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=== What is Free Software? ===
Line 45: Line 47:
=== Unethical and Immoral behavior ===
Line 78: Line 82:
Now, that who harms others by imposing restrictions that render
Software they
use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain
benefits out of
the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties,
avoiding competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing
a user
base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit
while
the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but
also
immoral.
=== Deciding whether to use non-Free Software ===

That who harms others by imposing restrictions that render Software
they use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain benefits out of
the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties, avoiding
competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing a user
base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit while
the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but also
immoral.
Line 87: Line 93:
under laws that permit them. Accepting the harm to oneself also harms
the community, therefore alternative that is least harmful to the
community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject the software
through which the aggression would be perpetrated.

Rejecting the software may require additional effort to live with
limitations in alternatives, or to create or improve alternatives, or
even refraining from doing what the software would be used for. All
of these may translate into harm for oneself and for the community.

Likewise, using the software right away may provide some benefit for
oneself and for the community. Finding out how the balance between
harm and benefit to the community compares with the balance to that
who chooses to accept non-Free Software requires deep understanding of
harm to community and to oneself out of using the software, accepting
its restrictions and even paying for the privilege, and of the benefit
to community and to oneself that is expected to be achieved through
the software.

Only someone who deeply understands morals, ethics and the Free
Software philosophy can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone
who deeply understands what the user intends to achieve through the
use of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.
under laws that permit them. If you accept the harm imposed on you,
you also harm your community. Therefore the alternative that is least
harmful to your community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject
the non-Free Software through which the aggression would be
perpetrated.

Rejecting non-Free Software may require additional effort to live with
limitations in Free alternatives, effort to create or improve the
alternatives, and even refraining from doing what the software would
be used for. All of these may translate into harm for you, but if you
decide to reject it, you're always making a morally correct decision,
because this decision doesn't harm anyone else.

However, using non-Free Software may provide some benefit for you and
your community. Finding out how the balance between harm and benefit
to the community compares with the balance to you, if you should
choose to accept non-Free Software, may provide you with additional
morally correct alternatives, but this requires deep understanding of
the benefit to your community and yourself that you expect to achieve
through the software, and the harm to your community and yourself out
of using the software, accepting its restrictions, spreading them and
even paying for the privilege, which makes the aggressor more
powerful.

Only someone with deep understanding of the moral and ethical aspects
of this decision, taking into account the Free Software philosophy,
can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone who deeply
understands what you may reasonably expect to achieve through the use
of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.
Line 112: Line 124:
be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the choice to
accept the non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking
the harm to oneself into account. But the lack of information about
the mark to the community is very likely to drive to a immoral
decision.

Someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge, may
overemphasize the benefit to the user without as much as estimating
the benefit to the community it needs to be compared with, coming to a
conclusion that harms the community more than needed. Or, this person
may disregard the benefit to the user, coming to a conclusion that
does not benefit the community as much as would be possible. Either
decision may turn out to be immoral, due to lack of enough information
to make a moral decision.

The user is probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to herself
and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free Software, even
though the user is likely to overestimate the expected benefits before
actually trying the software.
be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the acceptance
of non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking into
account the harm onto you, out of freedom deprivation. But the lack
of understanding about the harm to the community is very likely to
drive to an immoral decision that supports the acceptance of non-Free
Software.

Conversely, someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge,
may worry too much about the harm to the community and the most
obvious benefits to you, the user, and conclude that the only morally
correct decision is to reject the non-Free Software. Without taking
into account benefits to the community, this may be a sub-optimal
moral decision.

However, being too optimistic about benefits to the community, such as
assuming the benefits to you automatically extends to the entire
community, and expecting such overestimated benefits to offset the
harm to the community, may lead to the incorrect conclusion that
accepting the non-Free Software would be morally correct. Therefore,
being conservative as to benefits to the community is strongly
recommended.

You, the user, are probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to
yourself and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free
Software, even though you are likely to overestimate the expected
benefits before actually trying the software.
Line 133: Line 152:
qualified to evaluate the harm to the user and to the community out of
using that piece of non-Free Software.
qualified to evaluate the harm to you and the community out of using
that piece of non-Free Software.
Line 137: Line 156:
whether using the non-Free Software is moral or immoral.

So, in order to make any individual decision, the user could tell
someone else who understands the philosophy what the expected use of
the software is, such that this person can make an informed
whether your intended use of the non-Free Software could qualify as an
exception to the general rule.

So, in order to reach an informed and moral decision, you could tell
someone else who understands the philosophy better than you what the
expected use of the software is, and how you expect this to benefit
you and teh community, such that this person can make an informed
Line 145: Line 166:
teach it to the user, such that the user can make infomed decisions at
that time, and at any later time, and pass the philosophy on while at
that.
teach it to you, such that you can make infomed decisions from that
point
on, and even pass on the philosophy to others.
Line 151: Line 171:
recommend improved moral choices, such as investing in the development
of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case.


