Events will be taking place worldwide on Saturday to celebrate Software Freedom Day, but most of the buzz is in the developing world, according to one of the organisers.
Henrik Nilsen Omma, one of cofounders of Software Freedom Day, said on Wednesday that there are a lot of activities planned in Africa, Asia and Latin America, but things are a lot quieter elsewhere.
"In the UK there's not much happening. In fact, many Western countries are not doing very much at all," said Omma, who is based in the UK.
One exception is Australia, which has around 15 teams doing different events around the country. He said there were various possible social reasons why developing countries have got more involved in this initiative.
"I have been wondering about why that is," said Omma. "It could be because there is more of a social profile to open source in Africa and Asia — it's about empowerment. Also, open source communities are more fluid in developing countries, while in the West they're already quite established."
Omma said it was a shame that more wasn't happening in Europe as it is important to educate the public about alternatives to proprietary software.
Over 200 teams across the world have registered to take part in Software Freedom Day. Activities include handing out free-software CDs, lectures and demonstrations on free software. Some teams have planned more interactive activities, for example, on the Thai island of Phuket, members of the public can take part in a Tux painting competition.






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What a complete joke.
Free Software is only a myth.
What starts “free” today becomes required support tomorrow as demonstrated by Red Hat and many others.
If all software is going to be free, then everyone should start a “Food Freedom Day” to feed all the staving programmers who produce all the “free” software.
There is no such thing as a free lunch!
Wake up and smell my “not free” coffee.
"Free" as in "Speech", "Free" as in "Freedom". Not necessarily "Free" as in "Beer".
Always the same lack of understanding. Could it be willful?
"Free" suggests the older term "freeware".
When _most_ people discover that Open Source is not free in the "freeware" sense, it loses all interest for them.
If anything is misleading, it is calling software and software support you must pay for "free", because software and software support are commodities or services; they are not human rights.
There is free software. No question about that. Look at Acrobat Reader for example that most people are familiair with. There's tons more of quality free stuff out there. And just as is the case with Acrobat Reader as long as you can help yourself it's a whole lot less cash then when you have to pay someone to fix it for you. But even then still a whole lot less then having to pay someone to make it work, keep it working and paying for the licenses too.