Sirens, a Powerful New Documentary, Follows Lebanons First All-Female Metal Band as They Battle Sexism, Censorship, and Themselves – Pitchfork

Baghdadi does a beautiful job of presenting Slave to Sirens both as relatable young people and Middle Eastern women navigating the constant threat of oppression. She balances these themes, careful to never isolate or otherize her subjects. Rather, she lets the reality of daily life inform their individual choices and struggles.

Baghdadi spends a great deal of time on Mayassi, who teaches music at a primary school by day and lives on the outskirts of Beirut with her mother and younger brother. The film includes a number of interactions between Mayassi and her mom, who share a warm, humorous relationship underpinned with tension. Mayassi wants to move out, but her mother will not have it, citing the tradition that a daughter only leaves her mother once she is married and bearing children. Mayassi, who conceals her queer identity from her family, challenges the custom. What era is this? she asks. Youre talking like its the 1960s, when your mother had so many kids, they didnt even know each other. People would marry based on a photograph. Her mother, a quick-witted stoic, retorts: Now people are getting married over the internet. So you mean life has evolved?

Traces of news broadcasts act as foreboding narrators during these domestic vignettes. During one, Mayassi sits in her family living room as the voice of an anchor seeps from the TV: Article 534 of the law is vague. It says that any sexual relation contradictory to the laws of nature is punishable up to one year in prison. Later on, Mayassi and her mom tune into a report about local band Mashrou Leila, who were targeted by religious authorities and sent death threats for publicly supporting gay and transgender rights. Mayassi, downtrodden following Slave to Sirens lackluster reception at Glastonbury, stares wordlessly at the television set, perhaps imagining a bleak future for her band, and for herself as a queer woman in Lebanon. Across the room, a look of icy concern spreads across her mothers face.

The scene is subtle but integral. In a few frames, Baghdadi captures the independent fears of a mother and daughter, both emanating from political censorship but manifesting in distinct nightmares. The elder Mayassi dreads the loss of her daughter; Lilas fears the obliteration of her very being. In the next scene, members of the band are notified of a show cancellationthe venue cannot host metal groups, a common roadblock in a country that once banned albums by Metallica and Nirvana. I dont think theres actual freedom of expression in Lebanon, Mayassi says at one point. I would go online and check our videos, and people would call us sluts or whores Anytime a woman wants to be anything other than what society wants, its always an issue.

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Sirens, a Powerful New Documentary, Follows Lebanons First All-Female Metal Band as They Battle Sexism, Censorship, and Themselves - Pitchfork

Vote for the interest of all kids and against censorship – Grand Haven Tribune

Its been around two years since I first wrote in this newspaper, expressing concerns of the efforts of some individuals in our community to ban books, particularly books with LGBTQ content. Originally, that group was Grand Haven Conservative Parents. Then it became Restoring Ottawa. Now many of the individuals associated with this campaign against our schools are active in the local PAC Ottawa Impact.

Ottawa Impact has now released the names of their vetted candidates for school board, and you can tell that there is a direct connection between the efforts to ban books in our schools and the candidacies of Roger Williams, Thomas Hoekstra and Tommy Van Hill.

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About the writer: The Rev. Dr. Jared C. Cramer, Tribune community columnist, serves as rector of St. Johns Episcopal Church in Grand Haven. Information about his parish can be found at http://www.sjegh.com. These opinions are those of him alone as a resident of the community and do not necessarily reflect those of his church or congregation.

The rest is here:

Vote for the interest of all kids and against censorship - Grand Haven Tribune

Donald Trump Interview Removed by YouTube Decried as ‘Insane’ Censorship – Newsweek

Conservative figures have accused YouTube of political censorship after the video hosting platform removed an interview with Donald Trump over "misinformation."

In July, the former president appeared on the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show, with the interview still available to watch on Facebook and on the podcast's website.

However, the interview has been pulled from YouTube, with a message on the site stating that the video had violated its community guidelines.

In a series of tweets, Travis said YouTube took down the video for "misinformation" without giving further details.

"How does censoring interviews with political leaders aid any voters or democracy itself? This is scary. When have political censors ever been on the right side of history?" Travis tweeted.

"Voters should be able to see everything that any political figure says in public in order to judge for themselves whether they want to support or not support that person. That's democracy itself. YouTube should be ashamed for censoring interviews with any political figure."

Replying to the tweets, Texas GOP Senator Ted Cruz wrote: "This...is...insane."

Trump attorney Jenna Ellis also described the video's removal as "ridiculous," with Sean Davis, co-founder of the conservative website The Federalist, tweeting: "These Big Tech tyrannies have become governments unto themselves. They don't need to be regulated or reined in. They need to be destroyed before they destroy our entire constitutional republic."

It's unclear what prompted YouTube to remove the video.

During the interview, Trump claimed that the 2020 Election was "rigged and stolen" a claim he has made in almost every interview and public appearance for nearly two years now.

As he persisted with the unsubstantiated claims, Trump even expressed concern that the video might be removed.

"No sitting president's ever even come close, and I lost. It was a rigged election," Trump said. "I hope they don't take you off the air, but if they do, please, just delete this, because I don't want to see you guys go off the air."