If you ever accept distributable non-Free Software, you may find
yourself in a situation in which you have to decide whether or not to
distribute the software to someone else. You might be tempted to
apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept the
software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient.
recommend even superior moral choices, such as investing in the
development of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case,
at some cost and benefit for you, and no harm and much benefit to the
community. If you can afford the cost, by yourself or sharing it with
others, this is always a morally superior to accepting non-Free
Software.

=== Distributing non-Free Software ===

If you've ever accepted non-Free Software, you may find yourself in a
moral dilemma when a friend asks you for a copy. You might be tempted
to apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept
the software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient.
Line 161: Line 185:
situation.

One important difference is that the distributor does not suffer any
direct harm out of the distribution, unlike the recipient who does
suffer harm out of accepting the restriction. It only suffers harm as
a member of the community, out of the positive feedback to the
unethical imposition of restrictions.

Also, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the
situation, because it fails to take into account your role.

One important moral issue is that, when you distribute the non-Free
Software to someone else, the harm out of deprivation of freedoms
moves to the opposide side in your moral balance: accepting the
restrictions is no longer your own sacrifice, it's a sacrifice the
other gets to make.

On the other hand, sharing and solidarity are important moral values
to practice, and they were not applicable in your decision about
accepting non-Free Software, but they are in the case of distributing
it. However, sharing non-Free Software is always harmful, almost
always immoral, and quite often unethical.

When the non-Free Software does not permit redistribution, you have to
decide between disappointing your friend, which is immoral, or
disrespecting this restriction, so as to help your friend, which is
unethical and illegal. But harming that who harms you, without
escalating the harm nor taking personal advantage, is not immoral. So
it appears that the only morally correct choice for this dilemma is
illegal, and only legal choice is immoral. Therefore, you should
avoid getting into it. There are two ways to avoid it: don't have
friends, or don't have non-Free Software.

Removing the restriction against redistribution takes out the
unethical and illegal considerations from the above, which might get
you to think that sharing is an obviously correct moral decision, but
this would be setting aside the harm onto the recipient and many other
factors that affect the community.

Redistributable non-Free Software is a lesser aggression than
prohibiting redistribution, but it is an aggression on you and your
community nevertheless. Positive feedback to unethical restrictions
on studying and adapting the software, often related with limiting
functionality of hardware or avoiding competition, should still be
avoided.

So, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the
Line 172: Line 225:
benefits to the recipient and to the community of ouf the recipient's
acceptance of the software, but also that of the recipient's passing
on of the non-Free Software to others, possibly along with advice that
does not take all of the relevant ethical and moral issues into
account.

The distributor must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the
community as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to
someone who's not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of
accepting it, let alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such
decisions before passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free
Software is likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely
to influence similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the
point of altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for
software to run on, availability of such choices and even making it
difficult to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral
choices in this regard.

Distributors who make their decisions based solely on harm and
benefits to the user and community, the reasoning applied to decide
whether to accept non-Free Software, fail to take into account the
harm to the community that the recipient may cause as a consequence of
their own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a great
harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be morally
acceptable.

Distributors who can't determine whether the recipient is capable of
making informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept
non-Free Software, and to further distribute it, are better advised to
take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that may come out
of their own actions, thus not distributing the software before they
successfully pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of
informed decisions, such that, even if the user obtains the software
from someone else, she will still be more likely to make correct moral
decisions as to accepting it and distributing it.
benefits of your distribution, but also that of the recipient's
passing it on. If you don't have reasons to believe that the
recipient is going to take into consideration the moral and ethical
implications of further redistribution, then the harm to society that
ensues is your resposibility: it goes against your moral balance. It
is like starting a fire without precautions to make sure it remains
under control.

You must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the community
as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to someone who's
not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of accepting it, let
alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such decisions before
passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free Software is
likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely to influence
similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the point of
altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for software
to run on, availability of such choices and even making it difficult
to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral choices in this
regard.

If you make your decisions based solely on harm and benefits to the
recipients and the community, under the reasoning applied to decide
whether to accept non-Free Software, you fail to take into account the
harm to the community that the recipients may cause as a consequence
of your own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a
great harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be
morally acceptable.

If you can't determine whether the recipient is capable of making
informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept non-Free
Software, and whether or not to further distribute it, you are better
advised to take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that
may ensue: try to pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of
informed decisions, and try to make sure it is going to be taken into
account before you pass on the software. Then, even if the software
is obtained from another source, it is more likely that it will be
handled in a moral way.

=== General recommendations ===
Line 209: Line 266:
distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate in accepting it and
passing it on is worse, by far. If you'd like to help advance the
Free Software movement, please don't do this.


