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Amin Bandali: Why I love participating in LibrePlanet


Also published on the Free Software Foundation's
community blog:
Amin
Bandali: Why it's fun to participate in
LibrePlanet

I'm Amin Bandali, a free/libre software activist by passion, and
a software developer/engineer and computing scientist by profession.
I am a former intern and current volunteer with the Free Software
Foundation (FSF), and a member of the GNU Project. One of the ways
I volunteer with the FSF is through LibrePlanet. I've helped with
various aspects of the conference's organization, currently mainly
helping as a member of the LibrePlanet committee, which reviews all
session proposals. In this blog post I'd like to give a quick
background on how and why I got involved with LibrePlanet and how
I contribute to it today. I will also share how you, too, could
start helping with the organization of the conference in a number of
different ways, if you're interested!

I first got involved with LibrePlanet as a volunteer a few years
back. By that point, I'd enjoyed participating in the conference via
IRC and watching the talks online for a few years, and I was looking
for ways to get involved. As I couldn't make it to Boston to attend
LibrePlanet in person, I volunteered online, with tasks such as
helping watch over the conference IRC channels and answering questions
as best as I could. I seemed to have done a decent job, since the FSF
folks later asked if I could do the same for a few non-LibrePlanet
online FSF events too, which I gladly accepted.

Having enjoyed both participating and volunteering for LibrePlanet,
I thought it would be great if I could give a talk of my own, too.
This only became possible for me after 2020 with the possibility of
doing remote presentations. Since I sadly cannot attend the event in
person currently, this was a welcome side-effect of the conference
temporarily switching to an online-only format. So, I submitted a
proposal to talk about
"Jami
and how it empowers users"
for LibrePlanet 2021, which was
accepted and became my first LibrePlanet talk. Though presenting, or
even just submitting a talk at a large conference like LibrePlanet,
may sometimes seem like an intimidating task, I had a great time
presenting mine, thanks in no small part to the FSF staff and other
volunteer organizers, as well as the audience members.

The FSF staff were supportive and encouraging throughout the entire
process of preparing and presenting my talk, and the audience gave
positive and/or constructive feedback after my presentation. Plus,
I greatly enjoyed discussing various free software topics with them,
which was not really surprising because the folks attending
LibrePlanet tend to be free software enthusiasts or activists like
myself who are often just as eager to watch and chat with others about
free software. And, as my good GNU friend Jason Self puts it,
LibrePlanet is a wonderful place for such enthusiasts to
"recharge their
free software batteries each year"
.

Back in 2020, I was invited to join the LibrePlanet committee, a
diverse team of volunteers from different backgrounds and areas of
expertise that review all sessions submitted, helping select session
proposals in a way that provides an exciting lineup of talks for
people of differing areas and levels of experience and interest.
I humbly and happily accepted the invitation to join the committee,
and I help with the reviews to date. (I of course don't review my own
session proposals, nor the ones I recognize to be from people I know).
If you are also interested in joining the LibrePlanet committee and
helping review the wonderful session proposals the team receives for
each conference, you can come by the #libreplanet or #fsf channels on
the Libera.Chat IRC network and reach out to the FSF staff there, or
send an email to
campaigns@fsf.org.

Besides being part of the LibrePlanet committee and helping review
session proposals, there are a number of other ways to contribute to
the organization of the conference as well. Technical tasks include
helping with the setup and/or the maintenance of some pieces of
infrastructure for the conference, for example helping maintain the
conference's self-hosted installation of
LibreAdventure, which
is the conference's online event space where people can have their
avatars "bump" into each other to have a real-time videoconferencing
chat, and they can explore sessions, the FSF office (digitized),
virtual sponsor booths, and more. Non-technical tasks include helping
with the moderation of the conference's IRC channels on the event
days, and volunteering to introduce, caption, or transcribe talks.
There are also other logistical tasks that need doing now that
LibrePlanet is switching to a hybrid format with both online and
in-person events (in Boston). If you are interested in getting
involved and helping with any of these (or other) tasks, please email
to resources@fsf.org.

The theme for LibrePlanet 2023 is "Charting the Course", which
I find particularly apt and important.
The free
software movement has come a long way
and thanks to the tireless
efforts of people from projects and communities of varying sizes,
today we can carry out a very wide range of computing tasks in total
freedom. It is also crucially important to continue recognizing and
making progress in the areas of digital life where avoiding nonfree
software may not be currently possible or feasible. One such
notorious area is online payments, where the
GNU Taler folks have been hard at work
making freedom-respecting, privacy-friendly online transactions
possible. At LibrePlanet 2023, I hope to see talks on such areas of
digital life. I look forward to talks presenting the state of
available free software in a certain field and clarify to what extent
we can participate in them in freedom, along with a wishlist for
improvements and a roadmap for moving closer towards freedom in this
specific field so that we will ultimately, hopefully, reach full
digital freedom.

These, along with other factors — such as the FSF staff
striving for LibrePlanet to be inclusive and accessible, as well as
making it possible to participate online for those of us not able to
attend the event in person — make LibrePlanet a free software
event I'm most excited about and look forward to each year. I hope
and expect that LibrePlanet 2023 will be a conference with a lineup of
interesting, fun, educational, and thought-provoking user freedom
themed talks and sessions, along with a chance to catch up and
socialize with fellow free software hackers, activists, and/or
enthusiasts from all over the world, just like it always has been
— especially this time with its ever more relevant theme of
"Charting the Course" to not only reflect and celebrate the path we've
come so far, but to also look towards the future and chart the course
to software user freedom for coming generations.

Take care, and I hope to see you around for LibrePlanet 2023!

Amin Bandali
LibrePlanet Committee Member and assistant GNUisance

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Source: Planet GNU

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