Elsewhere in the July interview, Trump also appears to suggest that there is a link between the rise of COVID cases in the U.S. and the fact the midterm elections would be taking place in a few months.

"I looked at a map yesterday. It's very interesting. We have an election coming up, and all of a sudden, they're saying COVID is all over the place," Trump said.

When Clay responds that the "midterm variant is certainly spreading," Trump replies: "May have to go to mail-in ballots. Crooked mail-in ballots."

Conspiracy theorists have previously attempted to make the claim that the coronavirus pandemic was a hoax so mail-in voting would have to be brought in for the 2020 Election, making it easier to rig it against Trump.

Conservatives have also frequently spoken out about how so-called "Big Tech" such as Google, Facebook or YouTube reportedly censor right-wing voices in favor of more liberal ones.

YouTube has been contacted for comment.

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Donald Trump Interview Removed by YouTube Decried as 'Insane' Censorship - Newsweek

Gov. Newsom Signs Bill to Censor CA Doctors Accused of Spreading COVID Misinformation – California Globe

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed AB 2098 by Assemblyman Evan Low (D-Campbell), whichwill punish physiciansand surgeons for unprofessional conduct for advocating for the potential benefits of early treatment with off-label drugs, or those who dare to ask questions about COVID vaccine safety.

Assembly Bill 2098 puts unconstitutional restrictions on free speech by medical professionals. Under AB 2098, doctors will be subject to disciplinary actions by the Medical Board of California and the Osteopathic Medical Board of California if they do not adhere to the approved COVID treatment consensus.

Who approves the consensus, Dr. Peter Mazolewski said last week to the Globe. The medical board? Public health officials? Neither all of the members of the Medical Board nor all of Californias public health officials are licensed medical doctors.

In his signing statement, Gov. Newsom said, To be clear, this bill does not apply to any speech outside of discussions related to Covid-19 treatment within a direct physician patient relationship, as if its constitutional to limit the censorship of doctors to one medical issue. Imagine if doctors were censored over various cancer treatments or heart ailments.

The Governor of the State of California is telling the states licensed physicians that when they are treating a Covid patient, they must remain in the lane of the consensus of the CDC or CDPH treatment protocols.

Laura Powell, founder ofCalifornians for Good Governance explains in a June AB 2098 opposition letter:

There is no question that the bill is aimed at restricting speech based on its content. As such, it would be presumptively invalid and could only be upheld if the government could prove that the law is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.

Which it does not.

Physicians would be punished simply for doing what they believe is best for their patients, sharing legitimate medical information necessary for their patients to make a true risk/benefit analysis.

The bill is aimed at physicians who acknowledged the 1% mortality rate, questioned mandatory masks, school closures, and challenged the claim that the vaccine would shield patients from getting or spreading Covid. It is also aimed at physicians whochose to prescribe therapeutic treatments during COVID.

Censorship and criminalization are not the bulwarks of a free society, attorney Leigh Dundas said at the AB 2098 protest rally Friday at the State Capitol. The stark reality is if we are to remain a Constitutional Republic, then doctors must remain free to practice medicine.

Science and medicine are constantly evolving by challenging the status quo, Dundas added.

And Dundas warned that if this bill to censor Californias doctors is allowed to stand, guess who is next on the chopping block the press.

Tech entrepreneur Steve Kirsch addressed the AB 2098 protesters Friday. Im labeled a misinformation superspreader, but (Senator) Dr. Pan cant silence me because Im not a doctor.

Its [AB 2098] unconstitutional and anti-science, Kirsch continued. Tenure was created in universities to allow people to speak out without retribution. This is a special law targeted at misinformation for Covid-19, and thats not science.

As Laura Powell noted, The bill does not address the problem identified. The bills authors and supporters point to the problem of doctors who widely amplify falsehoods about Covid-19, but silencing them would violate the Constitution. To remedy the constitutional problems, it would have to be pared down to the point that it would simply duplicate existing law. Proponents are unable to cite a single example of a harm that could be prevented.

As Dr. Pete Mazolewski said, the purpose of Assembly Bill 2098is to circumvent due process against doctors over Covid misinformation conduct.

AB 2098will punish physiciansand surgeons for unprofessional conduct for advocating for the potential benefits of early treatment with off-label drugs, or those who dare to ask questions about COVID vaccine safety.

Does the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decide approved COVID treatment consensus? EvenCDC Director Rochelle Walensky recently admittedher agencys failures during the COVID-19 pandemic during a message to her staff in August. ABC reported,To be frank, we are responsible for some pretty dramatic, pretty public mistakes. From testing, to data, to communications, Walensky said.

We know there were a lot of problems with the CDC if we speak out right now, we run the risk of losing our licenses, Dr. Mazolewski said.

The rest is here:

Gov. Newsom Signs Bill to Censor CA Doctors Accused of Spreading COVID Misinformation - California Globe

Censorship Was The Spark That Sent Rod Serling To The Twilight Zone – /Film

Considering the show's strong bent towards social justice, it's not too surprising to find that one of the biggest inspirations for the series was the 1955 murder of Emmett Till. Till was aBlack 14-year-old boy who was"abducted, beaten, and shot" while visiting family in Mississippi, and whose killers both white were acquitted of all charges by an all-white jury. It was a tragedy that helped kickstart the civil rights movement, and also inspired Rod Serling to write a teleplay ("Noon on Doomsday") about the racism that led to such a miscarriage of justice unfolding.

