Kuleana and software freedom for the future
by
on December 23, 2024Pono and Meredith in Hawai'i - CC-BY-NA 4.0 Pono Takamori
During the holiday season I really want to share with you some thoughts on why software freedom is so important to me. Please donate during our fundraiser (and have you donation doubled from our matchers!). Also please see the note at the bottom about 2 Q&A sessions we’ll be having on December 27th and 30th!
My name is Pono, a name my native Hawaiian grandmother gave me. In Hawaiian we have a word: kuleana. A duty to take care of the land and the people around you given your own gifts and abilities. It’s been an important concept to me to guide me and share my passions and desires for a better world with the community around me. I came to Software Freedom Conservancy first as a Sustainer and activist, and then years later an employee. Software Freedom is an interesting area to think about place, because the digital world sometimes feels like an astral plane, so distant from our everyday lives. But the reality is that we can inhabit the physical world and digital world at the same time. Whether it’s liberating farming equipment so that we can repair the software on tools vital for food production or making sure that the internet connected devices in our homes are not spying on us, our stewardship for the Earth and for the digital spaces we occupy are not distinct but intertwined.
My wife and I are expecting our first child soon. We’re so excited for the future and how the three of us will grow and experience the world together. And while software freedom certainly wasn’t the first thing on our minds in this situation, we’ve already encountered baby gear that is internet connected and has moved to subscription model for existing features (this article from The Register talks about it as well as the letter we signed to the FTC advocating against such technology). It’s frustrating the many ways that our technology is dictated to us, when it is from our own labor that all this technology is created in the first place [footnote]. What does software freedom look like to someone growing up in a world filled with proprietary cloud based software, an increasing surveillance state, and corporations seeking to lock you in the their walled gardens?
Working for Software Freedom Conservancy has been amazing to work with community to build our collective future. We focus on protecting technological rights that corporations continually belittle and seek to undermine. Working with such an incredibly passionate and small team is something that makes advocating for software freedom feel good. Our activism, while sometimes driven to fight back against unchecked power, has it’s roots in the joy and liberation of programming and cooperation of our digital activities. It’s a long road ahead, but we must remember that there is joy to be had along the way.
I’m sure by wishing my daughter has an interest in computers, she will wind up finding her joy somewhere else. But isn’t that what we want? Regardless of technical proficiency or interest, we want to guarantee rights for all people. My kuleana is knowing that I’ve been given abilities and an interest in computing; I have a responsibility to others to make sure they are afforded the same rights and privileges I’ve attained.
I’m so thankful for the opportunity to share my story and why I think software freedom is a necessary (if not sufficient) condition for human liberation. It's my humble ask to support our organization you spread the word and tell a friend or family member about what we do. But if you are able to give this season, your contribution will be doubled during our fundraiser :)
While the annual sustainership level is $128/year, you can make monthly donations and get all the benefits of sustaining SFC for lightly less (at just $10/month)!
We’d also like to invite you to a Q&A with our Executive Director Karen Sandler and Policy Fellow Bradley M. Kuhn on the evening of December 27th and morning of December 30th. Use the commands below to find your local time.
$ date -d "2024-12-27 14:00 UTC"
$ date -d "2024-12-31 02:00 UTC"
Join us in #conservancy on libera.chat or our XMPP channel at those times for the BigBlueButton link. Can’t wait to see you!
Maholo nui loa,
— Daniel Sean Pono Takamori
footnote: The Luddites get a bad rap, but they were the skilled laborers who fought against technology replacing them in a way that's very reminiscent to our own movement. I highly recommend Brian Merchant's book "Blood in the Machine: The Origins of the Rebellion Against Big Tech"
Please email any comments on this entry to info@sfconservancy.org.