background preloader

Push the FreedomBox Foundation from 0 to 60 in 30 days by Ian Sullivan

Push the FreedomBox Foundation from 0 to 60 in 30 days by Ian Sullivan

Constitution - OpenTunisia Au nom du peuple, Nous, Habib Bourguiba, Président de la République Tunisienne, Vu le décret du 29 décembre 1955 (14 djoumada I 1375) portant institution de l'Assemblée Nationale Constituante, Vu la décision de l'Assemblée Nationale Constituante du 25 juillet 1957 (26 doulhidja 1376), Et après l'approbation de l'Assemblée Nationale Constituante, Promulguons la Constitution de la République Tunisienne dont la teneur suit : Préambule Au nom de Dieu, Clément et miséricordieux, Nous, représentants du peuple tunisien, réunis en Assemblée nationale constituante. Chapitre Premier : Dispositions générales Article premier - La Tunisie est un Etat libre, indépendant et souverain ; sa religion est l'Islam, sa langue l'arabe et son régime la république.Article 2 - La République Tunisienne constitue une partie du Grand Maghreb Arabe, à l'unité duquel elle oeuvre dans le cadre de l'intérêt commun. Chapitre II : Le pouvoir législatif Chapitre III : Le pouvoir Exécutif Section II : Le Gouvernement

Eben Moglen, Keynote, Navigating at the Age of Democratized Media Conference : Eben Moglen Eben Moglen Live in NYC on Friday: Freedom in the Cloud by Joe Brockmeier - Feb. 03, 2010Comments (0) If you're fortunate enough to live near New York City, you can catch Eben Moglen at the NY Chapter of the Internet Society (ISOC-NY) on Friday, talking about "Freedom in the Cloud." Specifically, Moglen will be talking about the implications of "cloud computing" on software freedom, privacy, and security. Cloud computing does pose quite a few challenges for software freedom. In addition to software licensing, users have to worry about privacy, data portability, and more. Just having the source is no longer enough, when users do have the source. It's licensed under the AGPL v3. This isn't a new topic for the SFLC or Moglen. Sponsored by ISOC-NY, NYU ACM, and the Brooklyn Law Incubator & Clinic, the event is open to the public. Share Your Comments

Liberation by software | Eben Moglen Johannes Gutenberg (1400-68), inventor of printing, examines a page from his first printing press – the technology that enabled both the Reformation and the Englightenment. Photograph: Hulton/Getty For the last half-thousand years, ever since there has been a press, the press has had a tendency to marry itself to power, willingly or otherwise. The existence of the printing press in western Europe destroyed the unity of Christendom, in the intellectual, political and moral revolution we call the Reformation. But the European states learned as the primary lesson of the Reformation the necessity of censorship: power controlled the press almost everywhere for hundreds of years. In the few places where the European press was not so controlled, it fuelled the intellectual, political and moral revolution we call the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, which taught us to believe, as Thomas Jefferson said, "When the press is free and every man able to read, all is safe."

Related: