Various typo fixes and minor textual improvements.
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software, and defending free software with practical initiatives.
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Conservancy accomplishes these goals with various initiatives, including
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defending and upholding the rights of software users and consumers under
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copyleft licenses, such as the GPL.</p>
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copyleft licenses, such as the <acronym title="General Public License">GPL</acronym>.</p>
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<h2 id="brief-history-of-user-focused-gpl-enforcement">Brief History of
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User-Focused GPL Enforcement</h2>
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project) and Harald Welte (major contributor to Linux’s netfilter
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subsystem) — to enforce the
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GPL. <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/about/staff/#bkuhn">Bradley
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M. Kuhn</a>, who is now Conservancy’s Policy Analyst and
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M. Kuhn</a>, who is now Conservancy’s Policy Fellow and
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Hacker-in-Residence, led and coordinated that coalition (when he was
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Executive Director of the FSF). By early 2004, this coalition, through the
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Executive Director of the <acronym title="Free Software Foundation">FSF</acronym>). By early 2004, this coalition, through the
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process of GPL enforcement, compelled Linksys to release an
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almost-GPL-compliant source release for the
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WRT54G. A <a href="https://openwrt.org/about/history">group of volunteers
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quickly built a new project, called OpenWRT</a> based on that source
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release. In the years that have followed, OpenWRT has been ported to almost
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quickly built a new project, called OpenWrt</a> based on that source
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release. In the years that have followed, OpenWrt has been ported to almost
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every major wireless router product. Now, more than 15 years later, the
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OpenWRT project routinely utilizes GPL source releases to build, improve
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and port OpenWRT. The project has also joined coalitions to fight the FCC
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OpenWrt project routinely utilizes GPL source releases to build, improve
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and port OpenWrt. The project has also joined coalitions to fight the FCC
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to ensure that consumers have and deserve rights to install modified
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firmwares on their devices and that such hobbyist improvements are no
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threat to spectrum regulation.</p>
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<p>Recently, OpenWRT decided to join Conservancy as one its member projects,
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<p>Recently, <a href="https://sfconservancy.org/news/2020/sep/10/openwrt-joins/">OpenWrt joined Conservancy as one its member projects</a>,
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and Conservancy has committed to long-term assistance to this project.</p>
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<p>OpenWRT has spurred companies to create better routers and other wireless
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devices than they would otherwise have designed because they now need to
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either compete with hobbyists, or (better still) cooperate with them to
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create hardware that fully supports OpenWRT’s features and improvements
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<p>OpenWrt has spurred companies to create better routers and other wireless
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devices than such companies would otherwise have designed because they now need to
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either compete with hobbyists, or (better still) cooperate with those hobbyists to
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create hardware that fully supports OpenWrt’s features and improvements
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(such as dealing
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with <a href="https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/network/traffic-shaping/sqm">the
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dreaded “bufferbloat” bugs</a>). This interplay between the hobbyist
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modify the software on their devices, the hobbyist community
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shrinks. Without intervention to ensure companies respect the hobbyist
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community, hobbyists are limited by the oft-arbitrary manufacturer-imposed
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restraints in the OEM firmware. OpenWRT saved the wireless router market
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restraints in the OEM firmware. OpenWrt saved the wireless router market
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from this disaster; we seek to help other embedded electronic subindustries
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avoid that fate. The authors of GPL’d software chose that license so its
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source is usable and readily available to hobbyists. It is our duty, as
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activists for the software freedom of hobbyists, to ensure these legally
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mandated rights are never curtailed.</p>
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<p>(More on the OpenWRT project’s history and its connection to GPL
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<p>(More on the OpenWrt project’s history and its connection to GPL
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enforcement can be found
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in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4lCMx-EI1s">Kuhn’s talk
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at <em>OpenWRT Summit 2016</em></a>.)</p>
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at <em>OpenWrt Summit 2016</em></a>.)</p>
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<p>Conservancy has had substantial success in leveraging more device freedom
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in other subindustries through GPL compliance. In 2009, Conservancy, with
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co-Plaintiff Erik Andersen, sued fourteen defendants in federal court under
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copyright claims on behalf of its BusyBox member project. Conservancy was
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able to achieve compliance for the BusyBox project in all fourteen
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copyright claims on behalf of its BusyBox member project. Conservancy
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achieved compliance for the BusyBox project in all fourteen
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cases. Most notably, the GPL-compliant source release obtained in the
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lawsuit for certain Samsung televisions provided the basis for
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the <a href="https://www.samygo.tv/">SamyGo project</a> — an alternative
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his <a href="https://gpl-violations.org/">gpl-violations.org
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project</a>. Harald successfully sued many companies (mostly in the
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wireless router industry) in Germany to achieve compliance and yield source
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releases that helped OpenWRT during that period.</p>
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releases that helped OpenWrt during that period.</p>
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<h2 id="importance-of-linux-enforcement-specifically">Importance of Linux Enforcement Specifically</h2>
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collection</a>.</p>
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<p>There is one overarching irony to this growing dystopia: nearly all these
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devices are based primarily on software licensed under the GPL: most
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devices are based primarily on GPL'd software: most
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notably, Linux. While Linux-based systems do allow proprietary user-space
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applications not licensed under GPL, the kernel and many other system
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applications (i.e., not licensed under GPL), the kernel and many other system
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utilities routinely used in embedded systems, such as Conservancy’s BusyBox
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project, are under that license (or similar copyleft licenses such as the
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LGPL). These licenses require device makers to provide complete,
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that source code must also include “the scripts used to control compilation
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and installation of the executable”. In short, the consumers must receive
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all the source code and the ability to modify, recompile and reinstall that
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software. Upholding of this core freedom for Linux made OpenWRT
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software. Upholding of this core freedom for Linux made OpenWrt
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possible. We work to preserve (or, more often, restore) that software
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freedom for consumers of other types of electronic devices.</p>
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predatory behavior perpetuated by the manufacturers of these devices by
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modifying and replacing the software. Hobbyists can aid their community by
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providing these alternatives. People with no technical background already
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replace firmware on their wireless routers with OpenWRT to both improve
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replace firmware on their wireless routers with OpenWrt to both improve
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network performance and allay privacy concerns. Furthermore, older
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equipment is often saved from planned obsolescence by alternative
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solutions. E-recyclers
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like <a href="https://www.freegeek.org/">Freegeek</a> do this regularly for
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desktop and laptop machines with GNU/Linux distributions like Debian, and
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with OpenWRT for wireless routers. We seek to ensure they can do this for
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with OpenWrt for wireless routers. We seek to ensure they can do this for
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other types of electronic products. However, without the complete,
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corresponding source code, including the scripts to control its compilation and
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corresponding source code (CCS), including the scripts to control its compilation and
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installation, the fundamental purpose of copyleft is frustrated. Consumers,
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hobbyists, non-profit e-recyclers and the general public are left without
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the necessary tools they need and deserve, and which the license promises
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<h3 id="alternative-firmware-project">Alternative Firmware Project</h3>
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<p>The success of the OpenWRT project, born from GPL enforcement, has an
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<p>The success of the OpenWrt project, born from GPL enforcement, has an
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important component. While we’ve long hoped that volunteers, as they did
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with OpenWRT and SamyGo, will take up compliant sources obtained in our GPL
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with OpenWrt and SamyGo, will take up compliant sources obtained in our GPL
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enforcement efforts and build alternative firmware projects, history shows
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us that the creation of such projects is not guaranteed and exceedingly
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rare.</p>
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