THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, May 28: Publicly-funded content must be openly available,
and sharing knowledge only enhances its richness, Italian senator Fiorello
Cortiana told a four-nation international conference held in the Kerala capital
this morning.
Eminent economist and former Venezuela minister for planning and development Dr
Filipe Perez-Marti agreed, and stressed that ?participation, solidarity and
wisdom? would be the key three words that characterise a new global situation.
Amidst praise for Kerala for organising this ?first ever? south-to-south
contact in the world of free software and free knowledge, speakers from Latin
America (Venezuela, and Brazil), Italy and India explored ways of
understanding their respective situations and possibilities for collaboration
across the oceans.
The Latin Americans were keen to hear about Kerala's attempts to look at take
Free Software solutions to schools, through their IT@School project which aims
to train about 200 master trainers, who will then train at least one teacher
from each school in the state in the use of free software.
Free Software Foundation of India director Prof G Nagarjuna stressed how India
was able to fight-back attempts to make software a patentable item. He said
help for this endeavour had come from enlightened politicians, the peoples'
science movement, media and others.
Latin American delegates spoke of how their firms ? including the Venezualan
oil giant ? had opted for free software, both for more control over their work
and avoid possibilities of sabotage in a crucial sector of the economy.
Government of Brazil special advisor in the ministry of communications Antonio
Bezerra de Albquerque Neto said Brazil was keen to build links with countries
like India and China, and stressed that Free Software is a key means of in
building a fairer society.
SPACE executive secretary Satish Babu called this a ?fairly unique event? and
said Kerala had a good chance of building itself as a global destination of
Free Software. SPACE chairperson Prof K R Srivathsan termed Free Software a
?natural way for the scientific community to play around with?.
Former musician turned Free Software activist Juan Carlos Gentile said he hoped
this first-ever meet of its kind ?would lead to many things to come?. Kerala IT
secretary PH Kurian said ideas of sharing knowledge were ?not alien? to India,
and cited the case of Gautam Buddha who used the people's language to spread
his message.
Kerala began this four-nation meet on Saturday morning, and it aims to take the
ideas of free software to different realms of society, which can gain from the
power of sharing knowledge and culture.
SPACE, the Thiruvananthapuram-based Society for the Promotion of Alternative
Computing and Environment, is co-organiser of this event with the global NGO
Hipatia (www.hipatia.net) and the Free Software Foundation-India
(www.fsf.org.in).
Organisers say that the international free software movement has shown a ?new
way of knowledge creation and social ownership?. They're keen to explore how
the ?free software model? can be applied to fields as diverse as governance,
digital inclusion, development and culture. (ENDS)
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