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Short Table of Contents
Foreword
Preface to the Second Edition
1. The Free Software Definition
2. The GNU Project
3. The Initial Announcement of the GNU Operating System
4. The GNU Manifesto
5. Why Software Should Not Have Owners
6. Why Software Should Be Free
7. Why Schools Should Exclusively Use Free Software
8. Releasing Free Software If You Work at a University
9. Why Free Software Needs Free Documentation
10. Selling Free Software
11. The Free Software Song
12. What’s in a Name?
13. Categories of Free and Nonfree Software
14. Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software
15. Did You Say “Intellectual Property”?@entrybreak{}It’s a Seductive Mirage
16. Words to Avoid (or Use with Care)
Because They Are Loaded or Confusing
17. The Right to Read: A Dystopian Short Story
18. Misinterpreting Copyright—A Series of Errors
19. Science Must Push Copyright Aside
20. Freedom—or Copyright
21. What Is Copyleft?
22. Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism
23. Anatomy of a Trivial Patent
24. Software Patents and Literary Patents
25. The Danger of Software Patents
26. Microsoft’s New Monopoly
27. Introduction to the Licenses
28. The GNU General Public License
29. Why Upgrade to GPLv3
30. The GNU Lesser General Public License
31. GNU Free Documentation License
32. Can You Trust Your Computer?
33. Who Does That Server Really Serve?
34. Free but Shackled: The Java Trap
35. The JavaScript Trap
36. The X Window System Trap
37. The Problem Is Software Controlled by Its Developer
38. We Can Put an End to Word Attachments
39. Thank You, Larry McVoy
40. Computing “Progress”: Good and Bad
41. Avoiding Ruinous Compromises
42. Overcoming Social Inertia
43. Freedom or Power?
Appendix A: A Note on Software
Appendix B: Translations of the Term “Free Software”
Index
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