Legal and Policy Issues

Why the pandemic could help FOSS, but was a win for proprietary software

D.legal
Italo Vignoli
<p>During the pandemic we have experienced a sudden growth of remote activities, with people working and studying from home. Most proprietary solutions were not suited for the task, as they were not compliant with GDPR, as they were profiling users beyond the provided service, and in many cases could not guarantee that end user data were maintained within Europe acconrding to EU legislations. Unfortunately, EU governments ignored the situation and signed contracts with big techs for remote work and remote teaching, exposing the personal information of million of EU citizens - the majority of them being students - to unauthorized practices. OSS could be the answer, but was ignored because there wasn't enough time to deploy appropriate solutions. The talk tries to provide a different perspective.</p>

Additional information

Type devroom

More sessions

2/5/22
Legal and Policy Issues
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D.legal
<p>I have started to teach OSS licences and compliances at a Japanese university since last year. it was difficult to teach OSS licences and compliances because I should have shown many of use cases so that the students could learn what the licences and compliance are and more, they even didn't know how to deal with ordinal software licenses. So, I had to talk many of the background knowledges to the students as an 'introduction' so that students could understand the OSS licences with ...
2/5/22
Legal and Policy Issues
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Legal and Policy Issues
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D.legal
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Legal and Policy Issues
Lucas Lasota
D.legal
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2/5/22
Legal and Policy Issues
D.legal
<p>The organizers of the Legal and Policy DevRoom for FOSDEM 2022 discuss together the issues they've seen over the last year in FOSS, and consider what we can learn from the presentations on the track this year, and look forward together about the future of FOSS policy.</p>