-------- Missatge reenviat --------
Assumpte:       A message from Richard M. Stallman
Data:   Mon, 31 Dec 2018 09:54:55 -0500
De:     Richard Stallman <[email protected]>



Free Software Foundation

*/Good GNUs, we've met our initial fundraiser goal of 400 new members!
We have a new ambitious stretch goal of $146,000 before the end of the
year. Read RMS's message below about how you can help./*

Dear ...,

This year, I'm happy to report, the Free Software Foundation (FSF)
received two large donations, each nominally a million dollars. The
donation from the Pineapple Fund
<https://www.fsf.org/news/free-software-foundation-receives-1-million-donation-from-pineapple-fund>
arrived in the form of Bitcoin and had gone down to around $860,000 by
the time we could convert it all to dollars. Around half of the donation
from Handshake
<https://www.fsf.org/news/free-software-foundation-receives-1-million-from-handshake>
is earmarked for specific software projects; some of that will go to
improving Replicant, the free Android fork, but that half won't help
fund the FSF's general operations.

We will need to add part of these donations to our reserves, which are
meant to enable us to keep operating in the case of a possible downturn.
That still leaves enough to expand our staff by two or three positions.
We will be able to do some of the work that always needed doing but that
we could not undertake.

We have added a position to the tech team
<https://www.fsf.org/blogs/sysadmin/help-the-fsf-tech-team-build-the-future-of-free-software>
so that they can upgrade the support platforms for GNU packages --
repositories, Web pages, translation, testing -- and publish about how
we run the FSF without nonfree software.

We intend also to add another person to the Licensing and Compliance
team
<https://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/fsf-licensing-compliance-lab-2018-and-the-future>,
which certifies distributions and products and enforces the GNU General
Public License. Because of the success of Respects Your Freedom, we have
a long backlog of products to evaluate. Expanding the team will increase
our ability to help people purchase hardware that runs entirely on free
software.

We will also fund development of free JavaScript code to make certain
Web sites function in the free world. Making sites depend on sending
users nonfree JavaScript code <https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/freejs> has
become fashionable, so that organizations and even governments do it
without even thinking about it. The option to communicate with Web sites
without running nonfree software is a crucial part of freedom for users
of the World Wide Web. We will also continue improving the GNU LibreJS
extension, and making GNU IceCat protect against JavaScript spyware
techniques.

This year's surprise one-time donations make it possible for us to hire
additional staff and do more work, but we can't coast very long on them
alone; we will need to continue paying the staff to keep doing the work.
Most of our income, these donations aside, comes from individual donors
giving less than $200 a year. To carry on with this work, we need your
support <https://fsf.org/appeal>.

The increased operations, as we are planning them now, will still not do
all that needs to be done to win freedom in computing. You can enable us
to continue -- and to undertake the other work that we are still not
doing -- by joining the Free Software Foundation
<https://my.fsf.org/join?pk_campaign=fall18&pk_kwd=rmsjoin> or donating
now <https://my.fsf.org/donate?pk_campaign=fall18&pk_kwd=rmsdonate>.
Even better, do both!

/Read and share online:
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/a-message-from-richard-m-stallman/

Happy hacking,
Richard M. Stallman
FSF President

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