Tux Machines

Do you waddle the waddle?

Other Sites

LinuxGizmos.com

Compulab’s IoT Gateway Equipped with Dual GbE Ports and GPS Connectivity

Compulab unveils the IOT-DIN-IMX8PLUS which is an advanced industrial IoT gateway equipped with dual GbE ports and GPS connectivity, offering versatility and robust functionality in a compact, modular DIN-rail form factor and fanless design.

9to5Linux

Proton 9.0 Released with Support for THE FINALS, Lord of the Rings: Gollum

Based on Wine 9.0, the Proton 9.0 release adds support for the Dinogen Online, Photography Simulator Demo, George McGeehan Gamer Hero, THE FINALS, True Reporter. Mystery of Mistwood, Road to Vostok Demo, Witch on the Holy Night, and Lord of the Rings: Gollum video games.

LibreOffice 24.2.3 Office Suite Is Now Available for Download with 79 Bug Fixes

Coming a little over a month after the LibreOffice 24.2.2 update, LibreOffice 24.2.3 is here to address more of those pesky bugs, crashes, and other annoyances reported by users in the latest LibreOffice 24.2 office suite series, thus improving its overall stability and reliability.

LibreELEC 12 Adds Raspberry Pi 5 Support, HDR Support for AMD and Intel GPUs

Powered by the long-term supported Linux 6.6 LTS kernel series and based on the latest Kodi 21 “Omega” media center software, LibreELEC 12 is here more than a year after LibreELEC 11 and introduces support for the Raspberry Pi 5 single-board computer.

GNU nano 8.0 Released with New Options and Various Improvements

GNU nano 8.0 bounds ^F for starting a forward search and ^B for starting a backward search by default, while M-F and M-B repeat the search in the corresponding direction, support for opening a file at a certain line number by using nano filename:number, and support for scrolling the viewport with the mouse wheel.

Microsoft is Not a Religious Choice.

posted by Roy Schestowitz on Mar 06, 2023

Authored by Dr. Andy Farnell

"The government is not trying to destroy Microsoft, it’s simply seeking to compel Microsoft to obey the law. It’s quite revealing that Mr. Gates equates the two."

--Government official

A recent Reddit post caught my attention as a Christian, humanist and computer scientist. Allegedly, an employer claimed to be troubled by a worker citing "Religious Reasons" for their refusal to use Microsoft 1. I also refuse to use Microsoft products, but have never been inclined to so boldly claim it a matter of "Religion".

I worry this may be a step too far, and may do some disservice to the very real struggle against corporate tyranny and erosion of digital rights. Indeed, there are many perfectly good reasons to reject the wares of Big Tech companies without invoking religion as a first line. Let's step back and consider why.

Religions are complex. They include ethical values, but also practices, habits, associations, symbolisms, traditions, and interpretations of texts. Most, though not all religions, espouse an ethical framework, but in secular modernity we bracket ethics aside. Whilst for people of faith religion and ethics are essentially synonymous, one may still have profound and unshakable ethics without subscribing to any organised religion.

It is not that religious tenets have no relevance to technology. I a troubled, through my personal religious beliefs, by our trajectory in the digital world. The greed, wrath, envy and sloth facilitated by a mindless cult of convenience and control is heartbreaking for me as a computer scientist. The bonfire of opportunity squandered in favour of technologies designed to track, manipulate, enslave and deceive feels like a tragedy of "biblical magnitude". Inseparably, with respect to positive spiritual understanding, it is religion that preserves my technological optimism, and sense of hope for humane, ethical technology.

Yet I see the framing of the Reddit story, of a modern-day "Luddite" throwing her religious spanner into the noble wheels of industry, as mischievous. It rather nicely stokes a false dichotomy between religion and technology. Not only are many technologists religious, but our 21st century digital technology is driven as much by transcendent supernaturalism and organisational ideologies as by clear reason.

Indeed there are good arguments to be heard that technology is a religion 2, and in some senses stands against 'Science' in its broadest sense - not least because Big Tech inherits many of the social control functions once associated with the brutal and punitive role of the Church, making the "Separation of Tech and State" as urgent as keeping apart "Church and State".

What is really being challenged here is not whether using Microsoft products offends one's "religious sensibilities", but whether a good-faith ethical objection to Big Tech products, whether it has roots in religion or not, is reasonable.

The issue here revolves around what I think may be a rather misguided or disingenuous attempt to leverage employment law. Law has long given broad protections to religion in the workplace including accommodation of sacred days, dress, prayer times, sanitary and Kosher provisions, respect for eating arrangements around Ramadan, and so on.