== Filosofía del Software Libre ==

El Software Libre es el Software que respeta 4 libertades básicas:
distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate before accepting it
and passing it on is much worse. In other words, to us closer to the
goal of the Free Software Movement, of enabling anyone who wishes to
live in digital freedom to do so, don't accept non-Free Software, and,
if you do, don't offer it to anyone who would accept it.
Line 239: Line 292:

=== What is Free Software? ===
Line 271: Line 326:
=== Unethical and Immoral behavior ===
Line 304: Line 361:
Now, that who harms others by imposing restrictions that render
Software they
use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain
benefits out of
the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties,
avoiding competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing
a user
base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit
while
the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but
also
immoral.
=== Deciding whether to use non-Free Software ===

That who harms others by imposing restrictions that render Software
they use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain benefits out of
the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties, avoiding
competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing a user
base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit while
the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but also
immoral.
Line 313: Line 372:
under laws that permit them. Accepting the harm to oneself also harms
the community, therefore alternative that is least harmful to the
community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject the software
through which the aggression would be perpetrated.

Rejecting the software may require additional effort to live with
limitations in alternatives, or to create or improve alternatives, or
even refraining from doing what the software would be used for. All
of these may translate into harm for oneself and for the community.

Likewise, using the software right away may provide some benefit for
oneself and for the community. Finding out how the balance between
harm and benefit to the community compares with the balance to that
who chooses to accept non-Free Software requires deep understanding of
harm to community and to oneself out of using the software, accepting
its restrictions and even paying for the privilege, and of the benefit
to community and to oneself that is expected to be achieved through
the software.

Only someone who deeply understands morals, ethics and the Free
Software philosophy can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone
who deeply understands what the user intends to achieve through the
use of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.
under laws that permit them. If you accept the harm imposed on you,
you also harm your community. Therefore the alternative that is least
harmful to your community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject
the non-Free Software through which the aggression would be
perpetrated.

Rejecting non-Free Software may require additional effort to live with
limitations in Free alternatives, effort to create or improve the
alternatives, and even refraining from doing what the software would
be used for. All of these may translate into harm for you, but if you
decide to reject it, you're always making a morally correct decision,
because this decision doesn't harm anyone else.

However, using non-Free Software may provide some benefit for you and
your community. Finding out how the balance between harm and benefit
to the community compares with the balance to you, if you should
choose to accept non-Free Software, may provide you with additional
morally correct alternatives, but this requires deep understanding of
the benefit to your community and yourself that you expect to achieve
through the software, and the harm to your community and yourself out
of using the software, accepting its restrictions, spreading them and
even paying for the privilege, which makes the aggressor more
powerful.

Only someone with deep understanding of the moral and ethical aspects
of this decision, taking into account the Free Software philosophy,
can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone who deeply
understands what you may reasonably expect to achieve through the use
of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.
Line 338: Line 403:
be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the choice to
accept the non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking
the harm to oneself into account. But the lack of information about
the mark to the community is very likely to drive to a immoral
decision.

Someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge, may
overemphasize the benefit to the user without as much as estimating
the benefit to the community it needs to be compared with, coming to a
conclusion that harms the community more than needed. Or, this person
may disregard the benefit to the user, coming to a conclusion that
does not benefit the community as much as would be possible. Either
decision may turn out to be immoral, due to lack of enough information
to make a moral decision.

The user is probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to herself
and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free Software, even
though the user is likely to overestimate the expected benefits before
actually trying the software.
be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the acceptance
of non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking into
account the harm onto you, out of freedom deprivation. But the lack
of understanding about the harm to the community is very likely to
drive to an immoral decision that supports the acceptance of non-Free
Software.

Conversely, someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge,
may worry too much about the harm to the community and the most
obvious benefits to you, the user, and conclude that the only morally
correct decision is to reject the non-Free Software. Without taking
into account benefits to the community, this may be a sub-optimal
moral decision.

However, being too optimistic about benefits to the community, such as
assuming the benefits to you automatically extends to the entire
community, and expecting such overestimated benefits to offset the
harm to the community, may lead to the incorrect conclusion that
accepting the non-Free Software would be morally correct. Therefore,
being conservative as to benefits to the community is strongly
recommended.

You, the user, are probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to
yourself and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free
Software, even though you are likely to overestimate the expected
benefits before actually trying the software.
Line 359: Line 431:
qualified to evaluate the harm to the user and to the community out of
using that piece of non-Free Software.
qualified to evaluate the harm to you and the community out of using
that piece of non-Free Software.
Line 363: Line 435:
whether using the non-Free Software is moral or immoral.

So, in order to make any individual decision, the user could tell
someone else who understands the philosophy what the expected use of
the software is, such that this person can make an informed
whether your intended use of the non-Free Software could qualify as an
exception to the general rule.

So, in order to reach an informed and moral decision, you could tell
someone else who understands the philosophy better than you what the
expected use of the software is, and how you expect this to benefit
you and teh community, such that this person can make an informed
Line 371: Line 445:
teach it to the user, such that the user can make infomed decisions at
that time, and at any later time, and pass the philosophy on while at
that.
teach it to you, such that you can make infomed decisions from that
point
on, and even pass on the philosophy to others.
Line 377: Line 450:
recommend improved moral choices, such as investing in the development
of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case.


