- Source: Software Freedom Law Center
The Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) is an organization that provides pro bono legal representation and related services to not-for-profit developers of free software/open source software. It was launched in February 2005 with Eben Moglen as chairman. Initial funding of US$4 million was pledged by Open Source Development Labs.
A news article stated:
Moglen expects — in fact, plans for — a large turnover in the staff. After five years, he anticipates 20 to 30 lawyers will have passed through the Center. By the time these alumni move on, Moglen hopes that its members will have the expertise to advise both communities and corporations alike. It will also create a loose association whose members can consult with each other as necessary.
GPL version 3
SFLC represented and advised the Free Software Foundation, one of its principal clients, throughout the process of drafting and public discussion of version 3 of the GNU General Public License (GPLv3) during 2005–2007. Along with FSF president Richard M. Stallman, SFLC director Eben Moglen and then-SFLC counsel Richard Fontana were principal authors of GPLv3, LGPLv3, and the GNU Affero General Public License.
BusyBox litigation
During 2007 and 2008, SFLC filed a series of copyright infringement lawsuits against various defendants, on behalf of Erik Andersen and Rob Landley, the principal developers of BusyBox. These lawsuits claimed violations of version 2 of the GNU General Public License (GPLv2).
On September 20, 2007, SFLC filed a lawsuit against Monsoon Multimedia, Inc. alleging that Monsoon had violated GPLv2 by including BusyBox code in their Monsoon Multimedia HAVA line of products without releasing BusyBox source code. This is believed to be the first U.S. court case in which the complaint concerned a GPL violation. On October 30, 2007, an SFLC press release announced that the lawsuit had been settled with Monsoon agreeing to comply with the GPL and pay a sum of money to the plaintiffs.
On November 20, 2007, SFLC filed a lawsuit against Xterasys Corporation and High-Gain Antennas, LLC. On December 17, 2007, SFLC announced a settlement with Xterasys; the company agreed to stop product shipments until it published complete source code for the GPL code and to pay an undisclosed sum to the plaintiffs. The suit against High-Gain Antennas was settled on March 6, 2008, with the company agreeing to comply with GPL and paying an undisclosed sum to the plaintiffs.
On December 7, 2007 SFLC filed a lawsuit against Verizon Communications, Inc. alleging that Verizon had violated GPLv2 by distributing BusyBox in the Actiontec MI424WR MoCA wireless routers bundled with the FiOS fiber optic bandwidth service, without providing corresponding source code. A settlement announced on March 17, 2008, included an agreement to comply with the GPL and an undisclosed sum paid to the plaintiffs.
On June 10, 2008, SFLC announced the filing of lawsuits against Bell Microproducts, Inc. and Super Micro Computer, Inc.
On December 14, 2009, SFLC announced the filing of a lawsuit on behalf of its clients, Software Freedom Conservancy and Erik Andersen, against 14 companies, including Best Buy, Samsung, and Westinghouse alleging these companies had violated GPLv2 by distributing BusyBox in some of their products without releasing BusyBox source code.
For instance, Samsung released its LN52A650 TV firmware in 2010, which was used later as the base for the community SamyGO project.
By 21 September 2013, all of the defendant companies had agreed on settlement terms with the plaintiffs, except for Westinghouse, against whom default judgment was entered.
Cisco lawsuit
On December 11, 2008, SFLC announced the filing of a lawsuit on behalf of its client, the Free Software Foundation, against Cisco Systems, Inc. This lawsuit was the first suit ever initiated by the Free Software Foundation,. On May 20, 2009, the parties announced a settlement.
Staff
As of May 2020, SFLC's staff included:
Eben Moglen, President and Executive Director
Mishi Choudhary, Legal Director
Tanisha Madrid-Batista, Chief Operating Officer
Daniel Gnoutcheff, Systems Administrator
Directors
As of May 2020, SFLC's directors were:
Eben Moglen
Diane M. Peters
Daniel Weitzner
Former staff
Richard Fontana, Counsel
Jim Garrison, Public Relations Coordinator
Bradley M. Kuhn, Policy Analyst and Technology Director
Matt Norwood, Counsel
Jonathan D. Bean, Counsel
Daniel J. Byrnes, Counsel
Albert Cahn, Counsel
Daniel B. Ravicher, Legal Director
Karen M. Sandler, General Counsel
James Vasile, Counsel
Rachel A. Wiener, Office Manager
Justin C. Colannino, Counsel
Aaron Williamson, Counsel
Marc Jones, Counsel
Clients
SFLC adds Wine to client list
Press Release: SFLC to represent the Wine project (see also Wine)
X.Org Foundation Hires Software Freedom Law Center
SFLC to represent Plone and the Plone Foundation (see Plone)
References
External links
Official website
New York Times article about SFLC launch
eWeek article about SFLC launch
Moglen plans "general counsel's office for the entire movement" Feb 2005, Newsforge
ZDNet interview with Eben Moglen where SFLC is discussed
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Yayasan Perangkat Lunak Bebas
- Lawrence Lessig
- Lisensi Publik Umum GNU
- X (media sosial)
- Indeks artikel politik
- Albert Einstein
- Hokky Situngkir
- Stop Online Piracy Act
- Perang Vietnam
- Software Freedom Law Center
- Software Freedom Conservancy
- Eben Moglen
- Bradley M. Kuhn
- Plone (software)
- Diaspora (social network)
- Open-source-software movement
- Karen Sandler
- Free software movement
- Microsoft Open Specification Promise