Free technologies\, instruments and software. All software is + run on a GNU/Linux Laptop. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/243/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Private Equity companies only want one thing and it's....... +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:332@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ben Ford\nThe experience of being acquired by a priva + te equity company is often traumatic. There are layoffs and reorgs and can + celed projects and nobody knows who's working on what and the back office + suite always changes so you're off balance to begin with and... and the co + mmunity. Who's keeping the community engaged through the process? How do y + ou even keep a community alive\, when all the metrics seem to be up in the + air and nobody seems to care about what's important? Complaints are pilin + g up\, community members feel unappreciated\, and we keep stepping on them + . Don't they know that community is what built this company?\n\nIt doesn't + have to end here. This talk will go through our experiences with this sit + uation and how we learned from it and are coming through the other side. I + will talk about how we learned to communicate our business value and how + we had to reset some of our expectations. Most importantly\, I'll talk abo + ut how we taught the new company to look at our community\, not with greed + \, but with appreciation. +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/245/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:371@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:BoF: Making an open source Linkedin +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:333@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:315@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:319@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1293,11 +1221,86 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:"The Power of Belonging: go beyond DEI " +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:299@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Aarti Ramkrishna\nOpen source communities have long b + een heralded as the bastions of innovation\, collaboration\, and shared pr + ogress. These communities thrive on the contributions of individuals from + all walks of life\, bringing a plethora of ideas and perspectives to the t + able. However\, the reality of achieving genuine diversity\, equity\, and + inclusion (DEI) within these spaces remains elusive.\n\nAarti Ramkrishna\, + an educator from the global majority and a dedicated equity advocate\, in + vites you to a compelling and transformative discussion on how we can cult + ivate a culture of belonging in open source environments. Drawing on her e + xtensive background in education administration\, curriculum development\, + and DEI\, Aarti offers a deeply personal and professional insight into th + e intricacies of fostering inclusive communities.\n\nIn her journey as an + instructional leader and equity facilitator\, Aarti has consistently champ + ioned the importance of diversity and inclusion. Her work in developing cu + lturally responsive curricula and facilitating professional development ha + s significantly enhanced educational outcomes and fostered a more inclusiv + e learning environment. She brings this wealth of experience to the open s + ource arena\, highlighting the parallels and unique challenges faced by th + ese communities.\n\nDuring this talk\, Aarti will delve into the importanc + e of recognizing and addressing implicit biases\, creating equitable parti + cipation opportunities\, and ensuring that every contributor feels seen an + d valued. She will share practical strategies and tools that open source e + ngineers can use to embed DEI principles into their projects\, from the in + itial stages of development to ongoing community engagement.\n\nThrough vi + vid storytelling and real-world examples\, Aarti will illustrate the trans + formative power of belonging. Attendees will leave with a deeper understan + ding of how to bridge gaps within their communities\, promote fairness\, a + nd cultivate an environment where innovation and inclusivity go hand in ha + nd.\n\nThis talk is a powerful call to action for all members of the open + source community. By committing to DEI\, we not only enrich our projects b + ut also ensure that the future of technology is shaped by a truly diverse + and inclusive set of voices. Join us in this crucial conversation and be p + art of the movement to build a more inclusive and innovative open source e + cosystem. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/228/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Report from the AI-Assisted Programming and Copyleft Committee +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:362@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stefano Zacchiroli\nAt the onset of AI-assisted progr + amming\, Software Freedom Conservancy convened a committee to investigate + the implications of such assistance \nfor copyleft and software freedom mo + re broadly. \nIn this session\, members of the committee will report back + to the FOSSY audience about their work and discuss recommendations for the + use and development of AI assistants that are compatible with free softwa + re goals. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/236/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T140000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:293@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bradley M. Kuhn\nSo much has happened recently with e + nforcement of copyleft licenses\, such as the GPL and LGPL. This session + will give you an update on all that's happened in the last year regarding + GPL compliance and enforcement. +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/257/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Down But Not Out: How I'm Continuing to Serve as a Tech Lead 3 Yea rs Unemployed DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T142500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:380@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jordan Hewitt\nWhen my freelancing "side gig" took of @@ -1320,19 +1323,9 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/264/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:244@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T144500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:245@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1340,10 +1333,10 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:247@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T144500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:244@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description URL:http://2024.fossy.us @@ -1352,36 +1345,44 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T144500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:246@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FLO funding: A panel discussion of challenges\, incentives\, and p - ossibilities -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:367@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T144500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:247@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Wm Salt Hale\nFollowing the three related talks earli - er in the day\, this session will provide an opportunity for interactive d - iscussion of key challenges in funding FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and - other similarly-licensed digital works\, with reference both to incentives - that shape the status quo and to possibilities for positive change. Salt - will facilitate as well as participate in the panel discussion\, which wil - l include opportunities for audience participation. -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/271/ +DESCRIPTION:No description +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Why rewrite OpenBSD's fw_update(8)? +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z +UID:340@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Andrew Hewus Fresh\nOpenBSD provides the utility fw_u + pdate(8) to handle firmware loading for hardware from manufacturers whose + licensing isn't compatible with our base system. We will take a trip into + the history of fw_update(8)\, its structure and why it exists. A recent re + write provides an illustration of the value OpenBSD places on simplicity a + nd user experience. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/217/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Survival is an Achievement: Tactical ways to keep user groups aliv e under strain DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:278@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Emily Soward\nThis talk focuses solely on how to help @@ -1404,31 +1405,9 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/214/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:350@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z -UID:372@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214523Z UID:377@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1439,7 +1418,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:My Neighbour in Open Source DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205020Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:300@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Harmony Elendu\n"My Neighbour in Open Source"\nIn a w @@ -1513,7 +1492,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Teaching Young Children About Software Freedom DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:311@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Aaron Wolf\nKids today grow up in a world dominated b @@ -1548,7 +1527,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:The Art of Asking DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:329@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Paige Cruz\nWhen joining a new organization or projec @@ -1569,33 +1548,17 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/248/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Why rewrite OpenBSD's fw_update(8)? -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z -UID:340@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Andrew Hewus Fresh\nOpenBSD provides the utility fw_u - pdate(8) to handle firmware loading for hardware from manufacturers whose - licensing isn't compatible with our base system. We will take a trip into - the history of fw_update(8)\, its structure and why it exists. A recent re - write provides an illustration of the value OpenBSD places on simplicity a - nd user experience. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/217/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface +SUMMARY:QuMat: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:363@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Andrew Musselman\nApache Mahout (https://mahout.apach e.org) is a linear algebra library for building machine learning solutions \, and up until this year focused on compute back-ends such as Spark and F link for processing training data into predictions. More recently the proj - ect has adopted quantum compute back-ends as well. The Qumat (https://gith + ect has adopted quantum compute back-ends as well. The QuMat (https://gith ub.com/apache/mahout?tab=readme-ov-file#qumat) library is a Python-based i nterface to multiple quantum computing systems\, starting with IBM's Qiski t\, which allows researchers and developers to assemble quantum logic gate @@ -1603,16 +1566,34 @@ DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Andrew Musselman\nApache Mahout (https://mahout.apach m computers. This talk will provide a brief introduction to quantum comput ing\, including the data structures used along with some basic logic gates (https://github.com/apache/mahout/blob/main/docs/basic_gates.md)\, and wi - ll demo Qumat software running in a notebook that will be shared after the + ll demo QuMat software running in a notebook that will be shared after the talk. LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/265/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FLO funding: A panel discussion of challenges\, incentives\, and p + ossibilities +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:367@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Wm Salt Hale\nFollowing the three related talks earli + er in the day\, this session will provide an opportunity for interactive d + iscussion of key challenges in funding FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and + other similarly-licensed digital works\, with reference both to incentives + that shape the status quo and to possibilities for positive change. Salt + will facilitate as well as participate in the panel discussion\, which wil + l include opportunities for audience participation. +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/271/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Mitigating MITMs in XMPP DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:248@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Amolith\nIn October 2023\, Jabber.ru\, “the largest @@ -1632,7 +1613,7 @@ SUMMARY:How a hardware company supports arm64 open source software develop ment DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:282@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Edward Vielmetti\nEquinix is not a typical contributo @@ -1656,7 +1637,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:320@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1664,34 +1645,21 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:AMA: Building Autonomous Self Healing Computer Systems +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:346@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Darrick J. Wong\nDoes your data management system go - bonkers? Would you like it to fix itself for you? Or possibly just grow - weird new parts on demand? I recently finished construction on an autonom - ous self healing filesystem for Linux 6.10 and would love to share how it - works with everyone. Many people who I've shown this off to think this is - magic\, but it's really not:\n\nDo you have record sets that you need to - index? While the system is running? What if I showed you several techniq - ue for doing that\, along with some discussion of the strengths and weakne - sses of each?\n\nHow about analyzing the structure of graph structured dat - a? By relaxing some constraints and tightening others\, it's possible to - determine if you've got a proper tree ... or whatever it is that directory - trees actually are. Eventual consistency is key here.\n\nOh\, and did I - mention that this is XFS? So I'll also talk about how do to this in a res - ource and functionality-constrained environment like the operating system! +DESCRIPTION:No description LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/239/ +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Q&A: Unemployed or Underemployed? How to get through. DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:356@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Mike Jang\nMike Jang and Jordan Hewitt will take this @@ -1706,7 +1674,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Using Open Source Software to power the Sustainable Cloud DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:288@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Dan Kalowsky\nThis session will introduce how Ampere @@ -1725,7 +1693,7 @@ SUMMARY:How do you really do GPL enforcement? (aka Bringing software right -to-repair to the masses) DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:294@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Denver Gingerich\nEnforcing the General Public Licens @@ -1752,7 +1720,7 @@ SUMMARY:Developing Accessible\, Multimodal Interactive STEM Simulations wi th SceneryStack DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:309@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Brett Fiedler\nSceneryStack is a recently created ope @@ -1781,7 +1749,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:316@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1793,7 +1761,7 @@ SUMMARY:A review of valuation models and their application to open source models DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:334@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Sophia Vargas\nCollectively\, we struggle to consiste @@ -1810,11 +1778,33 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/262/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T150000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:350@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:BoF: Amateur radio and Open Source +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T150000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:372@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Fun Activity (Improv-related\, slide deck karaoke?) +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z -UID:235@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:236@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Coffee\, tea\, and snack break URL:http://2024.fossy.us @@ -1823,7 +1813,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T154500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:237@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Coffee\, tea\, and snack break @@ -1833,7 +1823,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T154500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:238@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Coffee\, tea\, and snack break @@ -1841,19 +1831,30 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Coffee/tea break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T154500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z -UID:236@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T154500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:235@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Coffee\, tea\, and snack break URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z +UID:341@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Case Studies of Exploitation in Open Source DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205021Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214524Z UID:368@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Watson\nOpen Source funding is inextricably related t @@ -1882,63 +1883,78 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/220/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Discussion: Scalability Through Open Source Hygiene +SUMMARY:Research Says.....Insights on Building\, Leading\, and Sustaining + Open Source DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:295@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:330@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ria Farrell Schalnat\nThere are many processes within - an organization dealing with open source including licensing reviews & co - mpliance\, export compliance\, product security\, contractual obligations\ - , and sustainability. These operate against the backdrop of ongoing devel - opment in technology\, case law and newer legal requirements such as the E - O 14028 in the United States and the European Union’s Cyber Resiliency A - ct (EU-CRA). All of them depend on inventories to understand the scope o - f obligations\, risks and opportunities. They also require simple\, scala - ble runbooks to achieve the underlying goals. Come to this session for an - interactive discussion on practices and how to leverage projects within t - he Linux Foundation to super-charge your company’s open source practices - . -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/260/ +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Kaylea Champion\nHow do we know when a project is str + uggling? How can we build communities to sustain open source projects? \n\ + nIn this beginner-friendly talk\, I will describe recent research findings + about successfully sustaining an open source project and the lifecycles o + f these projects. We know that open source software is fundamental to glob + al communication\, business\, education\, and more. This software is often + produced and maintained through dynamic organizations in which we have a + great deal of flexibility to choose our own tasks. But what we choose to w + ork on and what the global public most needs are not always in alignment. + What organizational structures\, governance practices\, and technology cho + ices are associated with increased risk? And given these circumstances\, h + ow might we work together to improve software quality and security? Let's + look at what we know about signs of trouble and strategies for success\, a + nd then discuss how the research community can better serve the needs of o + pen source.\n\nYou'll walk away with:\n* new ideas for taking action perso + nally and inside organizations\n* specific data-driven insights into how p + rojects evolve over time +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/247/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Deconstructing the Linux System Definition to Understand the Scope - of the OIN License - Table 12 and +SUMMARY:Unlocking containers on ARM64: A story of runtime and image suppor + t DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:317@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:283@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Keith Bergelt\, CEO\, Open Invention Network\nOIN is - the only institution focused on mitigating patent risk in Open\nSource Sof - tware (OSS). With nearly 4\,000 members\, OIN maintains the\nworld's large - st and oldest patent cross license. The coverage area —\nor scope of the - OIN community cross license — is defined by a list of\nover 4\,500 core - OSS & hardware development packages called the Linux\nSystem Definition w - hich is updated approximately every 18-24 months.\n\nThe newest update — - Table 12\, which will become effective on August\n26\, 2024 — extends O - IN's existing patent risk mitigation efforts for\nits community members to - cloud-native computing\, enterprise software\,\nIoT\, networking\, automo - tive\, embedded systems and hardware development\ntechnologies\, among oth - ers.\n\nKEY TAKEAWAYS — Participants will develop an understanding of\n\ - n* The scope of OIN's Linux System definition - what it is\, how it is - maintained and updated\, its current coverage and a path for its future\n - \n* How the Linux System safeguards against patent threats and encoura - ges the adoption of OSS\n\n* How this framework relates to recent disp - utes like that in the US International Trade Commission between Netgear an - d TP Link\n\n* What else we are tracking in the area of patents that c - ould become threats to the OSS community -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/279/ +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Phil Estes\nContainer runtimes like Docker and contai + nerd are the core software components that enable the adoption of containe + r technology\, whether in cloud orchestrator systems like Kubernetes or in + edge and embedded compute scenarios. Similarly\, the Open Container Initi + ative (OCI) has standardized the concepts around containers\, like the ima + ge and runtime specifications\, so that all runtime implementations are in + teroperable. \n\nIn both these worlds\, the adoption of multi-platform sup + port has made steady progress for the last 6-8 years. While progress has b + een slow at times\, the ecosystem has now fully unlocked the advantages of + ARM64 as one of the key platforms supported directly by runtimes and enco + ded into the specifications of the OCI.\n\nIn this talk we'll walk through + this history of the adoption of ARM64\, including a focus on the CNCF con + tainerd project as a shining example of the adoption of multi-platform sup + port\, and specifically the enablement of the containerd project to build\ + , test\, and release official support on ARM64. We'll look at example use + cases and where the industry is using this support today to enable product + ion workloads on ARM64. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/189/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:289@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:317@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:343@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description LOCATION:327 @@ -1946,38 +1962,20 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:378@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Anatomy of a Cross-platform Chat SDK DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:252@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:321@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stephen Paul Weber\nA lot of XMPP developers spend mu - ch of their time re-implementing the same basic protocol features. While g - ood low-level libraries for protocol establishment are not hard to find\, - what would it look like to model at a higher level\, so that developers ca - n focus on building a great user experience and not have to worry about wh - at a "XEP" is? I have been exploring this space and will report on my find - ings\, demo a prototype\, and solicit feedback about what would make your - chat or real-time development experience smoother. -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/231/ +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:301@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -1988,7 +1986,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:You say you want a (web) revolution? DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:313@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bryan T Ollendyke\nThrough web standards\, we have gi @@ -2036,71 +2034,95 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/198/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:343@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:373@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description +DESCRIPTION:Neurodiversity Networking/Discussion LOCATION:333 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:341@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:359@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 +LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Unlocking containers on ARM64: A story of runtime and image suppor - t +SUMMARY:How to make local == CI for fun and more community contributions! +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:357@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jeremy Adams\nYou want contributors and and new maint + ainers to get up to speed quickly in your project\, but for many complex O + SS projects\, the chances are slim that a new contributor can actually cre + ate a development environment\, test an improvement\, and get it across th + e line without a lot of assistance. Often the CONTRIBUTING.md\, README.md + suggest that the best contributions are "non-code" because of the daunting + tangle environment setup\, local build and test scripts\, and a completel + y different stack in CI. There may even be several competing local environ + ments contributed over the months and years to further confuse matters.\n\ + nIn this talk\, Jeremy will showcase open source projects that have had th + eir local and CI experience harmonized by using open source Dagger. He'll + show how it can make it easier to onboard new contributors and make the pr + oject more fun and productive. +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/276/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:289@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Anatomy of a Cross-platform Chat SDK DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:283@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:252@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Phil Estes\nContainer runtimes like Docker and contai - nerd are the core software components that enable the adoption of containe - r technology\, whether in cloud orchestrator systems like Kubernetes or in - edge and embedded compute scenarios. Similarly\, the Open Container Initi - ative (OCI) has standardized the concepts around containers\, like the ima - ge and runtime specifications\, so that all runtime implementations are in - teroperable. \n\nIn both these worlds\, the adoption of multi-platform sup - port has made steady progress for the last 6-8 years. While progress has b - een slow at times\, the ecosystem has now fully unlocked the advantages of - ARM64 as one of the key platforms supported directly by runtimes and enco - ded into the specifications of the OCI.\n\nIn this talk we'll walk through - this history of the adoption of ARM64\, including a focus on the CNCF con - tainerd project as a shining example of the adoption of multi-platform sup - port\, and specifically the enablement of the containerd project to build\ - , test\, and release official support on ARM64. We'll look at example use - cases and where the industry is using this support today to enable product - ion workloads on ARM64. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/189/ +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Stephen Paul Weber\nA lot of XMPP developers spend mu + ch of their time re-implementing the same basic protocol features. While g + ood low-level libraries for protocol establishment are not hard to find\, + what would it look like to model at a higher level\, so that developers ca + n focus on building a great user experience and not have to worry about wh + at a "XEP" is? I have been exploring this space and will report on my find + ings\, demo a prototype\, and solicit feedback about what would make your + chat or real-time development experience smoother. +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/231/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:351@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:BoF: Crafts\, Mending\, and Repair (bring a project!) +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Navigating Dependency Abandonment DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:335@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bogdan Vasilescu\nMany developers relying on open-sou @@ -2124,16 +2146,73 @@ DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bogdan Vasilescu\nMany developers relying on open-sou e two studies\, and ends with recommendations to both researchers and prac titioners who are facing dependency abandonment or are sunsetting projects \, such as opportunities for low-effort transparency mechanisms to help ex - posed projects make better\, more informed decisions. + posed projects make better\, more informed decisions.\n\nThe slide deck ca + n be viewed here: https://cmustrudel.github.io/slides/fossy24-dependency-a + bandonment.pdf LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/255/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Embracing your weird: Community Building through Fun & Play +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:279@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tom "spot" Callaway\nI believe that the community tha + t plays together\, stays together. It sounds cliche (and it is)\, but the + first rule of community building is to remember that communities are made + of people\, not code. Over the last 15 years\, I've been experimenting wit + h creating opportunities for the communities that I am a part participated + in to play and have fun\, at first subconsciously\, but later\, mindfully + and intentionally. In this talk\, I will share some of the ideas I have t + ried\, along with some efforts that I have seen done in other communities. + I hope to try to convince you to invest in creating opportunities for you + r communities to connect as people through laughter and play\, and critica + lly\, and how that can help in growing the size\, resiliency\, and sustain + ability of open source communities. +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/212/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Discussion: Scalability Through Open Source Hygiene +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:295@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Ria Farrell Schalnat\nThere are many processes within + an organization dealing with open source including licensing reviews & co + mpliance\, export compliance\, product security\, contractual obligations\ + , and sustainability. These operate against the backdrop of ongoing devel + opment in technology\, case law and newer legal requirements such as the E + O 14028 in the United States and the European Union’s Cyber Resiliency A + ct (EU-CRA). All of them depend on inventories to understand the scope o + f obligations\, risks and opportunities. They also require simple\, scala + ble runbooks to achieve the underlying goals. Come to this session for an + interactive discussion on practices and how to leverage projects within t + he Linux Foundation to super-charge your company’s open source practices + . +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/260/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:378@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Open source mentorship programs: what’s in it for you as a mento r\, maintainer\, or mentee? (panel) DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:312@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Emily Lovell\nMentorship can be a powerful tool for c @@ -2157,116 +2236,20 @@ LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/196/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Research Says.....Insights on Building\, Leading\, and Sustaining - Open Source -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:330@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Kaylea Champion\nHow do we know when a project is str - uggling? How can we build communities to sustain open source projects? \n\ - nIn this beginner-friendly talk\, I will describe recent research findings - about successfully sustaining an open source project and the lifecycles o - f these projects. We know that open source software is fundamental to glob - al communication\, business\, education\, and more. This software is often - produced and maintained through dynamic organizations in which we have a - great deal of flexibility to choose our own tasks. But what we choose to w - ork on and what the global public most needs are not always in alignment. - What organizational structures\, governance practices\, and technology cho - ices are associated with increased risk? And given these circumstances\, h - ow might we work together to improve software quality and security? Let's - look at what we know about signs of trouble and strategies for success\, a - nd then discuss how the research community can better serve the needs of o - pen source.\n\nYou'll walk away with:\n* new ideas for taking action perso - nally and inside organizations\n* specific data-driven insights into how p - rojects evolve over time -LOCATION:328 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/247/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:359@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:258@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:351@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:How to make local == CI for fun and more community contributions! -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:357@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Jeremy Adams\nYou want contributors and and new maint - ainers to get up to speed quickly in your project\, but for many complex O - SS projects\, the chances are slim that a new contributor can actually cre - ate a development environment\, test an improvement\, and get it across th - e line without a lot of assistance. Often the CONTRIBUTING.md\, README.md - suggest that the best contributions are "non-code" because of the daunting - tangle environment setup\, local build and test scripts\, and a completel - y different stack in CI. There may even be several competing local environ - ments contributed over the months and years to further confuse matters.\n\ - nIn this talk\, Jeremy will showcase open source projects that have had th - eir local and CI experience harmonized by using open source Dagger. He'll - show how it can make it easier to onboard new contributors and make the pr - oject more fun and productive. -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/276/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Embracing your weird: Community Building through Fun & Play -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:279@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Tom "spot" Callaway\nI believe that the community tha - t plays together\, stays together. It sounds cliche (and it is)\, but the - first rule of community building is to remember that communities are made - of people\, not code. Over the last 15 years\, I've been experimenting wit - h creating opportunities for the communities that I am a part participated - in to play and have fun\, at first subconsciously\, but later\, mindfully - and intentionally. In this talk\, I will share some of the ideas I have t - ried\, along with some efforts that I have seen done in other communities. - I hope to try to convince you to invest in creating opportunities for you - r communities to connect as people through laughter and play\, and critica - lly\, and how that can help in growing the size\, resiliency\, and sustain - ability of open source communities. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/212/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T163000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:321@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:338 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T171500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:256@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -2274,19 +2257,9 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:257@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T171500 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T173000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:259@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -2294,80 +2267,30 @@ URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Break -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T171500 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:258@2024.fossy.us +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T171500 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:257@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:318@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Bradley M. Kuhn\nCome to this session to receive a wh - irlwind opportunity to dive deep into one of the most heavily discussed is - sues in the GPLv2 family of licenses. Namely\, what is it that one must p - rovide to meet the requirements to provide "the scripts used to control - installation of the executable"? Why do some feel that the plain meaning - of the word "install" doesn't really mean "install"?