If you ever accept distributable non-Free Software, you may find
yourself in a situation in which you have to decide whether or not to
distribute the software to someone else. You might be tempted to
apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept the
software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient.
recommend even superior moral choices, such as investing in the
development of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case,
at some cost and benefit for you, and no harm and much benefit to the
community. If you can afford the cost, by yourself or sharing it with
others, this is always a morally superior to accepting non-Free
Software.

=== Distributing non-Free Software ===

If you've ever accepted non-Free Software, you may find yourself in a
moral dilemma when a friend asks you for a copy. You might be tempted
to apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept
the software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient.
Line 387: Line 464:
situation.

One important difference is that the distributor does not suffer any
direct harm out of the distribution, unlike the recipient who does
suffer harm out of accepting the restriction. It only suffers harm as
a member of the community, out of the positive feedback to the
unethical imposition of restrictions.

Also, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the
situation, because it fails to take into account your role.

One important moral issue is that, when you distribute the non-Free
Software to someone else, the harm out of deprivation of freedoms
moves to the opposide side in your moral balance: accepting the
restrictions is no longer your own sacrifice, it's a sacrifice the
other gets to make.

On the other hand, sharing and solidarity are important moral values
to practice, and they were not applicable in your decision about
accepting non-Free Software, but they are in the case of distributing
it. However, sharing non-Free Software is always harmful, almost
always immoral, and quite often unethical.

When the non-Free Software does not permit redistribution, you have to
decide between disappointing your friend, which is immoral, or
disrespecting this restriction, so as to help your friend, which is
unethical and illegal. But harming that who harms you, without
escalating the harm nor taking personal advantage, is not immoral. So
it appears that the only morally correct choice for this dilemma is
illegal, and only legal choice is immoral. Therefore, you should
avoid getting into it. There are two ways to avoid it: don't have
friends, or don't have non-Free Software.

Removing the restriction against redistribution takes out the
unethical and illegal considerations from the above, which might get
you to think that sharing is an obviously correct moral decision, but
this would be setting aside the harm onto the recipient and many other
factors that affect the community.

Redistributable non-Free Software is a lesser aggression than
prohibiting redistribution, but it is an aggression on you and your
community nevertheless. Positive feedback to unethical restrictions
on studying and adapting the software, often related with limiting
functionality of hardware or avoiding competition, should still be
avoided.

So, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the
Line 398: Line 504:
benefits to the recipient and to the community of ouf the recipient's
acceptance of the software, but also that of the recipient's passing
on of the non-Free Software to others, possibly along with advice that
does not take all of the relevant ethical and moral issues into
account.

The distributor must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the
community as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to
someone who's not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of
accepting it, let alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such
decisions before passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free
Software is likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely
to influence similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the
point of altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for
software to run on, availability of such choices and even making it
difficult to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral
choices in this regard.

Distributors who make their decisions based solely on harm and
benefits to the user and community, the reasoning applied to decide
whether to accept non-Free Software, fail to take into account the
harm to the community that the recipient may cause as a consequence of
their own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a great
harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be morally
acceptable.

Distributors who can't determine whether the recipient is capable of
making informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept
non-Free Software, and to further distribute it, are better advised to
take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that may come out
of their own actions, thus not distributing the software before they
successfully pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of
informed decisions, such that, even if the user obtains the software
from someone else, she will still be more likely to make correct moral
decisions as to accepting it and distributing it.
benefits of your distribution, but also that of the recipient's
passing it on. If you don't have reasons to believe that the
recipient is going to take into consideration the moral and ethical
implications of further redistribution, then the harm to society that
ensues is your resposibility: it goes against your moral balance. It
is like starting a fire without precautions to make sure it remains
under control.

You must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the community
as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to someone who's
not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of accepting it, let
alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such decisions before
passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free Software is
likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely to influence
similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the point of
altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for software
to run on, availability of such choices and even making it difficult
to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral choices in this
regard.

If you make your decisions based solely on harm and benefits to the
recipients and the community, under the reasoning applied to decide
whether to accept non-Free Software, you fail to take into account the
harm to the community that the recipients may cause as a consequence
of your own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a
great harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be
morally acceptable.

If you can't determine whether the recipient is capable of making
informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept non-Free
Software, and whether or not to further distribute it, you are better
advised to take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that
may ensue: try to pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of
informed decisions, and try to make sure it is going to be taken into
account before you pass on the software. Then, even if the software
is obtained from another source, it is more likely that it will be
handled in a moral way.

=== General recommendations ===
Line 435: Line 545:
distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate in accepting it and
passing it on is worse, by far. If you'd like to help advance the
Free Software movement, please don't do this.
distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate before accepting it
and passing it on is much worse. In other words, to us closer to the
goal of the Free Software Movement, of enabling anyone who wishes to
live in digital freedom to do so, don't accept non-Free Software, and,
if you do, don't offer it to anyone who would accept it.

FLISOL Libre (Texto original)

Free Software philosophy

What is Free Software?