But let's be clear, according to US Government guidelines for employers;

"Social, political, or economic philosophies, or personal preferences, are not "religious" beliefs under Title VII." 3

Furthermore, most employers will likely raise the objection of "security" quite dishonestly, rather than sincerely admit that the technology choices of employees cause ordinary administrative or economic inconvenience. Again referring to US Title VII codes;

"Examples of burdens on business that are more than minimal (or an "undue hardship") include: (…) jeopardising security or health; or costing the employer more than a minimal amount."

For the case in point, proffering the nebulous catch-all of "security" is exceptionally dishonest due to the shockingly poor performance of Microsoft products in this regard. Further, I am inclined to agree with Feminist thinker Eve Ensler, that "security" has become its own religion in our times and should values clash it will most surely prevail.

Whether allowing reasonable workplace choice incurs more than a "minimal" cost is unexaminable given the complexity and widespread ignorance of modern technology. More importantly, given the ample opportunities - and even legal requirements - for interoperability, any such "costs" are largely the fault of companies whose strategic choices fail to anticipate reasonable expectations of choice.

Regardless, the law seems clear, that to offer objections to Microsoft products in the workplace on the basis of religion is folly. I could not help suspect this story having less than fair provenance. Would it not be a sly propaganda move if Microsoft could colour objections to its wares as the preserve of "religious crazies" and "fanatics"?

With that behind us, allow me to give my own argument as to why I refuse to use Microsoft products, whether at home, work or at leisure. It is because to do so is beneath my ethical values.

Microsoft is an unethical corporation.

Like so much of Big Tech and the commercial software industry in general, low quality products and reckless engineering are only the most visible sins. Behind that lies disregard for social responsibility, acts of theft and bribery, bullying, lying, opposition to freedom, sabotage of fair competition, disobligation to social norms like paying fair taxes and contempt for the laws of other nations.

These are not "mere opinions" born of my dislike for Big Tech, but supported by a litany of well documented legal history there for anyone with time, care and a search engine to examine. Microsoft's greed and willingness to exploit computer users has led them, again and again, before judges and courts who have fined them hundreds of millions of dollars for their misdeeds.

That said, Microsoft are one of the nicer Big Tech companies in an industry that has become decidedly unsavoury of late. Union busting, operating dangerous sweatshops, dumping toxic chemicals, collaboration with dictators, threatening critics, arbitrary lay-offs of many thousands of loyal employees… these are all grist for the mill in the cut-throat business behind our shiny gadgets.

I therefore think it is hardly debatable that we each have a solid and just right to make choices about digital products we use, which organisations we support, and to whom we give our money. My choice to not, even indirectly, financially support reprehensible bodies is my inalienable right.

Like many in the 1980s I chose not to support South African Apartheid, joining a widespread boycott that eventually unseated the regime. Is it not the quintessential essence of free market capitalism that we may each choose the products of companies and nations not only for economic reasons but for personal, moral and political reasons? Would it be right to force anyone to purchase products of human suffering such as "blood diamonds" or other unethically sourced goods?

I claim that, if we still believe in markets at all then we are compelled to respect individual choices, including those around digital technology as sacrosanct. Without this commitment what are we left with in our Western world but a form of "Consumer Communism", different only in flavour to its Chinese counterpart?

But just how much impact do ethical choices around technology really make to people? Can't we just go along to get along, put the nature of companies like Microsoft out of mind and, as my estranged aunt used to say, "play the white man"?

As I wrote in Digital Vegan 4;

Roughly, according to the American Time Use Survey and the 2014 Pew Research Social networking fact sheet, we spend on average, 0.5 hours a day in prayer and group worship, 0.5 hours engaged in social and conversational activities, 0.35 hours in romantic and sexual activity and 8.0 hours of screen time, of which 3.0 hours is interactive [Pew14]. This places computing, and the choices of operating system, applications, and workflows right at the centre of a Western adult's life.

So, we are not talking about choosing which flavour of ice-cream to eat. At issue here are some of the most profound life-choices we can make, and ethics ought to be right at the heart of those.

Added to the fact that, as discussed above, ethics extend beyond religion to the concerns of secular individuals, we can confidently claim common ethics to be a superset of religious principles. So I would say;

Refusal to use Microsoft products is much more than a mere "religious choice".

The response that "technology companies are all alike" is no argument. The moral individual is simply left with an obligation to choose the least evil digital technologies. Today that choice seems very clearly to be independent technology born of the Free Software movement, like GNU and the Linux kernel.