\nFinally see the big - debate that we've all been awaiting for years on this question. Time perm - itting\, we'll cover other issues. -LOCATION:333 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/280/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205022Z -UID:302@2024.fossy.us +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:290@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:322@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Opening Remarks -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T183000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:228@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Closing Remarks -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:260@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:328 +LOCATION:327 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Protecting users against confusing licensing DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:296@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Craig Topham\nThe Free Software Foundation's (FSF) GN @@ -2396,7 +2319,7 @@ BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:280@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -2404,50 +2327,10 @@ LOCATION:329 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:290@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: BoF DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:358@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:No description -LOCATION:327 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Leveraging open source softwares to incorporate open assignments i - n courses. -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:303@2024.fossy.us -CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Rie Namba\nAt the University of British Columbia\, we - host a variety of open source software platforms to support instructors i - n adopting various teaching practices. This session will specifically focu - s on MediaWiki\, WordPress\, and H5P as tools for instructors interested i - n incorporating open practices into their courses and projects. We will go - over use cases\, and discuss the challenges and considerations we encount - er in supporting both instructors and students. -LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/197/ -END:VEVENT -BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:352@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -2455,25 +2338,32 @@ LOCATION:333 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Why is Python Packaging -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:336@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:260@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Moshe Zadka\n"Python packaging is a problem" is a mem - e. What is Python packaging? What is being packaged\, where is it sent fro - m\, and where is its destination? Why\, oh why\, can't I just produce a lo - ckfile?\nLet's dive into the details of Python packaging: the past\, the p - resent\, the challenges ahead\, and the proposed solutions. -LOCATION:329 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/216/ +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:328 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:336@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:324@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:No description @@ -2481,10 +2371,21 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:318@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:333 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Community governance models on small-to-mid-size Mastodon servers DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z UID:323@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Darius Kazemi\nDecentralized social media's rapid exp @@ -2508,11 +2409,84 @@ LOCATION:328 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/250/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Leveraging open source softwares to incorporate open assignments i + n courses. +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:303@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Rie Namba\nAt the University of British Columbia\, we + host a variety of open source software platforms to support instructors i + n adopting various teaching practices. This session will specifically focu + s on MediaWiki\, WordPress\, and H5P as tools for instructors interested i + n incorporating open practices into their courses and projects. We will go + over use cases\, and discuss the challenges and considerations we encount + er in supporting both instructors and students. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/197/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:Voluntarily Excellent When It Comes To Accessibility: A New Review + er-Friendly VPAT +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:304@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Chris Knapp\nVPAT and HECVAT (Higher Education Commun + ity Vendor Assessment Toolkit) are a partial solution to the problem of de + termining what competing products show better compliance with standards. T + hey are also good instruments for planning how to equitably roll out an ad + option with full understanding of the compliance gaps of the chosen produc + t. \nBut standard compliance information cannot tell the whole story. It i + s a snapshot in time that does not speak to the culture of the vendor\, wh + ere the product has been\, and more importantly\, where it is going. In th + is session\, we will detail Sakai’s multi-year effort to develop and imp + lement a community-sourced accessibility strategy\, that eventually led us + to produce our own VPAT\, and the steps we took to reimagine the standard + VPAT format with the VPAT reviewer audience in mind. +LOCATION:338 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/199/ +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240802T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:302@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:329 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Opening Remarks +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240804T183000 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:228@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:Closing Remarks +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214525Z +UID:358@2024.fossy.us +CATEGORIES: +DESCRIPTION:No description +LOCATION:327 +URL:http://2024.fossy.us +END:VEVENT +BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:GitHub Actions & Arm64: Enabling the world’s software to build o n ARM DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214526Z UID:284@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Larissa Fortuna\nTravel through GitHub’s journey to @@ -2537,33 +2511,21 @@ LOCATION:327 URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/190/ END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT -SUMMARY:Voluntarily Excellent When It Comes To Accessibility: A New Review - er-Friendly VPAT -DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T173000 -DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240803T181500 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z -UID:304@2024.fossy.us +SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Talk +DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T173000 +DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T181500 +DTSTAMP:20250211T214526Z +UID:322@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: -DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Chris Knapp\nVPAT and HECVAT (Higher Education Commun - ity Vendor Assessment Toolkit) are a partial solution to the problem of de - termining what competing products show better compliance with standards. T - hey are also good instruments for planning how to equitably roll out an ad - option with full understanding of the compliance gaps of the chosen produc - t. \nBut standard compliance information cannot tell the whole story. It i - s a snapshot in time that does not speak to the culture of the vendor\, wh - ere the product has been\, and more importantly\, where it is going. In th - is session\, we will detail Sakai’s multi-year effort to develop and imp - lement a community-sourced accessibility strategy\, that eventually led us - to produce our own VPAT\, and the steps we took to reimagine the standard - VPAT format with the VPAT reviewer audience in mind. +DESCRIPTION:No description LOCATION:338 -URL:http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/199/ +URL:http://2024.fossy.us END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:FOSSY 2024: Social Event DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T190000 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20240801T220000 -DTSTAMP:20240729T205023Z +DTSTAMP:20250211T214526Z UID:379@2024.fossy.us CATEGORIES: DESCRIPTION:Official Thursday Night Event at Punch Bowl Social\n\n340 SW M diff --git a/schedule/conference.json b/schedule/conference.json index c21bfa5..57f3d2d 100644 --- a/schedule/conference.json +++ b/schedule/conference.json @@ -1,5 +1,22 @@ { "schedule": [ + { + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-03T09:15:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T09:45:00", + "duration": 30, + "kind": "Coffee/tea break", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 233, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Breakfast and coffee break" + }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -34,23 +51,6 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Breakfast and coffee break" }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-03T09:15:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T09:45:00", - "duration": 30, - "kind": "Coffee/tea break", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 233, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Breakfast and coffee break" - }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -97,12 +97,74 @@ "code": "402", "biography": "", "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Rosy Schechter", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/004bd8b1eee7125d0f74d5a89f14a149?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "404", + "biography": "", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Sriram Ramkrishna", + "twitter": "sramkrishna", + "mastodon": "sri@floss.social", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/447062d346ca576f8745b0cae1255dfc?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "362", + "biography": "Sri is a Free and Open Source advocate for over 25 years. Sri started working on open source software when he was 25 contributing to the GNOME project in 1997. 15 years later, he was given the opportunity to work on open source professionally at Intel Corporation in 2012. While his career has gone through many iterations his contributions to the GNOME project has been consistent - building community around projects and engaging with community. His passion today is to help build the Linux Application Ecosystem through initiatives like the Linux App Summit. Professionally, Sri is the senior community manager for oneAPI and the lead coordinator of Intel's Software Innovator Program.", + "username": "" } ], "abstract": "As free software has taken over the world, we've seen large contributions from corporations. This large adoption has led to more contributors (code, community and financial) than we ever dreamed. Unfortunately what this has caused is somewhat of a dependence on corporate funding and place making for our communities. Now we are faced with the question of now that free and open source software has taken over the world, how do we continue to build and use it outside of corporate contexts. Whether governmental, non-profit, education, or elsewhere, how do we make sure there is a digital future that is not reliant upon financing from corporations", "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/278/", "cancelled": false }, + { + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-02T09:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T10:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 229, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "20+ years of the OSU Open Source Lab", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Lance Albertson", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fdd76b88c53bc0051e9a25d6b99efae3?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "371", + "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 nearly 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": "" + }, + { + "name": "Pono Takamori", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/cfc9c8fd254228bec9bf46dbeba90719?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "406", + "biography": "Daniel Pono Takamori is the Community Organizer at Software Freedom Conservancy. He's been involved in FOSS for almost 20 years and worked for non-profit FOSS organizations for over a decade. While not at his computer he likes to play go, cook vegetables and ride his bike.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "The OSU Open Source Lab is a free vendor-neutral colocation hosting facility that provides a variety of hosting services for FOSS projects from around the world since 2003. This session will cover the current status of what the lab has been up to and other new services we\u2019re planning on releasing soon. Some of the interesting technologies we\u2019ve been working with include OpenStack, OpenPOWER, ARM64, RISC-V, Ceph storage and Chef to name a few.\r\n\r\nIf you\u2019ve ever wondered about all the services we provide and what we do, this is the session for you. We\u2019ve been improving our services quite a bit and also have been expanding on a few other fronts as well. In addition, we\u2019ll cover how we hire and mentor students who work at the lab and where they end up after graduating. In addition, we\u2019ll cover some other ways we try and mentor other students beyond those who work at the lab.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/274/", + "cancelled": false + }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -121,13 +183,13 @@ "name": "Open Source and AI", "authors": [ { - "name": "Bradley M. Kuhn", + "name": "Denver Gingerich", "twitter": "", "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "373", - "biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5ca795f06b3505f43bf7ba26fef37c7d?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "340", + "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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.", "username": "" }, { @@ -171,42 +233,10 @@ "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Bradley Kuhn will lead our panelists in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different efforts out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the technology\r\nactually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions. We\r\nmay even have a panelist or two willing to question whether the\r\ntechnology even should be held to such a definition.", + "abstract": "Denver Gingerich will lead our panelists in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different efforts out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the technology\r\nactually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions.", "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/275/", "cancelled": false }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-02T09:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T10:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 229, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "20+ years of the OSU Open Source Lab", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Lance Albertson", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/fdd76b88c53bc0051e9a25d6b99efae3?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "371", - "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 nearly 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": "The OSU Open Source Lab is a free vendor-neutral colocation hosting facility that provides a variety of hosting services for FOSS projects from around the world since 2003. This session will cover the current status of what the lab has been up to and other new services we\u2019re planning on releasing soon. Some of the interesting technologies we\u2019ve been working with include OpenStack, OpenPOWER, ARM64, RISC-V, Ceph storage and Chef to name a few.\r\n\r\nIf you\u2019ve ever wondered about all the services we provide and what we do, this is the session for you. We\u2019ve been improving our services quite a bit and also have been expanding on a few other fronts as well. In addition, we\u2019ll cover how we hire and mentor students who work at the lab and where they end up after graduating. In addition, we\u2019ll cover some other ways we try and mentor other students beyond those who work at the lab.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/274/", - "cancelled": false - }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -225,250 +255,68 @@ "name": "Registration Open" }, { - "room": "328", + "room": "333", "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Science of Community", - "conf_key": 327, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "From Data to Action: Using Metrics to Improve FOSS Communities", - "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": "282", - "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 an OpenUK board member and co-chair of the CNCF Contributor Strategy Technical Advisory Group. 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 BS in computer science, an MBA, and a PhD. In her spare time she enjoys reading science fiction, running, and traveling.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Sustaining FOSS projects and communities over the long-term can be a challenge. Project leaders and contributors are busy people who don\u2019t always have the time or experience to focus on growing a community and maintaining their software. Using metrics is one way to help FOSS projects identify potential issues and identify areas where they can improve their community to make it more sustainable over the long-term. Being proactive about improving sustainability before it becomes a crisis can help make our software more sustainable and reliable for all of us. However, not everyone has the experience or skills required to know how to interpret their metrics and use what they learn to make improvements within their community.\r\n\r\nThe CHAOSS project has been creating a series of MIT licensed Practitioner Guides focused on helping bridge the gap between research and practice to improve the sustainability of our software and communities. The guides are designed to make it easier for people to draw meaningful and actionable insights using community metrics, even when those people do not necessarily have a deep background in data analysis or much experience working within FOSS communities.\r\n\r\nThis talk will identify several categories of metrics from the Practitioner Guide Series (e.g., responsiveness, contributor sustainability, organizational participation), discuss how to interpret the metrics, and provide ideas for improving in areas identified using the metrics. The audience will walk away with a better understanding of how to use metrics to proactively improve the long-term sustainability of their FOSS projects and communities.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/253/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "geekygirldawn", - "mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@geekygirldawn" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 297, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", - "conf_key": 338, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Steadfast Self-Hosting Workshop", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Adam Monsen", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/efd087b3c1ac43def6e3e926ad633c25?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "391", - "biography": "Adam is a kind and savvy FOSS enthusiast. He\u2019s 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\u2019s most proud of his family, growing Mifos, founding SeaGL, selling C-SATS, and writing a FOSS book about self-hosting FOSS.\r\n\r\nAdam is privileged and lucky to have given talks and workshops at a handful of conferences (LFNW, SeaGL, LibrePlanet, OSCON, FOSSY) and various other engagements.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Join in a hands-on workshop all about self-hosting! Bring your experiences and curiosity, leave with inspiration and ideas to try out. Together we'll help each other get unblocked wherever we're at, from thinking about self-hosting to improving smooth-running servers and services. This workshop will focus on fundamental concepts, tools, and techniques from the FOSS book Steadfast Self-Hosting, although having and having read the book is not required.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/219/", - "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" + "333" ], "start": "2024-08-04T10:45:00", "end": "2024-08-04T11:30:00", "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "kind": "BoF", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 374, + "conf_key": 369, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "BoF for actors/creative types - writing and producing sketches" }, { "room": "333", "rooms": [ "333" ], - "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "BoFs and Discussions", - "conf_key": 347, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Mapping the UN's Sustainable Development Goals and their Relationships with FOSS", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Jonathan Starr", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5f23b4a626e2d89265b10faad2886bab?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "316", - "biography": "Program Manager at NumFOCUS's Open Source Science Initiative as well as a perpetual contributor to open source projects, companies, and organizations that enable open science.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "As we continue to map the digital knowledge and tooling ecosystems, we keep asking ourselves, \"who will use what we're building.\" FOSS contributors, funders, supporters, organizations, and users all come immediately to mind, and we've built for their uses. \r\n\r\nThe recent addition of over 10,000 papers as well as their relationships with FOSS software, researchers, and research institutions, however, has led us to begin exploring the relationships between knowledge discovery outputs, the tools used in the knowledge discovery process, and the UN's 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs).\r\n\r\nWe are asking ourselves the questions:\r\n\r\nWhat knowledge, discovered recently or decades ago, supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWhat FOSS tools are used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWho develops, maintains, and grows the communities behind the FOSS tools used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWhat communities, organizations, institutions, and industries support the people who develop, maintain, and grow the communities behind the FOSS tools used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs?\r\nWhat is the impact of a change (addition of funding, loss of funding, tooling innovations, etc.) in the network of actors and infrastructure behind SDG progress?\r\nWhat data points are most valuable for answering these questions?\r\nUltimately, how can we track, analyze, and visualize the data, data that we know exists, in a way that can inform actionable, sustainable outcomes in the advancement of the SDGs?\r\n\r\nAnd in this room at FOSSY, we'll be asking them out loud and discussing them with whoever cares to join.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/277/", - "cancelled": false - }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS For Education", - "conf_key": 307, + "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", + "conf_key": 291, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Open source training for reproducibility, collaboration, and community in academic research", + "name": "Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free", "authors": [ { - "name": "Alex Marden", + "name": "Josh Berkus", "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", + "mastodon": "@fuzzychef@m6n.io", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f599a70b5623f5831f8d24bd6e652035?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "367", - "biography": "Alex Marden began using open source software to facilitate international fieldwork and collaboration while studying wildfire ecology in the Kalahari Basin. He incorporates that experience into teaching numerous open source software-based courses and workshops at the University of Texas at Austin. As the GIS and Geospatial Data Coordinator at the UT Libraries, he supports the GIS needs of the university community and works to make geospatial data broadly available and accessible. In his role as an Open Geospatial Software Specialist with the UT Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO), he focuses on open-source software training and best practice documentation. Additionally, he is the current Chair of the newly formed UT-OSPO User Advisory Group, which aims to effectively serve and foster a community of open-source focused researchers. He received a PhD in Geography from UT Austin in 2024, where his research focused on spatiotemporally complex climate-disturbance linkages and how scale relates to the observability of those linkages.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a9bf741211c9717ed23f4680227b88e2?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "352", + "biography": "Josh Berkus has been contributing to various FOSS projects since 1998, including Linux, PostgreSQL, OpenOffice, MySQL, CouchDB, OpenSolaris, and others. Currently he works on Kubernetes for Red Hat. Josh is on the OSI Board, the CNCF Code of Conduct Committee, and co-organizes SCALE and Container Plumbing. He is local to Portland.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "McCoy Smith", + "twitter": "mccoysmith", + "mastodon": "@mccoysmith", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/44e615bb857f5cb8780dd2098c396f9a?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "366", + "biography": "P. McCoy Smith is the Founding Attorney at Lex Pan Law LLC, a full-service technology and intellectual property law firm based in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A and Opsequio LLC, an open source compliance consultancy. Prior to his current position, he spent 20 years in the legal department of a Fortune 50 multinational technology company as a business unit intellectual property specialist; among his duties was setting up the free & open source legal function and policies for that company. He preceded his in-house experience with 8 years in private practice in a large New York City-based boutique intellectual property law firm, working simultaneously as a U.S. patent litigator and U.S. patent prosecutor. He was also a patent examiner at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office prior to attending law school. He is licensed to practice law in Oregon, Washington State, California & New York and to prosecute patent applications in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office; he is also a registered Trademark and Patent Agent with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office. He has degrees from Colorado State University (Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering, with honors), Johns Hopkins University (Masters of Liberal Arts) and the University of Virginia (Juris Doctor). While in private practice, and continuing into his in-house career, he taught portions of the U.S. patent bar exam for a long-standing and well-known patent bar exam preparation course, and from 2014-2020 was on the editorial board of the Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society (JOLTS), and is currently on the editorial board of the American Intellectual Property Law Quarterly Journal (AIPLAQJ). He is the author or co-author of chapters on open source and copyright and patents in \u201cOpen Source Law, Policy & Practice\u201d (2022, Oxford University Press). He lectures frequently around the world on free and open source issues as well as other intellectual property topics.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Research-focused data and software training outside of the standard academic curriculum can play a crucial role in university environments. Reproducibility and collaboration are fundamental aspects of research, creating an opportunity to incorporate open source software development strategies and techniques into training workshops.\r\n\r\nThe University of Texas at Austin Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO) has co-sponsored numerous workshops that emphasize the interplay among open source software, reproducibility, and collaboration. A key focus is engaging researchers across diverse use-case scenarios along the open source participation pathway \u2013 from introducing participants to the benefits of using open source software to managing collaborative open source software ecosystems.\r\n\r\nThis session will explore the UT-OSPO\u2019s cross-departmental initiative, integrating open source software training into research workshops and events. We will discuss pedagogical and administrative strategies for appealing to a wide range of researchers and fostering an open source community within a large university.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/204/", - "cancelled": false - }, - { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Science of Community", - "conf_key": 331, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Things I've Learned as a Linux Kernel Maintainer", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Darrick J. Wong", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/442ca87b78597c13bf4df13bbd8d6c1d?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "320", - "biography": "Darrick designed the autonomous self healing capabilities in the XFS filesystem in Linux, and served as the kernel XFS maintainer from 2016 to 2023.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "I spent seven years serving as the maintainer of the XFS filesystem and iomap filesystem library in the Linux kernel. Whilst on that journey, I learned a lot about steering technical direction of those two projects, but also the limitations of managing a community without authority. I intend this talk to be most helpful for people who are current FOSS maintainers or are mid to senior level developers contemplating taking on such roles.\r\n\r\nThese are the six skills that I found most helpful and grew the most in those seven years:\r\n * Concocting a strategy from which to build a development roadmap\r\n * Defining roles for people to take on\r\n * Negotiating staffing and budgets with managers\r\n * Coaching people who are trying to get their efforts across the finish line\r\n * Dealing with external shocks in as principled a manner as possible\r\n * Steering your way out of burnout, aka Replacing Yourself\r\n\r\nFor each of these areas, I'll share how that skill fits into the Linux community (they didn't always fit well!) and what happened when I tried to make things happen in those areas. I will target spending about 4-5 minutes talking about each of those points and leave 20-25 minutes at the end for an audience discussion.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/246/", - "cancelled": false - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Wild Card", - "conf_key": 353, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Thinking Beyond 0's and 1's", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Nisha Kumar", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@nisha@social.afront.org", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/289a98c380a0ba0c05c19ceee863800a?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "300", - "biography": "Nisha is a Software Engineer at Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. When she isn't troubleshooting the cloud, she contributes to various open source Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) projects, most notably SPDX. In their free time, they like to solve human problems by making things.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Open Source won. We see it in the large number of software projects created and used by other software projects. Most of our modern day software, including AI, runs on a large number of open source software projects. Working in a cloud company that produces and deploys software at scale, I see a lot of phenomenon that look very much like what I used to see when I worked in semiconductor manufacturing an age ago. Examples of these are drift from the norm, heisenbugs, emergent properties, and just \u00af\\_(\u30c4)_/\u00af things.\r\n\r\nThe physical world is full of these types of phenomenon. We deal with it by using probability and statistics - accepting that we can't give a \"true\" or \"false\" answer, but settling for a continuous \"maybe\". This is a talk about looking at software production at a larger scale than just the single artisanal \"app\". We will apply probability and statistics to open source software at scale, and use some \"Machine Learning\" to get some insights into how the single app is the product of, and part of a somewhat unknowable whole.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/266/", + "abstract": "Why are the non-discriminatory clauses (5 and 6) part of the Open Source\r\nDefinition? Why does anyone care? Why shouldn't project owners be able\r\nto limit where the software can be used or prevent bad people from using\r\nthe software?\r\n\r\nThese two clauses are the most poorly understood parts of the Open\r\nSource Definition, and the ones that would-be license writers most\r\nfrequently want to compromise. They are not a moral requirement;\r\ninstead, they are compulsive in order to sustain how FOSS is packaged,\r\ndistributed, and used. An Open Source Initiative board member will\r\nexplain, in developer-friendly terms, why you should care about OSD5 and\r\nOSD6, and an attorney will explain why they are legally required.\r\n\r\nAttendees will learn why to retain these freedoms in their own\r\nlicense-writing, and why the are important when consuming other people's\r\nprojects.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/263/", "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@nisha@social.afront.org" + "mastodon_id": "@fuzzychef@m6n.io" }, { "room": "338", @@ -505,97 +353,6 @@ "cancelled": false, "twitter_id": "atg_abhishek" }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS For Education", - "conf_key": 314, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "An ideal education with Open Source, a Recent Grad's Perspective.", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Onexi", - "twitter": "NONE", - "mastodon": "NONE", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/af166ed2d55b11cf74a1fd8510f61003?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "380", - "biography": "Onexi is a recent graduate of Norfolk State University in the Field of Computer Science. A curious mind that has participated in the Netflix Pathways UX/UI Bootcamp, Cybersecurity competitions from the SANS organization, and most recently was introduced to the world of open source through the Open Source Research Experience Catalyst Program from UCSC. Now working as a Developer, always looking to learn something new and participate in an interesting conversation!", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "The open source world is one filled with opportunity, for collaboration, for learning, and brimming with experiences. It allows for ideas and communities to come about regardless of background, for the sake of a common goal. If only I knew about it sooner. I learned of open source in my last semester of college, and I believe it can transform our education as it is now.\r\n\r\nLet\u2019s propose a thought experiment. Suppose that you are back in college and open source is a widespread concept in education, not as it is right now, but as widely known as the idea of internships, for example. Opportunities for open source projects would exist for every discipline, allowing for the collaboration among students from art, literature, business, engineering, and more. Open source would be more diverse, allowing for other disciplines to pick up the work where another may falter. A developer might be too clear cut to write out friendly documentation for newcomers to a project, and a writer might be too non-technical to explain certain technologies in depth, but both people collaborating could create great documentation. If it sounds familiar in any way, it is essentially how people work in the real world, at a company. Meaning, that if you had open source in your education you could adapt to working with other disciplines that are not studying the same thing as you, on a project that can have a real world impact.\r\n\r\nCollege students would trick themselves into creating their own company, a pseudo startup. Many ideas flourish in young minds, but never come to fruition, maybe due to lack of resources, or not having the right people around. A lot of times, given a lack of knowledge, or the overwhelming feeling of doing lots of work that could have no impact, they never see the light. College is a place filled with diversity of knowledge and experiences, like open source. If a school club existed which allowed any major to join, bundle together, and create an open source project of their choosing while leaving each student a piece of the puzzle to fulfill, it would essentially have the same structure as a real company, more or less. Think about the many app/company ideas that have crossed your mind. Would you have tried to make them if you had open source? \r\n\r\nStudents can experience the real world and create a real project, from the comfort of their home. People have different circumstances, and many students fail to gain experience in their field right out of college. Whether it be personal circumstances, failing to get chosen for internships, or not having the time to do extracurriculars, there are many reasons why students fail to learn what real world work is like. Open source projects would allow a student to apply their skills regardless of time frame or location, given that they have a laptop on hand. Moreover, these skills can be directly applicable into the real world, as you work with people with different backgrounds towards a common goal.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/205/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "NONE", - "mastodon_id": "NONE" - }, - { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", - "conf_key": 364, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Co-Designing Sustainable Prosocial Digital Infrastructure", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "LX Cast", - "twitter": "laurex", - "mastodon": "I have one but have yet to post", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/05e09dd17e9c18210650a755b866e7ac?