Free Software is software that respects 4 essential freedoms:

0. the freedom to run the software for any purpose, whenever you wish. If someone limits how or when you can run the software, or what you can do with it, you experience moral and financial harm.

1. the freedom to study the software, and adapt it such that it does what you wish. You need source code to do this. If you cannot study the software, you can never be sure it doesn't do things you don't want it to do, or that it does correctly what it claims to do, so you may experience moral and financial harm. If you cannot adapt the software to your evolving needs, either it becomes useless or you must stop your needs from evolving, so you experience moral and financial harm.

2. the freedom to distribute the software as you have received it to whoever you wish, and to publish it, whenever you wish. If you are prohibited from sharing the software, your community is morally and financially harmed, and thus so are you, because one of the foundations of life in society is sharing. If you cannot charge for distribution, then you can only do it at your own expense, so you and your community are morally and financially harmed.

3. the freedom to improve the software and distribute or publish your modifications, whenever you wish, such that you can contribute your improvements to your community. If you cannot do so, your community is morally and financially harmed, and thus so are you. If you are not free to keep your private changes to yourself, you suffer financially, for you must distribute them at your own expenses, and morally, because this freedom was turned into an obligation. You need source code to improve the software.

If any of these freedoms is substantially limited for you, the Software is non-Free for you. For example, if law requires you to obtain permission from someone in order to enjoy certain freedoms, and the permission is denied, the Software is non-Free for you. If you enter an agreement with someone, and conditions in the agreement prevent you from enjoying certain freedoms, the Software is non-Free for you.

Unethical and Immoral behavior

Whoever chooses to deny you permissions, or to impose restrictions, such that you are denied substantial enjoyment of the freedoms, causes you moral and financial harm. But harming someone with intent to cause harm, or with awareness but disregard for the caused harm, is unethical. Therefore, disrespecting any of the four essential freedoms for software users is harmful and unethical.

The fundamental and nearly-universal moral principle known as the golden rule establishes that you should treat others as you would like to be treated. An act that brings more harm than benefit to others, as perceived by themselves, is immoral if it doesn't bring a similar balance of harm and benefit to the perpetrator, as perceived by himself.

A community protects itself and its members from harm through justice, a process that seeks to discourage unethical behavior and to restore moral balance, such that those who bring harm onto others are held accountable for their intentions and the consequences of their acts.

Unethical behavior should be discouraged, because an aggression requires the victim to choose between accepting the harm and seeking justice. Seeking justice requires additional effort from the victim and from the community, i.e., further harm for both, which is unfair.

Accepting the harm is clearly also unfair. However, if the aggression brings more benefit than harm to the perpetrator, it is also immoral, and accepting it indirectly harms the entire community, because it amounts to incentive for the perpetrator to repeat the aggression onto others.

Therefore, the fairest and least harmful outcome is that in which the aggression is avoided.

Deciding whether to use non-Free Software

That who harms others by imposing restrictions that render Software they use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain benefits out of the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties, avoiding competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing a user base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit while the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but also immoral.

Unfortunately, seeking justice for such aggressions is impossible under laws that permit them. If you accept the harm imposed on you, you also harm your community. Therefore the alternative that is least harmful to your community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject the non-Free Software through which the aggression would be perpetrated.

Rejecting non-Free Software may require additional effort to live with limitations in Free alternatives, effort to create or improve the alternatives, and even refraining from doing what the software would be used for. All of these may translate into harm for you, but if you decide to reject it, you're always making a morally correct decision, because this decision doesn't harm anyone else.

However, using non-Free Software may provide some benefit for you and your community. Finding out how the balance between harm and benefit to the community compares with the balance to you, if you should choose to accept non-Free Software, may provide you with additional morally correct alternatives, but this requires deep understanding of the benefit to your community and yourself that you expect to achieve through the software, and the harm to your community and yourself out of using the software, accepting its restrictions, spreading them and even paying for the privilege, which makes the aggressor more powerful.

Only someone with deep understanding of the moral and ethical aspects of this decision, taking into account the Free Software philosophy, can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone who deeply understands what you may reasonably expect to achieve through the use of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.

Someone in the latter group, without the former knowledge, will likely be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the acceptance of non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking into account the harm onto you, out of freedom deprivation. But the lack of understanding about the harm to the community is very likely to drive to an immoral decision that supports the acceptance of non-Free Software.

Conversely, someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge, may worry too much about the harm to the community and the most obvious benefits to you, the user, and conclude that the only morally correct decision is to reject the non-Free Software. Without taking into account benefits to the community, this may be a sub-optimal moral decision.

However, being too optimistic about benefits to the community, such as assuming the benefits to you automatically extends to the entire community, and expecting such overestimated benefits to offset the harm to the community, may lead to the incorrect conclusion that accepting the non-Free Software would be morally correct. Therefore, being conservative as to benefits to the community is strongly recommended.

You, the user, are probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to yourself and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free Software, even though you are likely to overestimate the expected benefits before actually trying the software.

