Libre Culture
What is libre culture?
Libre culture is all about empowering people. While the general philosophy stems greatly from the free software movement, libre culture is much broader and encompasses other aspects of culture such as music, movies, food, technology, etc.
Some beliefs include but aren't limited to:
- That copyright should expire after a certain period of time.
- That knowledge should be available to people, not locked away.
- That no entity should have unjust control or possession of others.
- That mass surveillance is about mass control, not justice.
- That we can all band together to help liberate each other.
Check out this link for more.
Rules
I've looked into the ways other forums handle rules, and I've distilled their policies down into two simple ideas.
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Please show common courtesy: Let's make this community one that people want to be a part of.
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Please keep posts generally on topic
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No NSFW content
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When sharing a Libre project, please include the name of its license in the title. For example: “Project name and summary (GPL-3.0)”
Libre culture is a very very broad topic, and while it's perfectly okay for a conversation to stray, I do ask that we keep things generally on topic.
Related Communities
- Libre Culture Memes
- Open Source
- ActivityPub
- Linux
- BSD
- Free (libre) Software Replacements
- Libre Software
- Libre Hardware
Helpful Resources
- The Respects Your Freedom Certification
- Libre GNU/Linux Distros
- Wikimedia Foundation
- The Internet Archive
- Guide to DRM-Free Living
- LibreGameWiki
- switching.software
- How to report violations of the GNU licenses
- Creative Commons Licenses
Community icon is from Wikimedia Commons and is public domain.
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So… is Android finally catching up to 13 year old Maemo in having unified contacts and messaging subsystem? (-:
It seems like a proprietary implementation that's trying to cash in on "exclusiveness" of iMessage and trying to hype it up in the process. Wouldn't trust it as far I can throw it.
I don't know, I've been on their Discord channel from the early stages and they seem pretty legit. Mind you I could be wrong, we all get taken into scams every now and then. I just got into their alpha testing so I will provide some feedback on how well it works. Honestly, it's fixing a problem that shouldn't be there. All of these walled garden messengers can't stand the test of time. We have to switch to something more federated like xmpp or something else. Even signal, while awesome, can't communicate with anything else. We need some good, secure, FOSS, instant messaging protocols.
Have you taken a look at SimpleX? I ditched Signal in favor of it - AND it's FOSS!
I have looked at it. It looks really cool! However, it does not have the user base of signal and does not have an easy unboarding for beginners. If I'm going to switch a person to an encrypted instant messenger I would do Signal. It is by far the simplest and the most widely used. The more widely it is used the easier it is to sell it to people. For the most secure I go with Session. But I do agree that SimpleX is on to something.
Yeah I find no mention of being Libre on their website. It looks like "just another" proprietary message app. The concept is interesting but if it's proprietary then it's just another garbage (and this nonsense about green and blue bubbles is ridiculous of course).
I say this as someone who could use a "unified messenger" like Pidgin in the old days. I currently use some set up with bitlbee+libpurple+quasselserver running on a personal server. It would be nice to eliminate all those middlemen and just have a libpurple based application that can run locally or on a server. I suspect if they're advertising support for all those protocols then they're probably using libpurple behind the scenes anyway.