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "381", - "biography": "LX is currently a founder of a group app called Fractal and a student and practitioner of patterns of collective practice. They have been a product leader working on communication and collaboration tech for about 12 years. They're a board member at Prosocial Design Network and Tech Fleet, a past Resident Fellow at the Integrity Institute, a steering committee member of the Council on Tech and Social Cohesion, a member of Aspen Institute's Virtually Human working group, a mentor with PDX Women in Tech and All Tech is Human, and a consultant helping nonprofits develop product discovery practices. \r\n\r\nLX Cast is mostly water and collections of bacteria and bone and stardust. An emergent invention. Canadian West Coast island-born former New Yorker current Portlander curiouser researcher reader leader shape shifter code switcher beginner elder young a flash of light technologist social engineer experimental questioning contradictory vegan (except for brownies) consultant recoverer contributor community practitioner strategist poet weirdo professional queer non-binary neurodivergent raised-Quaker seemer listener fox cook step-parent partner collaborator co-keeper teacher coach flaneur aesthete hiker hard to locate reliable emerging being who practices synthesis learning listening walking investigating supporting reflecting confusing growing perplexing and occasionally punctuating.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "To build social tech infrastructure that supports our collective well-being, we need to include decentralized, open source, and slow-growth options. However, these approaches have historically fallen outside traditional tech funding mechanisms. \r\n\r\nTech that supports collective well-being should meet real needs, solve real problems, be usable, and be purpose-built, not seeing people as an exploitable resource or means to extract. So how can projects like these be sustainable, secure, and built in collaboration with communities? We think that people putting money into projects should be part of the project design team, so that their expertise, experience, and motivations can be both represented and explicitly weighed in the context of the problem the technology hopes to solve. \r\n\r\nIn other words, we need to co-design our financial models to find strategies that support the holistic goals of the makers, community, and capital suppliers. In this workshop, we will explore some of the mechanisms that might lead to co-design frameworks, and surface strategies from participants. We will learn from one another what has worked and what hasn\u2019t, and re-imagine how people putting money into FOSS might be collaborators with us and the communities we\u2019re designing and building with.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/223/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "laurex", - "mastodon_id": "I have one but have yet to post" - }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T10:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T11:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 369, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "327", "rooms": [ @@ -666,9 +423,80 @@ "mastodon_id": "https://bsd.network/@dexter" }, { - "room": "333", + "room": "328", "rooms": [ - "333" + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", + "conf_key": 364, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Co-Designing Sustainable Prosocial Digital Infrastructure", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "LX Cast", + "twitter": "laurex", + "mastodon": "I have one but have yet to post", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/05e09dd17e9c18210650a755b866e7ac?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "381", + "biography": "LX is currently a founder of a group app called Fractal and a student and practitioner of patterns of collective practice. They have been a product leader working on communication and collaboration tech for about 12 years. They're a board member at Prosocial Design Network and Tech Fleet, a past Resident Fellow at the Integrity Institute, a steering committee member of the Council on Tech and Social Cohesion, a member of Aspen Institute's Virtually Human working group, a mentor with PDX Women in Tech and All Tech is Human, and a consultant helping nonprofits develop product discovery practices. \r\n\r\nLX Cast is mostly water and collections of bacteria and bone and stardust. An emergent invention. Canadian West Coast island-born former New Yorker current Portlander curiouser researcher reader leader shape shifter code switcher beginner elder young a flash of light technologist social engineer experimental questioning contradictory vegan (except for brownies) consultant recoverer contributor community practitioner strategist poet weirdo professional queer non-binary neurodivergent raised-Quaker seemer listener fox cook step-parent partner collaborator co-keeper teacher coach flaneur aesthete hiker hard to locate reliable emerging being who practices synthesis learning listening walking investigating supporting reflecting confusing growing perplexing and occasionally punctuating.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "To build social tech infrastructure that supports our collective well-being, we need to include decentralized, open source, and slow-growth options. However, these approaches have historically fallen outside traditional tech funding mechanisms. \r\n\r\nTech that supports collective well-being should meet real needs, solve real problems, be usable, and be purpose-built, not seeing people as an exploitable resource or means to extract. So how can projects like these be sustainable, secure, and built in collaboration with communities? We think that people putting money into projects should be part of the project design team, so that their expertise, experience, and motivations can be both represented and explicitly weighed in the context of the problem the technology hopes to solve. \r\n\r\nIn other words, we need to co-design our financial models to find strategies that support the holistic goals of the makers, community, and capital suppliers. In this workshop, we will explore some of the mechanisms that might lead to co-design frameworks, and surface strategies from participants. We will learn from one another what has worked and what hasn\u2019t, and re-imagine how people putting money into FOSS might be collaborators with us and the communities we\u2019re designing and building with.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/223/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "laurex", + "mastodon_id": "I have one but have yet to post" + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", + "conf_key": 338, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Steadfast Self-Hosting Workshop", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Adam Monsen", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/efd087b3c1ac43def6e3e926ad633c25?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "391", + "biography": "Adam is a kind and savvy FOSS enthusiast. He\u2019s 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\u2019s most proud of his family, growing Mifos, founding SeaGL, selling C-SATS, and writing a FOSS book about self-hosting FOSS.\r\n\r\nAdam is privileged and lucky to have given talks and workshops at a handful of conferences (LFNW, SeaGL, LibrePlanet, OSCON, FOSSY) and various other engagements.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Join in a hands-on workshop all about self-hosting! Bring your experiences and curiosity, leave with inspiration and ideas to try out. Together we'll help each other get unblocked wherever we're at, from thinking about self-hosting to improving smooth-running servers and services. This workshop will focus on fundamental concepts, tools, and techniques from the FOSS book Steadfast Self-Hosting, although having and having read the book is not required.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/219/", + "cancelled": false, + "mastodon_id": "@meonkeys@fosstodon.org" + }, + { + "room": "338", + "rooms": [ + "338" ], "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", @@ -676,39 +504,243 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", - "conf_key": 291, + "track": "FOSS For Education", + "conf_key": 307, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free", + "name": "Open source training for reproducibility, collaboration, and community in academic research", "authors": [ { - "name": "Josh Berkus", + "name": "Alex Marden", "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@fuzzychef@m6n.io", + "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a9bf741211c9717ed23f4680227b88e2?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "352", - "biography": "Josh Berkus has been contributing to various FOSS projects since 1998, including Linux, PostgreSQL, OpenOffice, MySQL, CouchDB, OpenSolaris, and others. Currently he works on Kubernetes for Red Hat. Josh is on the OSI Board, the CNCF Code of Conduct Committee, and co-organizes SCALE and Container Plumbing. He is local to Portland.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "McCoy Smith", - "twitter": "mccoysmith", - "mastodon": "@mccoysmith", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/44e615bb857f5cb8780dd2098c396f9a?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "366", - "biography": "P. McCoy Smith is the Founding Attorney at Lex Pan Law LLC, a full-service technology and intellectual property law firm based in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A and Opsequio LLC, an open source compliance consultancy. Prior to his current position, he spent 20 years in the legal department of a Fortune 50 multinational technology company as a business unit intellectual property specialist; among his duties was setting up the free & open source legal function and policies for that company. He preceded his in-house experience with 8 years in private practice in a large New York City-based boutique intellectual property law firm, working simultaneously as a U.S. patent litigator and U.S. patent prosecutor. He was also a patent examiner at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office prior to attending law school. He is licensed to practice law in Oregon, Washington State, California & New York and to prosecute patent applications in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office; he is also a registered Trademark and Patent Agent with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office. He has degrees from Colorado State University (Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering, with honors), Johns Hopkins University (Masters of Liberal Arts) and the University of Virginia (Juris Doctor). While in private practice, and continuing into his in-house career, he taught portions of the U.S. patent bar exam for a long-standing and well-known patent bar exam preparation course, and from 2014-2020 was on the editorial board of the Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society (JOLTS), and is currently on the editorial board of the American Intellectual Property Law Quarterly Journal (AIPLAQJ). He is the author or co-author of chapters on open source and copyright and patents in \u201cOpen Source Law, Policy & Practice\u201d (2022, Oxford University Press). He lectures frequently around the world on free and open source issues as well as other intellectual property topics.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f599a70b5623f5831f8d24bd6e652035?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "367", + "biography": "Alex Marden began using open source software to facilitate international fieldwork and collaboration while studying wildfire ecology in the Kalahari Basin. He incorporates that experience into teaching numerous open source software-based courses and workshops at the University of Texas at Austin. As the GIS and Geospatial Data Coordinator at the UT Libraries, he supports the GIS needs of the university community and works to make geospatial data broadly available and accessible. In his role as an Open Geospatial Software Specialist with the UT Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO), he focuses on open-source software training and best practice documentation. Additionally, he is the current Chair of the newly formed UT-OSPO User Advisory Group, which aims to effectively serve and foster a community of open-source focused researchers. He received a PhD in Geography from UT Austin in 2024, where his research focused on spatiotemporally complex climate-disturbance linkages and how scale relates to the observability of those linkages.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Why are the non-discriminatory clauses (5 and 6) part of the Open Source\r\nDefinition? Why does anyone care? Why shouldn't project owners be able\r\nto limit where the software can be used or prevent bad people from using\r\nthe software?\r\n\r\nThese two clauses are the most poorly understood parts of the Open\r\nSource Definition, and the ones that would-be license writers most\r\nfrequently want to compromise. They are not a moral requirement;\r\ninstead, they are compulsive in order to sustain how FOSS is packaged,\r\ndistributed, and used. An Open Source Initiative board member will\r\nexplain, in developer-friendly terms, why you should care about OSD5 and\r\nOSD6, and an attorney will explain why they are legally required.\r\n\r\nAttendees will learn why to retain these freedoms in their own\r\nlicense-writing, and why the are important when consuming other people's\r\nprojects.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/263/", + "abstract": "Research-focused data and software training outside of the standard academic curriculum can play a crucial role in university environments. Reproducibility and collaboration are fundamental aspects of research, creating an opportunity to incorporate open source software development strategies and techniques into training workshops.\r\n\r\nThe University of Texas at Austin Open Source Program Office (UT-OSPO) has co-sponsored numerous workshops that emphasize the interplay among open source software, reproducibility, and collaboration. A key focus is engaging researchers across diverse use-case scenarios along the open source participation pathway \u2013 from introducing participants to the benefits of using open source software to managing collaborative open source software ecosystems.\r\n\r\nThis session will explore the UT-OSPO\u2019s cross-departmental initiative, integrating open source software training into research workshops and events. We will discuss pedagogical and administrative strategies for appealing to a wide range of researchers and fostering an open source community within a large university.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/204/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 297, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Wild Card", + "conf_key": 353, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Thinking Beyond 0's and 1's", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Nisha Kumar", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@nisha@social.afront.org", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/289a98c380a0ba0c05c19ceee863800a?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "300", + "biography": "Nisha is a Software Engineer at Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. When she isn't troubleshooting the cloud, she contributes to various open source Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) projects, most notably SPDX. In their free time, they like to solve human problems by making things.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Open Source won. We see it in the large number of software projects created and used by other software projects. Most of our modern day software, including AI, runs on a large number of open source software projects. Working in a cloud company that produces and deploys software at scale, I see a lot of phenomenon that look very much like what I used to see when I worked in semiconductor manufacturing an age ago. Examples of these are drift from the norm, heisenbugs, emergent properties, and just \u00af\\_(\u30c4)_/\u00af things.\r\n\r\nThe physical world is full of these types of phenomenon. We deal with it by using probability and statistics - accepting that we can't give a \"true\" or \"false\" answer, but settling for a continuous \"maybe\". This is a talk about looking at software production at a larger scale than just the single artisanal \"app\". We will apply probability and statistics to open source software at scale, and use some \"Machine Learning\" to get some insights into how the single app is the product of, and part of a somewhat unknowable whole.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/266/", "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@fuzzychef@m6n.io" + "mastodon_id": "@nisha@social.afront.org" + }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Science of Community", + "conf_key": 327, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "From Data to Action: Using Metrics to Improve FOSS Communities", + "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": "282", + "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 an OpenUK board member and co-chair of the CNCF Contributor Strategy Technical Advisory Group. 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 BS in computer science, an MBA, and a PhD. In her spare time she enjoys reading science fiction, running, and traveling.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Sustaining FOSS projects and communities over the long-term can be a challenge. Project leaders and contributors are busy people who don\u2019t always have the time or experience to focus on growing a community and maintaining their software. Using metrics is one way to help FOSS projects identify potential issues and identify areas where they can improve their community to make it more sustainable over the long-term. Being proactive about improving sustainability before it becomes a crisis can help make our software more sustainable and reliable for all of us. However, not everyone has the experience or skills required to know how to interpret their metrics and use what they learn to make improvements within their community.\r\n\r\nThe CHAOSS project has been creating a series of MIT licensed Practitioner Guides focused on helping bridge the gap between research and practice to improve the sustainability of our software and communities. The guides are designed to make it easier for people to draw meaningful and actionable insights using community metrics, even when those people do not necessarily have a deep background in data analysis or much experience working within FOSS communities.\r\n\r\nThis talk will identify several categories of metrics from the Practitioner Guide Series (e.g., responsiveness, contributor sustainability, organizational participation), discuss how to interpret the metrics, and provide ideas for improving in areas identified using the metrics. The audience will walk away with a better understanding of how to use metrics to proactively improve the long-term sustainability of their FOSS projects and communities.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/253/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "geekygirldawn", + "mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@geekygirldawn" + }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 331, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "338", + "rooms": [ + "338" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS For Education", + "conf_key": 314, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "An ideal education with Open Source, a Recent Grad's Perspective.", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Onexi", + "twitter": "NONE", + "mastodon": "NONE", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/af166ed2d55b11cf74a1fd8510f61003?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "380", + "biography": "Onexi is a recent graduate of Norfolk State University in the Field of Computer Science. A curious mind that has participated in the Netflix Pathways UX/UI Bootcamp, Cybersecurity competitions from the SANS organization, and most recently was introduced to the world of open source through the Open Source Research Experience Catalyst Program from UCSC. Now working as a Developer, always looking to learn something new and participate in an interesting conversation!", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "The open source world is one filled with opportunity, for collaboration, for learning, and brimming with experiences. It allows for ideas and communities to come about regardless of background, for the sake of a common goal. If only I knew about it sooner. I learned of open source in my last semester of college, and I believe it can transform our education as it is now.\r\n\r\nLet\u2019s propose a thought experiment. Suppose that you are back in college and open source is a widespread concept in education, not as it is right now, but as widely known as the idea of internships, for example. Opportunities for open source projects would exist for every discipline, allowing for the collaboration among students from art, literature, business, engineering, and more. Open source would be more diverse, allowing for other disciplines to pick up the work where another may falter. A developer might be too clear cut to write out friendly documentation for newcomers to a project, and a writer might be too non-technical to explain certain technologies in depth, but both people collaborating could create great documentation. If it sounds familiar in any way, it is essentially how people work in the real world, at a company. Meaning, that if you had open source in your education you could adapt to working with other disciplines that are not studying the same thing as you, on a project that can have a real world impact.\r\n\r\nCollege students would trick themselves into creating their own company, a pseudo startup. Many ideas flourish in young minds, but never come to fruition, maybe due to lack of resources, or not having the right people around. A lot of times, given a lack of knowledge, or the overwhelming feeling of doing lots of work that could have no impact, they never see the light. College is a place filled with diversity of knowledge and experiences, like open source. If a school club existed which allowed any major to join, bundle together, and create an open source project of their choosing while leaving each student a piece of the puzzle to fulfill, it would essentially have the same structure as a real company, more or less. Think about the many app/company ideas that have crossed your mind. Would you have tried to make them if you had open source? \r\n\r\nStudents can experience the real world and create a real project, from the comfort of their home. People have different circumstances, and many students fail to gain experience in their field right out of college. Whether it be personal circumstances, failing to get chosen for internships, or not having the time to do extracurriculars, there are many reasons why students fail to learn what real world work is like. Open source projects would allow a student to apply their skills regardless of time frame or location, given that they have a laptop on hand. Moreover, these skills can be directly applicable into the real world, as you work with people with different backgrounds towards a common goal.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/205/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "NONE", + "mastodon_id": "NONE" + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 374, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T10:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "BoFs and Discussions", + "conf_key": 347, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Mapping the UN's Sustainable Development Goals and their Relationships with FOSS", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Jonathan Starr", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5f23b4a626e2d89265b10faad2886bab?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "316", + "biography": "Program Manager at NumFOCUS's Open Source Science Initiative as well as a perpetual contributor to open source projects, companies, and organizations that enable open science.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "As we continue to map the digital knowledge and tooling ecosystems, we keep asking ourselves, \"who will use what we're building.\" FOSS contributors, funders, supporters, organizations, and users all come immediately to mind, and we've built for their uses. \r\n\r\nThe recent addition of over 10,000 papers as well as their relationships with FOSS software, researchers, and research institutions, however, has led us to begin exploring the relationships between knowledge discovery outputs, the tools used in the knowledge discovery process, and the UN's 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs).\r\n\r\nWe are asking ourselves the questions:\r\n\r\nWhat knowledge, discovered recently or decades ago, supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWhat FOSS tools are used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWho develops, maintains, and grows the communities behind the FOSS tools used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs? \r\nWhat communities, organizations, institutions, and industries support the people who develop, maintain, and grow the communities behind the FOSS tools used in knowledge discovery that supports the advancement of the SDGs?\r\nWhat is the impact of a change (addition of funding, loss of funding, tooling innovations, etc.) in the network of actors and infrastructure behind SDG progress?\r\nWhat data points are most valuable for answering these questions?\r\nUltimately, how can we track, analyze, and visualize the data, data that we know exists, in a way that can inform actionable, sustainable outcomes in the advancement of the SDGs?\r\n\r\nAnd in this room at FOSSY, we'll be asking them out loud and discussing them with whoever cares to join.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/277/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", + "duration": 15, + "kind": "Break", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 270, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "", @@ -745,21 +777,48 @@ "name": "Slot" }, { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-03T11:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", - "duration": 15, - "kind": "Break", + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T12:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 270, + "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", + "conf_key": 292, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": false, + "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Bradley M. Kuhn", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "373", + "biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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": "" + }, + { + "name": "McCoy Smith", + "twitter": "mccoysmith", + "mastodon": "@mccoysmith", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/44e615bb857f5cb8780dd2098c396f9a?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "366", + "biography": "P. McCoy Smith is the Founding Attorney at Lex Pan Law LLC, a full-service technology and intellectual property law firm based in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A and Opsequio LLC, an open source compliance consultancy. Prior to his current position, he spent 20 years in the legal department of a Fortune 50 multinational technology company as a business unit intellectual property specialist; among his duties was setting up the free & open source legal function and policies for that company. He preceded his in-house experience with 8 years in private practice in a large New York City-based boutique intellectual property law firm, working simultaneously as a U.S. patent litigator and U.S. patent prosecutor. He was also a patent examiner at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office prior to attending law school. He is licensed to practice law in Oregon, Washington State, California & New York and to prosecute patent applications in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office; he is also a registered Trademark and Patent Agent with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office. He has degrees from Colorado State University (Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering, with honors), Johns Hopkins University (Masters of Liberal Arts) and the University of Virginia (Juris Doctor). While in private practice, and continuing into his in-house career, he taught portions of the U.S. patent bar exam for a long-standing and well-known patent bar exam preparation course, and from 2014-2020 was on the editorial board of the Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society (JOLTS), and is currently on the editorial board of the American Intellectual Property Law Quarterly Journal (AIPLAQJ). He is the author or co-author of chapters on open source and copyright and patents in \u201cOpen Source Law, Policy & Practice\u201d (2022, Oxford University Press). He lectures frequently around the world on free and open source issues as well as other intellectual property topics.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Come to this session to receive a whirlwind opportunity to dive deep into one of the most heavily discussed issues in the GPLv2 family of licenses. Namely, what is it that one must provide to meet the requirements to provide \"the scripts used to control installation of the executable\"? Why do some feel that the plain meaning of the word \"install\" doesn't really mean \"install\"?\r\nFinally see the big debate that we've all been awaiting for years on this question. Time permitting, we'll cover other issues.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/280/", + "cancelled": false }, { "room": "327", @@ -800,72 +859,36 @@ "rooms": [ "328" ], - "start": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", + "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 326, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T12:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 292, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", - "conf_key": 337, + "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", + "conf_key": 365, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Maps as Art using FOSS", + "name": "The State of FOSS Funding", "authors": [ { - "name": "Tracy Homer", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", + "name": "Kara Sowles", + "twitter": "feynudibranch", + "mastodon": "https://xoxo.zone/@feynudibranch", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/14f540eea60434f708ce82379f00ce57?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "264", - "biography": "By day Tracy works for the Software Freedom Conservancy, and by night extends her enthusiasm of Open Source Software into the worlds of maps and making. She recently graduated from the University of Tennessee with a BS in Geospatial Technology. In her spare time she helps administrates Knox Makers, a local community makerspace, also focused on FOSS for their tool setups.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/439077b7bf7c4fc3f1e345e5f52c2f88?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "359", + "biography": "Kara Sowles is an Open Source Program Manager at GitHub, where she gets to focus full-time on supporting free and open source maintainers. She ran the first cohort of GitHub Accelerator, a funding program aimed at finding new paths to financial sustainability for projects. She co-organizes Maintainer Month (it's in May) yearly, as well as GitHub's Maintainer Community. In the past, she ran Community programs at Puppet Labs for many years. She resides in Portland, Oregon, and loves studying trash, archaeology, and animation.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Tracy will show several different artistic maps she has made, and go through the different software tools used to make them. She will discuss what datasets and formats work for each type of map and how you can make your own artistic maps using freely licensed software.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/187/", - "cancelled": false + "abstract": "Join me in taking a look at the current state of free and open source software funding, what the potential paths to financial sustainability currently look like for maintainers, and what new models are being explored. \r\n\r\n- What options do projects have when looking to be financially sustainable long-term?\r\n- What organizations are funding free and open source software, and how do they allocate it?\r\n- What does it looks like to have funding that isn't subject to unstable corporate budgets and interests? \r\n- What\u2019s missing from our current models of funding? \r\n\r\nI\u2019ll include info from some of the top Open Source Program Offices currently funding corporate dependencies; government-funded initiatives aimed at sustaining digital public goods we all rely on; and user-sustained projects that rely on the goodwill of individuals. We\u2019ll touch on what place Accelerators and Grants have in this, and peeling away the growth-curve expectations from investors who may, or may not, understand the needs of free and open source. \r\n\r\nIt's essential we ask ourselves: how do we ensure the software our societies depend on is sustainable long-term?", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/222/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "feynudibranch", + "mastodon_id": "https://xoxo.zone/@feynudibranch" }, { "room": "333", @@ -875,7 +898,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "kind": "BoF", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -884,12 +907,12 @@ "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "Music Blocks Workshop" }, { - "room": "329", + "room": "338", "rooms": [ - "329" + "338" ], "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", @@ -897,13 +920,29 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 375, + "track": "AI and Machine Learning", + "conf_key": 361, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": false, + "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "Getting ML Right in a Complex Data World", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Oz Katz", + "twitter": "ozkatz100", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/072c0f7292a2051d29ecfef3851df888?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "343", + "biography": "Oz Katz is the Co-Creator of the open source lakeFS Project, an open source platform that delivers resilience and manageability to object-storage based data lakes, as well as the CTO and co-founder of Treeverse, the company behind lakeFS. Oz engineered and maintained petabyte-scale data infrastructure at analytics giant SmilarWeb, which he joined after the acquisition of Swayy.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Machine learning workflows are iterative & repetitive to and from multiple steps including data labeling, data cleaning, preprocessing and feature selection methods during model training, just to arrive at an accurate model.\r\n\r\nQuality ML at scale is only possible when we can reproduce a specific iteration of the ML experiment\u2013and this is where data is key. This means: capturing the version of training data, ML code and model artifacts at each iteration is mandatory. However, to efficiently version ML experiments without duplicating code, data and models, data versioning tools are required. Open source tools like lakeFS make it possible to version all components of ML experiments without the need to keep multiple copies, and as an added benefit, save you storage costs as well.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, you will learn how to use a data versioning engine to intuitively and easily version your ML experiments and reproduce any specific iteration of the experiment.\r\n\r\nThis talk will demo through a live code example:\r\n\u2022 Creating a basic ML experimentation framework with lakeFS (on Jupyter notebook)\r\n\u2022 Reproducing ML components from a specific iteration of an experiment\r\n\u2022 Building intuitive, zero-maintenance experiments infrastructure\r\n\r\nAll with common OSS data engineering stacks & open source tooling.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/237/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "ozkatz100" }, { "room": "338", @@ -993,6 +1032,94 @@ "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/193/", "cancelled": false }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", + "conf_key": 337, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Maps as Art using FOSS", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Tracy Homer", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/14f540eea60434f708ce82379f00ce57?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "264", + "biography": "By day Tracy works for the Software Freedom Conservancy, and by night extends her enthusiasm of Open Source Software into the worlds of maps and making. She recently graduated from the University of Tennessee with a BS in Geospatial Technology. In her spare time she helps administrates Knox Makers, a local community makerspace, also focused on FOSS for their tool setups.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Tracy will show several different artistic maps she has made, and go through the different software tools used to make them. She will discuss what datasets and formats work for each type of map and how you can make your own artistic maps using freely licensed software.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/187/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 375, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T12:15:00", + "duration": 30, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Wild Card", + "conf_key": 344, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Making new tools for open source graphics software", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Tom Lechner", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@tomsart@mastodon.social", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/49c733dd94c6a53e2c79b3c7bab5ac24?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "303", + "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": "Let's discuss various ways that tools such as Godot, Blender, Inkscape, and Krita let you extend them, such as non-destructive procedural generation from Blender's Geometry Nodes, custom utilities with Inkscape extensions, or hacking right in source code for crazier things. We will also talk about the importance of open standards for art resources, to be able to share resources across different software that might otherwise have very different internals and purposes.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/242/", + "cancelled": false, + "mastodon_id": "@tomsart@mastodon.social" + }, { "room": "329", "rooms": [ @@ -1059,39 +1186,23 @@ "twitter_id": "rspaik" }, { - "room": "338", + "room": "328", "rooms": [ - "338" + "328" ], - "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", + "start": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "AI and Machine Learning", - "conf_key": 361, + "track": null, + "conf_key": 326, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": true, + "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Getting ML Right in a Complex Data World", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Oz Katz", - "twitter": "ozkatz100", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/072c0f7292a2051d29ecfef3851df888?