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FSF Free Software Awards

The Free Software Foundation (FSF) grants two annual awards. Since 1998, FSF has granted the award for Advancement of Free Software and since 2005, also the Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit.

Yukihiro Matsumoto accepting the 2011 Advancement of Free Software award from former FSF president Richard Stallman

Presentation ceremonies edit

In 1999 the award for Advancement of Free Software was presented at the Jacob Javits Center European Meeting (FOSDEM). Since 2006, the awards have been presented at the FSF's annual members meeting in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Advancement of Free Software award edit

The Advancement of Free Software award is annually presented by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) to a person whom it deems to have made a great contribution to the progress and development of free software, through activities that accord with the spirit of free software.[1]

Winners edit

Source: Award for the Advancement of Free Software

 
Larry Wall, 1998
 
Miguel de Icaza, 1999
 
Brian Paul, 2000
 
Guido van Rossum, 2001
 
Lawrence Lessig, 2002
 
Alan Cox, 2003
 
Theo de Raadt, 2004
 
Andrew Tridgell, 2005
 
Theodore Ts'o, 2006
 
Harald Welte, 2007
 
Wietse Venema, 2008
 
John Gilmore, 2009
 
Rob Savoye, 2010
 
Yukihiro Matsumoto, 2011
 
Fernando Pérez, 2012
 
Matthew Garrett, 2013
 
Sébastien Jodogne, 2014
 
Werner Koch, 2015
 
Alexandre Oliva, 2016
 
Karen Sandler, 2017
 
Deborah Nicholson, 2018
 
Jim Meyering, 2019
 
Bradley M. Kuhn, 2020
 
Paul Eggert, 2021
1998 Larry Wall
for numerous contributions to Free Software, notably Perl. The other finalists were the Apache Project, Tim Berners-Lee, Jordan Hubbard, Ted Lemon, Eric S. Raymond, and Henry Spencer.[2]
1999 Miguel de Icaza
for his leadership and work on the GNOME Project. The other finalists were Donald Knuth for TeX and METAFONT and John Gilmore for work done at Cygnus Solutions and his contributions to the Free Software Foundation.[3]
2000 Brian Paul
for his work on the Mesa 3D Graphics Library. The other finalists were Donald Becker for his work on Linux drivers and Patrick Lenz for the open source site Freshmeat.[4]
2001 Guido van Rossum
for Python. The other finalists were L. Peter Deutsch for GNU Ghostscript and Andrew Tridgell for Samba.[5]
2002 Lawrence Lessig
for promoting understanding of the political dimension of free software, including the idea that "code is law". The other finalists were Bruno Haible for CLISP and Theo de Raadt for OpenBSD.[6]
2003 Alan Cox
for his work advocating the importance of software freedom, his outspoken opposition to the US's DMCA as well as other technology control measures, and his development work on the Linux kernel. The other finalists were Theo de Raadt for OpenBSD and Werner Koch for GnuPG.[7]
2004 Theo de Raadt
for his campaigning against binary blobs, and the opening of drivers, documentation and firmware of wireless networking cards for the good of everyone. The other finalists were Andrew Tridgell for Samba and Cesar Brod for advocacy in Brazil.[8]
2005 Andrew Tridgell
for his work on Samba and his BitKeeper client which led to the withdrawal of gratis BitKeeper licenses, spurring the development of git, a free software distributed revision control system for the Linux kernel. The other finalists were Hartmut Pilch founder of the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure for his combatting of the Software Patent Directive in Europe and Theodore Ts'o for his Linux kernel filesystem development.[9]
2006 Theodore Ts'o
for his work on the Linux kernel and his roles as a project leader in the development of Kerberos and ONC RPC. The other finalists were Wietse Venema for his creation of the Postfix mailserver and his work on security tools, and Yukihiro Matsumoto for his work in designing the Ruby programming language.[10]
2007 Harald Welte
for his work on GPL enforcement (Gpl-violations.org) and Openmoko[11]
2008 Wietse Venema
For his "significant and wide-ranging technical contributions to network security, and his creation of the Postfix email server."[12]
2009 John Gilmore
For his "many contributions and long term commitment to the free software movement."[13]
2010 Rob Savoye
For his work on Gnash
Additionally, a special mention was made to honor the memory and contribution of Adrian Hands, who used a morse input device to code and successfully submit a GNOME patch, three days before he died from ALS.[14]
2011 Yukihiro Matsumoto
the creator of Ruby, for his work on GNU, Ruby, and other free software for over 20 years.[15]
2012 Fernando Pérez
for his work on IPython, and his role in the scientific Python community.[16][17]
2013 Matthew Garrett
for his work to support software freedom in relation to Secure Boot, UEFI, and the Linux kernel[18]
2014 Sébastien Jodogne
for his work on easing the exchange of medical images and developing Orthanc.[19]
2015 Werner Koch
the founder and driving force behind GnuPG. GnuPG is the de facto tool for encrypted communication. Society needs more than ever to advance free encryption technology.[20]
2016 Alexandre Oliva
for his work in promoting Free Software and the involvement in projects like the maintenance of linux-libre and the reverse engineer of the proprietary software used by Brazilian citizens to submit their taxes to the government.[21]
2017 Karen Sandler
for her dedication to Free Software as the former Executive Director of GNOME Foundation, current Executive Director of Software Freedom Conservancy, co-organizer of Outreachy, and through years of pro bono legal advice.[22]
2018 Deborah Nicholson
Deborah was the director of community operations at the Software Freedom Conservancy, Stallman praised her body of work and her unremitting and widespread contributions to the free software community. "Deborah continuously reaches out to, and engages, new audiences with her message on the need for free software in any version of the future. "[23]
2019 Jim Meyering
a prolific free software programmer, maintainer and writer, having contributed significantly to the GNU Core Utilities, GNU Autotools and Gnulib.[24]
2020 Bradley M. Kuhn
for his work in enforcing the GNU General Public License (GPL) and promoting copyleft through his position at Software Freedom Conservancy.[25]
2021 Paul Eggert
a computer scientist who teaches in the Department of Computer Science at the University of California, Los Angeles, contributor to the GNU operating system for over thirty years and current maintainer of the Time Zone Database. [26]
2022 Eli Zaretskii
Contributor and co-maintainer of GNU Emacs, for over thirty years and overseeing more than two hundred active contributors.[27][28]
2023 Bruno Haible[29]

