The social logic of freedom: talk given at the FSOSS 2006
The Social Logic of Freedom:
OpenOffice.org and the Open Document
FormatPresented at FSOSS
2006
I. From Inked Paper to
Electronic Media
Paper and ink
documents do not require any special technology to read or write. This is so
obvious I have to say it. You do not need a special reader, computer, or other
mediating device. To record your thoughts for the future or for others a simple
stick saturated with ink and a sheet of paper or their equivalent is enough. And
to read it, you need nothing at all, just the ability and knowledge to decode
the marks. You need, in short, only readin' and 'ritin': education. What is
more, the document is yours to do as you like and is not dependent on the local
monopoly that made the paper or ink or tablet or whatever; and it won't become
illegible if the those who made the technology (and oddly neglected to patent
it) decide to change it, either because the market demands it (they need to make
more money) or because it's a static market and their shareholders insist on new
products (or, in short, they need to make more money). For paper and ink and its
equivalents, the longevity of the document, it's ability to stay a document and
not become like chicken scratches or a Frisbee or paper aeroplane, depends
simply on the physical and chemical robustness of the ink and paper and, lest we
forget, on the ability of people to read the language.
Since the modern period—since
the rise of the public sphere and other public modes of exchange and investment
and governance—it has been the historical responsibility of national
government to teach its people to read and write. Why? It's almost absurd to
ask. But if a people cannot read and write, then a nation's wealth is
imperilled: no business, no history, no public sphere, no future. And it has
been a characteristic of modern states to ensure the health and wealth of a
nation.
Switch now to the present and
to the contemporary and future usage of digital media. The trend, which has
only been accelerating, is to produce electronic documents and to save them in
huge electronic archives. Paper only documents, which recorded so much of our
past so easily and which anyone with training could produce (no special
technology required), are increasingly a thing of the past. They linger on out
of cultural momentum, but to me they mark the past. The future is digital and
electronic.
The advantage of this
condition is that it actually has the potential of being more democratic and
allowing for more universal access than paper and ink. Not because it is
cheaper (though that may well be the case once the land is stripped of trees)
but because digital documents are easier to produce and distribute. This ease
of production and circulation also implicitly enables a nation's people to
participate in the global economy. The alternative is a very likely
impoverished
isolation.
II. The
Bargains We Made
But at what price
have we bought this promise of global prosperity, this neoliberal dream? That
price is measured in more than dollars but even in dollars it is very high.
Unlike ink/paper technology, which anyone can use and which can preserve
thoughts for millennia, the documents we create today using an office
productivity suite not only require us to use technology that is neither open
nor free nor easily producible but proprietary: it's owned by someone, in this
case, most often your local monopoly. It's as if a language were created that
you had to pay to learn and then all the important texts were written in it.
Only those who paid could write and read the texts.
An analogy: It is as if we had entered
the European feudal age, when a version of this was in fact the case. The
language for official communication was Latin, not what people spoke, and
learning Latin cost a lot, so that only a very few families in this Cathedral
culture could wield official power. With the Renaissance, the people's language
(what they actually spoke, especially at the marketplace) was used and culture,
commerce, flourished; what counted as the public sphere grew--and has continued
to grow.
The threat against public
culture lies in the use of technologies of writing and reading that effectively
exclude all but the privileged public. Quietly, with almost no political
discussion, we have made a bargain and near betrayed our present and future. The
privileged (like those in this room) who enjoy neoliberal practises benefit from
the flatness of the world; the rest fall off the its curves and are effectively
illiterate, as they cannot engage in the information economy characterizing the
world today.
III. The Solution Is
Open
The solution is to use open
standards and open source.
Why are
open standards important? Open standards are, "publicly available and
implementable" standards (Wikipedia). Any compliant application can use an open
standard, whether it be proprietary or open source, so in purely pragmatic
terms, the real test of an open standard is not which organization—OASIS,
ISO, ECMA—has approved it but which applications—and how many-- are
using it. In this test, Microsoft's proposed standard, Open XML, fails
miserably and the OASIS OpenDocument Format (ODF)—now ISO 26300—does
quite well: IBM's Workplace, Sun's StarOffice, OpenOffice.org, KOffice,
Writely, AbiWord, and many others all use the ODF, albeit with varying degrees
of support (see Wikipedia for an excellent list of applications that implement
the ODF).
The result of this open
standard? Files can be freely passed among applications. You no longer need to
worry that your colleague or collaborator or any recipient is using the same
applications as you or that you will have to pay for the privilege of reading a
public document created using proprietary technology. It's the file that
counts, not the application. But open standards is but one half of the
coupling.
We need more. Open standards
allow for free exchange of files both now and in the future but open source
allows for anyone to afford the application, both now and in the future, for
open-source applications like OpenOffice.org, which is licensed under the LGPL,
are free, gratis: you pay nothing to use them. This is an important point: by
coupling open standards with open source, OpenOffice.org gives everyone the
ability to participate with no encumbrances in the public sphere.