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "343", - "biography": "Oz Katz is the Co-Creator of the open source lakeFS Project, an open source platform that delivers resilience and manageability to object-storage based data lakes, as well as the CTO and co-founder of Treeverse, the company behind lakeFS. Oz engineered and maintained petabyte-scale data infrastructure at analytics giant SmilarWeb, which he joined after the acquisition of Swayy.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Machine learning workflows are iterative & repetitive to and from multiple steps including data labeling, data cleaning, preprocessing and feature selection methods during model training, just to arrive at an accurate model.\r\n\r\nQuality ML at scale is only possible when we can reproduce a specific iteration of the ML experiment\u2013and this is where data is key. This means: capturing the version of training data, ML code and model artifacts at each iteration is mandatory. However, to efficiently version ML experiments without duplicating code, data and models, data versioning tools are required. Open source tools like lakeFS make it possible to version all components of ML experiments without the need to keep multiple copies, and as an added benefit, save you storage costs as well.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, you will learn how to use a data versioning engine to intuitively and easily version your ML experiments and reproduce any specific iteration of the experiment.\r\n\r\nThis talk will demo through a live code example:\r\n\u2022 Creating a basic ML experimentation framework with lakeFS (on Jupyter notebook)\r\n\u2022 Reproducing ML components from a specific iteration of an experiment\r\n\u2022 Building intuitive, zero-maintenance experiments infrastructure\r\n\r\nAll with common OSS data engineering stacks & open source tooling.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/237/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "ozkatz100" + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "328", @@ -1136,7 +1247,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-03T11:45:00", "end": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "kind": "BoF", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -1145,95 +1256,7 @@ "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T12:15:00", - "duration": 30, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Wild Card", - "conf_key": 344, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Making new tools for open source graphics software", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Tom Lechner", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@tomsart@mastodon.social", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/49c733dd94c6a53e2c79b3c7bab5ac24?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "303", - "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": "Let's discuss various ways that tools such as Godot, Blender, Inkscape, and Krita let you extend them, such as non-destructive procedural generation from Blender's Geometry Nodes, custom utilities with Inkscape extensions, or hacking right in source code for crazier things. We will also talk about the importance of open standards for art resources, to be able to share resources across different software that might otherwise have very different internals and purposes.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/242/", - "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@tomsart@mastodon.social" - }, - { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T11:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", - "conf_key": 365, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "The State of FOSS Funding", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Kara Sowles", - "twitter": "feynudibranch", - "mastodon": "https://xoxo.zone/@feynudibranch", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/439077b7bf7c4fc3f1e345e5f52c2f88?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "359", - "biography": "Kara Sowles is an Open Source Program Manager at GitHub, where she gets to focus full-time on supporting free and open source maintainers. She ran the first cohort of GitHub Accelerator, a funding program aimed at finding new paths to financial sustainability for projects. She co-organizes Maintainer Month (it's in May) yearly, as well as GitHub's Maintainer Community. In the past, she ran Community programs at Puppet Labs for many years. She resides in Portland, Oregon, and loves studying trash, archaeology, and animation.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Join me in taking a look at the current state of free and open source software funding, what the potential paths to financial sustainability currently look like for maintainers, and what new models are being explored. \r\n\r\n- What options do projects have when looking to be financially sustainable long-term?\r\n- What organizations are funding free and open source software, and how do they allocate it?\r\n- What does it looks like to have funding that isn't subject to unstable corporate budgets and interests? \r\n- What\u2019s missing from our current models of funding? \r\n\r\nI\u2019ll include info from some of the top Open Source Program Offices currently funding corporate dependencies; government-funded initiatives aimed at sustaining digital public goods we all rely on; and user-sustained projects that rely on the goodwill of individuals. We\u2019ll touch on what place Accelerators and Grants have in this, and peeling away the growth-curve expectations from investors who may, or may not, understand the needs of free and open source. \r\n\r\nIt's essential we ask ourselves: how do we ensure the software our societies depend on is sustainable long-term?", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/222/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "feynudibranch", - "mastodon_id": "https://xoxo.zone/@feynudibranch" - }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-02T12:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", - "duration": 90, - "kind": "Lunch break", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 224, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Lunch" + "name": "BoF: Web tools and link sharing" }, { "room": "", @@ -1241,7 +1264,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-03T12:30:00", "end": "2024-08-03T14:00:00", "duration": 90, - "kind": "Lunch break", + "kind": "Lunch break (on your own)", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -1250,7 +1273,24 @@ "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Lunch" + "name": "Lunch break (on your own)" + }, + { + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-02T12:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", + "duration": 90, + "kind": "Lunch break (on your own)", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 224, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Lunch break (on your own)" }, { "room": "", @@ -1258,7 +1298,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-04T12:30:00", "end": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", "duration": 90, - "kind": "Lunch break", + "kind": "Lunch break (on your own)", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -1267,7 +1307,7 @@ "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Lunch" + "name": "Lunch break (on your own)" }, { "room": "", @@ -1287,9 +1327,9 @@ "name": "Opening Remarks" }, { - "room": "333", + "room": "328", "rooms": [ - "333" + "328" ], "start": "2024-08-01T14:00:00", "end": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", @@ -1297,101 +1337,27 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 315, + "track": "XMPP", + "conf_key": 240, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", - "conf_key": 339, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Your FOSS Productive Life! - The Vibrant Ecosystem around Applications", + "name": "Setting Up A Simple XMPP Server", "authors": [ { - "name": "Sriram Ramkrishna", - "twitter": "sramkrishna", - "mastodon": "sri@floss.social", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/447062d346ca576f8745b0cae1255dfc?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "362", - "biography": "Sri is a Free and Open Source advocate for over 25 years. Sri started working on open source software when he was 25 contributing to the GNOME project in 1997. 15 years later, he was given the opportunity to work on open source professionally at Intel Corporation in 2012. While his career has gone through many iterations his contributions to the GNOME project has been consistent - building community around projects and engaging with community. His passion today is to help build the Linux Application Ecosystem through initiatives like the Linux App Summit. Professionally, Sri is the senior community manager for oneAPI and the lead coordinator of Intel's Software Innovator Program.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Free and Open Source Software ecosystems evolve in curious ways. In the beginning, when we thought about open source software, we limited ourselves to applying it to the desktop and the web. \r\n\r\nKernel, user-space, and application frameworks worked together closely to recreate the user experience that we, as nerds, grew up on. Over time as the utility of open source software became a part of enterprise and business, we moved away from the desktop into the data center. Then, came the myriad of technologies... from databases to containers....we are all familiar with today. The Linux-based desktop was relegated to the tinkerer, the curious, and the nostalgic. Developers moved to MacOS as the serious developer tool of choice. As investment moved away from the desktop and application ecosystem, it seemed that the bright light of this ecosystem had been diminished.\r\n\r\n Away from center stage, amazing things are happening in the app ecosystem. A greater sense of collaboration prevails, and this not quite hidden from view ecosystem is flourishing.\r\n\r\nThe Flathub App store has 2600 apps and is adding 40 new apps a month. By the end of 2024, it\u2019s projected that Flathub will have over 3000 apps ranging from developer oriented apps to apps on the go. Let's look at how this ecosystem is thriving and ushering in a renaissance. Expect to hear a short history lesson on the app ecosystem's influence on the Linux platform before focusing on the apps and where we are today.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/218/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "sramkrishna", - "mastodon_id": "sri@floss.social" - }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 371, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Wild Card", - "conf_key": 342, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "GNU/Linux Loves All: Free Software in Music", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Timmy James Barnett", + "name": "Root", "twitter": "", "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/7bd72e1c886b2c5d19d28fa12fed3f92?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "361", - "biography": "Timmy James Barnett is a musician and FLO software/hardware developer. He studied violin with Anna Vayman at Ball State University for 6 years, where he received his BM and MM. His original music is inspired by microtonality and Free Software. He plays microtonal music on violin, variously fretted guitars, keyboards and computers. Free Software is important because it makes microtonality and music in general more accessible to all without compromising Human Tech Rights. It allows musical exploration without arbitrary boundaries. Timmy writes and uses Free Software for live performance with !mindparade and GNU/Linux Loves All.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5b2b58c93321529b9daf5353f51cf4c3?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "279", + "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": "The music industry is cluttered with proprietary software and hardware. Musicians get locked into non-free technologies. There is even a professional pressure to use proprietary tools as though it is just part of making music in today's modern society. Apple computers are even seen by many as a default for beginner and professional musicians. When someone says they don't regularly use MacOS, Windows is assumed. But you can make great music without compromising Human Tech Rights by using Free Software and GNU/Linux, a far superior operating system to proprietary alternatives.\r\n\r\nTechnology is such a great tool for music. The development of technology supports the development of music. This is why musicians should be using Free Software and supporting a Free community. Philosophers, mathematicians, music performers and theorists have been coming up with many different ways of how to tune instruments for thousands of years. With the Internet, musicians can find out so much of what has been done in the past as well as what is possible now. The world of tuning keeps coming up with exciting new and innovative ways to organize possible pitches. \r\n\r\nHowever, even with something as exciting as new modern instruments and software that can inspire so much great music, we see so many new things that are proprietary. This world of proprietary puts unnecessary restrictions on what should be an open and creative process that is inviting for both amateurs and professionals. Why are companies making non-free software tools just for users to be able to even experience the sounds of notes that are decades, centuries or millennia old? Why should we have restrictions on the great notes both historic and modern from Africa, India, and the Middle East, that are not found on standard Western instruments in the local Western music store? We have such a great tool all around us, the computer. Computers should come to our aid in a way that inspires more music and community on a global scale. \r\n\r\nThis talk shows some great Free technologies, instruments and software. All software is run on a GNU/Linux Laptop.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/243/", + "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 using slides. The end result will be a fully functioning XMPP server that can be used throughout the remainder of the conference between all attendees. 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. This talk will also dive into some personal privacy, security, and persona considerations and how they will be affected by your threat model.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/233/", "cancelled": false }, { @@ -1430,40 +1396,6 @@ "twitter_id": "sugar_labs", "mastodon_id": "https://mastodon.social/@sugar_labs/" }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", - "conf_key": 293, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Bradley M. Kuhn", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "373", - "biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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": "So much has happened recently with enforcement of copyleft licenses, such as the GPL and LGPL. This session will give you an update on all that's happened in the last year regarding GPL compliance and enforcement.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/257/", - "cancelled": false - }, { "room": "327", "rooms": [ @@ -1500,9 +1432,9 @@ "twitter_id": "theMikeJang" }, { - "room": "338", + "room": "329", "rooms": [ - "338" + "329" ], "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", @@ -1510,60 +1442,164 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "AI and Machine Learning", - "conf_key": 362, + "track": null, + "conf_key": 376, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "BoFs and Discussions", + "conf_key": 349, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Report from the AI-Assisted Programming and Copyleft Committee", + "name": "FOSS-related legislation", "authors": [ { - "name": "Stefano Zacchiroli", - "twitter": "zacchiro", - "mastodon": "@zacchiro@mastodon.xyz", + "name": "Eric Gallager", + "twitter": "cooljeanius", + "mastodon": "@egallager@treehouse.systems", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9c31af6c5b4daa602dacb9d90274df38?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "273", - "biography": "Stefano Zacchiroli is full professor of computer science at T\u00e9l\u00e9com Paris, Polytechnic Institute of Paris. His current research interests span digital commons, open source software engineering, computer security, and the software supply chain. He is co-founder and CTO of Software Heritage, the largest public archive of software source code. He is a Debian developer since 2001, where he served as Debian project leader from 2010 to 2013. He is a former board director of the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and recipient of the 2015 O\u2019Reilly Open Source Award.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "Denver Gingerich", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5ca795f06b3505f43bf7ba26fef37c7d?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "340", - "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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "John Sullivan", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "https://social.librem.one/@johns", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c7bc3f6412a881f2f758658817f50702?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "363", - "biography": "John Sullivan is an independent free software activist and consultant\r\n(Alliterative Advising LLC), with specialties in communication,\r\ncommunity organizing, licensing, fundraising, strategic planning, and\r\nnonprofit governance. He is a Debian Developer, and member of its\r\nkeyring team. He is also a board member of F-Droid, and currently its\r\nvice chair. Previously, he worked for the Free Software Foundation for\r\nover nineteen years, including two as its union steward and eleven as\r\nits executive director. Prior to the FSF, John worked as a speech and\r\ndebate instructor for Harvard, University of Kentucky, and Michigan\r\nState University, coaching undergraduates and high school students on\r\npublic speaking, research, and critical thinking. He holds an MFA in\r\nWriting and Poetics from the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied\r\nPoetics (which is real) at Naropa University, and a BA in Philosophy\r\nfrom Michigan State, but he has been spending too much time with\r\ncomputers and online communities since running a 1990s BBS on his\r\nCommodore 64. Also he co-owns a pen store.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "Karen Sandler", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5e77b6e5743dd274a0bc00806cb082de?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "9", - "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.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f5f7b5b83330e07f530e15906f8082dc?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "337", + "biography": "Eric Gallager is one of 400 state representatives in the New Hampshire legislature, representing Merrimack County District 20 (i.e. Concord Ward 6), with a focus on FOSS-related legislation.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "At the onset of AI-assisted programming, Software Freedom Conservancy convened a committee to investigate the implications of such assistance \r\nfor copyleft and software freedom more broadly. \r\nIn this session, members of the committee will report back to the FOSSY audience about their work and discuss recommendations for the use and development of AI assistants that are compatible with free software goals.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/236/", + "abstract": "A discussion around FOSS-related legislation and doing markup on NH RSA 21-R: https://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/rsa/html/I/21-R/21-R-mrg.htm\r\n\r\nOther possible topics to discuss:\r\n * New Right-to-Repair proposals, including one for bionics: https://spectrum.ieee.org/bionic-right-to-repair\r\n * Giving \"Right to Inspect Source Code in Court\" another try, now with some additional sources, such as: https://kb.osu.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/ccdce761-3689-477b-918a-920a11ca9435/content\r\n * Setting up an official \"Open Data Policy\" for NH: https://github.com/opendata/Open-Data-Policies (RSA 21-R may already count, but I want to be sure)\r\n * Relatedly, but slightly differently, setting up an Open Source Program Office for NH: https://github.com/github/github-ospo\r\n * Setting up a sovereign tech fund for FOSS like Germany has: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Germany-STF-For-FFmpeg\r\n * Including an inspection of automotive software as part of the automobile inspections that the state already requires people to get for their cars", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/281/", "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "zacchiro", - "mastodon_id": "@zacchiro@mastodon.xyz" + "twitter_id": "cooljeanius", + "mastodon_id": "@egallager@treehouse.systems" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS and ARM64; from the Cloud to the Edge", + "conf_key": 287, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Video Encoding on Arm64", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "John J. O'Neill, Ph.D.", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b425537333f9696ae50907b6778a513a?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "392", + "biography": "John has extensive software development experience focusing on performance optimization especially on new hardware platforms with deep knowledge of the software development toolchain and architecture. John has given numerous presentations at international computing and scientific conferences, is the primary author of 7 scientific publications, co-author of over 200 peer reviewed publications, and contributed to several books. John holds a Ph.D. in physics from the University at Albany.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "This session provides a brief overview on video encoding and why it's critically important due to the exponential increase in online video. Video encoding on Arm64 processors provide outstanding performance and are very power efficient. The talk will compare running video encoding on Arm64 with legacy x86 processors as well as hardware-based Video Processing Units (VPU). The Arm64 video encoding ecosystem is very active and recent performance improvements will be highlighted. Future directions in Arm64 based video processing ecosystem will also be discussed.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/256/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", + "conf_key": 366, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Toward an Economy of Open Abundance: Why FLO funding needs donor coordination and how to do it", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Aaron Wolf", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@wolftune@social.coop", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b32ae4ca7b2465cc5b642eed9c285b06?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "297", + "biography": "Aaron is a community music teacher, co-founder of Snowdrift.coop (a long-struggling and principled platform working to solve economic coordination dilemmas around FLO public goods), and an activist and volunteer in many other areas. Originally from Ann Arbor, MI; he lives now in Oregon City with his wife, dog, and two kids.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Michael Siepmann", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@MSiep@social.coop", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/MichaelSiepmann-5_edited_-_square_closeup_r8ZDzHE.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg", + "code": "292", + "biography": "Michael is an interaction designer and user researcher with a PhD in psychology, decades of mindfulness practice, and great enthusiasm for making life better for all of us through psychosocially insightful and compassionate design of systems big and small.\r\n\r\nHe has been involved with FOSS since 2015, when he started volunteering for Snowdrift.coop. His contributions there have included user research, interaction design, message design, coining the term \"crowdmatching\", and proposing an approach to crowdmatching in which donations are adjusted monthly to match the extent to which the crowd's total pledge meets the project's goal.\r\n\r\nRecently, he started a closely related project, IwillifWecan.org.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "There are four categories of economic goods: private goods, club goods, commons, and public goods. FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and other similarly-licensed digital works are public goods \u2014 meaning they are open and abundant. So, they don't fit our market economy which relies on the opposite \u2014 scarcity and exclusion. Forcing software into the standard economic system leads to reliance on paywalls and ads. Can we do better?\r\n\r\nIn the first part of this talk, Aaron will provide an updated understanding of the economic dilemmas with public goods. He will explain how standard language and models of economics make assumptions that work against the goals of software freedom. From there, we can see how to frame a new economic understanding of sharing and abundance.\r\n\r\nTo get the key concepts, we need to distinguish between goods and services, exclusive vs open, and scarce vs abundant. We can see these as traits on continuums (between clearly open and clearly exclusive are examples of partly-open). With these core ideas in mind, we can more easily see the issues with FLO projects today (along with many related parts of the economy).\r\n\r\nIn the second part of the talk, Michael will argue that crowdfunding for FLO projects is not effective enough as is. That's why we see appeals to donate often couched in terms of merely buying someone a coffee and similar. To become a game-changing economic force for good, we need to improve one critical feature: donor coordination.\r\n\r\nWe believe that many more people would happily donate modest amounts to support FLO projects whose works they use and value \u2014 if only they could be confident that it would make a real difference. Most of us cannot give enough individually to change the game, but if large numbers of individuals can coordinate and donate together, the collective funding power could have a massive impact and even ultimately change the nature of our economy.\r\n\r\nThe basic principle of donor coordination is simple \u2014 what you donate can be tied to what others donate. But exactly how best to do it is not a simple question. There are many ways it can be approached, each with different pros and cons. Michael will present the key \"how\" variables, discuss their significance, and outline some of the pros and cons of each. And he'll describe the work he and others are doing to develop usable platforms to test these coordination ideas with real funding.\r\n\r\nThe panel following this talk at 3pm will provide an opportunity to explore these ideas further in interactive discussion.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/272/", + "cancelled": false, + "mastodon_id": "@wolftune@social.coop" + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", + "conf_key": 339, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Your FOSS Productive Life! - The Vibrant Ecosystem around Applications", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Sriram Ramkrishna", + "twitter": "sramkrishna", + "mastodon": "sri@floss.social", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/447062d346ca576f8745b0cae1255dfc?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "362", + "biography": "Sri is a Free and Open Source advocate for over 25 years. Sri started working on open source software when he was 25 contributing to the GNOME project in 1997. 15 years later, he was given the opportunity to work on open source professionally at Intel Corporation in 2012. While his career has gone through many iterations his contributions to the GNOME project has been consistent - building community around projects and engaging with community. His passion today is to help build the Linux Application Ecosystem through initiatives like the Linux App Summit. Professionally, Sri is the senior community manager for oneAPI and the lead coordinator of Intel's Software Innovator Program.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Free and Open Source Software ecosystems evolve in curious ways. In the beginning, when we thought about open source software, we limited ourselves to applying it to the desktop and the web. \r\n\r\nKernel, user-space, and application frameworks worked together closely to recreate the user experience that we, as nerds, grew up on. Over time as the utility of open source software became a part of enterprise and business, we moved away from the desktop into the data center. Then, came the myriad of technologies... from databases to containers....we are all familiar with today. The Linux-based desktop was relegated to the tinkerer, the curious, and the nostalgic. Developers moved to MacOS as the serious developer tool of choice. As investment moved away from the desktop and application ecosystem, it seemed that the bright light of this ecosystem had been diminished.\r\n\r\n Away from center stage, amazing things are happening in the app ecosystem. A greater sense of collaboration prevails, and this not quite hidden from view ecosystem is flourishing.\r\n\r\nThe Flathub App store has 2600 apps and is adding 40 new apps a month. By the end of 2024, it\u2019s projected that Flathub will have over 3000 apps ranging from developer oriented apps to apps on the go. Let's look at how this ecosystem is thriving and ushering in a renaissance. Expect to hear a short history lesson on the app ecosystem's influence on the Linux platform before focusing on the apps and where we are today.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/218/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "sramkrishna", + "mastodon_id": "sri@floss.social" }, { "room": "329", @@ -1654,25 +1690,6 @@ "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/200/", "cancelled": false }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 376, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "327", "rooms": [ @@ -1707,93 +1724,40 @@ "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/192/", "cancelled": false }, - { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "XMPP", - "conf_key": 240, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Setting Up A Simple XMPP Server", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Root", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5b2b58c93321529b9daf5353f51cf4c3?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "279", - "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 using slides. The end result will be a fully functioning XMPP server that can be used throughout the remainder of the conference between all attendees. 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. This talk will also dive into some personal privacy, security, and persona considerations and how they will be affected by your threat model.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/233/", - "cancelled": false - }, { "room": "327", "rooms": [ "327" ], - "start": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T14:45:00", + "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS and ARM64; from the Cloud to the Edge", - "conf_key": 287, + "track": "Wild Card", + "conf_key": 342, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Video Encoding on Arm64", + "name": "GNU/Linux Loves All: Free Software in Music", "authors": [ { - "name": "John J. O'Neill, Ph.D.", + "name": "Timmy James Barnett", "twitter": "", "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b425537333f9696ae50907b6778a513a?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "392", - "biography": "John has extensive software development experience focusing on performance optimization especially on new hardware platforms with deep knowledge of the software development toolchain and architecture. John has given numerous presentations at international computing and scientific conferences, is the primary author of 7 scientific publications, co-author of over 200 peer reviewed publications, and contributed to several books. John holds a Ph.D. in physics from the University at Albany.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/7bd72e1c886b2c5d19d28fa12fed3f92?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "361", + "biography": "Timmy James Barnett is a musician and FLO software/hardware developer. He studied violin with Anna Vayman at Ball State University for 6 years, where he received his BM and MM. His original music is inspired by microtonality and Free Software. He plays microtonal music on violin, variously fretted guitars, keyboards and computers. Free Software is important because it makes microtonality and music in general more accessible to all without compromising Human Tech Rights. It allows musical exploration without arbitrary boundaries. Timmy writes and uses Free Software for live performance with !mindparade and GNU/Linux Loves All.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "This session provides a brief overview on video encoding and why it's critically important due to the exponential increase in online video. Video encoding on Arm64 processors provide outstanding performance and are very power efficient. The talk will compare running video encoding on Arm64 with legacy x86 processors as well as hardware-based Video Processing Units (VPU). The Arm64 video encoding ecosystem is very active and recent performance improvements will be highlighted. Future directions in Arm64 based video processing ecosystem will also be discussed.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/256/", + "abstract": "The music industry is cluttered with proprietary software and hardware. Musicians get locked into non-free technologies. There is even a professional pressure to use proprietary tools as though it is just part of making music in today's modern society. Apple computers are even seen by many as a default for beginner and professional musicians. When someone says they don't regularly use MacOS, Windows is assumed. But you can make great music without compromising Human Tech Rights by using Free Software and GNU/Linux, a far superior operating system to proprietary alternatives.\r\n\r\nTechnology is such a great tool for music. The development of technology supports the development of music. This is why musicians should be using Free Software and supporting a Free community. Philosophers, mathematicians, music performers and theorists have been coming up with many different ways of how to tune instruments for thousands of years. With the Internet, musicians can find out so much of what has been done in the past as well as what is possible now. The world of tuning keeps coming up with exciting new and innovative ways to organize possible pitches. \r\n\r\nHowever, even with something as exciting as new modern instruments and software that can inspire so much great music, we see so many new things that are proprietary. This world of proprietary puts unnecessary restrictions on what should be an open and creative process that is inviting for both amateurs and professionals. Why are companies making non-free software tools just for users to be able to even experience the sounds of notes that are decades, centuries or millennia old? Why should we have restrictions on the great notes both historic and modern from Africa, India, and the Middle East, that are not found on standard Western instruments in the local Western music store? We have such a great tool all around us, the computer. Computers should come to our aid in a way that inspires more music and community on a global scale. \r\n\r\nThis talk shows some great Free technologies, instruments and software. All software is run on a GNU/Linux Laptop.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/243/", "cancelled": false }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T14:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 349, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "328", "rooms": [ @@ -1829,6 +1793,25 @@ "cancelled": false, "mastodon_id": "@binford2k@hachyderm.io" }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "BoF", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 371, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "BoF: Making an open source Linkedin" + }, { "room": "328", "rooms": [ @@ -1848,6 +1831,44 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Slot" }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 315, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "338", + "rooms": [ + "338" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 319, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "329", "rooms": [ @@ -1883,9 +1904,9 @@ "cancelled": false }, { - "room": "328", + "room": "338", "rooms": [ - "328" + "338" ], "start": "2024-08-04T14:00:00", "end": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", @@ -1893,58 +1914,114 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", - "conf_key": 366, + "track": "AI and Machine Learning", + "conf_key": 362, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Toward an Economy of Open Abundance: Why FLO funding needs donor coordination and how to do it", + "name": "Report from the AI-Assisted Programming and Copyleft Committee", "authors": [ { - "name": "Aaron Wolf", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@wolftune@social.coop", + "name": "Stefano Zacchiroli", + "twitter": "zacchiro", + "mastodon": "@zacchiro@mastodon.xyz", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/b32ae4ca7b2465cc5b642eed9c285b06?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "297", - "biography": "Aaron is a community music teacher, co-founder of Snowdrift.coop (a long-struggling and principled platform working to solve economic coordination dilemmas around FLO public goods), and an activist and volunteer in many other areas. Originally from Ann Arbor, MI; he lives now in Oregon City with his wife, dog, and two kids.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9c31af6c5b4daa602dacb9d90274df38?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "273", + "biography": "Stefano Zacchiroli is full professor of computer science at T\u00e9l\u00e9com Paris, Polytechnic Institute of Paris. His current research interests span digital commons, open source software engineering, computer security, and the software supply chain. He is co-founder and CTO of Software Heritage, the largest public archive of software source code. He is a Debian developer since 2001, where he served as Debian project leader from 2010 to 2013. He is a former board director of the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and recipient of the 2015 O\u2019Reilly Open Source Award.", "username": "" }, { - "name": "Michael Siepmann", + "name": "Denver Gingerich", "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@MSiep@social.coop", + "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/MichaelSiepmann-5_edited_-_square_closeup_r8ZDzHE.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg", - "code": "292", - "biography": "Michael is an interaction designer and user researcher with a PhD in psychology, decades of mindfulness practice, and great enthusiasm for making life better for all of us through psychosocially insightful and compassionate design of systems big and small.