Social benefit award edit

Source: The Award for Projects of Social Benefit

 
2009 Award for Projects of Social Benefit awarded to The Internet Archive.

The Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit is an annual award granted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). In announcing the award, the FSF explained that:

This award is presented to the project or team responsible for applying free software, or the ideas of the free software movement, in a project that intentionally and significantly benefits society in other aspects of life.[30]

According to Richard Stallman, former President of FSF, the award was inspired by the Sahana project which was developed, and was used, for organising the transfer of aid to tsunami victims in Sri Lanka after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. The developers indicated that they hope to adapt it to aid in other future disasters.[31]

This is the second annual award created by the FSF. The first was the Award for the Advancement of Free Software (AAFS).

Winners edit

The award was first awarded in 2005, and the recipients have been:[32]

2005 Wikipedia
The Free Encyclopedia
2006 The Sahana FOSS Disaster Management System
"An entirely volunteer effort to create technology for managing large-scale relief efforts"[33]
2007 Groklaw
"An invaluable source of legal and technical information for software developers, lawyers, law professors, and historians"[34]
2008 Creative Commons
"[For] foster[ing] a growing body of creative, educational and scientific works that can be shared and built upon by others [and] work[ing] to raise awareness of the harm inflicted by increasingly restrictive copyright regimes."[12]
2009 Internet Archive
For collecting freely available information, archiving the web, collaborating with libraries, and creating free software to make information available to the public.[13]
2010 Tor
For writing software to help privacy online.[35]
2011 GNU Health
For their work with health professionals around the world to improve the lives of the underprivileged.
2012 OpenMRS
"A free software medical record system for developing countries. OpenMRS is now in use around the world, including South Africa, Kenya, Rwanda, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania, Haiti, India, China, United States, Pakistan, the Philippines, and many other places."[16][17]
2013 GNOME Foundation's Outreach Program for Women
OPW's work benefits society, "addressing gender discrimination by empowering women to develop leadership and development skills in a society which runs on technology".[18]
2014 Reglue
which donates refurbished Linux computers to underprivileged children in Austin, TX.[19]
2015 Library Freedom Project
a partnership among librarians, technologists, attorneys, and privacy advocates which aims to make real the promise of intellectual freedom in libraries. By teaching librarians about surveillance threats, privacy rights and responsibilities, and digital tools to stop surveillance, the project hopes to create a privacy-centric paradigm shift in libraries and the local communities they serve.[20]
2016 SecureDrop
an open-source software platform for secure communication between journalists and sources (whistleblowers)[21]
2017 Public Lab
a non-profit organization that facilitates collaborative, open source environmental research in a model known as Community Science[22]
2018 OpenStreetMap
a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Founded by Steve Coast in the UK in 2004, OpenStreetMap is built by a community of over one million community members and has found its application on thousands of Web sites, mobile apps, and hardware devices. OpenStreetMap is the only truly global service without restrictions on use or availability of map information.[23]
2019 Let's Encrypt
a Certificate Authority (CA) that provides an easy way to obtain and install free TLS/SSL certificates.
2020 CiviCRM
free program that nonprofit organizations around the world use to manage their mailings and contact databases[25]
2021 SecuRepairs
an association of information security experts who support the right to repair[26]
2022 GNU Jami
Free software tool for decentralized, secure, encrypted videoconferencing.[27][28]
2023 code.gouv.fr
French Free Software Unit of the French government[29]

