-
Products
JBoss Enterprise Middleware
Web Server Developer Studio Portfolio Edition JBoss Operations Network FuseSource Integration Products Web Framework Kit Application Platform Data Grid Portal Platform SOA Platform Business Rules Management System (BRMS) Data Services Platform Messaging JBoss Community or JBoss enterprise -
Solutions
By IT challenge
Application development Business process management Enterprise application integration Interoperability Operational efficiency Security VirtualizationMigration Center
Migrate to Red Hat Enterprise Linux Systems management Upgrading to Red Hat Enterprise Linux JBoss Enterprise Middleware IBM AIX to Red Hat Enterprise Linux HP-UX to Red Hat Enterprise Linux Solaris to Red Hat Enterprise Linux UNIX to Red Hat Enterprise Linux Start a conversation with Red Hat Migration services
November 16, 2006
Subscribe
Recent articles
- The geek gift guide (and giveaway)
- How to set up a home email server
- How to set up a home DNS server
- The road to Tibet
- Peace in our time
- Ask Shadowman
- Tips & tricks
- >> more
More info
The road to Delhi with
Eben Moglen and Paul Jones
Produced by Kim Jokisch and Kristin Hondros
Ever wished you could be a fly on the wall when tech-savvy folks gather? We got the chance at this summer's Knowledge Symposium in Delhi, India.
The official title of the conference was "Owning the future: Ideas and their role in the digital age." In between the discussions and sessions, we sat in on a conversation between Eben Moglen and Paul Jones. Two of the open source movement's big thinkers--the lawyer (and founder of the Software Freedom Law Center) and the curator of ibiblio.org (one of the Internet's largest public repositories).
Moglen and Jones have an open and fast-paced discussion that touches on international labor dynamics, technology expansion, intellectual property, economics, capitalism, and freedom. (Just imagine what they could do in more than 8 minutes...)
And, as a bonus, hear Moglen talking about the Playstation 3 processors and the fight to not own the IP.
![[ RSS feed ]](/g/chrome/rss-feed.gif)







