Hackers News

No billionares at FOSDEM

Jack Dorsey, former CEO of Twitter, ousted board member of BlueSky, and grifter
extraordinaire to the tune of a $5.6B net worth, is giving a keynote at
FOSDEM
.

The FOSDEM keynote stage is one of the biggest platforms in the free software
community. Janson is the biggest venue in the event – its huge auditorium
can accommodate over 1,500 of FOSDEM’s 8,000 odd attendees, and it is live
streamed to a worldwide audience as the face of one of the free and open source
software community’s biggest events of the year. We’ve platformed Red Hat, the
NLNet Foundation, NASA, numerous illustrious community leaders, and many smaller
projects that embody our values and spirit at this location to talk about their
work or important challenges our community faces.

Some of these challenges, as a matter of fact, are Jack Dorsey’s fault. In 2023
this stage hosted Hachyderm’s Kris Nóva to discuss an exodus of Twitter
refugees to the fediverse. After Dorsey sold Twitter to Elon Musk, selling the
platform out to the far right for a crisp billion-with-a-“B” dollar payout, the
FOSS community shouldered the burden – both with our labor and our wallets –
of a massive exodus onto our volunteer-operated servers, especially from victims
fleeing the hate speech and harassment left in the wake of the sale. Two years
later one of the principal architects of, and beneficiaries of, that disaster
will step onto the same stage. Even if our community hadn’t been directly harmed
by Dorsey’s actions, I don’t think that we owe this honor to someone who took a
billion dollars to ruin their project, ostracize their users, and destroy the
livelihoods of almost everyone who worked on it.

Dorsey is presumably being platformed in Janson because his blockchain bullshit
company is a main sponsor of FOSDEM this year. Dorsey and his
colleagues want to get us up to speed on what Block is working on these days.
Allow me to give you a preview: in addition to posting $5B in revenue and a 21%
increase in YoY profit in 2024, Jack Dorsey laid off 1,000 employees, ordering
them not to publicly discuss board member Jay-Z’s contemporary sexual assault
allegations on their way out, and announced a new bitcoin mining ASIC in
collaboration with Core Scientific, who presumably installed them into their
new 100MW Muskogee, OK bitcoin mining installation
, proudly served by the
Muskogee Generating Station fossil fuel power plant and its 11 million
tons
of annual CO2 emissions and an estimated 62 excess
deaths
in the local area due to pollution associated with the power plant.
Nice.

In my view, billionaires are not welcome at FOSDEM. If billionaires want to
participate in FOSS, I’m going to ask them to refrain from using our platforms
to talk about their AI/blockchain/bitcoin/climate-disaster-as-a-service grifty
business ventures, and instead buy our respect by, say, donating 250 million
dollars to NLNet or the Sovereign Tech Fund. That figure, as a
percentage of Dorsey’s wealth, is proportional to the amount of money I donate
to FOSS every year, by the way. That kind of money would keep the FOSS community
running for decades.

I do not want to platform Jack Dorsey on this stage. To that end, I am
organizing a sit-in, in which I and anyone who will join me are going to sit
ourselves down on the Janson stage during his allocated time slot and peacefully
prevent the talk from proceeding as scheduled. We will be meeting at 11:45 PM
outside of Janson, 15 minutes prior to Dorsey’s scheduled time slot. Once the
stage is free from the previous speaker, we will sit on the stage until 12:30
PM. Bring a good book. If you want to help organize this sit-in, or just let me
know that you intend to participate, please contact me via
email; I’ll set up a mailing list if there’s enough
interest in organizing things like printing out pamphlets to this effect, or
even preparing an alternative talk to “schedule” in his slot.

admin

The realistic wildlife fine art paintings and prints of Jacquie Vaux begin with a deep appreciation of wildlife and the environment. Jacquie Vaux grew up in the Pacific Northwest, soon developed an appreciation for nature by observing the native wildlife of the area. Encouraged by her grandmother, she began painting the creatures she loves and has continued for the past four decades. Now a resident of Ft. Collins, CO she is an avid hiker, but always carries her camera, and is ready to capture a nature or wildlife image, to use as a reference for her fine art paintings.

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