Award for outstanding new Free Software contributor edit

The third annual award created by the FSF, the award is presented to an exceptional newcomer to the free software community.[36]

Winners edit

The award was first awarded for 2019 at LibrePlanet 2020, and the recipients have been:

2019 Clarissa Lima Borges
Outreachy internship work focused on usability testing for various GNOME applications.
2020 Alyssa Rosenzweig
Leads the Panfrost project, a project to reverse engineer and implement a free driver for the Mali series of graphics processing units (GPUs) used on a wide variety of single-board computers and mobile phones.
2021 Protesilaos Stavrou
A philosopher who since 2019 has become a mainstay of the GNU Emacs community through his blog posts, conference talks, livestreams, and code contributions.[26]
2022 Tad (SkewedZepplin)
Lead developer of DivestOS, which aims to remove proprietary binaries, and supports free software, security, privacy, and extending usefulness of older devices. Also a contributor to Replicant.[27][28]
2023 Nick Logozzo
lead developer of Parabolic (not to be confused with Parabola GNU/Linux)[29]

Award Committee edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mulligan, Rob Marvin and Christina (October 20, 2014). "SD Times news digest: October 20, 2014—Microsoft's fitness smartwatch, IBM plummets and FSF Award nominations".
  2. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  3. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  4. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  5. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  6. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  7. ^ . gnu.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  8. ^ . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  9. ^ . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 17 March 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  10. ^ . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  11. ^ . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 18 March 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  12. ^ a b . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 22 June 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  13. ^ a b . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 10 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  14. ^ John Sullivan. . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 1 May 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  15. ^ . fsf.org. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  16. ^ a b "2012 Free Software Award winners announced — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software". www.fsf.org.
  17. ^ a b online, heise. "Free Software Awards für IPython und OpenMRS". heise online.
  18. ^ a b Free Software Foundation (2014-03-21). "Matthew Garrett, GNOME Foundation's Outreach Program for Women are Free Software Award winners". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  19. ^ a b Sébastien Jodogne, ReGlue are Free Software Award (2014) winners FSF
  20. ^ a b Library Freedom Project and Werner Koch are 2015 Free Software Awards winners FSF
  21. ^ a b SecureDrop and Alexandre Oliva are 2016 Free Software Awards winners FSF
  22. ^ a b Public Lab and Karen Sandler are 2017 Free Software Awards winners FSF
  23. ^ a b OpenStreetMap and Deborah Nicholson win 2018 FSF Awards FSF
  24. ^ Let's Encrypt, Jim Meyering, and Clarissa Lima Borges receive FSF's 2019 Free Software Awards FSF
  25. ^ a b "Free Software Awards winners announced: CiviCRM, Bradley Kuhn, and Alyssa Rosenzweig — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software". www.fsf.org. Retrieved 2021-03-22.
  26. ^ a b c Free Software Awards winners announced: SecuRepairs, Protesilaos Stavrou, Paul Eggert , FSF
  27. ^ a b c Dee, Katie (2023-03-20). "The recipients of the 2022 Free Software Awards have been announced". SD Times. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  28. ^ a b c "Free Software Supporter April [LWN.net]". lwn.net. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  29. ^ a b c Farough, Greg (2024-05-05). "Free Software Awards winners announced: Bruno Haible, code.gouv.fr, Nick Logozzo". FSF. Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  30. ^ "Announcement of award at FSF website". Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  31. ^ Richard Stallman. "FSF blog entry". Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  32. ^ "Awards of projects of social benefit at FSF website". Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  33. ^ "Sahana wins FSF Award". April 3, 2007.
  34. ^ "Groklaw - Harald Welte and Groklaw win FSF's 2007 Free Software Awards". www.groklaw.net.
  35. ^ "Guns, drugs and freedom: the great dark net debate". www.telegraph.co.uk.
  36. ^ "Award for Outstanding New Free Software Contributor — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software". www.fsf.org. Retrieved 2021-03-22.