How might this work? Let's imagine
that the public sector uses StarOffice or Workplace or OpenOffice.org or
whatever and saves its documents as ODF or PDF files. The government, either
working on its own behalf or with the private sector, installs OpenOffice.org on
computers in all public libraries and other public spaces where it can site a
server or computer. Anyone thus has access to these documents. Is this an
insecure arrangement? No: For open source and open standards are constructed
from the ground up with real-world security issues foremost. Systems and files
can be made secure; security works at every level, and heterogeneity of systems
is allowed, in fact expected (this is the real world). In contrast, Microsoft
claims its systems are really only secure if one only uses them; insecurity
comes from without.
But we know that
blaming the victim, in this case the person affected by the viruses and crashes,
is a poor way to defend oneself. The better argument is to recognize the flaws
in the model. But the model Microsoft has promulgated cannot support a
heterogeneous world where different systems coexist. Open source and open
standards can; they have been designed from the very beginning with that model
in mind.
And the technologies are
maturing. It is the case now that support for most every language spoken here
in in Toronto exists for OpenOffice.org, which can run on Windows, Linux, Mac OS
X, and many other platforms. If you wish to customize it, that's possible, too.
The code and license allows you to write plugins, addons, whatever you need to
extend the application. And if you don't want to do this yourself, it's easy to
pay for someone to do it for you.
But
all that assumes—incorrectly—that there is a pool of developers.
I've been in this business now for over five years and I assure you, that's a
myth. So what we need to do is build that pool. Otherwise, we will have
exchanged one consumer model for another. What makes FOSS special is the
ability, after all, to enhance it, to make it your own and in doing so, to make
it everyone's. The logic of freedom when applied to open source determines an
ever expanding commons, not a shrinking pool. What's more, this logic can be
extended to work outside of software production. OpenOffice.org's enduser
documentation, for instance, has been entirely produced by a group of people
working under the aegis of a free license and led by Gerry Singleton and Scott
Carr.
I invite students, professors,
entrepreneurs to consider OpenOffice.org as a nearly limitless source. The code
can be used to learn how to program, for instance. New applications using
OpenOffice.org can be distributed—even for money: our license allows for
that. Support, training, certification: all these are possible and very much
encouraged.
What is crucial is that we
think of OpenOffice.org not as another consumer commodity but as a continuing
project. A commodity has a way of stopping history and future; shrinkwrapped,
it encloses its own present. A continuing project, however, allows for change,
evolution. I find the project far more important than the product, as such. The
product may not exist ten years from now but I expect the project will—and
it will be larger.
Coda: In
Canada
I came to Canada with high
hopes. I came from Bush's United States Arnold "The Governator"
Schwarzenegger's California, and more generally from a nation so sold on the
idea that government has no responsibility to its people that war seems the best
solution to just about everything. And I thought that Paul Martin's more
socially responsible government would be more responsive to open source; or that
Dalton's leadership would manifest in an understanding of the advantages of
FOSS.
I was naïve. And also
ignorant. Canada is like many other nations in this regard. There is of course
real and substantial work being done here—by CLUE, but the Canadian
OpenOffice.ca, by others—and there are substantial efforts in getting the
provincial and federal governments to use not just Linux but OpenOffice.org and
other open-source applications.
But
so much more could be done. We need to organize and coordinate with vendors
distributing open-source and open-standard applications and with groups involved
in the movement. We need to contact our representatives and make open access to
government documents, to national archives, to the nation's intellectual
property by all a national right, a given of Canadian residency. This is a
political issue not just a technical problem. And it must be regarded by the
politicians dependent on our votes as
political.
Every country I've visited,
every country I know about, even those like Venezuela, are deep in sink of
proprietary software and dependent on proprietary formats and relations;
regional alternatives and existing
open
standards are shut out. These countries are
only now coming to understand the implications of using proprietary formats and
only now are realizing that there is choice in the tools of production they have
come to use.
But now that nations like
France, Denmark, Belgium and so on are seriously debating ODF—which allows
for proprietary implementations, after all—there is little reason for a
nation like Canada, with its diverse and multilingual populace to shift to tools
that allow its provincial and federal governments to produce and exchange
documents its people can read and, when needed, edit, without having to buy
inadequate proprietary
applications.
Inadequate? Yes; for
unlike proprietary applications, OpenOffice.org can be easily translated to
North America's indigenous languages; in fact, I've sought to initiate such work
already. And unlike proprietary applications, OpenOffice.org is free—it
costs nothing. First Nations people, as well as the French and English speakers
and as well as all speakers of the dozens of languages one hears spoken just in
Toronto, can use a single application for free without fear of being called a
thief or worse, losing their language to an application's.
I call then upon Canada's
governments—city, provincial, federal--to answer a challenge: To give her
people an ambition that shape the world and make it better; not by erecting a
bigger phallic symbol yet—we've got the Toronto CN tower—but that
will chart the path for participatory democracies throughout the world. I call
upon the government to move to the OpenDocument format; to move to
OpenOffice.org; to move to technology that declares for freedom, for diversity,
for community engagement, and for social responsibility.
Posted: Sun - October 29, 2006 at 07:13 PM