Someone with deep knowledge of the philosophy is probably best qualified to evaluate the harm to you and the community out of using that piece of non-Free Software.

Only someone with both qualifications can evaluate them all, to tell whether your intended use of the non-Free Software could qualify as an exception to the general rule.

So, in order to reach an informed and moral decision, you could tell someone else who understands the philosophy better than you what the expected use of the software is, and how you expect this to benefit you and teh community, such that this person can make an informed recommendation taking all the benefits and harms into account.

An alternative is for the person who understands the philosophy to teach it to you, such that you can make infomed decisions from that point on, and even pass on the philosophy to others.

Someone with knowledge about software engineering, the expected use of the software and the mechanics of Free Software development may recommend even superior moral choices, such as investing in the development of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case, at some cost and benefit for you, and no harm and much benefit to the community. If you can afford the cost, by yourself or sharing it with others, this is always a morally superior to accepting non-Free Software.

Distributing non-Free Software

If you've ever accepted non-Free Software, you may find yourself in a moral dilemma when a friend asks you for a copy. You might be tempted to apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept the software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient. But this reasoning is not a perfect fit for this very different situation, because it fails to take into account your role.

One important moral issue is that, when you distribute the non-Free Software to someone else, the harm out of deprivation of freedoms moves to the opposide side in your moral balance: accepting the restrictions is no longer your own sacrifice, it's a sacrifice the other gets to make.

On the other hand, sharing and solidarity are important moral values to practice, and they were not applicable in your decision about accepting non-Free Software, but they are in the case of distributing it. However, sharing non-Free Software is always harmful, almost always immoral, and quite often unethical.

When the non-Free Software does not permit redistribution, you have to decide between disappointing your friend, which is immoral, or disrespecting this restriction, so as to help your friend, which is unethical and illegal. But harming that who harms you, without escalating the harm nor taking personal advantage, is not immoral. So it appears that the only morally correct choice for this dilemma is illegal, and only legal choice is immoral. Therefore, you should avoid getting into it. There are two ways to avoid it: don't have friends, or don't have non-Free Software.

Removing the restriction against redistribution takes out the unethical and illegal considerations from the above, which might get you to think that sharing is an obviously correct moral decision, but this would be setting aside the harm onto the recipient and many other factors that affect the community.

Redistributable non-Free Software is a lesser aggression than prohibiting redistribution, but it is an aggression on you and your community nevertheless. Positive feedback to unethical restrictions on studying and adapting the software, often related with limiting functionality of hardware or avoiding competition, should still be avoided.

So, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the same knowledge you do as to the ethical and moral issues involved. It is very important to take into account not only the direct harms and benefits of your distribution, but also that of the recipient's passing it on. If you don't have reasons to believe that the recipient is going to take into consideration the moral and ethical implications of further redistribution, then the harm to society that ensues is your resposibility: it goes against your moral balance. It is like starting a fire without precautions to make sure it remains under control.

You must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the community as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to someone who's not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of accepting it, let alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such decisions before passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free Software is likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely to influence similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the point of altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for software to run on, availability of such choices and even making it difficult to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral choices in this regard.

If you make your decisions based solely on harm and benefits to the recipients and the community, under the reasoning applied to decide whether to accept non-Free Software, you fail to take into account the harm to the community that the recipients may cause as a consequence of your own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a great harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be morally acceptable.

If you can't determine whether the recipient is capable of making informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept non-Free Software, and whether or not to further distribute it, you are better advised to take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that may ensue: try to pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of informed decisions, and try to make sure it is going to be taken into account before you pass on the software. Then, even if the software is obtained from another source, it is more likely that it will be handled in a moral way.

General recommendations

As a general rule of thumb, accepting non-Free Software is bad, but distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate before accepting it and passing it on is much worse. In other words, to us closer to the goal of the Free Software Movement, of enabling anyone who wishes to live in digital freedom to do so, don't accept non-Free Software, and, if you do, don't offer it to anyone who would accept it.

BR

¿Cosas que no deben suceder?

  • Instalar software Privativo
  • Omitir hablarles a los asistentes sobre la importancia de la libertad

¿Cosas que pueden pasar?

Lista de componentes privativos que se instalan por omisión en

Ubuntu

Fedora

Debian

FLISOL Libre (Texto traducido)

Filosofía del Software Libre

What is Free Software?

El Software Libre es software que respeta estas cuatro libertades escenciales:

0. la libertad de ejecutar el software para cualquier propósito, cuando usted lo quiera. Si alguien limita como o cuando usted puede ejecutar el software, o lo que usted puede hacer con el mismo, usted experimenta un daño moral o financiero.

1. la libertad para estudiar el software, y adaptarlo en una forma tal que haga lo que usted desee. Usted necesita el código fuente para hacer esto. Si usted no puede estudiar el software, usted nunca estará seguro de que no hace cosas que usted no quiere que haga, o que hace correctamente las cosas que asegura que hace, de forma tal que usted experimentará daño moral o financiero. Si usted no puede adaptar el software a sus propias necesidades cambiantes, las alternativas son que el software se torna eventualmente inútil o sus necesidades deben dejar de cambiar, de manera que usted experimentará daño moral y financiero.