Serling was expecting to deal with a lot of pushback and censorship with his script, but was still surprised by how extreme it all turned out to be. He later claimed the story was "gone over with a fine-tooth comb by 30 different people," and that by the time it aired it was basically unrecognizable from the story Serling was trying to tell. As Smithsonian Magazine put it, "Any hint of the South was removed from the plot; not even a Coca-Cola bottle could appear, lest viewers invoke the idea of the region."

The whole thing made Serling rethink his approach to social commentary, and soon after he had the idea for "The Twilight Zone," a show that was about apolitical sci-fi/fantasy concepts on the surface, but often used them as an avenue to explore more controversial ideas. It was through the "Twilight Zone" that Serling managed to get his Emmett Till-inspired story aired on TV: the aforementioned episode "I Am the Night," which is still one of the most memorable episodes of the series.

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Censorship Was The Spark That Sent Rod Serling To The Twilight Zone - /Film

When transparency is also obscurity: The conundrum that is open-source security – Help Net Security

Open-source software (OSS) has a lot of advocates. After all, why would we continuously try and write code that solves problems that others have already solved? Why not share the knowledge and gradually and incrementally improve existing open-source solutions? These egalitarian ideals are arguably central to civilization itself never mind software but also contain underlying tensions that have been a challenge for generations.

The challenge of OSS security is that just because everyone can look at the source code, it does not mean anyone will. There are widely used open-source projects that are being maintained by only a small number of engineers, and those engineers cannot be entirely altruistic with their contributions of time and effort they, too, have bills to pay.

This can be a challenge even for larger open-source projects. For example: the Linux kernel project has 30+ million lines of code, hundreds of bugs that need to be fixed, and almost 2000 active developers working on it. Thats 15,000+ lines of code per active developer!

A recent report from the Linux Foundation found that the average number of outstanding critical vulnerabilities in an application is 5.1, and that 41% of organizations are not confident in their open source software security. Even worse: only 49% of organizations have an open-source security policy.

Even if a security issue is found in open-source software, it does not mean someone will fix it. This is a fact highlighted by the report, which found that the average number of days to fix a vulnerability is currently 97.8 leaving enterprises running that software open to attacks for many months. This is the often-ignored side of OSS security: while the good guys can hunt for bugs and vulnerabilities in the code to fix them, the bad guys can hunt for those same bugs to exploit them.

The reality is that these potential security issues are not a distant, imaginary problem, or industry FUD that can be easily ignored in the real world. Due to the vast amount of OSS code in active use, examples of active security issues with open source are legion. Indeed, 70% of the average program today is made of open-source software, with the number of dependencies varying widely by language: a mere 25 dependencies per project in Pythons case, but a massive 174 per project in the case of JavaScript.

As the situation with the colors.js and faker.js packages demonstrated earlier this year, problems with dependencies can have real-world impact on enterprise software. The two simple JavaScript libraries were baked into thousands of Node Package Manager (NPM) programs, which in turn were downloaded multiple millions of times every week till their creator, JavaScript developer Marak Squires, deliberately broke them for reasons unknown. The result of Squires adding an infinite loop to colors.js and faker.js was widespread failure of NPMs that included his code, prompting a scramble to roll back the changes to safe versions (colors.js v1.40 and faker.js v5.5.3).

Relying exclusively on a volunteer community to identify vulnerabilities, report and fix them is a bet with long odds. Paying someone to probe the security of your open-source solutions can help plug this gap, while you continue to enjoy the wider benefits of open source.

Another challenge with OSS updates and patches is that they need to be applied to secure systems, a fact that can present specific challenges. If your mission-critical solution relies on a specific software version, updating may mean losing functionality and/or requiring unscheduled downtime. In these business-critical scenarios it is sometimes more elegant to employ an expert to backport the fix and maintain a version for a longer period than the wider community supports.

Its open-source, go change it! is a statement you will hear a lot from the open-source community, and it highlights a key fact: Expecting good security levels for free while others contribute time, effort or money to the equation is not reasonable or sustainable.

Options include either contributing to open source as it was originally intended, by improving the code and publishing it for others, or employing experts to manage the OSS code and debug it as required. But making no contribution at all is an option that the industry cant afford.

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When transparency is also obscurity: The conundrum that is open-source security - Help Net Security

You thought you bought software all you bought was a lie – The Register

Comment At the heart of the computer industry are some very big lies, and some of them are especially iniquitous. One is about commercial software.

Free and open source software (FOSS) is at the root of a very big lie. FOSS itself isn't a lie. FOSS is real and it matters. The problem is that the most significant attribute of FOSS is a negative. It's all about what it is not. It's quite hard to explain things in terms of what they are not. People aren't used to it, and it can cause more confusion than it clears up.

