The Fellowship / Fellows / greve / freedom bits / WIPO PCDA1: Second FSFE statement, on Friends of Development proposal

WIPO PCDA1: Second FSFE statement, on Friends of Development proposal

The Friends of Development proposal is currently up for discussions, and NGOs are being asked for statements. Since Free Software disappeared from the Friends of Development proposal in the latest revision stage, it seemed prudent to criticse that:

    Mr Chair,
    
    since you have now once more taken over as chair for our session, let
    me first congratulate you on your election as chair and your effort at
    trying to reach a substantial outcome. We greatly appreciate the
    chance to give some insight on the excellent proposal by the Friends
    of Development, on which we would like to commend them.
    
    The Free Software Foundation Europe fully supports most of the notions
    expressed in the proposal. In particular we wish to highlight the
    importance of a need for policy review and evaluation on the
    policy-making level and a possible Treaty on Access to Knowledge.
    
    We also are strongly in favor of protecting the public domain from
    re-privatisation. As was pointed out by the majority of delegations,
    the WIPO toolset is supposed to serve the public domain by allowing a
    limited monopoly in return for expanding the reservoir of human
    knowledge that is the public domain.
    
    That said, it seems the notion of Free Software is now sadly lacking
    from the Friends of Development proposal, as it is lacking from some
    of the other proposals.
    
    We believe that authors of Free Software have no less right to publish
    the result of their work under a copyright license of their choosing.
    
    We also believe that software authors around the world should have the
    full information about their licensing options, including releasing
    their software as Free Software, which is an enormously successful
    model in the social, political and economic sense.
    
    It may seem counterintuitive to some, but Free Software under licenses
    that provide the freedom to use the software for any purpose; the
    freedom to study the software to learn how it functions; the freedom
    to adapt the software to the needs of any person or group; and the
    freedom to distribute that software in both the original and modified
    form; have greatly contributed to humankind in the past 20 years.
    
    These freedoms provided by Free Software were central in bringing
    about the internet and have enabled people around the world to train
    themselves and others. These freedoms allowed people to adapt the
    software to their language and culture, to support and accomodate
    their disabilities and gave them the power to make sure that they
    would be the ones who controlled their digital infrastructure.
    
    Free Software will be doing this in the future. And while it is true
    that people and companies contributing to Free Software are useful for
    all of society, companies large and small around the world also prove
    the economic success of the Free Software model.
    
    All software developers around the world deserve to be fully informed
    about their choices, and WIPO should include Free Software in all its
    activities.
    
    WIPO should further not de-facto mandate use of proprietary software
    by member states or other organisations it interfaces with. Authors
    and users of Free Software are no less entitled to make their free
    choices of license, and WIPO should therefore not exclude them on the
    grounds of their legitimate choice of copyright licensing.
    
    We therefore find it necessary to explicitly include Free Software in
    the proposals and future activities.
    
    Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    

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