Free Skool:Summer 2013
Note: When editing, please sign entries with ~~~~ or click in the WikiEditor. This will add your username and the time/date. |
Free Skool, Free Software: Beyond Open Source
- The focus of this class will be empowerment through free software.
- We'll need a quick overview of wiki editing as well, so that we can use this wiki for collaboration.
- The facilitators will hammer home the importance of freedom, openness, and the role of FOSS (free/open-source software) in building and maintaining a free Web.
Class Description
Free software (commonly called “open source”) is in most of our pockets, in the mutant forms of Android and iOS. The conflict between human freedom and software surveillance is more real than ever. The dual nature of this technology, and technology in general, presents a challenge for activists, educators, and everyone. Learn about free (as in freedom) software, its history, and what you can do to empower and protect yourself with it.
Time and Location
Classes take place Wednesdays 5:00pm to 6:00pm EST, July 17 thru August 28 at The People's Arts Collective of New Haven:
Optionally, after class sessions can be scheduled, preferably somewhere with beer and the Internet.
Signing Up
There are a few ways to do this, there's a signup sheet at the Free Skool website, but it requires giving your information to Google via Google Docs. You can also just contact the facilitators (listed below) directly, or just show up. Classes are typically 13-16 people, but we have room for (maybe) 20 people and will try to make computers available for participants upon request.
- To edit this wiki, you must request an account.
Facilitator
Sean "Diggity" O'Brien
me@seandiggity.com or sean@webio.me
Participants
- List will go here, if you want your name published!
- Please consider joining Foojbook, which will make communication much smoother.
Class Outline
Session 1
July 17, 2013
FOSS Overview
Video
Readings
Freedom Tips
- Block ads and browse the Web more securely.
- Take a look at all the FOSS operations systems out there.
Session 2
July 24, 2013
- Loose discussion about PRISM and Snowden revelations, why it's a new thing and not just the "same old spying".
- Short discussion of the PRISM slides by a very excited and animated dude.
- Overview of the slides that were leaked, and a visually nicer presentation.
- There are other programs, like Stellar Wind, which we know less about and use the "power of FOSS" against us. There are also "old-fashioned" methods like tapping undersea cables.
Readings
Videos
Freedom Tips
- Take a few minutes and browse these browser addons to stop tracking.
- Make sure you check out PRISM Break and try the FOSS alternatives there, or see our list
Session 3
July 31, 2013
- Loose discussion about XKeyscore, another deeply troubling NSA program revealed today.
- XKeyscore queries, in real time, "strong selectors" such as email, or "soft selectors" such as content. It can look for "anomalies", without any specific person attached, such as a person speaking a foreign language, using encryption, or unidentified protocols/software.
- NSA hearing cancelled
Readings
Videos
- Richard Stallman: Snowden & Assange besieged by empire but not defeated
- Greenwald: Is U.S. Exaggerating Threat to Embassies to Silence Critics of NSA Domestic Surveillance?
Freedom Tips
- Don't forget how close the links are between "hacktivism" and movements like Occupy.
- Does Linux = Anarchy? It's been called "practical anarchism".
Session 4
Aug 7, 2013
- More discussion about the latest NSA/Snowden news.
- Business report says NSA spying could cost billion dollar losses to U.S. "cloud" industry.
- "Cloud computing" pushes most of what you would normally do on your own machine (e.g. computer, phone) to another machine (server). Web browsers and "thin apps" (software "wrappers" that run mostly on another machine somewhere on the Internet) are quickly removing our options for running our own software (app stores!).
- Although this diagram uses some complex terms, it clearly shows the role of our computers in the Brave New Cloud World: running a Web browser, as a thin client, etc. (and therefore losing control to whoever owns the servers).
- The Cloud is a trap. We need to ask, Who does that server really serve?
Readings
Videos
- Viewer questions for Jacob Applebaum of the Tor project
- Obama's dismissive comments on PRISM
- Obama lying about the NSA on the Tonight Show
Freedom Tips
- Take a minute to learn how the Internet works, or at least the way most of it has for the past 10-20 years.
- Now take three minutes to learn how cloud computing is changing all that.
Session 5
Aug 14, 2013
- LavaBit shutdown, Silent Mail shutdown, and what it means.
- The PirateBay: Away From Keyboard (TPB AFK)
- Bittorrent tutorial and Deluge setup.
- A quick overview of the Software as a Product model, to bring things full circle.
Videos
Readings
- NSA to world+dog: We're only watching 1.6% of Internet, honest
- Transcript: Obama’s Remarks on NSA Controversy
Freedom Tips
- Check out our recommendations for private Web browsing, including thoughts on ThePirateBrowser.
- Bradley Manning has been tortured, humiliated, and coerced into an apology. Share his story!
Session 6
Aug 21, 2013
- Microsoft makes most of its money from Microsoft Office, and their Windows desktop monopoly relies upon it too. Let's stop supporting a company that spies on us and keeps us under heel, and use LibreOffice instead!
- There are good reasons not to save documents in .doc, .docx, or any proprietary file format.
- We know Microsoft needs MS Office and that the last few years have been tough for them. However, we need to ask ourselves, are we doing enough? When will we say ¡Ya basta! and stop using their products?
- Did you know desktop computers may be on the way out? Dell is in a mess, and there's a lot riding on the next update to Windows (they can't afford to keep screwing up new products).
- What does the Microsoft decline mean? We know Microsoft is evil, but there are new threats in a "post-PC world". We have to keep fighting new challenges.
- As Microsoft collapses, it may act like an animal backed into a corner. We may have to ask Microsoft's permission just to start up a computer.
Readings
- Linux in 2013: Zemlin said that each day some 10,519 lines of code are added to the Linux kernel, while another 6,782 lines are subtracted from it. All told, the kernel averages around 7.38 changes per hour – a phenomenal rate for any code base.
- Zemlin went on to liken Linux to a multi-million dollar R&D project, on which over 400 companies collaborate – some of which, at the same time, are fierce competitors. "This incredible platform is now more than just an operating system. Linux is really now becoming a fundamental part of society – one of the greatest shared technology resources known to man," Zemlin said. He added, "I mean, it runs all of our stock markets, most of our air-traffic control systems, internet, phones, you name it ... most of the world's telecommunications systems ... this is really now beyond a movement and an operating system, this is now this real, shared, societal, important piece of work.
- Counting Source Lines of Code (SLOC): How FOSS has transcended the standard metric of software production.
Video
Class Materials
Did you know you can "roll your own" PDF from any page(s) of this site by clicking Print/export > Download as PDF in the sidebar?
More Resources
- Links to all kinds of cool (and helpful!) stuff.
Libre Recommendations
Videos
Readings
Wiki Editing Help
Tips on editing this wiki.