2. the freedom to distribute the software as you have received it to whoever you wish, and to publish it, whenever you wish. If you are prohibited from sharing the software, your community is morally and financially harmed, and thus so are you, because one of the foundations of life in society is sharing. If you cannot charge for distribution, then you can only do it at your own expense, so you and your community are morally and financially harmed.

3. the freedom to improve the software and distribute or publish your modifications, whenever you wish, such that you can contribute your improvements to your community. If you cannot do so, your community is morally and financially harmed, and thus so are you. If you are not free to keep your private changes to yourself, you suffer financially, for you must distribute them at your own expenses, and morally, because this freedom was turned into an obligation. You need source code to improve the software.

If any of these freedoms is substantially limited for you, the Software is non-Free for you. For example, if law requires you to obtain permission from someone in order to enjoy certain freedoms, and the permission is denied, the Software is non-Free for you. If you enter an agreement with someone, and conditions in the agreement prevent you from enjoying certain freedoms, the Software is non-Free for you.

Unethical and Immoral behavior

Whoever chooses to deny you permissions, or to impose restrictions, such that you are denied substantial enjoyment of the freedoms, causes you moral and financial harm. But harming someone with intent to cause harm, or with awareness but disregard for the caused harm, is unethical. Therefore, disrespecting any of the four essential freedoms for software users is harmful and unethical.

The fundamental and nearly-universal moral principle known as the golden rule establishes that you should treat others as you would like to be treated. An act that brings more harm than benefit to others, as perceived by themselves, is immoral if it doesn't bring a similar balance of harm and benefit to the perpetrator, as perceived by himself.

A community protects itself and its members from harm through justice, a process that seeks to discourage unethical behavior and to restore moral balance, such that those who bring harm onto others are held accountable for their intentions and the consequences of their acts.

Unethical behavior should be discouraged, because an aggression requires the victim to choose between accepting the harm and seeking justice. Seeking justice requires additional effort from the victim and from the community, i.e., further harm for both, which is unfair.

Accepting the harm is clearly also unfair. However, if the aggression brings more benefit than harm to the perpetrator, it is also immoral, and accepting it indirectly harms the entire community, because it amounts to incentive for the perpetrator to repeat the aggression onto others.

Therefore, the fairest and least harmful outcome is that in which the aggression is avoided.

Deciding whether to use non-Free Software

That who harms others by imposing restrictions that render Software they use non-Free most often do so in order to obtain benefits out of the restrictions, such as being paid more royalties, avoiding competition, inducing exclusive dependencies and even growing a user base through network effects. Since the aggressor gets benefit while the victim is harmed, the aggression is not only unethical, but also immoral.

Unfortunately, seeking justice for such aggressions is impossible under laws that permit them. If you accept the harm imposed on you, you also harm your community. Therefore the alternative that is least harmful to your community is to avoid the aggression, i.e., to reject the non-Free Software through which the aggression would be perpetrated.

Rejecting non-Free Software may require additional effort to live with limitations in Free alternatives, effort to create or improve the alternatives, and even refraining from doing what the software would be used for. All of these may translate into harm for you, but if you decide to reject it, you're always making a morally correct decision, because this decision doesn't harm anyone else.

However, using non-Free Software may provide some benefit for you and your community. Finding out how the balance between harm and benefit to the community compares with the balance to you, if you should choose to accept non-Free Software, may provide you with additional morally correct alternatives, but this requires deep understanding of the benefit to your community and yourself that you expect to achieve through the software, and the harm to your community and yourself out of using the software, accepting its restrictions, spreading them and even paying for the privilege, which makes the aggressor more powerful.

Only someone with deep understanding of the moral and ethical aspects of this decision, taking into account the Free Software philosophy, can properly evaluate the harms, and only someone who deeply understands what you may reasonably expect to achieve through the use of the software can properly evaluate the benefits.

Someone in the latter group, without the former knowledge, will likely be unaware of the harm to the community, thus regarding the acceptance of non-Free Software as a win-win situation, even after taking into account the harm onto you, out of freedom deprivation. But the lack of understanding about the harm to the community is very likely to drive to an immoral decision that supports the acceptance of non-Free Software.

Conversely, someone in the former group, without the latter knowledge, may worry too much about the harm to the community and the most obvious benefits to you, the user, and conclude that the only morally correct decision is to reject the non-Free Software. Without taking into account benefits to the community, this may be a sub-optimal moral decision.

However, being too optimistic about benefits to the community, such as assuming the benefits to you automatically extends to the entire community, and expecting such overestimated benefits to offset the harm to the community, may lead to the incorrect conclusion that accepting the non-Free Software would be morally correct. Therefore, being conservative as to benefits to the community is strongly recommended.