So, instead, FOSS advocates talk about aspects which are easier to explain. Stuff like "source code," which is where the term "open source" came from. The problem is that in real life, the parts that are relatively easy to convey are most often completely irrelevant, at best unimportant, and at worst, not true at all.

So first, I want to talk about something equally important, but which may seem like a digression. Let's talk about convenience.

Anyone who chooses to use free and open source software on their desktop regularly gets asked why. Why bother? Isn't it more work? Isn't the pro-grade gear commercial? Isn't it worth buying the good stuff? Windows is the industry standard, isn't it simply less work to go with the flow?

Well, no. The software industry reboots more often than a ZX-81 with a wobbly RAM pack, but we're half a century into the microprocessor era now, and a large majority of software has been thoroughly commoditized. Anyone can do it. These days, it's all about branding.

The practical upshot of which is that most of the time, the commercial stuff isn't significantly better. No, it isn't less hassle. Mostly, it's more hassle, but if you're used to the nuisances you don't notice them. If the free software experience was really worse, most of us wouldn't do it.

If you're a bit of a non-conformist, perhaps you chose a Mac instead. Macs come with lots of great software thrown in for free, and they make it really easy to buy more. If you haven't got tech support at your beck and call, or if you're much too important to learn the fiddly bits, aren't you worth a Mac?

I like Macs. I've been using them since 1988. To the puzzlement, and sometimes irritation, of FOSS-inclined friends and colleagues, my home desktop is a Mac. Modern Macs are Unix boxes, just like PCs running Linux. The majority of 1990s Linux proponents I know, from back when it was hard, have (very quietly) switched to Macs.

The thing that puzzles Mac OS X-era owners is that I use almost none of the perfectly good software my iMac came bundled with. I don't use Apple's email client, or its browser, or its cloud storage, or its productivity apps. I put different, mostly FOSS apps on it instead.

Again, this all about convenience. For me, this has several benefits for me. It lets me run the same set of apps on macOS, and on Linux, and on Windows when I have to. I don't have to worry about moving apps between platforms or formats: I use the same set of apps on all three, so no conversion is necessary. If there's a bug or a vulnerability, I can get a new version from each app's creators, quickly, without waiting for a big vendor to patch or update its products.

This is a big deal, and it comes up more often than you'd think.

I regularly get asked, by both friends and acquaintances, and in my former life as a tech consultant, about switching office software. It happened, yet again, very recently, when an acquaintance of mine updated their computer. That in turn updated Microsoft Office, and that broke it in some way. As a result, they asked about free office suites.

But they had some stipulations: it had to open all their existing documents with perfect fidelity, and it had to have an email client that would import Outlook .PST files perfectly.

I started to explain that no free office suite can do this. None of the significant ones even come with an email client or anything like one. That is the point of vendor lock-in. This is why many software vendors regularly change their file formats, but ensure that the new product can import the old product's file, often with a scary warning.

It's because it keeps you paying. You may be perfectly happy with your old version, but people will start sending you files from newer versions, and oft you won't be able to open them, so you end up having to update just for a quiet life.

If there were a single FAQ file for people wanting to switch away from proprietary software, this would be the answer:

No, you cannot have perfect fidelity.

Nothing free will do that. But asking why can't we have perfect compatibility is the wrong question. (Not because it's unanswerable. The answer is easy, but it's unsatisfying: it's in the interests of proprietary vendors to make perfect compatibility as hard as they can get away with, because it makes them more money.)

A better question is this:

If I have to sacrifice perfect compatibility, what do I get in return?

And the answer to that is good news: you get convenience. Put up with the slight hiccup of some wonky conversions, and you get unlimited free tools, forever, and they work on everything, and they will never lock you out or compel you to pay for an upgrade.

Free stuff, for the taking.

The reason that it's not better to buy software is simple, but it's a lie. A lie at the heart of the entire computer industry, but nonetheless a lie that's very hard to see "for the same reason that people in Trafalgar Square can't see England," to quote a good book.

It isn't better to buy commercial software because you can't buy software.

It is not possible for you to own paid-for, commercial software. You can't buy it. You probably think that you have bought lots, but you haven't. All you really bought is a lie.

Not because software can't be bought. It absolutely can, just not at retail. Large corporations buy and sell software to each other all the time, for millions and billions.

But ordinary people, users, customers, including corporate clients, do not and cannot buy software. You probably think you have, and that you own umpteen programs, but you don't. That's a lie by the commercial software industry.

All you can buy is licenses. Serial numbers or activation keys or maybe even hardware dongles. Strange abstract entities that only really exist in lawyers' minds, which claim to permit you to use someone else's software.

And they aren't worth the paper that they're no longer printed upon.

You don't own the software. You have no rights over it. The vendors don't even claim it works and, indeed, explicitly state that it might not and if it doesn't it's not their fault and they don't, and won't, promise to fix it.

You own, at most, a serial number. Congratulations. You paid $25 per letter for a really bad Scrabble hand, and it won't work with the next version of the app, or with your next computer either. Enjoy.

At worst, with software as a service, you don't even get a copy. You don't even get to run it on your own computer. You pay for the right to use someone else's computer, and if they go broke or get hacked or your internet goes down tough. Sucks to be you.

There certainly are ways.

