No, You Won't See Me on Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, Google Plus, Google Hangouts, nor Skype

Bradley M. Kuhn's Blog ( bkuhn ) 2013-03-15

Summary:

Most folks outside of technology fields and the software freedom movement can't grok why I'm not on Facebook. Facebook's marketing has reached most of the USA's non-technical Internet users. On the upside, Facebook gave the masses access to something akin to blogging. But, as with most technology controlled by for-profit companies, Facebook is proprietary software. Facebook, as a software application, is written in a mix of server-side software that no one besides Facebook employees can study, modify and share. On the client-side, Facebook is an obfuscated, proprietary software Javascript application, which is distributed to the user's browser when they access facebook.com. Thus, in my view, using Facebook is no different than installing a proprietary binary program on my GNU/Linux desktop.

Most of the press critical of Facebook has focused on privacy, data mining of users' data on behalf of advertisers, and other types of data autonomy concerns. Such concerns remain incredibly important too. Nevertheless, since the advent of the software freedom community's concerns about network services a few years ago, I've maintained this simple principle, that I still find correct: While I can agree that merely liberating all software for an online application is not a sufficient condition to treat the online users well, the liberation of the software is certainly a necessary condition for the freedom of the users. Releasing freely all code for the online application the first step for freedom, autonomy, and privacy of the users. Therefore, I certainly don't give in myself to running proprietary software on my FaiF desktops. I simply refuse to use Facebook.

Meanwhile, when Google Plus was announced, I didn't see any fundamental difference from Facebook. Of course, there are differences on the subtle edges: for example, I do expect that Google will respect data portability more than Facebook. However, I expect data mining for advertisers' behalf will be roughly the same, although Google will likely be more subtle with advertising tie-in than Facebook, and thus users will not notice it as much.

But, since I'm firstly a software freedom activist, on the primary issue of my concern, there is absolutely no difference between Facebook and Google Plus. Google Plus' software is a mix of server-side trade-secret software that only Google employees can study, share, and modify, and a client-side proprietary Javascript application downloaded into the users' browsers when they access the website.

Yet, in a matter of just a few months, much of the online conversation in the software freedom community has moved to Google Plus, and I've heard very few people lament this situation. It's not that I believe we'll succeed against proprietary software tomorrow, and I understand fully that (unlike me) most people in the software freedom community have important reasons to interact regularly with those outside of our community. It's not that I chastise software freedom developers and activist for maintaining a minimal presence on these services to interact with those who aren't committed to our cause.

My actual complaint here is that Google Plus is becoming the default location for discussion of software freedom issues. I've noticed because I've recently discovered that I've missed a lot of community conversations that are only occurring on Google Plus. (I've similarly noticed that many of my Free Software contacts spam me to join Linkedin, so I assume something similar is occurring there as well.)

What's more, I've received more pressure than ever before to sign up for not only Google Plus, but for Twitter, Linkedin, Google Hangout, Skype and other socially-oriented online communication services. Indeed, just in the last ten days, I've had three different software freedom development projects and/or organizations request that I sign up for a proprietary online communication service merely to attend a meeting or conference call. (Update on 2013-02-16: I still get such requests on a monthly basis.) Of course, I refused, but I've not felt peer pressure this strong since I was a teenager.

Indeed, the advent of proprietary social networking software adds a new challenge to those of us who want to stand firm and resist proprietary software. As adoption of services like Facebook, Tw

Link:

http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2011/11/24/google-plus.html

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Authors:

bkuhn@ebb.org (Bradley M. Kuhn)

Date tagged:

03/15/2013, 12:17

Date published:

11/24/2011, 12:15