LibrePlanet: About/Mission Statement

From LibrePlanet
Jump to: navigation, search
(Revert to previously agreed upon 2010 mission statement. (Page was unprotected; & slowly edited beyond its original scope over time; c.f. https://u.fsf.org/2ze where we quote our internal copy of the statement, which corresponds to 2010, not 2013 vers.))
 
(32 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Founding Documents}}
 
{{Founding Documents}}
  
<!-- keep these away from editors -->
 
 
[[Category:LibrePlanet]]
 
[[Category:LibrePlanet]]
[[Category:Draft]]
 
[[Category:InputNeeded]]
 
  
 
= Mission Statement =
 
= Mission Statement =
  
Our mission: to further free software for a free society.
+
The mission of LibrePlanet is to empower a global network of both local and project-based teams, all working together to advance free software as a social movement for user freedom.  
  
The LibrePlanet project exists to build a global network of activists working together to further the ideals of software freedom and related issues as necessary means for a free society.
+
== Motivation ==
  
== What we do ==
+
Free software is paramount for a free society. As computers play increasingly integral roles in more and more aspects of our lives, the role of software freedom in guaranteeing our general freedom grows in parallel. The software which runs on our computers defines how we experience and interact with the world, so we must ensure that we have the freedom and control to determine how we connect and communicate with each another. Otherwise, we make our autonomy contingent on the people and corporations who own software.
 +
 
 +
Through a philosophy advocating [http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html four essential freedoms], the free software movement has become one of the most successful social movements in recent history. In addition to being a movement of its own, free software provides tools and platforms which enable other movements to work effectively for social good. LibrePlanet promotes free software as a critical building block for an overall free society.
 +
 
 +
== Goals ==
 +
 
 +
=== Unite ===
 +
 
 +
Bridge connections between activists, users, and contributors in the free software community.
 +
 
 +
=== Advocate ===
 +
 
 +
Promote free software ideals through education, campaigns, and events.
 +
 
 +
=== Advance ===
 +
 
 +
Build and contribute to free software code, documentation, and design.
 +
 
 +
=== Encourage ===
 +
 
 +
Welcome all interested people to free software, and help motivate and increase their involvement.
 +
 
 +
=== Assist ===
 +
 
 +
Provide support and guidance for people using and contributing to free software.
 +
 
 +
=== Focus ===
  
Our primary activity is organizing and operating local teams, all contributing to the advancement of a free society by promoting free software. These teams are organized by geographical region and open to anyone who would like to get involved. Smaller sub-teams may exist for more specific reasons or tasks as well. While our main focus is on local groups, LibrePlanet is also an organizing space for global teams and other projects. LibrePlanet will work to provide the infrastructure, necessary tools and resources, to help free software proponents organize into teams working together to advocate and contribute to free software.
+
Keep focus on free software as an ethical social movement, more than just a way of producing software.
  
== Motivation ==
+
== What we do ==
  
Why is free software important for social good and a free society?
+
Our primary activity is organizing and operating local teams. These teams are organized by geographical region and open to anyone who would like to get involved. While our main focus is on these local groups, LibrePlanet is also an organizing space for everyone in the free software community to collaborate around global projects and issues. LibrePlanet will work to provide the necessary infrastructure, tools, and resources to help free software proponents amplify their advocacy.
  
== History ==
+
= History =
  
 
This project began during the 2006 FSF Associate Member Meeting to help organize ways to bring free software as a movement "into the mainstream." We started by organizing the FSF members at the 2006 meeting into groups based on geography. They then brainstormed ideas for how to organize people around issues central to the free software movement, and posted those ideas on a wiki page titled after their region. You can read those ideas on the pages linked to from the [[2006 Member Meeting]] page.
 
This project began during the 2006 FSF Associate Member Meeting to help organize ways to bring free software as a movement "into the mainstream." We started by organizing the FSF members at the 2006 meeting into groups based on geography. They then brainstormed ideas for how to organize people around issues central to the free software movement, and posted those ideas on a wiki page titled after their region. You can read those ideas on the pages linked to from the [[2006 Member Meeting]] page.

Latest revision as of 15:37, 16 May 2022

Founding Documents.png

So that the name 'LibrePlanet' is strongly associated with a clear goal, and so individual groups can cooperate and collaborate effectively, all LibrePlanet participants agree with this set of founding principles:

Mission Statement
Code of Conduct

Add this box to your profile page to indicate you support these documents and agree to work in accordance with LibrePlanet's Mission Statement and Code of Conduct.

Simply add the following line to your user page:

{{Founding Documents}}

Mission Statement

The mission of LibrePlanet is to empower a global network of both local and project-based teams, all working together to advance free software as a social movement for user freedom.

Motivation

Free software is paramount for a free society. As computers play increasingly integral roles in more and more aspects of our lives, the role of software freedom in guaranteeing our general freedom grows in parallel. The software which runs on our computers defines how we experience and interact with the world, so we must ensure that we have the freedom and control to determine how we connect and communicate with each another. Otherwise, we make our autonomy contingent on the people and corporations who own software.

Through a philosophy advocating four essential freedoms, the free software movement has become one of the most successful social movements in recent history. In addition to being a movement of its own, free software provides tools and platforms which enable other movements to work effectively for social good. LibrePlanet promotes free software as a critical building block for an overall free society.

Goals

Unite

Bridge connections between activists, users, and contributors in the free software community.

Advocate

Promote free software ideals through education, campaigns, and events.

Advance

Build and contribute to free software code, documentation, and design.

Encourage

Welcome all interested people to free software, and help motivate and increase their involvement.

Assist

Provide support and guidance for people using and contributing to free software.

Focus

Keep focus on free software as an ethical social movement, more than just a way of producing software.

What we do

Our primary activity is organizing and operating local teams. These teams are organized by geographical region and open to anyone who would like to get involved. While our main focus is on these local groups, LibrePlanet is also an organizing space for everyone in the free software community to collaborate around global projects and issues. LibrePlanet will work to provide the necessary infrastructure, tools, and resources to help free software proponents amplify their advocacy.

History

This project began during the 2006 FSF Associate Member Meeting to help organize ways to bring free software as a movement "into the mainstream." We started by organizing the FSF members at the 2006 meeting into groups based on geography. They then brainstormed ideas for how to organize people around issues central to the free software movement, and posted those ideas on a wiki page titled after their region. You can read those ideas on the pages linked to from the 2006 Member Meeting page.