\r\n\r\nHe has been involved with FOSS since 2015, when he started volunteering for Snowdrift.coop. His contributions there have included user research, interaction design, message design, coining the term \"crowdmatching\", and proposing an approach to crowdmatching in which donations are adjusted monthly to match the extent to which the crowd's total pledge meets the project's goal.\r\n\r\nRecently, he started a closely related project, IwillifWecan.org.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5ca795f06b3505f43bf7ba26fef37c7d?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "340", + "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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "John Sullivan", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "https://social.librem.one/@johns", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/c7bc3f6412a881f2f758658817f50702?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "363", + "biography": "John Sullivan is an independent free software activist and consultant\r\n(Alliterative Advising LLC), with specialties in communication,\r\ncommunity organizing, licensing, fundraising, strategic planning, and\r\nnonprofit governance. He is a Debian Developer, and member of its\r\nkeyring team. He is also a board member of F-Droid, and currently its\r\nvice chair. Previously, he worked for the Free Software Foundation for\r\nover nineteen years, including two as its union steward and eleven as\r\nits executive director. Prior to the FSF, John worked as a speech and\r\ndebate instructor for Harvard, University of Kentucky, and Michigan\r\nState University, coaching undergraduates and high school students on\r\npublic speaking, research, and critical thinking. He holds an MFA in\r\nWriting and Poetics from the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied\r\nPoetics (which is real) at Naropa University, and a BA in Philosophy\r\nfrom Michigan State, but he has been spending too much time with\r\ncomputers and online communities since running a 1990s BBS on his\r\nCommodore 64. Also he co-owns a pen store.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Karen Sandler", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5e77b6e5743dd274a0bc00806cb082de?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "9", + "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.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "There are four categories of economic goods: private goods, club goods, commons, and public goods. FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and other similarly-licensed digital works are public goods \u2014 meaning they are open and abundant. So, they don't fit our market economy which relies on the opposite \u2014 scarcity and exclusion. Forcing software into the standard economic system leads to reliance on paywalls and ads. Can we do better?\r\n\r\nIn the first part of this talk, Aaron will provide an updated understanding of the economic dilemmas with public goods. He will explain how standard language and models of economics make assumptions that work against the goals of software freedom. From there, we can see how to frame a new economic understanding of sharing and abundance.\r\n\r\nTo get the key concepts, we need to distinguish between goods and services, exclusive vs open, and scarce vs abundant. We can see these as traits on continuums (between clearly open and clearly exclusive are examples of partly-open). With these core ideas in mind, we can more easily see the issues with FLO projects today (along with many related parts of the economy).\r\n\r\nIn the second part of the talk, Michael will argue that crowdfunding for FLO projects is not effective enough as is. That's why we see appeals to donate often couched in terms of merely buying someone a coffee and similar. To become a game-changing economic force for good, we need to improve one critical feature: donor coordination.\r\n\r\nWe believe that many more people would happily donate modest amounts to support FLO projects whose works they use and value \u2014 if only they could be confident that it would make a real difference. Most of us cannot give enough individually to change the game, but if large numbers of individuals can coordinate and donate together, the collective funding power could have a massive impact and even ultimately change the nature of our economy.\r\n\r\nThe basic principle of donor coordination is simple \u2014 what you donate can be tied to what others donate. But exactly how best to do it is not a simple question. There are many ways it can be approached, each with different pros and cons. Michael will present the key \"how\" variables, discuss their significance, and outline some of the pros and cons of each. And he'll describe the work he and others are doing to develop usable platforms to test these coordination ideas with real funding.\r\n\r\nThe panel following this talk at 3pm will provide an opportunity to explore these ideas further in interactive discussion.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/272/", + "abstract": "At the onset of AI-assisted programming, Software Freedom Conservancy convened a committee to investigate the implications of such assistance \r\nfor copyleft and software freedom more broadly. \r\nIn this session, members of the committee will report back to the FOSSY audience about their work and discuss recommendations for the use and development of AI assistants that are compatible with free software goals.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/236/", "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@wolftune@social.coop" + "twitter_id": "zacchiro", + "mastodon_id": "@zacchiro@mastodon.xyz" }, { - "room": "338", + "room": "333", "rooms": [ - "338" + "333" ], - "start": "2024-08-01T14:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", + "start": "2024-08-02T14:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T14:45:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 319, + "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", + "conf_key": 293, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": false, + "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Bradley M. Kuhn", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "373", + "biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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": "" + }, + { + "name": "Denver Gingerich", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5ca795f06b3505f43bf7ba26fef37c7d?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "340", + "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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Karen Sandler", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5e77b6e5743dd274a0bc00806cb082de?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "9", + "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.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "So much has happened recently with enforcement of copyleft licenses, such as the GPL and LGPL. This session will give you an update on all that's happened in the last year regarding GPL compliance and enforcement.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/257/", + "cancelled": false }, { "room": "327", @@ -1982,23 +2059,6 @@ "twitter_id": "DamnGoodTek", "mastodon_id": "DamnGoodTech" }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T15:00:00", - "duration": 15, - "kind": "Break", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 244, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -2019,14 +2079,14 @@ { "room": "", "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", + "start": "2024-08-01T14:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T15:00:00", "duration": 15, "kind": "Break", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 247, + "conf_key": 244, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -2051,70 +2111,56 @@ "name": "Slot" }, { - "room": "328", + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-04T14:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", + "duration": 15, + "kind": "Break", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 247, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "329", "rooms": [ - "328" + "329" ], - "start": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T15:45:00", + "start": "2024-08-03T15:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T15:45:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", - "conf_key": 367, + "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", + "conf_key": 340, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "FLO funding: A panel discussion of challenges, incentives, and possibilities", + "name": "Why rewrite OpenBSD's fw_update(8)?", "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": "271", - "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. 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": "" - }, - { - "name": "Eric Holscher", - "twitter": "ericholscher", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a985c35d6be3c88a87d92b92b0d3756f?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "397", - "biography": "Eric is the co-founder of Read the Docs, Write the Docs, and EthicalAds.\r\n\r\nHis work has historically been around software documentation, but he\u2019s also been actively engaged in community building and open source sustainability for over 15 years.\r\n\r\nHe currently lives in Bend, Oregon, and love to explore the outdoors, checking out the various beauty that the world holds.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "LX Cast", - "twitter": "laurex", - "mastodon": "I have one but have yet to post", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/05e09dd17e9c18210650a755b866e7ac?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "381", - "biography": "LX is currently a founder of a group app called Fractal and a student and practitioner of patterns of collective practice. They have been a product leader working on communication and collaboration tech for about 12 years. They're a board member at Prosocial Design Network and Tech Fleet, a past Resident Fellow at the Integrity Institute, a steering committee member of the Council on Tech and Social Cohesion, a member of Aspen Institute's Virtually Human working group, a mentor with PDX Women in Tech and All Tech is Human, and a consultant helping nonprofits develop product discovery practices. \r\n\r\nLX Cast is mostly water and collections of bacteria and bone and stardust. An emergent invention. Canadian West Coast island-born former New Yorker current Portlander curiouser researcher reader leader shape shifter code switcher beginner elder young a flash of light technologist social engineer experimental questioning contradictory vegan (except for brownies) consultant recoverer contributor community practitioner strategist poet weirdo professional queer non-binary neurodivergent raised-Quaker seemer listener fox cook step-parent partner collaborator co-keeper teacher coach flaneur aesthete hiker hard to locate reliable emerging being who practices synthesis learning listening walking investigating supporting reflecting confusing growing perplexing and occasionally punctuating.", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "Michael Siepmann", + "name": "Andrew Hewus Fresh", "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@MSiep@social.coop", + "mastodon": "@afresh1@bsd.network", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/MichaelSiepmann-5_edited_-_square_closeup_r8ZDzHE.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg", - "code": "292", - "biography": "Michael is an interaction designer and user researcher with a PhD in psychology, decades of mindfulness practice, and great enthusiasm for making life better for all of us through psychosocially insightful and compassionate design of systems big and small.\r\n\r\nHe has been involved with FOSS since 2015, when he started volunteering for Snowdrift.coop. His contributions there have included user research, interaction design, message design, coining the term \"crowdmatching\", and proposing an approach to crowdmatching in which donations are adjusted monthly to match the extent to which the crowd's total pledge meets the project's goal.\r\n\r\nRecently, he started a closely related project, IwillifWecan.org.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6cd56a05a2e514c815927a5c24404285?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "360", + "biography": "Andrew has been using OpenBSD for over 20 years and afresh1@openbsd.org for about ten now and in that time has contributed at least a week worth of effort to the project. He primary keeps L up to date in the base system and maintains a few ports to have something to test those perl updates. He hasn't used OpenBSD professionally since before he got his account, but continually wishes other things were as nice to use. He has also restarted and has been organizing the BSD Pizza Night in Portland, OR since 2014, shortly after moving there.", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Following the three related talks earlier in the day, this session will provide an opportunity for interactive discussion of key challenges in funding FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and other similarly-licensed digital works, with reference both to incentives that shape the status quo and to possibilities for positive change. Salt will facilitate as well as participate in the panel discussion, which will include opportunities for audience participation.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/271/", + "abstract": "OpenBSD provides the utility fw_update(8) to handle firmware loading for hardware from manufacturers whose licensing isn't compatible with our base system. We will take a trip into the history of fw_update(8), its structure and why it exists. A recent rewrite provides an illustration of the value OpenBSD places on simplicity and user experience.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/217/", "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "altsalt", - "mastodon_id": "@salt@social.coop" + "mastodon_id": "@afresh1@bsd.network" }, { "room": "329", @@ -2151,44 +2197,6 @@ "cancelled": false, "twitter_id": "eksoward" }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T15:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T15:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 350, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T15:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 372, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "329", "rooms": [ @@ -2324,41 +2332,6 @@ "twitter_id": "paigerduty", "mastodon_id": "https://hachyderm.io/@paigerduty" }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T15:00:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T15:45:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", - "conf_key": 340, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Why rewrite OpenBSD's fw_update(8)?", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Andrew Hewus Fresh", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@afresh1@bsd.network", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6cd56a05a2e514c815927a5c24404285?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "360", - "biography": "Andrew has been using OpenBSD for over 20 years and afresh1@openbsd.org for about ten now and in that time has contributed at least a week worth of effort to the project. He primary keeps L up to date in the base system and maintains a few ports to have something to test those perl updates. He hasn't used OpenBSD professionally since before he got his account, but continually wishes other things were as nice to use. He has also restarted and has been organizing the BSD Pizza Night in Portland, OR since 2014, shortly after moving there.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "OpenBSD provides the utility fw_update(8) to handle firmware loading for hardware from manufacturers whose licensing isn't compatible with our base system. We will take a trip into the history of fw_update(8), its structure and why it exists. A recent rewrite provides an illustration of the value OpenBSD places on simplicity and user experience.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/217/", - "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@afresh1@bsd.network" - }, { "room": "338", "rooms": [ @@ -2376,7 +2349,7 @@ "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface", + "name": "QuMat: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface", "authors": [ { "name": "Andrew Musselman", @@ -2389,11 +2362,77 @@ "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Apache Mahout (https://mahout.apache.org) is a linear algebra library for building machine learning solutions, and up until this year focused on compute back-ends such as Spark and Flink for processing training data into predictions. More recently the project has adopted quantum compute back-ends as well. The Qumat (https://github.com/apache/mahout?tab=readme-ov-file#qumat) library is a Python-based interface to multiple quantum computing systems, starting with IBM's Qiskit, which allows researchers and developers to assemble quantum logic gates into circuits that can run on simulators as well as utility-scale quantum computers. This talk will provide a brief introduction to quantum computing, including the data structures used along with some basic logic gates (https://github.com/apache/mahout/blob/main/docs/basic_gates.md), and will demo Qumat software running in a notebook that will be shared after the talk.", + "abstract": "Apache Mahout (https://mahout.apache.org) is a linear algebra library for building machine learning solutions, and up until this year focused on compute back-ends such as Spark and Flink for processing training data into predictions. More recently the project has adopted quantum compute back-ends as well. The QuMat (https://github.com/apache/mahout?tab=readme-ov-file#qumat) library is a Python-based interface to multiple quantum computing systems, starting with IBM's Qiskit, which allows researchers and developers to assemble quantum logic gates into circuits that can run on simulators as well as utility-scale quantum computers. This talk will provide a brief introduction to quantum computing, including the data structures used along with some basic logic gates (https://github.com/apache/mahout/blob/main/docs/basic_gates.md), and will demo QuMat software running in a notebook that will be shared after the talk.", "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/265/", "cancelled": false, "twitter_id": "akm" }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T15:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS Funding and Economics", + "conf_key": 367, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "FLO funding: A panel discussion of challenges, incentives, and possibilities", + "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": "271", + "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. 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": "" + }, + { + "name": "Eric Holscher", + "twitter": "ericholscher", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/a985c35d6be3c88a87d92b92b0d3756f?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "397", + "biography": "Eric is the co-founder of Read the Docs, Write the Docs, and EthicalAds.\r\n\r\nHis work has historically been around software documentation, but he\u2019s also been actively engaged in community building and open source sustainability for over 15 years.\r\n\r\nHe currently lives in Bend, Oregon, and love to explore the outdoors, checking out the various beauty that the world holds.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "LX Cast", + "twitter": "laurex", + "mastodon": "I have one but have yet to post", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/05e09dd17e9c18210650a755b866e7ac?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "381", + "biography": "LX is currently a founder of a group app called Fractal and a student and practitioner of patterns of collective practice. They have been a product leader working on communication and collaboration tech for about 12 years. They're a board member at Prosocial Design Network and Tech Fleet, a past Resident Fellow at the Integrity Institute, a steering committee member of the Council on Tech and Social Cohesion, a member of Aspen Institute's Virtually Human working group, a mentor with PDX Women in Tech and All Tech is Human, and a consultant helping nonprofits develop product discovery practices. \r\n\r\nLX Cast is mostly water and collections of bacteria and bone and stardust. An emergent invention. Canadian West Coast island-born former New Yorker current Portlander curiouser researcher reader leader shape shifter code switcher beginner elder young a flash of light technologist social engineer experimental questioning contradictory vegan (except for brownies) consultant recoverer contributor community practitioner strategist poet weirdo professional queer non-binary neurodivergent raised-Quaker seemer listener fox cook step-parent partner collaborator co-keeper teacher coach flaneur aesthete hiker hard to locate reliable emerging being who practices synthesis learning listening walking investigating supporting reflecting confusing growing perplexing and occasionally punctuating.", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Michael Siepmann", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@MSiep@social.coop", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "/site_media/media/speaker_photos/MichaelSiepmann-5_edited_-_square_closeup_r8ZDzHE.jpg.120x120_q85_crop.jpg", + "code": "292", + "biography": "Michael is an interaction designer and user researcher with a PhD in psychology, decades of mindfulness practice, and great enthusiasm for making life better for all of us through psychosocially insightful and compassionate design of systems big and small.\r\n\r\nHe has been involved with FOSS since 2015, when he started volunteering for Snowdrift.coop. His contributions there have included user research, interaction design, message design, coining the term \"crowdmatching\", and proposing an approach to crowdmatching in which donations are adjusted monthly to match the extent to which the crowd's total pledge meets the project's goal.\r\n\r\nRecently, he started a closely related project, IwillifWecan.org.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Following the three related talks earlier in the day, this session will provide an opportunity for interactive discussion of key challenges in funding FLO (Free/Libre/Open) software and other similarly-licensed digital works, with reference both to incentives that shape the status quo and to possibilities for positive change. Salt will facilitate as well as participate in the panel discussion, which will include opportunities for audience participation.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/271/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "altsalt", + "mastodon_id": "@salt@social.coop" + }, { "room": "328", "rooms": [ @@ -2494,28 +2533,13 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Wild Card", + "track": null, "conf_key": 346, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": true, + "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "AMA: Building Autonomous Self Healing Computer Systems", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Darrick J. Wong", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/442ca87b78597c13bf4df13bbd8d6c1d?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "320", - "biography": "Darrick designed the autonomous self healing capabilities in the XFS filesystem in Linux, and served as the kernel XFS maintainer from 2016 to 2023.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Does your data management system go bonkers? Would you like it to fix itself for you? Or possibly just grow weird new parts on demand? I recently finished construction on an autonomous self healing filesystem for Linux 6.10 and would love to share how it works with everyone. Many people who I've shown this off to think this is magic, but it's really not:\r\n\r\nDo you have record sets that you need to index? While the system is running? What if I showed you several technique for doing that, along with some discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of each?\r\n\r\nHow about analyzing the structure of graph structured data? By relaxing some constraints and tightening others, it's possible to determine if you've got a proper tree ... or whatever it is that directory trees actually are. Eventual consistency is key here.\r\n\r\nOh, and did I mention that this is XFS? So I'll also talk about how do to this in a resource and functionality-constrained environment like the operating system!", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/239/", - "cancelled": false + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "327", @@ -2717,17 +2741,55 @@ "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/262/", "cancelled": false }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T15:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T15:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "BoF", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 350, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "BoF: Amateur radio and Open Source" + }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T15:00:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T15:45:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "BoF", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 372, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Fun Activity (Improv-related, slide deck karaoke?)" + }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-01T15:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", + "start": "2024-08-02T15:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Coffee/tea break", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 235, + "conf_key": 236, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -2771,20 +2833,39 @@ { "room": "", "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-02T15:45:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", + "start": "2024-08-01T15:45:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Coffee/tea break", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 236, + "conf_key": 235, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], "name": "Coffee, tea, and snack break" }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 341, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "328", "rooms": [ @@ -2831,9 +2912,9 @@ "twitter_id": "elementwatson" }, { - "room": "333", + "room": "328", "rooms": [ - "333" + "328" ], "start": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", "end": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", @@ -2841,38 +2922,65 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", - "conf_key": 295, + "track": "Science of Community", + "conf_key": 330, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": false, + "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Discussion: Scalability Through Open Source Hygiene", + "name": "Research Says.....Insights on Building, Leading, and Sustaining Open Source", "authors": [ { - "name": "Ria Farrell Schalnat", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", + "name": "Kaylea Champion", + "twitter": "kayleachampion", + "mastodon": "@kaylea@social.coop", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ef7862587ed68666f03878f2723a810c?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "328", - "biography": "Ria Farrell Schalnat works with the Open Program Office of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. This role combines her prior lives as a computer programmer, lawyer and adjunct professor specializing in intellectual property subjects including open source. She has guided initiatives in patent portfolio management, intellectual property due diligence for mergers and acquisitions, software licensing, workflow and process management.\r\n\r\nRia is served for two years as President of CincyIP, a local bar association dedicated to intellectual property education. She also served as an adjunct professor at the University of Cincinnati School of Law and University of Dayton School of Law on subjects including Patent Litigation, Cyberspace Law and Open Source Licensing. Within the Linux Foundation, her extracurricular activities include both the SPDX project and CHAOSS. Finally, she participates in ongoing CISA-hosted community discussions related to software bills of material (SBOMs).", - "username": "" - }, - { - "name": "Lynn Westfall", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4cde6f3d1d38f926dac83876c139a0ce?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "383", - "biography": "Lynn Westfall, AKA The Modem Lisa is a Software Supply Chain Expert with over 25 years of experience in the IT Procurement, IT Asset Management, and Software Composition Analysis fields. She started her journey with FOSS as a teen seeking freely available tools in the 1990s to help create music and websites and she quickly fell in love with the many tweaks and adjustments needed to make audio drivers work on different Linux distros. Later in her career, she found herself working in a corporation developing software on Sun, soon to be Oracle stack software and hardware, and this transition prompted a deep dive into the world of software licensing. Creating effective open source policies and the processes to support them throughout the SDLC and entire organization became a true passion for Lynn. Always an advocate for responsible open source software use within software development organizations, she stumbled upon working within the CISA Community groups working on their SBOM initiatives in early 2023. She recently reopened the business she started in 1999, The Modem Lisa, and hopes to help companies of all sizes manage their FOSS with knowledge and respect.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/917b3a38a024326d995eb551559fedfb?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "265", + "biography": "Kaylea Champion is a PhD Candidate at University of Washington. Her work is focused on how people work together to build groovy things like Linux and Wikipedia -- including what gets built and maintained (and what doesn't), who takes part (and who is excluded), and how those organizations form (and fall apart).", "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "There are many processes within an organization dealing with open source including licensing reviews & compliance, export compliance, product security, contractual obligations, and sustainability. These operate against the backdrop of ongoing development in technology, case law and newer legal requirements such as the EO 14028 in the United States and the European Union\u2019s Cyber Resiliency Act (EU-CRA). All of them depend on inventories to understand the scope of obligations, risks and opportunities. They also require simple, scalable runbooks to achieve the underlying goals. Come to this session for an interactive discussion on practices and how to leverage projects within the Linux Foundation to super-charge your company\u2019s open source practices.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/260/", - "cancelled": false + "abstract": "How do we know when a project is struggling? How can we build communities to sustain open source projects? \r\n\r\nIn this beginner-friendly talk, I will describe recent research findings about successfully sustaining an open source project and the lifecycles of these projects. We know that open source software is fundamental to global communication, business, education, and more. This software is often produced and maintained through dynamic organizations in which we have a great deal of flexibility to choose our own tasks. But what we choose to work on and what the global public most needs are not always in alignment. What organizational structures, governance practices, and technology choices are associated with increased risk? And given these circumstances, how might we work together to improve software quality and security? Let's look at what we know about signs of trouble and strategies for success, and then discuss how the research community can better serve the needs of open source.\r\n\r\nYou'll walk away with:\r\n* new ideas for taking action personally and inside organizations\r\n* specific data-driven insights into how projects evolve over time", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/247/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "kayleachampion", + "mastodon_id": "@kaylea@social.coop" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS and ARM64; from the Cloud to the Edge", + "conf_key": 283, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Unlocking containers on ARM64: A story of runtime and image support", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Phil Estes", + "twitter": "estesp", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f89b63d91e9b55028012dd6efaef7149?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "321", + "biography": "Phil is a Principal Engineer for Amazon Web Services (AWS), focused on core container technologies that power AWS container offerings like Fargate, EKS, and ECS.\r\n\r\nPhil is currently an active contributor and maintainer for the CNCF containerd runtime project, and participates in the Open Container Initiative (OCI) as the member of the Technical Oversight Board (TOB). Phil has also been a long-time core contributor and maintainer on the Docker/Moby engine project where he contributed key features like user namespace support and multi-platform image capabilities.\r\n\r\nPhil enjoys helping others understand and apply container and cloud native concepts and speaks worldwide at industry conferences and meetups, and is a member of the CNCF Ambassadors program.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "Container runtimes like Docker and containerd are the core software components that enable the adoption of container technology, whether in cloud orchestrator systems like Kubernetes or in edge and embedded compute scenarios. Similarly, the Open Container Initiative (OCI) has standardized the concepts around containers, like the image and runtime specifications, so that all runtime implementations are interoperable. \r\n\r\nIn both these worlds, the adoption of multi-platform support has made steady progress for the last 6-8 years. While progress has been slow at times, the ecosystem has now fully unlocked the advantages of ARM64 as one of the key platforms supported directly by runtimes and encoded into the specifications of the OCI.\r\n\r\nIn this talk we'll walk through this history of the adoption of ARM64, including a focus on the CNCF containerd project as a shining example of the adoption of multi-platform support, and specifically the enablement of the containerd project to build, test, and release official support on ARM64. We'll look at example use cases and where the industry is using this support today to enable production workloads on ARM64.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/189/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "estesp" }, { "room": "333", @@ -2885,42 +2993,8 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", - "conf_key": 317, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Deconstructing the Linux System Definition to Understand the Scope of the OIN License - Table 12 and", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Keith Bergelt, CEO, Open Invention Network", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/d36494d058acee9edcce7a6d8b429468?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "377", - "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": "OIN is the only institution focused on mitigating patent risk in Open\r\nSource Software (OSS). With nearly 4,000 members, OIN maintains the\r\nworld's largest and oldest patent cross license. The coverage area \u2014\r\nor scope of the OIN community cross license \u2014 is defined by a list of\r\nover 4,500 core OSS & hardware development packages called the Linux\r\nSystem Definition which is updated approximately every 18-24 months.\r\n\r\nThe newest update \u2014 Table 12, which will become effective on August\r\n26, 2024 \u2014 extends OIN's existing patent risk mitigation efforts for\r\nits community members to cloud-native computing, enterprise software,\r\nIoT, networking, automotive, embedded systems and hardware development\r\ntechnologies, among others.\r\n\r\nKEY TAKEAWAYS \u2014 Participants will develop an understanding of\r\n\r\n* The scope of OIN's Linux System definition - what it is, how it is maintained and updated, its current coverage and a path for its future\r\n\r\n* How the Linux System safeguards against patent threats and encourages the adoption of OSS\r\n\r\n* How this framework relates to recent disputes like that in the US International Trade Commission between Netgear and TP Link\r\n\r\n* What else we are tracking in the area of patents that could become threats to the OSS community", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/279/", - "cancelled": false - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 289, + "conf_key": 317, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -2928,9 +3002,9 @@ "name": "Slot" }, { - "room": "329", + "room": "327", "rooms": [ - "329" + "327" ], "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", @@ -2939,7 +3013,7 @@ "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 378, + "conf_key": 343, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -2947,9 +3021,9 @@ "name": "Slot" }, { - "room": "328", + "room": "338", "rooms": [ - "328" + "338" ], "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", @@ -2957,29 +3031,13 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "XMPP", - "conf_key": 252, + "track": null, + "conf_key": 321, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": true, + "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Anatomy of a Cross-platform Chat SDK", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Stephen Paul Weber", - "twitter": "singpolyma", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ab4d3a66e470ce10eb7ec812fab3c46?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "318", - "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 lot of XMPP developers spend much of their time re-implementing the same basic protocol features. While good low-level libraries for protocol establishment are not hard to find, what would it look like to model at a higher level, so that developers can focus on building a great user experience and not have to worry about what a \"XEP\" is? I have been exploring this space and will report on my findings, demo a prototype, and solicit feedback about what would make your chat or real-time development experience smoother.