185 lines
9.8 KiB
HTML
185 lines
9.8 KiB
HTML
{% extends "base_about.html" %}
|
||
{% block subtitle %}Directors - {% endblock %}
|
||
{% block submenuselection %}Directors{% endblock %}
|
||
{% block content %}
|
||
|
||
<h1>Directors</h1>
|
||
|
||
<p>Like many non-profits, Conservancy is directed by a
|
||
self-perpetuating Board of Directors, who
|
||
appoint the <a href="/about/staff/">Executive Director and staff</a> to carry out the
|
||
day-to-day operations of the organization. The Directorship of the
|
||
Conservancy includes both talented non-profit managers and experienced
|
||
FLOSS project leaders who can both guide the administrative operations of
|
||
the organization as well as mentor member project leaders as needed. Our
|
||
Directors constantly search for additional directors who can contribute a
|
||
variety of expertise and perspective related to the Conservancy's
|
||
mission.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Currently, the directors of Conservancy are:</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Jeremy Allison</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Jeremy Allison is one of the lead developers on the Samba Team, a
|
||
group of programmers developing an Open Source Windows compatible file
|
||
and print server product for UNIX systems. Developed over the Internet
|
||
in a distributed manner similar to the Linux system, Samba is used by
|
||
all Linux distributions as well as many thousands of corporations and
|
||
products worldwide. Jeremy handles the co-ordination of Samba
|
||
development efforts and acts as a corporate liaison to companies using
|
||
the Samba code commercially.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>He works for Google, Inc. who fund him to work on improving Samba and
|
||
solving the problems of Windows and Linux interoperability.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Kate Chapman</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Kate Chapman is Chief Technology Officer of the Cadasta Foundation,
|
||
leading the organization’s technology team and strategy. Cadasta
|
||
develops free and open source software to help communities document their
|
||
land rights around the world. Chapman is recognized as a leader in the
|
||
domains of open source geospatial technology and community mapping, and an
|
||
advocate for open imagery as a public good. Over the past 15 years she’s
|
||
worked on geospatial problems of all kinds, including tracking malaria
|
||
outbreaks, mapping private residences for emergency response, and even
|
||
analyzing imaginary items used in geospatial games. Chapman co-founded the
|
||
Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team and served as the organization’s first
|
||
Executive Director. She currently serves as the Chairperson of the Board of
|
||
Directors of the OpenStreetMap Foundation.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Dr. Laura Fortunato</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p><a href="http://www.santafe.edu/~fortunato/">Dr. Laura Fortunato</a>
|
||
is associate professor of evolutionary anthropology at the University
|
||
of Oxford, where she researches the evolution of human social and
|
||
cultural behavior, working at the interface of anthropology and
|
||
biology. An advocate of reproducible computational methods in
|
||
research, including the use of Free/Open-Source tools, she founded the
|
||
<a href="https://rroxford.github.io/">Reproducible Research Oxford</a>
|
||
project, with the aim to foster a culture of reproducibility and open
|
||
research at Oxford.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Laura holds a degree in Biological Sciences from the University of
|
||
Padova and masters and PhD in Anthropology from University College
|
||
London. Before joining Oxford she was an Omidyar fellow at the <a
|
||
href="http://www.santafe.edu/">Santa Fe Institute</a>, where she is
|
||
currently an External Professor and a member of the Science Steering
|
||
Committee. She is also a member of the steering group of the <a
|
||
href="http://www.ukrn.org/">UK Reproducibility Network</a>, a peer-led
|
||
consortium that aims to promote robust research practice in the UK.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Mark Galassi</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Mark Galassi has been involved in the GNU project since 1984. He
|
||
currently works as a researcher in the International, Space, and Response
|
||
division at Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he has worked on the
|
||
HETE-2 satellite, ISIS/Genie, the Raptor telescope, the Swift satellite,
|
||
and the muon tomography project. In 1997 Mark took a couple of years off
|
||
from Los Alamos (where he was previously in the ISR division and the
|
||
Theoretical Astrophysics group) to work for Cygnus (now a part of Red Hat)
|
||
writing software and books for eCos, although he continued working on the
|
||
HETE-2 satellite (an astrophysical Gamma Ray Burst mission) part
|
||
time. Mark earned his BA in Physics at Reed College and a PhD from the
|
||
Institute for Theoretical Physics at Stony Brook. </p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Bdale Garbee</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p><a href="https://gag.com/bdale/">Bdale Garbee</a> has been a contributor
|
||
to the Free Software community since 1979. Bdale's background also includes
|
||
many years of hardware design, Unix internals, and embedded systems work.