External links edit

  • Official Advancement of Free Software Award site
  • Official Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit site

free, software, awards, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, m. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources FSF Free Software Awards news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message The Free Software Foundation FSF grants two annual awards Since 1998 FSF has granted the award for Advancement of Free Software and since 2005 also the Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit Yukihiro Matsumoto accepting the 2011 Advancement of Free Software award from former FSF president Richard Stallman Contents 1 Presentation ceremonies 2 Advancement of Free Software award 2 1 Winners 3 Social benefit award 3 1 Winners 4 Award for outstanding new Free Software contributor 4 1 Winners 5 Award Committee 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPresentation ceremonies editIn 1999 the award for Advancement of Free Software was presented at the Jacob Javits Center European Meeting FOSDEM Since 2006 the awards have been presented at the FSF s annual members meeting in Cambridge Massachusetts Advancement of Free Software award editThe Advancement of Free Software award is annually presented by the Free Software Foundation FSF to a person whom it deems to have made a great contribution to the progress and development of free software through activities that accord with the spirit of free software 1 Winners edit Source Award for the Advancement of Free Software nbsp Larry Wall 1998 nbsp Miguel de Icaza 1999 nbsp Brian Paul 2000 nbsp Guido van Rossum 2001 nbsp Lawrence Lessig 2002 nbsp Alan Cox 2003 nbsp Theo de Raadt 2004 nbsp Andrew Tridgell 2005 nbsp Theodore Ts o 2006 nbsp Harald Welte 2007 nbsp Wietse Venema 2008 nbsp John Gilmore 2009 nbsp Rob Savoye 2010 nbsp Yukihiro Matsumoto 2011 nbsp Fernando Perez 2012 nbsp Matthew Garrett 2013 nbsp Sebastien Jodogne 2014 nbsp Werner Koch 2015 nbsp Alexandre Oliva 2016 nbsp Karen Sandler 2017 nbsp Deborah Nicholson 2018 nbsp Jim Meyering 2019 nbsp Bradley M Kuhn 2020 nbsp Paul Eggert 2021 1998 Larry Wall for numerous contributions to Free Software notably Perl The other finalists were the Apache Project Tim Berners Lee Jordan Hubbard Ted Lemon Eric S Raymond and Henry Spencer 2 1999 Miguel de Icaza for his leadership and work on the GNOME Project The other finalists were Donald Knuth for TeX and METAFONT and John Gilmore for work done at Cygnus Solutions and his contributions to the Free Software Foundation 3 2000 Brian Paul for his work on the Mesa 3D Graphics Library The other finalists were Donald Becker for his work on Linux drivers and Patrick Lenz for the open source site Freshmeat 4 2001 Guido van Rossum for Python The other finalists were L Peter Deutsch for GNU Ghostscript and Andrew Tridgell for Samba 5 2002 Lawrence Lessig for promoting understanding of the political dimension of free software including the idea that code is law The other finalists were Bruno Haible for CLISP and Theo de Raadt for OpenBSD 6 2003 Alan Cox for his work advocating the importance of software freedom his outspoken opposition to the US s DMCA as well as other technology control measures and his development work on the Linux kernel The other finalists were Theo de Raadt for OpenBSD and Werner Koch for GnuPG 7 2004 Theo de Raadt for his campaigning against binary blobs and the opening of drivers documentation and firmware of wireless networking cards for the good of everyone The other finalists were Andrew Tridgell for Samba and Cesar Brod for advocacy in Brazil 8 2005 Andrew Tridgell for his work on Samba and his BitKeeper client which led to the withdrawal of gratis BitKeeper licenses spurring the development of git a free software distributed revision control system for the Linux kernel The other finalists were Hartmut Pilch founder of the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure for his combatting of the Software Patent Directive in Europe and Theodore Ts o for his Linux kernel filesystem development 9 2006 Theodore Ts o for his work on the Linux kernel and his roles as a project leader in the development of Kerberos and ONC RPC The other finalists were Wietse Venema for his creation of the Postfix mailserver and his work on security tools and Yukihiro Matsumoto for his work in designing the Ruby programming language 10 2007 Harald Welte for his work on GPL enforcement Gpl violations org and Openmoko 11 2008 Wietse Venema For his significant and wide ranging technical contributions to network security and his creation of the Postfix email server 12 2009 John Gilmore For his many contributions and long term commitment to the free software movement 13 2010 Rob Savoye For his work on GnashAdditionally a special mention was made to honor the