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/231/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "singpolyma" + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "329", @@ -3035,25 +3093,6 @@ "cancelled": false, "twitter_id": "btopro" }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 343, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "333", "rooms": [ @@ -3062,7 +3101,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "kind": "BoF", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -3071,21 +3110,21 @@ "tags": "", "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" + "name": "Neurodiversity Networking/Discussion" }, { - "room": "329", + "room": "338", "rooms": [ - "329" + "338" ], - "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", + "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 341, + "conf_key": 359, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -3097,35 +3136,109 @@ "rooms": [ "327" ], + "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Wild Card", + "conf_key": 357, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "How to make local == CI for fun and more community contributions!", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Jeremy Adams", + "twitter": "jpadamspdx", + "mastodon": "jeremy@hachyderm.io", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/89f57c8a900000c72f25b4ed7f31c1a7?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "357", + "biography": "Jeremy has enjoyed working with people and computers at Dagger, GitHub, Twistlock, and Puppet. These days he's thinking about and hacking on a lot of pipelines, trying to make things a bit more magical.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "You want contributors and and new maintainers to get up to speed quickly in your project, but for many complex OSS projects, the chances are slim that a new contributor can actually create a development environment, test an improvement, and get it across the line without a lot of assistance. Often the CONTRIBUTING.md, README.md suggest that the best contributions are \"non-code\" because of the daunting tangle environment setup, local build and test scripts, and a completely different stack in CI. There may even be several competing local environments contributed over the months and years to further confuse matters.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, Jeremy will showcase open source projects that have had their local and CI experience harmonized by using open source Dagger. He'll show how it can make it easier to onboard new contributors and make the project more fun and productive.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/276/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "jpadamspdx", + "mastodon_id": "jeremy@hachyderm.io" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 289, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS and ARM64; from the Cloud to the Edge", - "conf_key": 283, + "track": "XMPP", + "conf_key": 252, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": true, "contact": [], - "name": "Unlocking containers on ARM64: A story of runtime and image support", + "name": "Anatomy of a Cross-platform Chat SDK", "authors": [ { - "name": "Phil Estes", - "twitter": "estesp", + "name": "Stephen Paul Weber", + "twitter": "singpolyma", "mastodon": "", "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f89b63d91e9b55028012dd6efaef7149?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "321", - "biography": "Phil is a Principal Engineer for Amazon Web Services (AWS), focused on core container technologies that power AWS container offerings like Fargate, EKS, and ECS.\r\n\r\nPhil is currently an active contributor and maintainer for the CNCF containerd runtime project, and participates in the Open Container Initiative (OCI) as the member of the Technical Oversight Board (TOB). Phil has also been a long-time core contributor and maintainer on the Docker/Moby engine project where he contributed key features like user namespace support and multi-platform image capabilities.\r\n\r\nPhil enjoys helping others understand and apply container and cloud native concepts and speaks worldwide at industry conferences and meetups, and is a member of the CNCF Ambassadors program.", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/3ab4d3a66e470ce10eb7ec812fab3c46?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "318", + "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": "Container runtimes like Docker and containerd are the core software components that enable the adoption of container technology, whether in cloud orchestrator systems like Kubernetes or in edge and embedded compute scenarios. Similarly, the Open Container Initiative (OCI) has standardized the concepts around containers, like the image and runtime specifications, so that all runtime implementations are interoperable. \r\n\r\nIn both these worlds, the adoption of multi-platform support has made steady progress for the last 6-8 years. While progress has been slow at times, the ecosystem has now fully unlocked the advantages of ARM64 as one of the key platforms supported directly by runtimes and encoded into the specifications of the OCI.\r\n\r\nIn this talk we'll walk through this history of the adoption of ARM64, including a focus on the CNCF containerd project as a shining example of the adoption of multi-platform support, and specifically the enablement of the containerd project to build, test, and release official support on ARM64. We'll look at example use cases and where the industry is using this support today to enable production workloads on ARM64.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/189/", + "abstract": "A lot of XMPP developers spend much of their time re-implementing the same basic protocol features. While good low-level libraries for protocol establishment are not hard to find, what would it look like to model at a higher level, so that developers can focus on building a great user experience and not have to worry about what a \"XEP\" is? I have been exploring this space and will report on my findings, demo a prototype, and solicit feedback about what would make your chat or real-time development experience smoother.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/231/", "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "estesp" + "twitter_id": "singpolyma" + }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "BoF", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 351, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "BoF: Crafts, Mending, and Repair (bring a project!)" }, { "room": "328", @@ -3167,11 +3280,109 @@ "username": "" } ], - "abstract": "Many developers relying on open-source digital infrastructure expect continuous maintenance, but even the most critical packages can become unmaintained. Despite this, there is little understanding of the prevalence of abandonment of widely-used packages, of subsequent exposure, and of reactions to abandonment in practice, or the factors that influence them. We did two research studies to address this gap.\r\n\r\nFirst, we interviewed 33 developers who have experienced dependency abandonment, and learned that many felt they had little to no support or guidance when facing abandonment, leaving them to figure out what to do through a trial-and-error process on their own. Often, people used multiple strategies to cope with abandonment, for example, first reaching out to the community to find potential alternatives, then switching to a community-accepted alternative if one exists.\r\n\r\nSecond, we quantitatively analyzed all widely-used npm packages and found that abandonment is common among them, that abandonment exposes many projects which often do not respond, that responses correlate with other dependency management practices, and that removal is significantly faster when a projects end-of-life status is explicitly stated. \r\n\r\nThis talk reviews the results of these two studies, and ends with recommendations to both researchers and practitioners who are facing dependency abandonment or are sunsetting projects, such as opportunities for low-effort transparency mechanisms to help exposed projects make better, more informed decisions.", + "abstract": "Many developers relying on open-source digital infrastructure expect continuous maintenance, but even the most critical packages can become unmaintained. Despite this, there is little understanding of the prevalence of abandonment of widely-used packages, of subsequent exposure, and of reactions to abandonment in practice, or the factors that influence them. We did two research studies to address this gap.\r\n\r\nFirst, we interviewed 33 developers who have experienced dependency abandonment, and learned that many felt they had little to no support or guidance when facing abandonment, leaving them to figure out what to do through a trial-and-error process on their own. Often, people used multiple strategies to cope with abandonment, for example, first reaching out to the community to find potential alternatives, then switching to a community-accepted alternative if one exists.\r\n\r\nSecond, we quantitatively analyzed all widely-used npm packages and found that abandonment is common among them, that abandonment exposes many projects which often do not respond, that responses correlate with other dependency management practices, and that removal is significantly faster when a projects end-of-life status is explicitly stated. \r\n\r\nThis talk reviews the results of these two studies, and ends with recommendations to both researchers and practitioners who are facing dependency abandonment or are sunsetting projects, such as opportunities for low-effort transparency mechanisms to help exposed projects make better, more informed decisions.\r\n\r\nThe slide deck can be viewed here: https://cmustrudel.github.io/slides/fossy24-dependency-abandonment.pdf", "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/255/", "cancelled": false, "twitter_id": "b_vasilescu" }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Supporting User Groups", + "conf_key": 279, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Embracing your weird: Community Building through Fun & Play", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Tom \"spot\" Callaway", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "@spot@social.afront.org", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6318a246b849dc68e643fd5e6563c72b?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "350", + "biography": "Tom Callaway, \"spot\" to his friends, has been part of FOSS communities since he was in high school. He skipped his junior year \"graduation\" to attend a local Linux conference, and never looked back. He spent 19 years at Red Hat, before joining Amazon Web Services (AWS) as part of their Open Source Standards and Marketing team. He's forgotten more about FOSS licensing than many lawyers will ever know, and believes in the power of community over code.\r\n\r\nIn his non-existent spare time, he enjoys traveling, games, puzzles, comics, hockey, blue, 3d printing, accidental time loops, traveling, games, and puzzles.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "I believe that the community that plays together, stays together. It sounds cliche (and it is), but the first rule of community building is to remember that communities are made of people, not code. Over the last 15 years, I've been experimenting with creating opportunities for the communities that I am a part participated in to play and have fun, at first subconsciously, but later, mindfully and intentionally. In this talk, I will share some of the ideas I have tried, along with some efforts that I have seen done in other communities. I hope to try to convince you to invest in creating opportunities for your communities to connect as people through laughter and play, and critically, and how that can help in growing the size, resiliency, and sustainability of open source communities.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/212/", + "cancelled": false, + "mastodon_id": "@spot@social.afront.org" + }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", + "conf_key": 295, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Discussion: Scalability Through Open Source Hygiene", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Ria Farrell Schalnat", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/ef7862587ed68666f03878f2723a810c?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "328", + "biography": "Ria Farrell Schalnat works with the Open Program Office of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. This role combines her prior lives as a computer programmer, lawyer and adjunct professor specializing in intellectual property subjects including open source. She has guided initiatives in patent portfolio management, intellectual property due diligence for mergers and acquisitions, software licensing, workflow and process management.\r\n\r\nRia is served for two years as President of CincyIP, a local bar association dedicated to intellectual property education. She also served as an adjunct professor at the University of Cincinnati School of Law and University of Dayton School of Law on subjects including Patent Litigation, Cyberspace Law and Open Source Licensing. Within the Linux Foundation, her extracurricular activities include both the SPDX project and CHAOSS. Finally, she participates in ongoing CISA-hosted community discussions related to software bills of material (SBOMs).", + "username": "" + }, + { + "name": "Lynn Westfall", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/4cde6f3d1d38f926dac83876c139a0ce?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "383", + "biography": "Lynn Westfall, AKA The Modem Lisa is a Software Supply Chain Expert with over 25 years of experience in the IT Procurement, IT Asset Management, and Software Composition Analysis fields. She started her journey with FOSS as a teen seeking freely available tools in the 1990s to help create music and websites and she quickly fell in love with the many tweaks and adjustments needed to make audio drivers work on different Linux distros. Later in her career, she found herself working in a corporation developing software on Sun, soon to be Oracle stack software and hardware, and this transition prompted a deep dive into the world of software licensing. Creating effective open source policies and the processes to support them throughout the SDLC and entire organization became a true passion for Lynn. Always an advocate for responsible open source software use within software development organizations, she stumbled upon working within the CISA Community groups working on their SBOM initiatives in early 2023. She recently reopened the business she started in 1999, The Modem Lisa, and hopes to help companies of all sizes manage their FOSS with knowledge and respect.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "There are many processes within an organization dealing with open source including licensing reviews & compliance, export compliance, product security, contractual obligations, and sustainability. These operate against the backdrop of ongoing development in technology, case law and newer legal requirements such as the EO 14028 in the United States and the European Union\u2019s Cyber Resiliency Act (EU-CRA). All of them depend on inventories to understand the scope of obligations, risks and opportunities. They also require simple, scalable runbooks to achieve the underlying goals. Come to this session for an interactive discussion on practices and how to leverage projects within the Linux Foundation to super-charge your company\u2019s open source practices.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/260/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 378, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "338", "rooms": [ @@ -3237,162 +3448,16 @@ "cancelled": false }, { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Science of Community", - "conf_key": 330, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Research Says.....Insights on Building, Leading, and Sustaining Open Source", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Kaylea Champion", - "twitter": "kayleachampion", - "mastodon": "@kaylea@social.coop", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/917b3a38a024326d995eb551559fedfb?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "265", - "biography": "Kaylea Champion is a PhD Candidate at University of Washington. Her work is focused on how people work together to build groovy things like Linux and Wikipedia -- including what gets built and maintained (and what doesn't), who takes part (and who is excluded), and how those organizations form (and fall apart).", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "How do we know when a project is struggling? How can we build communities to sustain open source projects? \r\n\r\nIn this beginner-friendly talk, I will describe recent research findings about successfully sustaining an open source project and the lifecycles of these projects. We know that open source software is fundamental to global communication, business, education, and more. This software is often produced and maintained through dynamic organizations in which we have a great deal of flexibility to choose our own tasks. But what we choose to work on and what the global public most needs are not always in alignment. What organizational structures, governance practices, and technology choices are associated with increased risk? And given these circumstances, how might we work together to improve software quality and security? Let's look at what we know about signs of trouble and strategies for success, and then discuss how the research community can better serve the needs of open source.\r\n\r\nYou'll walk away with:\r\n* new ideas for taking action personally and inside organizations\r\n* specific data-driven insights into how projects evolve over time", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/247/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "kayleachampion", - "mastodon_id": "@kaylea@social.coop" - }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], - "start": "2024-08-04T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", + "duration": 15, + "kind": "Break", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 359, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "333", - "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 351, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Wild Card", - "conf_key": 357, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "How to make local == CI for fun and more community contributions!", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Jeremy Adams", - "twitter": "jpadamspdx", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/89f57c8a900000c72f25b4ed7f31c1a7?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "357", - "biography": "Jeremy has enjoyed working with people and computers at Dagger, GitHub, Twistlock, and Puppet. These days he's thinking about and hacking on a lot of pipelines, trying to make things a bit more magical.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "You want contributors and and new maintainers to get up to speed quickly in your project, but for many complex OSS projects, the chances are slim that a new contributor can actually create a development environment, test an improvement, and get it across the line without a lot of assistance. Often the CONTRIBUTING.md, README.md suggest that the best contributions are \"non-code\" because of the daunting tangle environment setup, local build and test scripts, and a completely different stack in CI. There may even be several competing local environments contributed over the months and years to further confuse matters.\r\n\r\nIn this talk, Jeremy will showcase open source projects that have had their local and CI experience harmonized by using open source Dagger. He'll show how it can make it easier to onboard new contributors and make the project more fun and productive.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/276/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "jpadamspdx" - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Supporting User Groups", - "conf_key": 279, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Embracing your weird: Community Building through Fun & Play", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Tom \"spot\" Callaway", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "@spot@social.afront.org", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/6318a246b849dc68e643fd5e6563c72b?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "350", - "biography": "Tom Callaway, \"spot\" to his friends, has been part of FOSS communities since he was in high school. He skipped his junior year \"graduation\" to attend a local Linux conference, and never looked back. He spent 19 years at Red Hat, before joining Amazon Web Services (AWS) as part of their Open Source Standards and Marketing team. He's forgotten more about FOSS licensing than many lawyers will ever know, and believes in the power of community over code.\r\n\r\nIn his non-existent spare time, he enjoys traveling, games, puzzles, comics, hockey, blue, 3d printing, accidental time loops, traveling, games, and puzzles.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "I believe that the community that plays together, stays together. It sounds cliche (and it is), but the first rule of community building is to remember that communities are made of people, not code. Over the last 15 years, I've been experimenting with creating opportunities for the communities that I am a part participated in to play and have fun, at first subconsciously, but later, mindfully and intentionally. In this talk, I will share some of the ideas I have tried, along with some efforts that I have seen done in other communities. I hope to try to convince you to invest in creating opportunities for your communities to connect as people through laughter and play, and critically, and how that can help in growing the size, resiliency, and sustainability of open source communities.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/212/", - "cancelled": false, - "mastodon_id": "@spot@social.afront.org" - }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T16:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T17:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 321, + "conf_key": 258, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -3416,23 +3481,6 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Slot" }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", - "duration": 15, - "kind": "Break", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 257, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, { "room": "", "rooms": [], @@ -3453,14 +3501,14 @@ { "room": "", "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-03T17:15:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", + "start": "2024-08-02T17:15:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", "duration": 15, "kind": "Break", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 258, + "conf_key": 257, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -3468,53 +3516,9 @@ "name": "Slot" }, { - "room": "333", + "room": "327", "rooms": [ - "333" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "Licensing and Legal Issues", - "conf_key": 318, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Bradley M. Kuhn", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/0580d7a67da1b15b1695edc4e22779f9?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "373", - "biography": "Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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": "" - }, - { - "name": "McCoy Smith", - "twitter": "mccoysmith", - "mastodon": "@mccoysmith", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/44e615bb857f5cb8780dd2098c396f9a?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "366", - "biography": "P. McCoy Smith is the Founding Attorney at Lex Pan Law LLC, a full-service technology and intellectual property law firm based in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A and Opsequio LLC, an open source compliance consultancy. Prior to his current position, he spent 20 years in the legal department of a Fortune 50 multinational technology company as a business unit intellectual property specialist; among his duties was setting up the free & open source legal function and policies for that company. He preceded his in-house experience with 8 years in private practice in a large New York City-based boutique intellectual property law firm, working simultaneously as a U.S. patent litigator and U.S. patent prosecutor. He was also a patent examiner at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office prior to attending law school. He is licensed to practice law in Oregon, Washington State, California & New York and to prosecute patent applications in the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office; he is also a registered Trademark and Patent Agent with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office. He has degrees from Colorado State University (Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering, with honors), Johns Hopkins University (Masters of Liberal Arts) and the University of Virginia (Juris Doctor). While in private practice, and continuing into his in-house career, he taught portions of the U.S. patent bar exam for a long-standing and well-known patent bar exam preparation course, and from 2014-2020 was on the editorial board of the Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society (JOLTS), and is currently on the editorial board of the American Intellectual Property Law Quarterly Journal (AIPLAQJ). He is the author or co-author of chapters on open source and copyright and patents in \u201cOpen Source Law, Policy & Practice\u201d (2022, Oxford University Press). He lectures frequently around the world on free and open source issues as well as other intellectual property topics.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "Come to this session to receive a whirlwind opportunity to dive deep into one of the most heavily discussed issues in the GPLv2 family of licenses. Namely, what is it that one must provide to meet the requirements to provide \"the scripts used to control installation of the executable\"? Why do some feel that the plain meaning of the word \"install\" doesn't really mean \"install\"?\r\nFinally see the big debate that we've all been awaiting for years on this question. Time permitting, we'll cover other issues.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/280/", - "cancelled": false - }, - { - "room": "329", - "rooms": [ - "329" + "327" ], "start": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", "end": "2024-08-02T18:15:00", @@ -3523,62 +3527,7 @@ "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, - "conf_key": 302, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 322, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "", - "rooms": [], - "start": "2024-08-04T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-04T18:30:00", - "duration": 60, - "kind": "Opening Remarks", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 228, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Closing Remarks" - }, - { - "room": "328", - "rooms": [ - "328" - ], - "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 260, + "conf_key": 290, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", "released": false, @@ -3638,79 +3587,6 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Slot" }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 290, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "327", - "rooms": [ - "327" - ], - "start": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": null, - "conf_key": 358, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": false, - "contact": [], - "name": "Slot" - }, - { - "room": "338", - "rooms": [ - "338" - ], - "start": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-02T18:15:00", - "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", - "section": "fossy-2024", - "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS For Education", - "conf_key": 303, - "license": "CC-BY-SA", - "tags": "", - "released": true, - "contact": [], - "name": "Leveraging open source softwares to incorporate open assignments in courses.", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Rie Namba", - "twitter": "dreamsanatomy", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/29d35368d4399a07a708853f5eabd830?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "268", - "biography": "Rie currenly works at the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology (https://ctlt.ubc.ca/ )at University of British Columbia. Rie designs, develops, supports and maintains resources to facilitate the use of open practices in teaching and learning (specifically Wiki, WordPress and H5P). Rie provides consultation to students, faculty, and staff who are incorporating open practices in their work and develops, implements, and curates educational resources and materials (guides, handouts, tutorials, websites) that address teaching and learning-related professional development needs and improve upon sustainable practices for resource sharing. Rie is also part of the stewardship committee member of the ETUG (Educational Technology Users Group - https://etug.ca/).", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "At the University of British Columbia, we host a variety of open source software platforms to support instructors in adopting various teaching practices. This session will specifically focus on MediaWiki, WordPress, and H5P as tools for instructors interested in incorporating open practices into their courses and projects. We will go over use cases, and discuss the challenges and considerations we encounter in supporting both instructors and students.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/197/", - "cancelled": false, - "twitter_id": "dreamsanatomy" - }, { "room": "333", "rooms": [ @@ -3719,7 +3595,7 @@ "start": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", "end": "2024-08-03T18:15:00", "duration": 45, - "kind": "Talk", + "kind": "BoF", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", "track": null, @@ -3730,6 +3606,25 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Slot" }, + { + "room": "328", + "rooms": [ + "328" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 260, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "329", "rooms": [ @@ -3741,28 +3636,13 @@ "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS in Daily Life", + "track": null, "conf_key": 336, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": true, + "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Why is Python Packaging", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Moshe Zadka", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f1b9eda8229c1ce71bcef8d6fd5eb804?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "313", - "biography": "Moshe has been involved in the Linux community since 1998, helping in Linux \"installation parties\". They have been programming Python since 1999, and has contributed to the core Python interpreter. Moshe has been a DevOps/SRE since before those terms existed, caring deeply about software reliability, build reproducibility and other such things. They have worked in companies as small as three people and as big as tens of thousands -- usually some place around where software meets infrastructure.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "\"Python packaging is a problem\" is a meme. What is Python packaging? What is being packaged, where is it sent from, and where is its destination? Why, oh why, can't I just produce a lockfile?\r\nLet's dive into the details of Python packaging: the past, the present, the challenges ahead, and the proposed solutions.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/216/", - "cancelled": false + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "328", @@ -3783,6 +3663,25 @@ "contact": [], "name": "Slot" }, + { + "room": "333", + "rooms": [ + "333" + ], + "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 318, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "328", "rooms": [ @@ -3818,6 +3717,130 @@ "cancelled": false, "mastodon_id": "@darius@friend.camp" }, + { + "room": "338", + "rooms": [ + "338" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS For Education", + "conf_key": 303, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Leveraging open source softwares to incorporate open assignments in courses.", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Rie Namba", + "twitter": "dreamsanatomy", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/29d35368d4399a07a708853f5eabd830?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "268", + "biography": "Rie currenly works at the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology (https://ctlt.ubc.ca/ )at University of British Columbia. Rie designs, develops, supports and maintains resources to facilitate the use of open practices in teaching and learning (specifically Wiki, WordPress and H5P). Rie provides consultation to students, faculty, and staff who are incorporating open practices in their work and develops, implements, and curates educational resources and materials (guides, handouts, tutorials, websites) that address teaching and learning-related professional development needs and improve upon sustainable practices for resource sharing. Rie is also part of the stewardship committee member of the ETUG (Educational Technology Users Group - https://etug.ca/).", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "At the University of British Columbia, we host a variety of open source software platforms to support instructors in adopting various teaching practices. This session will specifically focus on MediaWiki, WordPress, and H5P as tools for instructors interested in incorporating open practices into their courses and projects. We will go over use cases, and discuss the challenges and considerations we encounter in supporting both instructors and students.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/197/", + "cancelled": false, + "twitter_id": "dreamsanatomy" + }, + { + "room": "338", + "rooms": [ + "338" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": "FOSS For Education", + "conf_key": 304, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": true, + "contact": [], + "name": "Voluntarily Excellent When It Comes To Accessibility: A New Reviewer-Friendly VPAT", + "authors": [ + { + "name": "Chris Knapp", + "twitter": "", + "mastodon": "", + "contact": "redacted", + "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5424f6ba662723e910e00e4dc2d3ea26?s=120&d=mp", + "code": "332", + "biography": "Chris Knapp is an accessibility consultant/tester who operates a disability-owned business called Accessiversity. Chris joined the Sakai community in 2020 to help out with accessibility testing/quality assurance, and now serves as The Sakai Accessibility Team Lead. As someone who is statutorily blind and has to rely on screen readers and other assistive technology to interact with a complex web application like Sakai, Chris is uniquely positioned to understand and articulate the specific needs of these users, while providing for an authentic accessibility experience. Chris is also a member of the Sakai PMC.", + "username": "" + } + ], + "abstract": "VPAT and HECVAT (Higher Education Community Vendor Assessment Toolkit) are a partial solution to the problem of determining what competing products show better compliance with standards. They are also good instruments for planning how to equitably roll out an adoption with full understanding of the compliance gaps of the chosen product. \r\nBut standard compliance information cannot tell the whole story. It is a snapshot in time that does not speak to the culture of the vendor, where the product has been, and more importantly, where it is going. In this session, we will detail Sakai\u2019s multi-year effort to develop and implement a community-sourced accessibility strategy, that eventually led us to produce our own VPAT, and the steps we took to reimagine the standard VPAT format with the VPAT reviewer audience in mind.", + "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/199/", + "cancelled": false + }, + { + "room": "329", + "rooms": [ + "329" + ], + "start": "2024-08-02T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-02T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 302, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, + { + "room": "", + "rooms": [], + "start": "2024-08-04T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-04T18:30:00", + "duration": 60, + "kind": "Opening Remarks", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 228, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Closing Remarks" + }, + { + "room": "327", + "rooms": [ + "327" + ], + "start": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-03T18:15:00", + "duration": 45, + "kind": "Talk", + "section": "fossy-2024", + "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", + "track": null, + "conf_key": 358, + "license": "CC-BY-SA", + "tags": "", + "released": false, + "contact": [], + "name": "Slot" + }, { "room": "327", "rooms": [ @@ -3857,34 +3880,19 @@ "rooms": [ "338" ], - "start": "2024-08-03T17:30:00", - "end": "2024-08-03T18:15:00", + "start": "2024-08-01T17:30:00", + "end": "2024-08-01T18:15:00", "duration": 45, "kind": "Talk", "section": "fossy-2024", "section_name": "FOSSY 2024", - "track": "FOSS For Education", - "conf_key": 304, + "track": null, + "conf_key": 322, "license": "CC-BY-SA", "tags": "", - "released": true, + "released": false, "contact": [], - "name": "Voluntarily Excellent When It Comes To Accessibility: A New Reviewer-Friendly VPAT", - "authors": [ - { - "name": "Chris Knapp", - "twitter": "", - "mastodon": "", - "contact": "redacted", - "picture_url": "https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/5424f6ba662723e910e00e4dc2d3ea26?s=120&d=mp", - "code": "332", - "biography": "Chris Knapp is an accessibility consultant/tester who operates a disability-owned business called Accessiversity. Chris joined the Sakai community in 2020 to help out with accessibility testing/quality assurance, and now serves as The Sakai Accessibility Team Lead. As someone who is statutorily blind and has to rely on screen readers and other assistive technology to interact with a complex web application like Sakai, Chris is uniquely positioned to understand and articulate the specific needs of these users, while providing for an authentic accessibility experience. Chris is also a member of the Sakai PMC.", - "username": "" - } - ], - "abstract": "VPAT and HECVAT (Higher Education Community Vendor Assessment Toolkit) are a partial solution to the problem of determining what competing products show better compliance with standards. They are also good instruments for planning how to equitably roll out an adoption with full understanding of the compliance gaps of the chosen product. \r\nBut standard compliance information cannot tell the whole story. It is a snapshot in time that does not speak to the culture of the vendor, where the product has been, and more importantly, where it is going. In this session, we will detail Sakai\u2019s multi-year effort to develop and implement a community-sourced accessibility strategy, that eventually led us to produce our own VPAT, and the steps we took to reimagine the standard VPAT format with the VPAT reviewer audience in mind.", - "conf_url": "http://2024.fossy.us/schedule/presentation/199/", - "cancelled": false + "name": "Slot" }, { "room": "", diff --git a/schedule/index.html b/schedule/index.html index ebdbf97..60cda2d 100644 --- a/schedule/index.html +++ b/schedule/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -302,7 +302,7 @@ -