|
||
He was an early participant in the Debian project, helped port Debian
|
||
GNU/Linux to 5 architectures, served as Debian Project Leader, then
|
||
chairman of the Debian Technical Committee for nearly a decade, and remains
|
||
active in the Debian community.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Bdale served as an HP Fellow in the Office of the CTO until 2016 where
|
||
he led HP's open source strategy work. Bdale served as President of
|
||
Software in the Public Interest for a decade. He served nearly as long on
|
||
the board of directors of the Linux Foundation representing individual
|
||
affiliates and the developer community. Bdale currently serves on the
|
||
boards of the Freedombox Foundation, Linux Professional Institute, and
|
||
Aleph Objects.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2 id="bkuhn">Bradley M. Kuhn</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p><a href="http://ebb.org/bkuhn/">Bradley M. Kuhn</a> is
|
||
the <a href="/about/staff/#bkuhn">Policy Fellow and Hacker-in-Residence</a>
|
||
at <a href="/">Software Freedom Conservancy</a> and editor-in-chief
|
||
of <a href="https://copyleft.org">copyleft.org</a>. Kuhn began his work in
|
||
the software freedom movement as a volunteer in 1992, when he became an early
|
||
adopter of Linux-based systems, and began contributing to various Free
|
||
Software 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 FSF. As FSF's
|
||
Executive Director from 2001–2005, Kuhn
|
||
led <a href="https://www.fsf.org/licensing">FSF's GPL enforcement</a>,
|
||
launched <a href="https://www.fsf.org/associate/">its Associate Member
|
||
program</a>, and invented
|
||
the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.html">Affero GPL</a>. Kuhn
|
||
was appointed President of Software Freedom Conservancy in April 2006, was
|
||
Conservancy's primary volunteer from 2006–2010, and has been a
|
||
full-time staffer since early 2011. Kuhn holds a summa cum laude B.S. in
|
||
Computer Science
|
||
from <a href="http://www.loyola.edu/academic/computerscience">Loyola
|
||
University in Maryland</a>, and an M.S. in Computer Science from
|
||
the <a href="http://www.cs.uc.edu/">University of
|
||
Cincinnati</a>. <a href="http://www.ebb.org/bkuhn/articles/thesis/">Kuhn's
|
||
Master's thesis</a> discussed methods for dynamic interoperability of Free
|
||
Software programming languages. Kuhn received
|
||
the <a href="http://www.oscon.com/oscon2012/public/schedule/detail/25039">O'Reilly
|
||
Open Source Award in 2012</a>, in recognition for his lifelong policy work on
|
||
copyleft licensing. Kuhn has <a href="http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/">a
|
||
blog</a> and co-hosts
|
||
the audcast, <a href="http://faif.us/"><cite>Free as in Freedom</cite></a>.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Mike Linksvayer</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Mike Linksvayer serves on the boards of AcaWiki and OpenHatch,
|
||
and on the Open Definition Advisory Council, and is Policy Director at GitHub.
|
||
Previously Mike was CTO, VP, and a Senior Fellow at Creative Commons, and a
|
||
co-founder of Bitzi, an early open content/open
|
||
data mass collaboration platform.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2>Allison Randal</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Over the course of multiple decades as a free software developer,
|
||
Allison has worked in a wide variety of projects and domains, from
|
||
games, linguistic analysis tools, websites, mobile apps, shipping
|
||
fulfillment, and talking smart-home appliances, to programming language
|
||
design, compilers, hypervisors, containers, deployment automation,
|
||
database replication, and operating systems.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>She is a board member at the Perl Foundation, a board member at the
|
||
OpenStack Foundation, and co-founder of the FLOSS Foundations group for
|
||
free software community leaders. At various points in the past she has
|
||
served as president of the Open Source Initiative, president of the Perl
|
||
Foundation, board member of the Python Software Foundation, chairman of
|
||
the Parrot Foundation, chief architect of the Parrot virtual machine,
|
||
Open Source Evangelist at O’Reilly Media, conference chair of OSCON,
|
||
Technical Architect of Ubuntu, Open Source Advisor at Canonical,
|
||
Distinguished Technologist and Open Source Strategist at HP, and
|
||
Distinguished Engineer at SUSE. She collaborates in the Debian project,
|
||
and is currently taking a mid-career research sabbatical at the
|
||
University of Cambridge.</p>
|
||
|
||
<h2 id="tony">Tony Sebro</h2>
|
||
|
||
<p>Tony currently serves as the Deputy General Counsel for
|
||
the <a href="https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Home">Wikimedia
|
||
Foundation</a>, where he manages the day-to-day operations of Wikimedia's
|
||
legal department, and provide specific expertise on free and open source
|
||
licensing, intellectual property, non-profit law, and privacy matters.
|
||
Tony is also an organizer of
|
||
Conservancy's <a href="https://outreachy.org">Outreachy</a> project,
|
||
which provides paid internships in free and open source for people from
|
||
groups traditionally underrepresented in tech. Prior to joining
|
||
Wikimedia, Tony served as General Counsel (and “Employee #2”)
|
||
of Software Freedom Conservancy for over six years. Tony has also spent
|
||
time in the private sector with PCT Law Group and Kenyon & Kenyon, and as
|
||
an intellectual property licensing and business development professional
|
||
with IBM. Tony received an O'Reilly Open Source Award in 2017. Tony is
|
||
an active participant in and supporter of the non-profit community, and
|
||
lives in the Bay Area with his family.</p>
|
||
|
||
{% endblock %}
|