Free Software Foundation announces the winners of the annual award for contribution to the development of free software

The LibrePlanet 2022 conference, which was held online like in the past two years, hosted a virtual awards ceremony, which announced the winners of the annual Free Software Awards 2021, established by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) and awarded to people who have made the most significant contribution to the development of free software, as well as socially significant free projects. The commemorative plates and certificates presented at the ceremony were sent to the winners by mail (the FSF award does not imply a monetary reward).

The Free Software Advancement and Development Award went to Paul Eggert, who is responsible for maintaining the timezone database used by most Unix systems and all Linux distributions. The database reflects and accumulates information about all changes associated with time zones, including time zone shifts and changes in the transition to summer / winter time. In addition, Paul has also been involved in the development of many open source projects such as GCC for over 30 years.

Free Software Foundation announces the winners of the annual award for contribution to the development of free software

In the nomination given to projects that have brought significant benefits to society and contributed to the solution of important social problems, the award was given to the SecuRepairs project, which unites computer security specialists who defend the right of users to independently repair, examine the internals, maintain and make changes to the stuffing of their devices or software. products. In addition to the rights of the owners, the SecuRepairs project also advocates for the possibility of repair by independent professionals not affiliated with the manufacturer. The project is trying to counter the initiatives of hardware manufacturers aimed at making it harder for users to interfere with their devices. Getting the ability to make changes yourself is explained, for example, by the need to urgently fix vulnerabilities and privacy issues, without waiting for the manufacturer's response.

In the Outstanding New Contributor Contribution to Free Software category, which honors newcomers whose first contributions show a visible commitment to the free software movement, the award went to Protesilaos Stavrou, who excelled in the development of the Emacs editor. Protesilaus develops several useful additions to Emacs and actively contributes to the community with blog posts and live streams. Protesilaus is cited as an example where a beginner can reach the status of a key contributor to a large free project in just a few years.

Free Software Foundation announces the winners of the annual award for contribution to the development of free software

List of past winners:

  • 2020 Bradley M. Kuhn, Executive Director and founding member of the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC).
  • 2019 Jim Meyering, maintainer of the GNU Coreutils package since 1991, co-author of autotools and creator of Gnulib.
  • 2018 Deborah Nicholson, Director of Community Engagement, Software Freedom Conservancy;
  • 2017 Karen Sandler, Director, Software Freedom Conservancy;
  • 2016 Alexandre Oliva, Brazilian free software promoter and developer, founder of the Latin American Open Source Foundation, author of the Linux-Libre project (a completely free version of the Linux kernel);
  • 2015 Werner Koch, creator and main developer of the GnuPG toolkit (GNU Privacy Guard);
  • 2014 Sébastien Jodogne, author of Orthanc, a free DICOM server for accessing computed tomography data;
  • 2013 Matthew Garrett, one of the developers of the Linux kernel, who is on the technical board of the Linux Foundation, has made a significant contribution to ensuring that Linux boots on systems with UEFI Secure Boot;
  • 2012 Fernando Perez, author of IPython, an interactive shell for the Python language;
  • 2011 Yukihiro Matsumoto, author of the Ruby programming language. Yukihiro has been involved in the development of the GNU, Ruby and other open source projects for over 20 years;
  • 2010 Rob Savoye, Gnash free Flash player project leader, GCC, GDB, DejaGnu, Newlib, Libgloss, Cygwin, eCos, Expect, founder of Open Media Now;
  • 2009 John Gilmore, co-founder of the human rights organization Electronic Frontier Foundation, creator of the legendary Cypherpunks mailing list and the alt.* Usenet conference hierarchy. Founder of Cygnus Solutions, the first to provide commercial support for free software solutions. Founder of the free projects Cygwin, GNU Radio, Gnash, GNU tar, GNU UUCP and FreeS/WAN;
  • 2008 Wietse Venema (a well-known computer security expert, creator of such popular projects as Postfix, TCP Wrapper, SATAN and The Coroner's Toolkit);
  • 2007 Harald Welte (Architect of the OpenMoko mobile platform, one of the 5 core developers of netfilter/iptables, maintainer of the Linux kernel packet filtering subsystem, free software activist, creator of the website gpl-violations.org);
  • 2006 Theodore T'so (developer of Kerberos v5, ext2/ext3 filesystems, well-known Linux kernel hacker and member of the group that developed the IPSEC specification);
  • 2005 Andrew Tridgell (creator of samba and rsync projects);
  • 2004 Theo de Raadt (OpenBSD project leader);
  • 2003 Alan Cox (contribution to the development of the Linux kernel);
  • 2002 Lawrence Lessig (open source promoter);
  • 2001 Guido van Rossum (author of the Python language);
  • 2000 Brian Paul (developer of the Mesa 3D library);
  • 1999 Miguel de Icaza (leader of the GNOME project);
  • 1998 Larry Wall (creator of the Perl language).

The following organizations and communities received the award for the development of socially significant free projects: CiviCRM (2020), Let's Encrypt (2019), OpenStreetMap (2018), Public Lab (2017), SecureDrop (2016), Library Freedom Project (2015), Reglue (2014) , GNOME Outreach Program for Women (2013), OpenMRS (2012), GNU Health (2011), Tor Project (2010), Internet Archive (2009), Creative Commons (2008), Groklaw (2007), Sahana (2006), and Wikipedia (2005).

Source: opennet.ru

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