You can make a few hundred mill, and buy a software company.

You can write your own software. But it's really hard, especially as most modern commercial OSes don't come with software development tools any more. All that work that went into making computers easier to use didn't go into making them easier to program partly because that would destroy the revenue stream. You don't even get Qbasic any more, and Hypercard is long gone.

You can hire some programmers to write the software you need just for you.

Of course, you can't check their work unless you learn their job, and they might go sell it to someone else too. If you lose those programmers, others probably won't be able to take over. Just as no real work has gone into making it easier for non-specialists to write software, precious little has gone into real genuine modularity, or maintainability, or robustness, or efficiency. Real software is about as recyclable as fast food packaging.

But if you commissioned it and paid someone to create it for you, and you keep the code, then you do own it.

This is one reason that FOSS advocates keep going on about source code. The majority of operating systems and mass-market software is compiled. It inherently has two parts, like a jelly and a mold. If you don't have the mold, you can't make more matching jelly, and you can't make one from the jelly. So if you only have the jelly, well, it won't last long and you can't maintain it, or replace the bits you ate or which went bad. Software, like jelly, is very perishable. It doesn't last and there's no fridge.

But if you have the mold, well, even if you don't know how to make jelly, you can hire a cook, give them the mold, and they can make you more identical jelly.

Source code is the jelly mold. It's no use on its own but you can use it to make something useful.

In most other ways, though, source code is useless.

Sadly, this means that the benefits that FOSS advocates talk about simply are not real. The ability to alter or customize software? By and large, fictional. You can't usefully inspect it, check it or verify it. Most software is written in famously opaque languages. Programmers can't read their own code a few weeks or months later, let alone anyone else's.

It's huge and hugely complicated and almost unreadable.

It's also vast.

A modern Linux distro contains hundreds of millions of lines of code.

It doesn't matter that the code is unreadable. Even if it was perfectly clear, there is way too much of it. A modern operating system is so unimaginably enormous that even if you were a genius, it would take centuries to read a whole OS. Nobody understands the entire things any more: human minds are too small, and lifespans far too short.

The skill of reading the stuff is rare, which makes those folks very well paid. Worse still, the task can't be parallelized. Nobody can afford to hire a million programmers and give them a hundred lines each. If there were anyone that could afford it, those millions of available programmers don't exist. And if they did exist, studying a few hundred lines each would not give them any meaningful overview.

Which leads us to another, smaller lie.

For the most part, computer source code isn't some big sensitive commercial property, a precious trade secret.

The real reason that commercial software companies won't open up their source code, even of obsolete products, is not secrecy. It's not that they're afraid of someone stealing their top secret genius-level algorithms. The good algorithms have been duplicated many times over.

Programmers who had a lot of formal education learned lots of algorithms, just like chess players learn opening moves. Programmers with less formal training but strong skills just reinvent them.

No, the real reason that companies rarely open up the source code of their obsolete products is much simpler.

It's simple embarrassment. Shame at its poor quality.

Because the code is a mess. If it's obsolete, there's no money in fixing it or even cleaning it up. There's also nobody available to do it because the people who know how to do it are busy working on the new stuff.

Another aspect is that big software projects are a little like international debt. Every country owes every other country huge amounts of money. Nobody has enough to pay theirs all off, so they just owe each other hundreds of billions, eternally.

Most companies pay each other for bits of each other's software to make it work together. That means they don't own the whole thing. It's a patchwork quilt. They're no longer completely sure which bits they wrote and which they borrowed.

And exactly like tidying it up before publishing it, to go through it and remove all the bits that are other people's would take decades and cost millions. There's no possible payout, but a small risk someone might use the result to compete with them, so they don't do it.

Commercial software is as much about quality and features as it is about locking customers in, so that it's too hard, or too expensive, for them to move.

So the real deal about free and open source software is this: since you can't really buy or own software at all, only big companies can, then the only software that isn't someone else's property is software that is nobody's property.

The one meaningful advantage to having the source code is just that you can make your own unlimited copies. If it's legal to get the source code, it's legal to use it to make more copies. So the only software that doesn't put you under someone else's control is software that isn't someone else's. Software that isn't a trade secret. Meaning software that is community property, open to everyone.

It's not about ownership at all. It never was. It's about control.

Which is why the term "open source" exists: it was a way to get this idea across to business people who don't understand source code and don't care about cost because it's not their own money they're spending.

Control is really about freedom. Which is why what we now call "open source" was originally called "free software," but unfortunately, that sounds like it's about money. It's not about money. So instead of "free," for now, let's say "open."

If you are not passionate about freedom and rights and ownership and all that, at least when it comes to your computer, then the practical value of openness, of open formats and open software, is convenience.

You pay the one-time non-monetary cost of converting your stuff into open formats, of switching to open rivals to commercial software, and storing it on open storage services, and possibly, if you want, switching to open OSes, and then you get back control.

Buy a new laptop? Just copy your OS onto it. No license, no activation, no keys. Copy it and it just works. Want two laptops, a big one for home and a small one for travelling? No problem: make two copies. Have the same copy on your desktop if you wish.