memory and contribution of Adrian Hands who used a morse input device to code and successfully submit a GNOME patch three days before he died from ALS 14 dd 2011 Yukihiro Matsumoto the creator of Ruby for his work on GNU Ruby and other free software for over 20 years 15 2012 Fernando Perez for his work on IPython and his role in the scientific Python community 16 17 2013 Matthew Garrett for his work to support software freedom in relation to Secure Boot UEFI and the Linux kernel 18 2014 Sebastien Jodogne for his work on easing the exchange of medical images and developing Orthanc 19 2015 Werner Koch the founder and driving force behind GnuPG GnuPG is the de facto tool for encrypted communication Society needs more than ever to advance free encryption technology 20 2016 Alexandre Oliva for his work in promoting Free Software and the involvement in projects like the maintenance of linux libre and the reverse engineer of the proprietary software used by Brazilian citizens to submit their taxes to the government 21 2017 Karen Sandler for her dedication to Free Software as the former Executive Director of GNOME Foundation current Executive Director of Software Freedom Conservancy co organizer of Outreachy and through years of pro bono legal advice 22 2018 Deborah Nicholson Deborah was the director of community operations at the Software Freedom Conservancy Stallman praised her body of work and her unremitting and widespread contributions to the free software community Deborah continuously reaches out to and engages new audiences with her message on the need for free software in any version of the future 23 2019 Jim Meyering a prolific free software programmer maintainer and writer having contributed significantly to the GNU Core Utilities GNU Autotools and Gnulib 24 2020 Bradley M Kuhn for his work in enforcing the GNU General Public License GPL and promoting copyleft through his position at Software Freedom Conservancy 25 2021 Paul Eggert a computer scientist who teaches in the Department of Computer Science at the University of California Los Angeles contributor to the GNU operating system for over thirty years and current maintainer of the Time Zone Database 26 2022 Eli Zaretskii Contributor and co maintainer of GNU Emacs for over thirty years and overseeing more than two hundred active contributors 27 28 2023 Bruno Haible 29 Social benefit award editSource The Award for Projects of Social Benefit nbsp 2009 Award for Projects of Social Benefit awarded to The Internet Archive The Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit is an annual award granted by the Free Software Foundation FSF In announcing the award the FSF explained that This award is presented to the project or team responsible for applying free software or the ideas of the free software movement in a project that intentionally and significantly benefits society in other aspects of life 30 According to Richard Stallman former President of FSF the award was inspired by the Sahana project which was developed and was used for organising the transfer of aid to tsunami victims in Sri Lanka after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake The developers indicated that they hope to adapt it to aid in other future disasters 31 This is the second annual award created by the FSF The first was the Award for the Advancement of Free Software AAFS Winners edit The award was first awarded in 2005 and the recipients have been 32 2005 Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia 2006 The Sahana FOSS Disaster Management System An entirely volunteer effort to create technology for managing large scale relief efforts 33 2007 Groklaw An invaluable source of legal and technical information for software developers lawyers law professors and historians 34 2008 Creative Commons For foster ing a growing body of creative educational and scientific works that can be shared and built upon by others and work ing to raise awareness of the harm inflicted by increasingly restrictive copyright regimes 12 2009 Internet Archive For collecting freely available information archiving the web collaborating with libraries and creating free software to make information available to the public 13 2010 Tor For writing software to help privacy online 35 2011 GNU Health For their work with health professionals around the world to improve the lives of the underprivileged 2012 OpenMRS A free software medical record system for developing countries OpenMRS is now in use around the world including South Africa Kenya Rwanda Lesotho Zimbabwe Mozambique Uganda Tanzania Haiti India China United States Pakistan the Philippines and many other places 16 17 2013 GNOME Foundation s Outreach Program for Women OPW s work benefits society addressing gender discrimination by empowering women to develop leadership and development skills in a society