Everything about Bruce Perens totally explained
Bruce Perens is a
computer programmer and advocate in the
open source community. He created the
Open Source Definition and published the first formal announcement and manifesto of
open source. He co-founded the
Open Source Initiative with
Eric S. Raymond.
In 2005, Perens represented Open Source at the
United Nations World Summit on the Information Society, at the invitation of the
United Nations Development Program. He has appeared before national legislatures and is often quoted in the press, advocating for open source and the reform of national and international technology policy.
Viewpoint
Perens poses Open Source as a means of marketing the
free software philosophy of
Richard Stallman to business people who are more concerned with profit than freedom, and claims that open source and free software are only two ways of talking about the same phenomenon. This differs from Stallman and Raymond. Perens postulates an economic theory for business use of Open Source in his paper
The Emerging Economic Paradigm of Open Source and his speech
Innovation Goes Public. This differs from Raymond's theory in
The Cathedral and the Bazaar, which having been written before there was much business involvement in open source, explains open source as a consequence of programmer motivation and leisure.
Organizations
Perens is a former
Debian Project Leader, a founder of
Software in the Public Interest, founder and first project leader of the
Linux Standard Base project, the initial author of
BusyBox, and founder of the
UserLinux project. Perens also has a book series with Prentice Hall PTR called the
Bruce Perens' Open Source Series. He is an avid
amateur radio enthusiast (
callsign K6BP) and maintains technocrat.net, which he styles 'a more mature forum than
Slashdot'. He is also the founder of No Code International which is an organization whose primary purpose was to eliminate
morse code proficiency as a requirement to obtain an
amateur radio license. This goal has been reached with the removal of code requirements from international law (International Telecommunications Union treaty provision S25.5), the new "code-free" rules introduced on
2007-02-23, and similar legal changes in almost all nations worldwide.
Perens left OSI a year after co-founding it, with reasons explained in an email titled "
It's Time to Talk About Free Software Again
". In February 2008, for the 10th anniversary of the Open Source, Perens has published an interesting message to the community called
State of Open Source Message: A New Decade For Open Source
. For the same event, the 10th anniversary of Open Source, the ezine RegDeveloper has published
an interesting interview with Bruce Perens
where he revives an updated view on the past and the future, and the dangers of the Open Source, especially the useless proliferation of OSI approved licenses and the strength of the GPL 3. In addition, the interview covers Linus' refusal to adopt the GPLv3 for the Linux kernel. In this
Linux.com interview
, Perens discusses how he became involved in Open Source, and what keeps him involved today.
He was an employee of
SourceLabs from June 2005 until December 2007. He is currently CEO of
Kiloboot.
Creation of the Open Source Definition
The Open Source Definition was first created by Perens as the
Debian Free Software Guidelines, itself part of the
Debian Social Contract. Perens proposed a draft of the Debian Social Contract to the Debian developers on the debian-private mailing list early in June, 1997. Debian developers contributed discussion and changes for the rest of the month while Perens edited, and the completed document was then announced as Debian project policy. On February 3, 1998, a group of people met at VA Linux Systems (without Perens) to discuss the promotion of Free Software to business from pragmatic terms, rather than the moral terms preferred by Richard Stallman. Christine Petersen of the nanotechnology organization
Foresight Institute was present because Foresight took an early interest in Free Software, and Petersen suggested the term "Open Source". The next day, Eric Raymond recruited Perens to work with him on the formation of Open Source. Perens modified his Debian document into the Open Source Definition by removing Debian references and replacing them with "Open Source".
The original announcement of the
Open Source Definition was made on February 9, 1998 on
Slashdot and elsewhere, though the Slashdot link to the definition is broken. The earliest known text of the definition is from
Linux Gazette. He is featured in two documentaries on Open Source:
Revolution OS and
The Code-Breakers. He produced a video commercial
Impending Security Breach for Sourcelabs in 2007.
Academia
Perens is finishing a three-year grant from the Competence Fund of Southern Norway. With this funding, he spent part of the summer as a visiting lecturer and researcher at
University of Agder in 2006 and 2007, and does other work remotely. During this time he consulted the Norwegian Government and other entities on government policy issues related to computers and software. He previously worked remotely as Senior Scientist for Open Source with the
Cyber Security Policy Research Institute of
George Washington University.
2007 activities
Today, Perens is still active in representing open source to the world and advising several national governments and multinational corporations regarding Open Source. In 2007 some of his government advisory roles included: a meeting with the President of the
Chamber of Deputies (the lower house of parliament) in Italy and testimony to the Culture Committee of the Chamber of Deputies; a keynote speech at the foundation of Norway's Open Source Center, following Norway's Minister of Governmental Reform (Perens is on the advisory board of the center); he provided input on the revision of the
European Interoperability Framework; and he was keynote speaker at a European Commission conference on
Digital Business Ecosystems at the Centre Borschette, Brussels, on November 7.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Bruce Perens'.
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