Have the same apps on your Windows desktop with the fancy 3D card for gaming, and your partner's Mac, and on your Linux laptop because it runs cooler and the battery lasts longer.

If they're all open apps, they run on anything.

If you run Linux or another open OS, all your apps and the OS can be updated at the same time, with one update tool and one command.

This may not sound big, but it's a big fail if you run FOSS on Windows or macOS. Some things update themselves, but then it's out of your control again.

Since nobody makes money from getting you to buy new versions, the trickle of new features is constant, gradual, and free.

And since the programs are being built and maintained by the people who use them, not for others' gain, they try to keep it quick, so it isn't such a performance hog and it doesn't mandate new hardware features and thus frequent "hardware refreshes."

So run Linux (or whatever) and you can run older, slower hardware and still enjoy decent performance or if you wish, run newer but lower-performance, lower-spec hardware, and still get a decent experience, which is why ChromeBooks have sold so well in recent years.

This is a really huge point, and one that we will return to very soon, because of its massive implications even outside of the computer industry.

Yes, there are still prices to pay to switch, but at least they're not financial. This won't cost you any money, it will save you money.

You will have to put some effort into switching. You need to do some relearning. Not everything will work the way you're used to. Familiar product names from familiar vendors mostly won't be available any more or if they are, you'll need to learn extra steps to use them. You'll have to get used to some new ways of working.

And you often won't get quite as many features and maybe not quite as much polish, because features and polish and shininess are what sell software upgrades. If nobody's making any profit when users upgrade, there's less incentive for fancy features and shine.

But on the flip side, while commercial vendors have a keen interest in concealing flaws and defects from you, suppliers of open stuff that is free of charge don't. So you will often find better documentation, better help and better support, more informative error messages, and friendlier, more welcoming communities of users who actively want to help you.

Because they're not in it for the money. Today, that means doing the bare minimum to ship a Minimum Viable Product that's Just Barely Good Enough to keep the company afloat.

So what I told my acquaintance when their copy of Microsoft Office self-destructed was:

You can't have perfect fidelity from any free office suite. You can't keep your Outlook .PST files. You will have to put up with imperfect conversions, but it's worth it.

Get LibreOffice. Or OnlyOffice if you prefer ribbons. Get Thunderbird. Spend some time: get used to them.

Get a free IMAP account with lots of space. Connect Outlook to it. Using Outlook, copy all your mails to the IMAP server. Sync your address book and calendar to online ones.

Then connect Thunderbird to the same accounts, and make sure you have all your data.

Then stop using Outlook.

That is the real answer here.

You cannot have a perfect identical free replacement. That is how they keep you paying for new versions: familiarity. That is the lock on the door.

But you can just walk away.

As a wise man said, it's a long walk to freedom. If you're used to being in prison, you may get agoraphobia. Don't blame the outside for this.

You can have a free office suite.

No, it will not have perfect fidelity with MS documents, because that is what locked in means.

So stop doing what the free suites can't do.

Using FOSS doesn't even have to mean using Linux.

It's not even a 12-step program.

Step one: switch to FOSS apps. Stop using your proprietary ones. Get familiar with free replacements on your old OS.

Step two: switch to a FOSS OS. It will be more familiar because you're used to the apps.

The Reg's own Trevor Pott has sung the praises of Windows app installation automator Ninite before, more than once. If you're setting up a new PC, it's revolutionary: a day's work becomes a 10-minute job.

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You thought you bought software all you bought was a lie - The Register

Linux Foundation Energy Gains More Industry Support to Drive the Energy Transition – PR Newswire

Open source foundation gains new members and launches new projects to support digital transformation in the power sector

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 5, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --LF Energy, the open source foundation focused on harnessing the power of collaborative software and hardware technologies to decarbonize our global economies, is pleased to announce new members, projects, and governing board members have joined the foundation.

Shellhas joined LF Energy as a Strategic Member, the highest level of membership. Areti and Futurewei have also joined as new General Members. Additionally, Microsoft, which had been a General Member, has upgraded its membership to the Strategic level. LF Energy members provide funding and resources to support the foundation's mission of building a unified approach to developing non-differentiating code that can enable utilities, grid operators, electric vehicle makers, energy saving companies and others to develop and implement technologies to transform the power sector.

In pursuit of that mission, LF Energy is also announcing three new open source software projects have launched under its umbrella:

To support all LF Energy projects and digital transformation in the energy sector, two new industry leaders have joined the foundation's governing board. Dr. Marissa Hummon, Chief Technology Officer, Utilidata and Dr. McGee Young, Founder & CEO, Watt Carbon, were both elected to the governing board as General Member Representatives. Both executives, and their companies, represent crucial pieces of the decarbonization ecosystem.

WattCarbon develops decarbonization measurement and verification tools to track the carbon intensity of building energy use. The company helps users reduce carbon footprints by taking into account the availability of zero-carbon energy using data feeds and real-time grid carbon intensity values. Companies often struggle to make the connection between their energy consumption and the availability of renewable energy making calculating carbon emissions difficult. WattCarbon helps resolve those challenges.