which runs on technology 18 2014 Reglue which donates refurbished Linux computers to underprivileged children in Austin TX 19 2015 Library Freedom Project a partnership among librarians technologists attorneys and privacy advocates which aims to make real the promise of intellectual freedom in libraries By teaching librarians about surveillance threats privacy rights and responsibilities and digital tools to stop surveillance the project hopes to create a privacy centric paradigm shift in libraries and the local communities they serve 20 2016 SecureDrop an open source software platform for secure communication between journalists and sources whistleblowers 21 2017 Public Lab a non profit organization that facilitates collaborative open source environmental research in a model known as Community Science 22 2018 OpenStreetMap a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world Founded by Steve Coast in the UK in 2004 OpenStreetMap is built by a community of over one million community members and has found its application on thousands of Web sites mobile apps and hardware devices OpenStreetMap is the only truly global service without restrictions on use or availability of map information 23 2019 Let s Encrypt a Certificate Authority CA that provides an easy way to obtain and install free TLS SSL certificates 2020 CiviCRM free program that nonprofit organizations around the world use to manage their mailings and contact databases 25 2021 SecuRepairs an association of information security experts who support the right to repair 26 2022 GNU Jami Free software tool for decentralized secure encrypted videoconferencing 27 28 2023 code gouv fr French Free Software Unit of the French government 29 Award for outstanding new Free Software contributor editThe third annual award created by the FSF the award is presented to an exceptional newcomer to the free software community 36 Winners edit The award was first awarded for 2019 at LibrePlanet 2020 and the recipients have been 2019 Clarissa Lima Borges Outreachy internship work focused on usability testing for various GNOME applications 2020 Alyssa Rosenzweig Leads the Panfrost project a project to reverse engineer and implement a free driver for the Mali series of graphics processing units GPUs used on a wide variety of single board computers and mobile phones 2021 Protesilaos Stavrou A philosopher who since 2019 has become a mainstay of the GNU Emacs community through his blog posts conference talks livestreams and code contributions 26 2022 Tad SkewedZepplin Lead developer of DivestOS which aims to remove proprietary binaries and supports free software security privacy and extending usefulness of older devices Also a contributor to Replicant 27 28 2023 Nick Logozzo lead developer of Parabolic not to be confused with Parabola GNU Linux 29 Award Committee editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2023 1998 Peter H Salus Scott Christley Rich Morin Adam Richter Richard Stallman and Vernor Vinge 1999 Peter H Salus no further details found 2000 no details found 2001 The selection committee included Miguel de Icaza Ian Murdock Eric S Raymond Peter H Salus Vernor Vinge and Larry Wall 2002 The selection committee included Enrique A Chaparro Frederic Couchet Hong Feng Miguel de Icaza Raj Mathur Frederick Noronha Jonas Oberg Eric S Raymond Guido van Rossum Peter H Salus Suresh Ramasubramanian and Larry Wall 2003 The selection committee included Enrique A Chaparro Frederic Couchet Miguel de Icaza Raj Mathur Frederick Noronha Jonas Oberg Bruce Perens Peter H Salus Suresh Ramasubramanian Richard Stallman and Vernor Vinge 2004 Suresh Ramasubramanian Raj Mathur Frederick Noronha Hong Feng Frederic Couchet Enrique A Chaparro Vernor Vinge Larry Wall Alan Cox Peter H Salus Richard Stallman 2005 Peter H Salus chair Richard Stallman Alan Cox Lawrence Lessig Guido van Rossum Frederic Couchet Jonas Oberg Hong Feng Bruce Perens Raj Mathur Suresh Ramasubramanian Enrique A Chaparro Ian Murdock 2006 Peter H Salus chair Richard Stallman Andrew Tridgell Alan Cox Lawrence Lessig Vernor Vinge Frederic Couchet Jonas Oberg Hong Feng Raj Mathur Suresh Ramasubramanian 2008 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Peter H Salus Raj Mathur Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman and Fernanda G Weiden 2009 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Peter H Salus Lawrence Lessig Raj Mathur Wietse Venema Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman Fernanda G Weiden and Harald Welte 2010 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Peter H Salus Raj Mathur Wietse Venema Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman Fernanda G Weiden and Harald Welte 2011 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Peter H Salus Raj Mathur Wietse Venema Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman Fernanda G Weiden and Harald Welte 2012 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Peter H Salus Raj Mathur Wietse Venema Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman Fernanda G Weiden and Harald Welte 2013 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Wietse Venema Hong Feng Andrew Tridgell Jonas Oberg Vernor Vinge Richard Stallman Fernanda G Weiden Rob Savoye and Harald Welte 2014 Suresh Ramasubramanian Chair Marina Zhurakhinskaya Matthew Garrett Rob Savoye Wietse Venema Richard Stallman Vernor Vinge Hong Feng Fernanda G Weiden Harald Welte Jonas Oberg and Yukihiro Matsumoto See also edit nbsp Free and open source software portal List of computer related awardsReferences edit Mulligan Rob Marvin and Christina October 20 2014 SD Times news digest October 20 2014 Microsoft s fitness smartwatch IBM plummets and FSF Award nominations Free Software Award Finalists 1998 gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 1999 Free Software Awards gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2000 Free Software Awards gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2001 Free Software Awards gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2002 Free Software Awards gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2003 Free Software Awards gnu org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 Theo de Raadt presented with the 2004 Free Software Award fsf org Archived from the original on 12 June 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2005 Free Software Award Winner Announced fsf org Archived from the original on 17 March 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 Ted Ts o wins the 2006 Award for the Advancement of Free Software fsf org Archived from the original on 11 May 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 Harald Welte and Groklaw announced as winners of the FSF s 2007 annual free software awards fsf org Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 a b Wietse Venema and Creative Commons announced as winners of the 2008 free software awards fsf org Archived from the original on 22 June 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 a b 2009 Free Software Awards Announced fsf org Archived from the original on 10 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 John Sullivan 2010 Free Software Awards announced fsf org Archived from the original on 1 May 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 2011 Free Software Awards announced fsf org Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2015 a b 2012 Free Software Award winners announced Free Software Foundation Working together for free software www fsf org a b online heise Free Software Awards fur IPython und OpenMRS heise online a b Free Software Foundation 2014 03 21 Matthew Garrett GNOME Foundation s Outreach Program for Women are Free Software Award winners Free Software Foundation Retrieved 2014 03 23 a b Sebastien Jodogne ReGlue are Free Software Award 2014 winners FSF a b Library Freedom Project and Werner Koch are 2015 Free Software Awards winners FSF a b SecureDrop and Alexandre Oliva are 2016 Free Software Awards winners FSF a b Public Lab and Karen Sandler are 2017 Free Software Awards winners FSF a b OpenStreetMap and Deborah Nicholson win 2018 FSF Awards FSF Let s Encrypt Jim Meyering and Clarissa Lima Borges receive FSF s 2019 Free Software Awards FSF a b Free Software Awards winners announced CiviCRM Bradley Kuhn and Alyssa Rosenzweig Free Software Foundation Working together for free software www fsf org Retrieved 2021 03 22 a b c Free Software Awards winners announced SecuRepairs Protesilaos Stavrou Paul Eggert FSF a b c Dee Katie 2023 03 20 The recipients of the 2022 Free Software Awards have been announced SD Times Retrieved 2023 06 07 a b c Free Software Supporter April LWN net lwn net Retrieved 2023 06 07 a b c Farough Greg 2024 05 05 Free Software Awards winners announced Bruno Haible code gouv fr Nick Logozzo FSF Retrieved 2024 05 06 Announcement of award at FSF website Retrieved 1 May 2007 Richard Stallman FSF blog entry Retrieved 1 May 2007 Awards of projects of social benefit at FSF website Retrieved 1 May 2007 Sahana wins FSF Award April 3 2007 Groklaw Harald Welte and Groklaw win FSF s 2007 Free Software Awards www groklaw net Guns drugs and freedom the great dark net debate www telegraph co uk Award for Outstanding New Free Software Contributor Free Software Foundation Working together for free software www fsf org Retrieved 2021 03 22 External links editOfficial Advancement of Free Software Award site Official Free Software Award for Projects of Social Benefit site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FSF Free Software Awards amp oldid 1222528318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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