In a world increasingly indifferent to human values, lived experience and common morals, Microsoft and other Big Tech companies are more than simple businesses. They are symbols and receptacles of the underlying anti-humanism of our epoch. Yet they continue to aggressively insinuate themselves into our daily lives.

Further, and perhaps more on topic, we should recognise that companies who coerce employees into unethical choices are themselves unethical. If they have cornered themselves into a captive monoculture through their own poor strategy, that is not an excuse which discharges them of moral obligation.

In tech we used to say, "Nobody ever got fired for choosing Microsoft." Let's see if this is about to take on a new meaning. To fire an employee for refusing to use a product on sincere moral grounds is reprehensible. Such companies should be called-out for that.

Regardless of the truth behind this story it remains important. Wit all the ethical implications of so-called "AI" expanding into our lives these choices are going to become bigger issues. Laws concerning religious choice in the workplace may need expanding to encompass secular ethical choices with deep societal implications.

As these technological problems encroach into politics, policing, healthcare, education and employment we will see more examples of this tension. Those who sincerely believe Big Tech is a threat to freedom and liberal democracy find ourselves on the newest wave of an ancient battle with corruption. Anti-Microsoft lobbyists find themselves in good company with Secular Humanists who have long struggled for equity of ethical value informed by reason as much as tradition or association.

In support of the employee, I think raising the question of religion has been a good way to temporarily escape the parochialism of our corporate workplaces. In an update to the original post 5 the employee has now, after meetings with HR, Legal and IT, had her requests accommodated, despite her company apparently having good grounds to claim "undue hardship".

We should not take the US legal position as some sort of universal standard. In contrast, the Brazilian constitution equates the protections to religious and philosophical beliefs. Whilst UK laws have long favoured industrial and commercial interests, creating an ideal environment for Big Tech to foist its values upon us, our Equality Act 2010 offers surprising leeway for non-religious ethical objections 6. Under UK law it is unnecessary to 'prove' the validity of one's belief for the belief to be protected by law; only to observe that it is sincerely held.

While not harmful to use religion as a specific reason for eschewing products or services, for now I would suggest those who are passionate about the problem need not lean too readily on established religious identity. Rather we must drag our opponents out into the clear daylight of more widely shared feelings. Let's call this what it is: an ethical objection.

Sincere ethical objections ought to be grounds enough to insist on meaningful digital choices without fear of exclusion or retribution. Digital monocultures and cavalier assumptions around them threaten our long-established classical liberal freedom from tyranny.

Amidst the apparent bounty of technological choice we have neglected "negative freedoms". We must again mobilise to restore equity and protection under the law for digital rights of abstention as well as choice. On a positive note, this will surely bolster the case for interoperability, greater user-control and anti-monopoly which will in turn stimulate and strengthen our economie

Nobody should be forced to support systems and companies they find morally objectionable, and no coercion on the grounds of compatibility, policy, security, or mere convenience is acceptable.

Acknowledgements

Thank you to Roy Schestowitz, Alexandre Oliva, Daniel James, Edward Nevard and Richard Stallman for your kind comments, suggestions and corrections.

Footnotes:

Other Recent Tux Machines' Posts

LibreOffice 24.2.3 Office Suite Is Now Available for Download with 79 Bug Fixes
LibreOffice 24.2.3 is now available for download as the third point release to the LibreOffice 24.2 office suite series fixing more than 70 bugs for improved stability and robustness.
TUXEDO Pulse 14 Gen4 Laptop Arrives with AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS and Radeon 780M
Linux hardware vendor TUXEDO Computers unveiled today the Gen4 (4th generation) TUXEDO Pulse 14 laptop with an updated processor from the AMD Ryzen 7 8000 Series.
LibreELEC (Omega) 12.0
LibreELEC 12.0 has released as final release, bringing Kodi (Omega) v21.0
Proton 9.0 Released with Support for THE FINALS, Lord of the Rings: Gollum
Valve released today Proton 9.0 as the latest stable release of this open-source compatibility tool for Steam Play based on Wine and additional components that lets you play Windows games on Linux systems.
Simplify hybrid cloud operations with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.4
Architecting, deploying, and managing hybrid cloud environments can be a challenging and time-consuming process
Windows TCO Stories
Windows causing problems
Nano 8.0 Command-Line Text Editor Released
Beloved by countless Linux users, the Nano text editor rolls out v8.0 'Grus grus' with modernized bindings
Neofetch Development Ends as GitHub Project Archived
It seems that the popular command-line system info tool Neofetch is dead, Jim
Gentoo Linux tells AI-generated code contributions to fork off
AI-generated and assisted code contributions are no longer allowed in the Gentoo Linux distribution
 
