by on January 26, 2026
My name is Tracy and I'm the Operations Manager here at Software Freedom Conservancy. Basically that means I support many different parts of the organization, from writing up contracts for project developers to banking reconciliation. I also manage our annual conference, FOSSY.
Below is a conversation I had with our Executive Director Karen Sandler about my story with free software. Part of which centers my work with Knox Makers, the Makerspace I'm a board member of. Software freedom is an issue that affects us all, and I hope to bring some light to both my own story and a wider view of how non-FOSS developers and users interact with free software in an everyday way.
Karen Sandler: How did you first encounter the idea of software freedom?
Tracy Homer: It was a slow discovery process. When I first started using Linux, it's primary draw was that it was free (as in beer). I didn't really know it had anything to do with free as in speech and copyleft licensing. Over time I've learned how important it is to be able to modify your own devices and see what goes on behind the screens in the services that hold our most personal information.
Karen: What was the first FOSS software you used?
Tracy: Inkscape, one of SFC's member projects! I use it for all kinds of design work -both for SFC and personally. If you've been to FOSSY or visited our booth at other conferences, chances are the print material was designed in Inkscape.
Karen: We know you are very involved with the makerspace, Knox Makers. How does Knox Makers use FOSS?
Tracy: Knox Makers is committed to open source software and hardware wherever possible. We feel it is an aspect of accessibility for our members, and allows them the ability to try out and learn deeply all kinds of different tools, without having to pay expensive licensing fees, or worry about their art being sucked up by AI, or needing to buy a certain OS to run it. We've modified some software to make it more community user friendly, and written our own plugins and tools for our member's use as well. Knox Makers is actually how I learned of SFC in the first place, as a few of my good friends there are sustainers.
Karen: What are some projects you've recently done personally?
Tracy: I just finished a year's long project, embroidering a globe. It doesn't sound like it fits with free sofware but it does! I created my own pattern in QGIS (open source geographic software) using depth of the ocean translated into different shades of blue. Then I exported each of the 20 spherical triangular pieces into Inkscape to add some registration lines and print out. It took so long that I feel kind of lost what to work on next.
Karen: How does software freedom enrich your daily life?
Tracy: The few proprietary systems I still have to use are intensely frustrating. I feel like it's a game of cat and mouse trying to figure out how to use a "new and better!" interface with no documentation and no way to revert changes feels very disheartening. Any searching for error messages just brings up a long thread of other users with the same issue and maybe a rote answer from the company, typically unhelpful. That maybe doesn't answer the question, because I went the other way with it. But so most of my life is using open software and hardware that it's really become a non issue. I have a problem with something; I fix it. I can switch to something different if I really don't like it - I can even change up my whole computer system if I find it doesn't suit my needs. I don't get ads and other popups thrown in my face every where I turn, and I know my data and art belongs to only me.
Karen: You've been at SFC for over 3 years! And, as Operations Manager, you take care of some of the least glamous work that we have. What do you enjoy about your job? (hopefully it's something!)
Tracy: Working here has been great - everyone at SFC is lovely and I think we make a great team. I really enjoy meeting other people in the FOSS world, so I like tabling at conferences. And seeing everyone at FOSSY too. Weirdly, I enjoy the accounting aspects, because it feels like a puzzle to put together. All the numbers have to fit somewhere and they all have to sum up perfectly in the end so tracking down the missing pieces is a fun challenge.
Karen: What do you hope to accomplish in software freedom, either personally or professionally in the coming months or years?
Tracy: I've only done the most minor contributions to projects, and someday I'd like to develop the skills to do more. I'd also like to focus on adding more to my city in OpenStreetMap - it's pretty sparse in places. I think with SFC I'd like to help focus on on advocacy and how software freedom benefits many different aspects of life, especially in the creative space.
Please email any comments on this entry to info@sfconservancy.org.