You, the user, are probably best qualified to evaluate benefits to yourself and to the community out of using a piece of non-Free Software, even though you are likely to overestimate the expected benefits before actually trying the software.

Someone with deep knowledge of the philosophy is probably best qualified to evaluate the harm to you and the community out of using that piece of non-Free Software.

Only someone with both qualifications can evaluate them all, to tell whether your intended use of the non-Free Software could qualify as an exception to the general rule.

So, in order to reach an informed and moral decision, you could tell someone else who understands the philosophy better than you what the expected use of the software is, and how you expect this to benefit you and teh community, such that this person can make an informed recommendation taking all the benefits and harms into account.

An alternative is for the person who understands the philosophy to teach it to you, such that you can make infomed decisions from that point on, and even pass on the philosophy to others.

Someone with knowledge about software engineering, the expected use of the software and the mechanics of Free Software development may recommend even superior moral choices, such as investing in the development of Free Software so as to satisfy the expected use case, at some cost and benefit for you, and no harm and much benefit to the community. If you can afford the cost, by yourself or sharing it with others, this is always a morally superior to accepting non-Free Software.

Distributing non-Free Software

If you've ever accepted non-Free Software, you may find yourself in a moral dilemma when a friend asks you for a copy. You might be tempted to apply the same reasoning that you used to decide whether to accept the software in the first place, on behalf of the potential recipient. But this reasoning is not a perfect fit for this very different situation, because it fails to take into account your role.

One important moral issue is that, when you distribute the non-Free Software to someone else, the harm out of deprivation of freedoms moves to the opposide side in your moral balance: accepting the restrictions is no longer your own sacrifice, it's a sacrifice the other gets to make.

On the other hand, sharing and solidarity are important moral values to practice, and they were not applicable in your decision about accepting non-Free Software, but they are in the case of distributing it. However, sharing non-Free Software is always harmful, almost always immoral, and quite often unethical.

When the non-Free Software does not permit redistribution, you have to decide between disappointing your friend, which is immoral, or disrespecting this restriction, so as to help your friend, which is unethical and illegal. But harming that who harms you, without escalating the harm nor taking personal advantage, is not immoral. So it appears that the only morally correct choice for this dilemma is illegal, and only legal choice is immoral. Therefore, you should avoid getting into it. There are two ways to avoid it: don't have friends, or don't have non-Free Software.

Removing the restriction against redistribution takes out the unethical and illegal considerations from the above, which might get you to think that sharing is an obviously correct moral decision, but this would be setting aside the harm onto the recipient and many other factors that affect the community.

Redistributable non-Free Software is a lesser aggression than prohibiting redistribution, but it is an aggression on you and your community nevertheless. Positive feedback to unethical restrictions on studying and adapting the software, often related with limiting functionality of hardware or avoiding competition, should still be avoided.

So, you should take into account that the recipient may not have the same knowledge you do as to the ethical and moral issues involved. It is very important to take into account not only the direct harms and benefits of your distribution, but also that of the recipient's passing it on. If you don't have reasons to believe that the recipient is going to take into consideration the moral and ethical implications of further redistribution, then the harm to society that ensues is your resposibility: it goes against your moral balance. It is like starting a fire without precautions to make sure it remains under control.

You must not disregard the harm that can be brought to the community as a consequence of distributing non-Free Software to someone who's not prepared to evaluate the harmful consequences of accepting it, let alone to pass on the knowledge needed to make such decisions before passing it on. Without this knowledge, the non-Free Software is likely to spread exponentially, its acceptance is likely to influence similar decisions pertaining to other programs, to the point of altering market dynamics as to users' choices of hardware for software to run on, availability of such choices and even making it difficult to spread the knowledge needed to make informed moral choices in this regard.

If you make your decisions based solely on harm and benefits to the recipients and the community, under the reasoning applied to decide whether to accept non-Free Software, you fail to take into account the harm to the community that the recipients may cause as a consequence of your own choice to give them the software. Disregarding such a great harm will very often make a very harmful decision appear to be morally acceptable.

If you can't determine whether the recipient is capable of making informed moral decisions as to whether or not to accept non-Free Software, and whether or not to further distribute it, you are better advised to take the conservative approach of bounding the harm that may ensue: try to pass on the knowledge needed to make both kinds of informed decisions, and try to make sure it is going to be taken into account before you pass on the software. Then, even if the software is obtained from another source, it is more likely that it will be handled in a moral way.

General recommendations

As a general rule of thumb, accepting non-Free Software is bad, but distributing it to someone who wouldn't hesitate before accepting it and passing it on is much worse. In other words, to us closer to the goal of the Free Software Movement, of enabling anyone who wishes to live in digital freedom to do so, don't accept non-Free Software, and, if you do, don't offer it to anyone who would accept it.

¿Cosas que no deben suceder?

  • Instalar software Privativo
  • Omitir hablarles a los asistentes sobre la importancia de la libertad

¿Cosas que pueden pasar?

Lista de componentes privativos que se instalan por omisión en

Ubuntu

Fedora

Debian