Open Hardware: Arduino, Raspberry Pi, and More
4 open hardware picks
today's howtos
second batch of howtos
IBM's Red Hat on "AI" Hype, FedRAMP, and OpenShift Virtualization
4 articles in redhat.com
Games: Steam, Proton, and More
8 new stories for gamers
Fwupd 1.9.19 Linux Firmware Updater Supports Acer U32 and Luxshare 7-in-1 Docks
Richard Hughes announced today a new release of the popular Linux firmware updater utility fwupd, version 1.9.19, that brings support for more devices, as well as various improvements.
FIREBAT T8 Plus Mini PC Running Linux: Installing and Configuring Rhino Linux
It sounds like an ideal low cost machine to run Linux on the desktop
OpenTofu 1.7.0 Rolls Out with Important Enhancements
OpenTofu 1.7.0 Terraform alternative released with end-to-end state encryption, dynamic functions, and more
Free and Open Source Software
Only free and open source software are eligible for inclusion
Collections of Different Linux Distributions
Because Linux is an open source operating system, combinations of software vary between Linux distros
Microsoft says April Windows updates break VPN connections
Microsoft has confirmed that the April 2024 Windows security updates break VPN connections across client and server platforms
Family of free and friendly open source software
Or FOFAFOSS. Rolls right off your tongue
Stable kernels: Linux 6.8.9, Linux 6.6.30, Linux 6.1.90, Linux 5.15.158, Linux 5.10.216, Linux 5.4.275, and Linux 4.19.313
I'm announcing the release of the 6.8.9 kernel
Programming Leftovers
Programming related links
today's leftovers
misc. links
Open Hardware: Open On-FPGA Debug Interface and RISC-V FPGA for Linux
for the hackers among us
Mozilla: William Durand on His Moziversary and Don Marti on Pandoc
a couple of personal updates
today's howtos
half a dozen howtos
Red Hat and Fedora News
Misc. stories
Security Leftovers
Security related stories
KDE: KOrganizer and Goal Sprint 2024
Some KDE picks
Debian News From the Projects, Developers, Sparky, DPL
misc. Debian picks
Serpent OS: Calm Before The Storm
It's that time of month again, and we have some details to share with you on boot management, as well as plans for real installs landing in May
Today in Techrights
Some of the latest articles
LWN's Latest Articles About Linux (Kernel)
outside the paywall now
Rust Programming Leftovers
4 stories
today's howtos
second batch of howtos
Programming Leftovers
Programming picks
Openwashing Leftovers
fake openness
today's leftovers
misc. topics covered this week
Free, Libre, and Open Source Software Leftovers
applications and more
Games: Descent 3 Liberated, SummerCart64, and More
games related news
Audiocasts/Shows: FLOSS Weekly, Linux Matters, Destination Linux, mintCast
4 new episodes
PostgreSQL: PGConf.dev 2024 and Datasentinel 2024.04
PostgreSQL news
Windows TCO Leftovers
Windows security ruin
Security Leftovers
Security links
Linux Devices and Open Hardware/Modding-Friendly Appliances
extensive new list of hardware picks
GNOME: Call for GNOME Asia 2024 Location Proposals, Nautilus+Microsoft, Workbench 46.1, and More
GNOME development updates and news
LibreELEC 12 Adds Raspberry Pi 5 Support, HDR Support for AMD and Intel GPUs
LibreELEC, the JeOS (Just Enough Operating System) for embedded devices forked from OpenELEC and based on the Kodi home theatre software, has been updated today to version 12, a major update that adds support for new devices and new features.
Android Leftovers
New Wpeeper Android malware can steal your data through backdoor – learn how to stay safe
today's howtos
5 howtos
Latest From Red Hat's Site
IBM marketing mostly
Waveshare UGV Rover – A 6-wheel AI robot built around Raspberry Pi 4/5 and ESP32
Since the source code for the platform will be open-sourced it can also be used for educational purposes, programming, robotics, AI experimentation, and many other applications
Games: Team17 Humble Bundle, Steam Deck, and Lots More
10 latest stories from gamingonlinux
Distrobox 1.7.2 Enhances Container Management
Distrobox 1.7.2 container wrapping layer promises easier management and improved POSIX compatibility
Review: Fedora 40 "KDE"
Fedora often acts as a testing grounds for young technologies, particularly development tools
I Used macOS for Years. Here’s Why I Prefer Ubuntu
Even if you’re a long-time user of a particular OS, it can pay to check out the alternatives