Licensing and Legal Issues

+

Open

@@ -594,14 +594,6 @@ -

- Deconstructing the Linux System Definition to Understand the Scope of the OIN License - Table 12 and -
- Keith Bergelt, CEO, Open Invention Network -

- - - @@ -680,14 +672,6 @@ -

- The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable -
- Bradley M. Kuhn, McCoy Smith -

- - - @@ -897,7 +881,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

- Licensing and Legal Issues — + Open — 333 @@ -1060,7 +1044,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

- Licensing and Legal Issues — + Open — 333 @@ -1215,20 +1199,13 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- Deconstructing the Linux System Definition to Understand the Scope of the OIN License - Table 12 and -
- Keith Bergelt, CEO, Open Invention Network -

- -

- Licensing and Legal Issues — + Open — 333 @@ -1371,20 +1348,13 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable -
- Bradley M. Kuhn, McCoy Smith -

- -

- Licensing and Legal Issues — + Open — 333 @@ -1549,7 +1519,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

20+ years of the OSU Open Source Lab
- Lance Albertson + Lance Albertson, Pono Takamori

@@ -1722,6 +1692,14 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! +

+ The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable +
+ Bradley M. Kuhn, McCoy Smith +

+ + + @@ -1742,11 +1720,11 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

12:30PM

- + - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -1817,7 +1795,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft
- Bradley M. Kuhn + Bradley M. Kuhn, Denver Gingerich, Karen Sandler

@@ -2200,7 +2178,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

20+ years of the OSU Open Source Lab
- Lance Albertson + Lance Albertson, Pono Takamori

@@ -2484,6 +2462,13 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! +

+ The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable +
+ Bradley M. Kuhn, McCoy Smith +

+ + @@ -2533,7 +2518,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -2648,7 +2633,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft
- Bradley M. Kuhn + Bradley M. Kuhn, Denver Gingerich, Karen Sandler

@@ -3303,7 +3288,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

Open Source and AI
- Bradley M. Kuhn, Allison Randal, Joey Hess, julia ferraioli, Kat Walsh + Denver Gingerich, Allison Randal, Joey Hess, julia ferraioli, Kat Walsh

@@ -3340,14 +3325,6 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- Things I've Learned as a Linux Kernel Maintainer -
- Darrick J. Wong -

- - - @@ -3472,10 +3449,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + BoF: Web tools and link sharing + @@ -3504,11 +3483,11 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

12:30PM

- + - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -3568,6 +3547,14 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! +

+ FOSS-related legislation +
+ Eric Gallager +

+ + + @@ -3689,10 +3676,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + BoF: Amateur radio and Open Source + @@ -3781,10 +3770,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + BoF: Crafts, Mending, and Repair (bring a project!) + @@ -3854,23 +3845,19 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- Why is Python Packaging -
- Moshe Zadka -

- - - - + +
+

BoF

+
+ @@ -3953,7 +3940,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

Open Source and AI
- Bradley M. Kuhn, Allison Randal, Joey Hess, julia ferraioli, Kat Walsh + Denver Gingerich, Allison Randal, Joey Hess, julia ferraioli, Kat Walsh

@@ -4009,13 +3996,6 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- Things I've Learned as a Linux Kernel Maintainer -
- Darrick J. Wong -

- - @@ -4237,6 +4217,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + BoF: Web tools and link sharing + @@ -4293,7 +4275,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -4398,6 +4380,13 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! +

+ FOSS-related legislation +
+ Eric Gallager +

+ + @@ -4602,6 +4591,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + BoF: Amateur radio and Open Source + @@ -4763,6 +4754,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + BoF: Crafts, Mending, and Repair (bring a project!) + @@ -4890,13 +4883,6 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- Why is Python Packaging -
- Moshe Zadka -

- - @@ -4919,6 +4905,10 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! +
+

BoF

+
+ @@ -5069,7 +5059,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

FOSS outside of corporations
- Karen Sandler, John Sullivan, Kate Chapman + Karen Sandler, John Sullivan, Kate Chapman, Rosy Schechter, Sriram Ramkrishna

@@ -5128,10 +5118,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + BoF for actors/creative types - writing and producing sketches + @@ -5222,10 +5214,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + Music Blocks Workshop + @@ -5254,11 +5248,11 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

12:30PM

- + - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -5314,10 +5308,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + BoF: Making an open source Linkedin + @@ -5369,14 +5365,6 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- AMA: Building Autonomous Self Healing Computer Systems -
- Darrick J. Wong -

- - - @@ -5408,10 +5396,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + Fun Activity (Improv-related, slide deck karaoke?) + @@ -5422,7 +5412,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

- Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface + QuMat: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface
Andrew Musselman

@@ -5492,10 +5482,12 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - + + Neurodiversity Networking/Discussion + @@ -5606,7 +5598,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

FOSS outside of corporations
- Karen Sandler, John Sullivan, Kate Chapman + Karen Sandler, John Sullivan, Kate Chapman, Rosy Schechter, Sriram Ramkrishna

@@ -5713,6 +5705,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + BoF for actors/creative types - writing and producing sketches + @@ -5876,6 +5870,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + Music Blocks Workshop + @@ -5932,7 +5928,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! - Lunch + Lunch break (on your own) @@ -6037,6 +6033,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + BoF: Making an open source Linkedin + @@ -6120,13 +6118,6 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! -

- AMA: Building Autonomous Self Healing Computer Systems -
- Darrick J. Wong -

- - @@ -6200,6 +6191,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + Fun Activity (Improv-related, slide deck karaoke?) + @@ -6223,7 +6216,7 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited!

- Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface + QuMat: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface
Andrew Musselman

@@ -6354,6 +6347,8 @@ Just quick ~15 minute Max ride from PSU. All attendees are invited! + Neurodiversity Networking/Discussion + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/187/index.html b/schedule/presentation/187/index.html index d00087a..d72cd4f 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/187/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/187/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/188/index.html b/schedule/presentation/188/index.html index 50c7170..da1a799 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/188/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/188/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -226,6 +226,18 @@ Now, Rowan is eager to get better at introducing other kids to FLO software. And +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ +
diff --git a/schedule/presentation/189/index.html b/schedule/presentation/189/index.html index 47b4a4d..be4b67c 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/189/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/189/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -214,6 +214,18 @@ In this talk we'll walk through this history of the adoption of ARM64, including +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/190/index.html b/schedule/presentation/190/index.html index 70ff29d..301a38e 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/190/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/190/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -210,6 +210,18 @@ GitHub has long been the home for open source, with GitHub Actions being well-lo +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/191/index.html b/schedule/presentation/191/index.html index b79b44a..7b31d84 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/191/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/191/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -202,6 +202,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/192/index.html b/schedule/presentation/192/index.html index d6c5a6a..7485e91 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/192/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/192/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/193/index.html b/schedule/presentation/193/index.html index 5df2b26..244cebe 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/193/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/193/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/194/index.html b/schedule/presentation/194/index.html index b2c8832..8bac2c0 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/194/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/194/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -206,6 +206,18 @@ This talk will provide an authoritative introduction to FreeBSD features and use +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/195/index.html b/schedule/presentation/195/index.html index 84ae51d..3922468 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/195/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/195/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -233,6 +233,18 @@ scale makes in enabling software development to succeed.

+

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/196/index.html b/schedule/presentation/196/index.html index 373761e..cafca03 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/196/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/196/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -257,6 +257,18 @@ Session takeaways: +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/197/index.html b/schedule/presentation/197/index.html index a241078..d3c1cef 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/197/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/197/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/198/index.html b/schedule/presentation/198/index.html index 3f88b43..4f61512 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/198/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/198/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -233,6 +233,18 @@ We seek Ubiquity for web content and experiences. We seek a revolution in web pu +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/199/index.html b/schedule/presentation/199/index.html index e841de0..f56f47c 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/199/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/199/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -205,6 +205,18 @@ But standard compliance information cannot tell the whole story. It is a snapsho +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/200/index.html b/schedule/presentation/200/index.html index a40b16c..e753518 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/200/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/200/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -235,6 +235,18 @@ This presentation will showcase the foundational work of UCSC in building an OSP +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/202/index.html b/schedule/presentation/202/index.html index f8c2189..048613f 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/202/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/202/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -220,6 +220,18 @@ This talk will examine education and mentorship as a strategy to bring free soft +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/203/index.html b/schedule/presentation/203/index.html index 07880f0..cd0fade 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/203/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/203/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/204/index.html b/schedule/presentation/204/index.html index 169decd..2b01d09 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/204/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/204/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/205/index.html b/schedule/presentation/205/index.html index e7a33d4..50cdb84 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/205/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/205/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -212,6 +212,18 @@ Students can experience the real world and create a real project, from the comfo +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/206/index.html b/schedule/presentation/206/index.html index a263f64..bba1bc6 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/206/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/206/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -207,6 +207,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/212/index.html b/schedule/presentation/212/index.html index 7a1525c..b851ccf 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/212/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/212/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ In his non-existent spare time, he enjoys traveling, games, puzzles, comics, hoc +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/213/index.html b/schedule/presentation/213/index.html index 566467f..2f78e22 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/213/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/213/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/214/index.html b/schedule/presentation/214/index.html index 655c22d..092615f 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/214/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/214/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -208,6 +208,18 @@ No community management skills or experience needed; this talk is all about less +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/216/index.html b/schedule/presentation/216/index.html index eb66dfc..e82785e 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/216/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/216/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/217/index.html b/schedule/presentation/217/index.html index 8d77df2..238c1f4 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/217/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/217/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/218/index.html b/schedule/presentation/218/index.html index 267639e..aa0c3f6 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/218/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/218/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -212,6 +212,16 @@ The Flathub App store has 2600 apps and is adding 40 new apps a month. By the en +

Videos

+ + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/219/index.html b/schedule/presentation/219/index.html index cfe7456..223e5b2 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/219/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/219/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -206,6 +206,18 @@ Adam is privileged and lucky to have given talks and workshops at a handful of c +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/220/index.html b/schedule/presentation/220/index.html index 1abc821..f3678cb 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/220/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/220/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -239,6 +239,18 @@ The attendee will walk away with a useful model for critiquing open source fundi +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/222/index.html b/schedule/presentation/222/index.html index 8da59ae..4f5c10d 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/222/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/222/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -213,6 +213,18 @@ It's essential we ask ourselves: how do we ensure the software our societies dep +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/223/index.html b/schedule/presentation/223/index.html index 2d8a831..fcb4f8f 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/223/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/223/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -212,6 +212,18 @@ In other words, we need to co-design our financial models to find strategies tha +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/224/index.html b/schedule/presentation/224/index.html index f370b46..e604db7 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/224/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/224/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/226/index.html b/schedule/presentation/226/index.html index b4cb6de..cc984f8 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/226/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/226/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/228/index.html b/schedule/presentation/228/index.html index 4253e8a..c8fae73 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/228/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/228/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/229/index.html b/schedule/presentation/229/index.html index 03e43e8..9ffb54c 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/229/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/229/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/231/index.html b/schedule/presentation/231/index.html index db419d4..9285007 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/231/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/231/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/232/index.html b/schedule/presentation/232/index.html index 0feee60..eff82b5 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/232/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/232/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/233/index.html b/schedule/presentation/233/index.html index 146564d..fc34786 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/233/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/233/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -202,6 +202,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/236/index.html b/schedule/presentation/236/index.html index 4ea923f..84355b0 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/236/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/236/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -269,6 +269,18 @@ In this session, members of the committee will report back to the FOSSY audience +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/237/index.html b/schedule/presentation/237/index.html index c351a9a..5632b57 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/237/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/237/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/238/index.html b/schedule/presentation/238/index.html index c4f344f..18506b4 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/238/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/238/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/239/index.html b/schedule/presentation/239/index.html index ef87ffa..5d20093 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/239/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/239/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/240/index.html b/schedule/presentation/240/index.html index 8d354db..9df9bb7 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/240/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/240/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/242/index.html b/schedule/presentation/242/index.html index 8abd924..e074684 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/242/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/242/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/243/index.html b/schedule/presentation/243/index.html index 99e8ff3..cb8196e 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/243/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/243/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -208,6 +208,18 @@ This talk shows some great Free technologies, instruments and software. All soft +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/244/index.html b/schedule/presentation/244/index.html index b9fa2da..19166a2 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/244/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/244/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/245/index.html b/schedule/presentation/245/index.html index 23384d5..1af1263 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/245/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/245/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/246/index.html b/schedule/presentation/246/index.html index ae1f825..4bed5aa 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/246/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/246/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/247/index.html b/schedule/presentation/247/index.html index 027abc1..5f50744 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/247/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/247/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -212,6 +212,18 @@ You'll walk away with: +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/248/index.html b/schedule/presentation/248/index.html index e0d260b..27c6cf3 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/248/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/248/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -210,6 +210,18 @@ We will unpack what it takes to craft questions that get answered by reviewing s +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/250/index.html b/schedule/presentation/250/index.html index 21e4a08..a0a45aa 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/250/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/250/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -206,6 +206,18 @@ This presentation will cover what we found when we spoke to the people on the gr +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/253/index.html b/schedule/presentation/253/index.html index 8a2caf5..ce6795b 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/253/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/253/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -210,6 +210,18 @@ This talk will identify several categories of metrics from the Practitioner Guid +

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/254/index.html b/schedule/presentation/254/index.html index 57fe287..05a1baa 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/254/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/254/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/255/index.html b/schedule/presentation/255/index.html index f9fb223..fcde4d8 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/255/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/255/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -226,10 +226,24 @@ First, we interviewed 33 developers who have experienced dependency abandonment, Second, we quantitatively analyzed all widely-used npm packages and found that abandonment is common among them, that abandonment exposes many projects which often do not respond, that responses correlate with other dependency management practices, and that removal is significantly faster when a projects end-of-life status is explicitly stated. -This talk reviews the results of these two studies, and ends with recommendations to both researchers and practitioners who are facing dependency abandonment or are sunsetting projects, such as opportunities for low-effort transparency mechanisms to help exposed projects make better, more informed decisions.

