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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bruce_PerensBruce Perens - Wikipedia

    Bruce Perens (born around 1958) is an American computer programmer and advocate in the free software movement. He created The Open Source Definition and published the first formal announcement and manifesto of open source .

  2. Radio Program / Podcast Friday. I am on a well-known broadcast/podcast, I think Friday. If you are concerned that I haven’t given someone credit or that history has been misrepresented: I was recorded for three hours, and what they called me to fact-check would be just a few minutes on the air.

  3. Bruce Perens is one of the founders of the Open Source movement, the creator of Busybox, and a legal-technical expert. He has worked on various fields of software, electronics, and communications, and published 24 books on Open Source topics.

  4. 27 Dis 2023 · Bruce Perens, a free software pioneer, talks to The Register about his vision for the Post-Open Source movement, which aims to address the problems of open source licenses and corporate exploitation. He also criticizes IBM's treatment of RHEL and the lack of user-friendly software in the open source community.

  5. 15 Mei 2024 · Radio Program / Podcast Friday. I am on a well-known broadcast/podcast, I think Friday. If you are concerned that I haven’t given someone credit or that history has been misrepresented: I was recorded for three hours, and what they called me to fact-check would be just a few minutes on the air.

  6. The Open Source Definition (OSD) helped to clarify what was meant by open and to distinguish the open movement from the free software movement. Like the DFSG on which it is based, the OSD is used primarily to determine whether or not software licenses qualify for the label “open source.”.

  7. 30 Apr 2024 · Perens wants his new license – intended to complement open source licensing rather than replace it – to be administered by a 501(c)(6) non-profit. This entity would handle payments to developers. He points to the music performing rights organizations as a template, although among ASCAP, BMI, SECAC, and GMR, only ASCAP remains non-profit.