Banana Pi BPI-M5 Pro low-profile SBC features Rockchip RK3576 octa-core Cortex-A72/A53 AIoT SoC
The Banana Pi BPi-MP5 Pro will support Android 14, Debian 11, and Buildroot through official Rockchip support
NXP i.MX 8M Plus powered DIN-Rail IoT gateway takes DIO, RS232, RS485, and ADC expansion modules
Compulab provides Yocto 4.0 and Debian 12 images with support for Docker, MS Azure IoT, Node-RED, and OTA updates with Mender, as well as Modbus RTU, Modbus TCP, and MQTT libraries
April GNU Spotlight with Amin Bandali: Eleven new GNU releases!
Eleven new GNU releases in the last month (as of April 28, 2024)
Free and Open Source Software
Cava is a bar spectrum audio visualizer for terminal (ncurses) or desktop (SDL)
Collections of Different Linux Distributions
A distro provides the user with a desktop environment, preloaded applications, and ways to update and maintain the system
Kate & Icons
I think that is rather unpleasant and for e.g. the left icon-only border just an unusable insult
Thunderbird Monthly Development Digest: April 2024
Hello Thunderbird Community, and welcome back to the monthly Thunderbird development digest
LXQt 2.0.0 Unveils Exciting Features for a Better User Experience
Learn what's new in the LXQt 2.0.0 desktop environment, which promises Wayland updates soon.
Today in Techrights
Some of the latest articles
Founder of NixOS 'Ousted'
as predicted
German state moving 30,000 PCs to LibreOffice
The term digital sovereignty is very important here
Software: syslog-ng, Virtual Keyboards, pgvector, and More
Free software coverage and releases
today's howtos
various howtos for Wednesday
Latest From IBM's redhat.com
several redhat.com articles
Not again Red Hat
On “Corporate Open Source is Dead”
Yocto Project 5.0 “Scarthgap” released with Linux 6.6 and plenty of changes
The Yocto Project 5.0 codenamed “Scarthgap” has just been released with Linux 6.6, glibc 2.39, LLVM 18.1, and over 300 other recipe upgrades
EasyOS Kirkstone-series version 5.8 released
Version 5.7 was released on February 4, 2024
Amarok 3.0 "Castaway" released!
The Amarok Development Squad is happy to announce the immediate availability of Amarok 3.0 "Castaway"
Linux Mint 22 Will Include Preinstalled App for Matrix
Linux Mint 22 will include a Matrix web client preinstalled when released later this year
today's leftovers
3 more stories
Security Leftovers
only 4 for now
today's howtos
last batch for today
GNU nano 8.0 Released with New Options and Various Improvements
GNU nano 8.0 command line text editor for Unix-like operating systems is now available for download as a major update introducing new features and various improvements.
Windows TCO: the Cost of Windows and Microsoft Breaches
Windows TCO/Microsoft incidents
Programming, Graphics Development, and BSD
coding related links
today's howtos
8 howtos for now
Free, Libre, and Open Source Software Leftovers
Education, licensing, and more
Devices, Open Hardware, and Mobile
Some Linux- of hacker-friendly gadgets
Android Leftovers
Merger of Android and Pixel teams may be good news for Samsung
4 tools Steam Deck and Linux gamers need to install
Gaming on Linux can be a little complicated, but the open-source community has put into the software surrounding the Linux gaming experience
IPFire Location: A decentralised, signed database in DNS
In the recent series of updates on IPFire Location, we are bringing you an exciting new feature today
GEEKOM XT12 Pro review – Part 3: Ubuntu 24.04 on an Intel Core i9-12900H mini PC
The GEEKOM XT12 Pro works well and fast in Ubuntu 24.04 thanks to its powerful Intel Core i9-12900H 14-core/20-thread processor
Ubuntu 24.04 Official Flavors Are Now Available for Download, Here’s What’s New
As part of today’s release of Ubuntu 24.04 LTS (Noble Numbat), all the official Ubuntu flavors have been updated to the same version and, in this article, you can learn about their new features and improvements.
Free and Open Source Software
These are free and open source software
Collections of Different Linux Distributions
A distro provides the user with a desktop environment, preloaded applications, and ways to update and maintain the system
The 5 GIMP features I depend on most when editing images (and how I use them)
If you're looking for a powerful, free image editor, look no further than GIMP
Today in Techrights
Some of the latest articles