Utilidata is a venture-backed software company that optimizes the distribution of electricity through meter-embedded software and utility-integrated data processing and power flow controllers. By continuously monitoring and optimizing the operation of the grid, Utilidata saves energy, lowers the cost of adding more solar generation, batteries and electric vehicle charging, and better detects power flow anomalies that can cause outages and fires.

Dr. Audrey Lee, Senior Director of Energy Strategy, Microsoft, who was previously a General Member Representative remains on the governing board but has transitioned to Strategic Member Representative in light of Microsoft's upgraded membership.

"The momentum we have seen in 2022 is nothing short of astounding, with more organizations across energy, technology, academia, government and other sectors coming to realize that the only way to meet decarbonization goals is to work together to develop the necessary technologies," said LF Energy Executive Director Dr. Shuli Goodman. "We welcome all our new members and projects and look forward to working with this growing community on shared technologies to modernize energy infrastructure globally. We will accelerate digital transformation in support of the energy transition, and mitigate some of the worst outcomes of climate change, through this collaborative approach."

LF Energy will host an online meeting on November 17, 2022 at 8am Pacific to discuss current activities and plans for 2023; foundation members and others interested in attending may register here.

LF Energy Resources

About LF Energy

A first-of-its-kind initiative, LF Energy provides a 21st century plan of action to solve climate change through open frameworks, reference architectures and a support ecosystem of complementary projects. In addition to the new members, Strategic Members include Alliander, Google, Microsoft, RTE and Shell, in addition to over 50 General and Associate Members from across the energy industry, technology, academia, and government. Find further information here: https://www.lfenergy.org

Contact:Dan BrownLF Energy[emailprotected]415-420-7880

SOURCE LF Energy

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Linux Foundation Energy Gains More Industry Support to Drive the Energy Transition - PR Newswire

Cryptocurrency In A Declining Market: What Lawyers Need To Know About Bankruptcy, Regulation, And Other Trends – Above the Law

Like any other investment, cryptocurrency can be exciting and rewarding when the market is hot and when it cools down, investors, funds, and the lawyers who advise them can face tricky questions.

As noted in a recent Practising Law Institute Briefing, Cryptocurrency and Bankruptcy: What Lawyers Need to Know Now That Crypto Winter Is Here, crypto is not immune to the effects of a declining market nor to bankruptcy and its related laws.

During the information-packed One-Hour Briefing, presenter Noah Schottenstein, of DLA Piper, walks attendees through the basics of the crypto finance market, defining its unique features as compared to traditional finance. He goes on to explore novel legal issues that bankruptcy courts are only beginning to face.

As explained by Schottenstein, the crypto winter that began earlier this year was associated with the crash of the Terra/Luna cryptocurrencies. The dramatic dip in the crypto market ultimately saw high-profile bankruptcy filings, including the Three Arrows Capital hedge fund and the retail-focused crypto platforms Voyager and Celsius.

The Briefing continues with discussion of topics such as the application of avoidance actions to cryptocurrency transactions, the types of claims and protections retail depositors and other counterparties may hold in bankruptcy proceedings, and the overlay between regulatory structures and bankruptcy law.

In-house counsel, outside attorneys, and compliance, finance, and other allied professionals interested in the structure of cryptocurrency finance markets and bankruptcy law can get up to date with this program and learn why expectations surrounding the impact of bankruptcy may be upended in this evolving landscape.

Crypto and securities regulation

The bankruptcy program comes at a time when the intersection of regulations and crypto is an increasingly hot topic. At The SEC Speaks in 2022, presented by PLI with the SEC in Washington, D.C. on September 8 and 9, a main topic was crypto, crypto, crypto, said Kurt Wolfe, co-host of PLIs inSecurities podcast, in an episode about the conference. Every single panel that I attended talked about crypto, even some of the ones you wouldnt think of, like trading and markets, he said.

Wolfe and co-host Chris Ekimoff discussed the significance of Chairman Genslers opening remarks for The SEC Speaks, titled Kennedy and Crypto. In his speech, the Chairman asserted, Nothing about the crypto markets is incompatible with the securities laws. Investor protection is just as relevant, regardless of underlying technologies.

Interested in learning more?

PLI offers a wealth of resources on cryptocurrency.

If youd like to brush up on the basics, check out the one-day program Think Like a Lawyer, Talk Like a Geek 2022: Get Fluent in Technology, taking place via live webcast and in person on October 14. This unique program is designed to give lawyers the necessary background to become more knowledgeable advocates in technology-related matters and understand the emerging trends in this field, including blockchain, cryptocurrencies, and NFTs.

For those interested in diving into the growing crypto trend of DAOs, or decentralized autonomous organizations, PLI will offer Decentralized Automated Organizations (DAOs): Practical Applications and Legal Framework. Register for the November 16 One-Hour Briefing to learn how DAOs have the potential to disrupt the traditional economic system as they become active investors and lenders, while raising significant issues of securities, tax, and corporate law.

See additional crypto-related content on PLIs website.