+This talk reviews the results of these two studies, and ends with recommendations to both researchers and practitioners who are facing dependency abandonment or are sunsetting projects, such as opportunities for low-effort transparency mechanisms to help exposed projects make better, more informed decisions. + +The slide deck can be viewed here: https://cmustrudel.github.io/slides/fossy24-dependency-abandonment.pdf

+

Videos

+ + + + +

Available sources:

+ + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/256/index.html b/schedule/presentation/256/index.html index a8c64cc..ab3ad43 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/256/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/256/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/257/index.html b/schedule/presentation/257/index.html index 10ecf17..9a94c1d 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/257/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/257/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -192,6 +192,38 @@

+
  • + + Denver Gingerich +

    + Denver Gingerich
    + + + https://ossguy.com/ + +

    +
    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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.
    +

    +
  • + +
  • + + Karen Sandler +

    + Karen Sandler
    + + +

    +
    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. + +Prior 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. + +Karen 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. + +Sandler has won awards for her work on behalf of software freedom, including the O’Reilly Open Source Award in 2011. She received an honorary doctorate from KU Leuven in 2023.
    +

    +
  • + @@ -202,6 +234,18 @@ +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/259/index.html b/schedule/presentation/259/index.html index 5c17b22..224c2db 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/259/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/259/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -222,6 +222,18 @@ software freedom.

    +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/260/index.html b/schedule/presentation/260/index.html index ac7ceda..6c8790c 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/260/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/260/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -218,6 +218,18 @@ Ria is served for two years as President of CincyIP, a local bar association ded +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/261/index.html b/schedule/presentation/261/index.html index 7a1dd94..4c88b48 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/261/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/261/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -206,6 +206,16 @@ Lastly, we'll cover the offer check, something everyone can do to help in SFC's +

    Videos

    + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/262/index.html b/schedule/presentation/262/index.html index 0805c23..d9dcd0d 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/262/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/262/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -202,6 +202,18 @@ +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/263/index.html b/schedule/presentation/263/index.html index d2bb922..a43ba64 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/263/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/263/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -235,6 +235,18 @@ projects.

    +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/264/index.html b/schedule/presentation/264/index.html index a5672ec..6183dc3 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/264/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/264/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/265/index.html b/schedule/presentation/265/index.html index 7f71b49..8bf1715 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/265/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/265/index.html @@ -15,18 +15,18 @@ - FOSSY 2024 | Presentation: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface + FOSSY 2024 | Presentation: QuMat: Apache Mahout's Quantum Computing Interface - + - + @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -155,7 +155,7 @@
    diff --git a/schedule/presentation/266/index.html b/schedule/presentation/266/index.html index a509769..cab79f3 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/266/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/266/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -204,6 +204,18 @@ The physical world is full of these types of phenomenon. We deal with it by usin +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + +
    diff --git a/schedule/presentation/268/index.html b/schedule/presentation/268/index.html index b3573bd..0831447 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/268/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/268/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -226,6 +226,18 @@ For the record, I'm happy where I'm working now, and I hope to stay there for ma +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/269/index.html b/schedule/presentation/269/index.html index bccad69..139f3fc 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/269/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/269/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -226,6 +226,18 @@ Mike's mission is to share my passion for new software and to help users achieve +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/271/index.html b/schedule/presentation/271/index.html index 4c19a7f..737ff2e 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/271/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/271/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/272/index.html b/schedule/presentation/272/index.html index 82c844c..5762d24 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/272/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/272/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -234,6 +234,18 @@ The panel following this talk at 3pm will provide an opportunity to explore thes +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/273/index.html b/schedule/presentation/273/index.html index fc3ab3e..19457b3 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/273/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/273/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -215,6 +215,18 @@ Nextcloud app.

    +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/274/index.html b/schedule/presentation/274/index.html index 2f311b5..47e0e44 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/274/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/274/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -194,6 +194,18 @@ Since joining the OSUOSL in 2007, Lance has managed all of the hosting activitie

    +
  • + + Pono Takamori +

    + Pono Takamori
    + + +

    +
    Daniel Pono Takamori is the Community Organizer at Software Freedom Conservancy. He's been involved in FOSS for almost 20 years and worked for non-profit FOSS organizations for over a decade. While not at his computer he likes to play go, cook vegetables and ride his bike.
    +

    +
  • + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/275/index.html b/schedule/presentation/275/index.html index c364fb2..4868b19 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/275/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/275/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -182,13 +182,15 @@
  • - Bradley M. Kuhn + Denver Gingerich

    - Bradley M. Kuhn
    + Denver Gingerich
    + https://ossguy.com/ +

    -
    Bradley M. Kuhn is the Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence at Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC). 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’s non-profit career began in 2000, when he was hired by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). As FSF’s Executive Director from 2001–2005, Kuhn led FSF’s GPL enforcement, launched its Associate Member program, and invented the Affero GPL. Kuhn began as SFC’s primary volunteer from 2006–2010, and became its first staff person in 2011. Kuhn's work at SFC focuses on enforcement of the GPL agreements, FOSS licensing policy, and non-profit infrastructural solutions for FOSS. 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’s Master’s 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 — both in recognition for his lifelong policy work on copyleft licensing and its enforcement.
    +
    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 FOSSY, CopyleftConf, LibrePlanet, LinuxCon North America, CopyCamp Toronto, FOSSLC's Summercamp, and the Open Video Conference.

  • @@ -255,10 +257,8 @@ He lives in an off-grid passive house in the woods of Appalachia. When not helpi

    Abstract

    -

    Bradley Kuhn will lead our panelists in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different efforts out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the technology -actually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions. We -may even have a panelist or two willing to question whether the -technology even should be held to such a definition.

    +

    Denver Gingerich will lead our panelists in a lively conversation on the keynote stage about the different efforts out there to define what free/open AI should mean and how the technology +actually being made does and doesn't meet those possible definitions.

    diff --git a/schedule/presentation/276/index.html b/schedule/presentation/276/index.html index 43f2bde..4f6c25a 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/276/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/276/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -206,6 +206,18 @@ In this talk, Jeremy will showcase open source projects that have had their loca +

    Videos

    + + + + +

    Available sources:

    + +
    diff --git a/schedule/presentation/277/index.html b/schedule/presentation/277/index.html index cbd7c7b..834919f 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/277/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/277/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/278/index.html b/schedule/presentation/278/index.html index 6e6a66f..e696788 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/278/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/278/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -239,6 +239,34 @@ Commodore 64. Also he co-owns a pen store.

    +
  • + + Rosy Schechter +

    + Rosy Schechter
    + + +

    +
    +

    +
  • + +
  • + + Sriram Ramkrishna +

    + Sriram Ramkrishna
    + + @sramkrishna
    + + + https://linkedin.com/in/sriram-ramkrishna + +

    +
    Sri is a Free and Open Source advocate for over 25 years. Sri started working on open source software when he was 25 contributing to the GNOME project in 1997. 15 years later, he was given the opportunity to work on open source professionally at Intel Corporation in 2012. While his career has gone through many iterations his contributions to the GNOME project has been consistent - building community around projects and engaging with community. His passion today is to help build the Linux Application Ecosystem through initiatives like the Linux App Summit. Professionally, Sri is the senior community manager for oneAPI and the lead coordinator of Intel's Software Innovator Program.
    +

    +
  • + diff --git a/schedule/presentation/279/index.html b/schedule/presentation/279/index.html index b971fe4..f4d2b22 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/279/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/279/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/schedule/presentation/280/index.html b/schedule/presentation/280/index.html index 601c85c..3753512 100644 --- a/schedule/presentation/280/index.html +++ b/schedule/presentation/280/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -158,7 +158,7 @@

    The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable

    -333 | Thu 01 Aug 5:30 p.m.–6:15 p.m. +333 | Fri 02 Aug 11:45 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

    diff --git a/schedule/presentation/281/index.html b/schedule/presentation/281/index.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..efe2910 --- /dev/null +++ b/schedule/presentation/281/index.html @@ -0,0 +1,280 @@ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + FOSSY 2024 | Presentation: FOSS-related legislation + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
    + + + + + + +
    + + + +
    +
    + +
    + + + +
    +
    + + +
    +
    + + + +
    +
    +

    Presented by

    +
      + +
    • + + Eric Gallager +

      + Eric Gallager
      + + @cooljeanius
      + + + https://linktr.ee/ericgallager + +

      +
      Eric Gallager is one of 400 state representatives in the New Hampshire legislature, representing Merrimack County District 20 (i.e. Concord Ward 6), with a focus on FOSS-related legislation.
      +

      +
    • + +
    +
    + +
    +

    Abstract

    + +

    A discussion around FOSS-related legislation and doing markup on NH RSA 21-R: https://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/rsa/html/I/21-R/21-R-mrg.htm + +Other possible topics to discuss: + * New Right-to-Repair proposals, including one for bionics: https://spectrum.ieee.org/bionic-right-to-repair + * Giving "Right to Inspect Source Code in Court" another try, now with some additional sources, such as: https://kb.osu.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/ccdce761-3689-477b-918a-920a11ca9435/content + * Setting up an official "Open Data Policy" for NH: https://github.com/opendata/Open-Data-Policies (RSA 21-R may already count, but I want to be sure) + * Relatedly, but slightly differently, setting up an Open Source Program Office for NH: https://github.com/github/github-ospo + * Setting up a sovereign tech fund for FOSS like Germany has: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Germany-STF-For-FFmpeg + * Including an inspection of automotive software as part of the automobile inspections that the state already requires people to get for their cars

    + + + +
    +
    + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
    + + + + + diff --git a/speaker/profile/264/index.html b/speaker/profile/264/index.html index 0b5916e..a9f7339 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/264/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/264/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/265/index.html b/speaker/profile/265/index.html index 0eea67c..3e17b47 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/265/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/265/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/266/index.html b/speaker/profile/266/index.html index e030113..d9ebcae 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/266/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/266/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/268/index.html b/speaker/profile/268/index.html index 4eebf03..d60d86c 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/268/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/268/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/271/index.html b/speaker/profile/271/index.html index a67d864..b6bd57c 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/271/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/271/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/273/index.html b/speaker/profile/273/index.html index 082985f..79e3f03 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/273/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/273/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/274/index.html b/speaker/profile/274/index.html index fd12cbd..1d3a0b5 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/274/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/274/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/276/index.html b/speaker/profile/276/index.html index 6d26920..5fc8fac 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/276/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/276/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/279/index.html b/speaker/profile/279/index.html index 88e1570..a1c4402 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/279/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/279/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/281/index.html b/speaker/profile/281/index.html index 87f1211..f9f737f 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/281/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/281/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/282/index.html b/speaker/profile/282/index.html index d77dfc8..d652358 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/282/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/282/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/284/index.html b/speaker/profile/284/index.html index ef9a4c6..bc2c0b6 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/284/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/284/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/286/index.html b/speaker/profile/286/index.html index 824edc2..78bd08b 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/286/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/286/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/287/index.html b/speaker/profile/287/index.html index f8f7dab..a2d4c67 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/287/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/287/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/290/index.html b/speaker/profile/290/index.html index 2d48da3..7c345d2 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/290/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/290/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/292/index.html b/speaker/profile/292/index.html index 99fa998..705ea2e 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/292/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/292/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/293/index.html b/speaker/profile/293/index.html index b64a7b9..eb10870 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/293/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/293/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/295/index.html b/speaker/profile/295/index.html index 0a3845d..64ab028 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/295/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/295/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/297/index.html b/speaker/profile/297/index.html index 27fb717..9c652ad 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/297/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/297/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/298/index.html b/speaker/profile/298/index.html index ec32d1b..d201a97 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/298/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/298/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/299/index.html b/speaker/profile/299/index.html index 3d6b08b..131df87 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/299/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/299/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/300/index.html b/speaker/profile/300/index.html index f54faf9..0802d31 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/300/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/300/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/303/index.html b/speaker/profile/303/index.html index dc27b48..79ebfb1 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/303/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/303/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/304/index.html b/speaker/profile/304/index.html index df94037..43022a9 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/304/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/304/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/305/index.html b/speaker/profile/305/index.html index 76a5873..74e4db5 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/305/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/305/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/308/index.html b/speaker/profile/308/index.html index fc35686..a39f038 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/308/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/308/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/310/index.html b/speaker/profile/310/index.html index c1b6ac6..9f0bc25 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/310/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/310/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/313/index.html b/speaker/profile/313/index.html index 496872c..34683e1 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/313/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/313/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/314/index.html b/speaker/profile/314/index.html index 980ff12..a9b5531 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/314/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/314/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/316/index.html b/speaker/profile/316/index.html index 0789958..9df5f30 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/316/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/316/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/317/index.html b/speaker/profile/317/index.html index 0fcc4a6..625ffe2 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/317/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/317/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/318/index.html b/speaker/profile/318/index.html index 0cac514..7544ace 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/318/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/318/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/320/index.html b/speaker/profile/320/index.html index fc0327c..eb12ec7 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/320/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/320/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/321/index.html b/speaker/profile/321/index.html index 020db4a..1db7447 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/321/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/321/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/322/index.html b/speaker/profile/322/index.html index c3f7b1e..0d6d047 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/322/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/322/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/323/index.html b/speaker/profile/323/index.html index f9fa888..ac1afab 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/323/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/323/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/326/index.html b/speaker/profile/326/index.html index 30e107f..0b14cce 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/326/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/326/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/327/index.html b/speaker/profile/327/index.html index 846e60b..57e9c9b 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/327/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/327/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/328/index.html b/speaker/profile/328/index.html index d679a62..1fa2979 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/328/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/328/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/331/index.html b/speaker/profile/331/index.html index 63197c3..062243c 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/331/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/331/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/332/index.html b/speaker/profile/332/index.html index 1eb9cc0..7da90ff 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/332/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/332/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/333/index.html b/speaker/profile/333/index.html index 8ac6644..c63dc0a 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/333/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/333/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/335/index.html b/speaker/profile/335/index.html index 804312f..44c1e65 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/335/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/335/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/336/index.html b/speaker/profile/336/index.html index 9f35ccd..96cfe06 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/336/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/336/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/account/password/reset/index.html b/speaker/profile/337/index.html similarity index 79% rename from account/password/reset/index.html rename to speaker/profile/337/index.html index a60ac59..394e3fa 100644 --- a/account/password/reset/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/337/index.html @@ -15,18 +15,18 @@ - FOSSY 2024 | Password reset + FOSSY 2024 | Speaker - Eric Gallager - + - + - + @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -155,8 +155,16 @@
    @@ -169,49 +177,37 @@ -
    -
    -
    - Password reset -

    Forgotten your password? Enter your email address below, and we'll send you an email allowing you to reset it.

    -
    -
    - - - - - - +
    +
    -
    - - - - - -
    - - - - - -
    +

    Biography

    + +
    Eric Gallager is one of 400 state representatives in the New Hampshire legislature, representing Merrimack County District 20 (i.e. Concord Ward 6), with a focus on FOSS-related legislation.
    + +

    Presentations

    + + +
    +
    + Eric Gallager +
    - - - -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -

    If you have any trouble resetting your password, contact us at conference@sfconservancy.org.

    - @@ -230,16 +226,15 @@ - + + + - - +
    diff --git a/speaker/profile/338/index.html b/speaker/profile/338/index.html index 5d41c34..2abc42e 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/338/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/338/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/340/index.html b/speaker/profile/340/index.html index 3d2fca5..8ed9a81 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/340/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/340/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -198,6 +198,28 @@ +
  • + Open Source and AI + + – + Saturday + 9:45 a.m.–10:30 a.m. + in + + +
  • + +
  • + Update on Recent Copyleft Litigation and the State of Copyleft + + – + Friday + 2 p.m.–2:45 p.m. + in + 333 + +
  • +
  • Report from the AI-Assisted Programming and Copyleft Committee diff --git a/speaker/profile/343/index.html b/speaker/profile/343/index.html index 4492e4f..9fd3c24 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/343/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/343/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/344/index.html b/speaker/profile/344/index.html index 5b39373..de9afd7 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/344/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/344/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/345/index.html b/speaker/profile/345/index.html index 91f5d3b..b95c3ac 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/345/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/345/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/346/index.html b/speaker/profile/346/index.html index b3b2058..12255d4 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/346/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/346/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/350/index.html b/speaker/profile/350/index.html index 93ee828..ff25efd 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/350/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/350/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/352/index.html b/speaker/profile/352/index.html index 2e50661..3d0fc58 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/352/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/352/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/353/index.html b/speaker/profile/353/index.html index 476b67e..0510fe4 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/353/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/353/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/356/index.html b/speaker/profile/356/index.html index 46192db..b7ce692 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/356/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/356/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/357/index.html b/speaker/profile/357/index.html index eb1fd58..c55985e 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/357/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/357/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/358/index.html b/speaker/profile/358/index.html index bfeb14c..d7567d3 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/358/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/358/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/359/index.html b/speaker/profile/359/index.html index f04f768..5b7fa60 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/359/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/359/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/360/index.html b/speaker/profile/360/index.html index 92be094..4d7eb9b 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/360/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/360/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/361/index.html b/speaker/profile/361/index.html index ffb5e27..019f848 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/361/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/361/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/362/index.html b/speaker/profile/362/index.html index 4d5cd64..09fee2b 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/362/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/362/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -200,6 +200,17 @@
  • +
  • + FOSS outside of corporations + + – + Sunday + 9:45 a.m.–10:30 a.m. + in + + +
  • +
    diff --git a/speaker/profile/363/index.html b/speaker/profile/363/index.html index a45d56d..bf21aaf 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/363/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/363/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/366/index.html b/speaker/profile/366/index.html index 09a5230..69e53e0 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/366/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/366/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -190,22 +190,22 @@
    • - The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable + Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free – - Thursday - 5:30 p.m.–6:15 p.m. + Friday + 10:45 a.m.–11:30 a.m. in 333
    • - Why FOSS Must Be Discrimination Free + The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable – Friday - 10:45 a.m.–11:30 a.m. + 11:45 a.m.–12:30 p.m. in 333 diff --git a/speaker/profile/367/index.html b/speaker/profile/367/index.html index 112b7c2..1f8e9a5 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/367/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/367/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/368/index.html b/speaker/profile/368/index.html index 68765ac..12724c3 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/368/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/368/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/370/index.html b/speaker/profile/370/index.html index b28c807..b614d4d 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/370/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/370/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/371/index.html b/speaker/profile/371/index.html index 1da604c..24c3ccc 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/371/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/371/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/372/index.html b/speaker/profile/372/index.html index b422ec9..bdcfd58 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/372/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/372/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/373/index.html b/speaker/profile/373/index.html index d52ed8b..9baf80d 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/373/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/373/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -189,8 +189,8 @@ The Scripts Used to Control Installation of the Executable – - Thursday - 5:30 p.m.–6:15 p.m. + Friday + 11:45 a.m.–12:30 p.m. in 333 @@ -207,17 +207,6 @@
    • -
    • - Open Source and AI - - – - Saturday - 9:45 a.m.–10:30 a.m. - in - - -
    • -
    diff --git a/speaker/profile/375/index.html b/speaker/profile/375/index.html index ac6ac43..6c8423f 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/375/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/375/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/376/index.html b/speaker/profile/376/index.html index 9db29e5..fc485c8 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/376/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/376/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/377/index.html b/speaker/profile/377/index.html index 3af7a33..fc61320 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/377/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/377/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/379/index.html b/speaker/profile/379/index.html index fa60c9c..6c2e3a8 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/379/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/379/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/380/index.html b/speaker/profile/380/index.html index 8f2069d..734bf72 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/380/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/380/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/381/index.html b/speaker/profile/381/index.html index e653b79..3fbc39f 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/381/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/381/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/383/index.html b/speaker/profile/383/index.html index a836895..d6a376c 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/383/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/383/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/391/index.html b/speaker/profile/391/index.html index 9a24419..97f9a31 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/391/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/391/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/392/index.html b/speaker/profile/392/index.html index 6e4d986..db3890d 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/392/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/392/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets diff --git a/speaker/profile/394/index.html b/speaker/profile/394/index.html index c6a4fff..3735d76 100644 --- a/speaker/profile/394/index.html +++ b/speaker/profile/394/index.html @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ -Dashboard + Tickets @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@
    -
    -
    -
    - Log in to an existing account - - - - - - +
    +
    -
    - - - - - -
    - - - - - -
    +

    Biography

    + +
    + +

    Presentations

    + + +
    +
    + Rosy Schechter +
    - - - -
    - - - - - -
    - - - - - -
    - -
    - - - - -
    - -
    -
    - - - - - - -
    -
    - -
    - - - - - - - - Forgot your password? - - - - -
    -
    - -
    -
    - @@ -266,25 +213,20 @@ - - - + + - + - - - - + + + + @@ -308,13 +250,13 @@ href="https://social.sfconservancy.org/conservancy" alt="Mastodon">
    - Software Freedom Conservancy logo + Software Freedom Conservancy logo
    diff --git a/tickets/register.html b/speaker/profile/406/index.html similarity index 50% rename from tickets/register.html rename to speaker/profile/406/index.html index 244af9d..19deeaa 100644 --- a/tickets/register.html +++ b/speaker/profile/406/index.html @@ -15,18 +15,18 @@ - FOSSY 2024 | Log in + FOSSY 2024 | Speaker - Pono Takamori - + - + - + - + @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ - + @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@