Practising Law Institute is a nonprofit learning organization dedicated to keeping attorneys and other professionals at the forefront of knowledge and expertise. PLI is chartered by the Regents of the University of the State of New York and was founded in 1933 by Harold P. Seligson. The organization provides the highest quality, accredited, continuing legal and professional education programs in a variety of formats which are delivered by more than 4,000 volunteer faculty including prominent lawyers, judges, investment bankers, accountants, corporate counsel, and U.S. and international government regulators. PLI publishes a comprehensive library of Treatises, Course Handbooks, Answer Books and Journals also available through the PLI PLUS online platform. The essence of PLIs mission is its commitment to the pro bono community. View PLIs upcoming programs here.

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Cryptocurrency In A Declining Market: What Lawyers Need To Know About Bankruptcy, Regulation, And Other Trends - Above the Law

CME Group and CF Benchmarks to Launch Three New Cryptocurrency Reference Rates and Real-Time Indices on October 31 – PR Newswire

CHICAGO and LONDON, Oct. 6, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --CME Group, the world's leading derivatives marketplace, and CF Benchmarks, the leading provider of cryptocurrency benchmark indices, today announced plans to launch three new cryptocurrency reference rates and real-time indices, which will be calculated and published daily by CF Benchmarks, beginning October 31.

Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1915231/CME_CF_Benchmarks_Combo_Logo.jpg

These reference rates and indices are not tradable futures products. They include the following:

"Together with bitcoin, ether and other available cryptocurrencies, CME CF Reference Rates and Real-Time Indices will capture more than 92% of the investable cryptocurrency market capitalization," said Giovanni Vicioso, CME Group Global Head of Cryptocurrency Products. "These new benchmarks are designed to allow traders, institutions and other users to access a much broader range of cryptocurrencies through a suite of products they are already familiar with, allowing them to confidently and more accurately manage cryptocurrency price risk, value portfolios or create structured products like ETFs."

CME CF Reference Rates and Real-Time Indices are based on robust methodologies that have regular expert oversight and are designed to meet the growing need for transparent, regulated and round-the-clock pricing.

Several leading crypto exchanges and trading platforms will provide pricing data for these new benchmarks, starting initially with Bitstamp, Coinbase, Gemini, itBit, Kraken, and LMAX Digital. Each coin will trade on a minimum of two of these constituent exchanges.

"Investors are increasingly seeking exposure to a wider range of cryptocurrencies as they learn more about the potential of the digital asset class," said Sui Chung, CEO of CF Benchmarks. "Regulated investment products, spearheaded by CME Group's Crypto derivative suite, have helped open crypto to a much wider range of investors. Through its robust reference rates, CF Benchmarks is proud to be able to facilitate the creation of regulated financial products for this new asset class so investors can seek and manage exposure with confidence."

"The introduction of new products at CME Group is both exciting and necessary, as investors demand a focused exchange where safety and risk are a primary priority," said Bill Cannon, Head of Portfolio Management at Valkyrie Investments. "This expansion provides functional accessibility to a variety of new and unique financial products, bridging the ever-narrowing gap between traditional and decentralized financial markets. We find that these types of innovations, especially at the current point in the cycle, will help build a stronger foundation in digital assets and create new channels of growth considering the amount of investment currently entering the sector."

Each of these new reference rates will provide the U.S. dollar price of each digital asset, published once-a-day at 4 p.m. London time, while each respective real-time index will be published once per second, 24 hours a day, 365 days per year.

For more information on these products, please visit http://www.cmegroup.com/cryptobenchmarks.

About CME Group

As the world's leading derivatives marketplace, CME Group (www.cmegroup.com) enables clients to trade futures, options, cash and OTC markets, optimize portfolios, and analyze data empowering market participants worldwide to efficiently manage risk and capture opportunities. CME Group exchanges offer the widest range of global benchmark products across all major asset classes based oninterest rates,equity indexes,foreign exchange,energy,agricultural productsandmetals. The company offers futures and options on futures trading through the CME Globex platform, fixed income trading via BrokerTec and foreign exchange trading on the EBS platform. In addition, it operates one of the world's leading central counterparty clearing providers, CME Clearing.

CME Group, the Globe logo, CME, Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Globex, and, E-miniare trademarks of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. CBOT and Chicago Board of Trade are trademarks of Board of Trade of the City of Chicago, Inc. NYMEX, New York Mercantile Exchange and ClearPort are trademarks of New York Mercantile Exchange, Inc. COMEX is a trademark of Commodity Exchange, Inc. BrokerTec and EBS are trademarks of BrokerTec Europe LTD and EBS Group LTD, respectively.Dow Jones, Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and S&P are service and/or trademarks of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC, Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC and S&P/Dow Jones Indices LLC, as the case may be, and have been licensed for use by Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

About CF Benchmarks

CF Benchmarks is the leading provider of cryptocurrency benchmark indices, authorised and regulated by the UK FCA under the EU BMR. Composed of market data from six constituent exchanges, its benchmark indices are provided through public methodologies and transparent governance, for tracking, valuing and settling risk in cryptocurrency financial services and products. CF Benchmarks' indices have been used to settle over $500bn of cryptocurrency derivative contracts listed for trading by CME Group and Kraken Futures.

CME-G

SOURCE CME Group

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CME Group and CF Benchmarks to Launch Three New Cryptocurrency Reference Rates and Real-Time Indices on October 31 - PR Newswire