What is Free Software
The principles of Free Software are simple but it is important to not get confused by the underlying complexity caused by its long history. Learn about the four freedoms and their meaning, the fundamentals about Free Software licenses, the most common synonyms, and the advantages that Free Software provides.
Looking beyond the circle of software itself, you can read more about the interplay of Free Software with other fields like education, procurement and democracy.
The Four Freedoms
Free Software refers to freedom, not price. It guarantees its users the essential four freedoms. The absence of at least one of these freedoms means an application is proprietary, so non‐Free Software.
Use
Study
Share
Improve
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Use
Free Software can be used for any purpose and is free of restrictions such as licence expiry or geographic limitations.
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Study
Free Software and its code can be studied by anyone, without non‐disclosure agreements or similar restrictions.
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Share
Free Software can be shared and copied at virtually no cost.
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Improve
Free Software can be modified by anyone, and these improvements can be shared publicly.
Licenses
The four freedoms are given by a software’s licence. Software licences define the conditions under which a programme can be used and reused. For it to be Free Software, the licence text must contain at least the four freedoms. The Free Software Foundation and the Open Source Initiative maintain lists of reviewed and approved licences. An application can usually not be considered Free Software, if its licence does not appear in one of these lists.
There are a multitude of licences with different focal points, and a software product or parts of it can also be licenced under more than one licence. The actual selection is a strategic question but you are advised to pick one of the most widely used licences.
Synonyms
Over the course of time, people came up with additional labels for Free Software. Often the motivation for these terms is to highlight different aspects and to avoid confusion.
Free Software was first defined with the four freedoms mentioned above by the GNU project in 1986. In 1998, "Open Source" has been set up as a marketing campaign for Free Software but with the same freedoms in mind. Other widely known labels for Free Software are "Libre Software", initiated to avoid the ambiguity of the English word "free", and "FOSS" or "FLOSS" as abbreviations for "Free (Libre) Open Source Software".
The level of freedom a particular software offers is always determined by the licence, not the label. In other words, don’t get confused by different terms for the same features. If you are interested in the historical background and why we prefer the original term, you can Read more...
Advantages
Free Software is about freedom. In practice, this provides numerous advantages for users, organisations, businesses and administrations.
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Autonomy
Free Software helps to develop and maintain tailored software that suits your needs, not just the vendor's business model.
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Collaboration
Free Software can be shared and used in a non-exclusive way by everyone – serving the public good.
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Share & Copy
A Free Software licence allows a limitless number of installations to be run, without paying extra.
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No Lock-in
Free Software licenses reinforce independence from vendors and provide more choice in service providers.
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Reuse Code
Free Software provides the freedom to reuse the code for other projects.
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Innovation
A Free Software licence encourages innovation for your software.
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Competition
Free Software prevents monopolies and enhances competition.
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Security
Free Software allows for independent security checks that help close security holes faster.
Further insights
The numerous advantages of Free Software are a benefit in itself, but also contribute positively to other technical and non-technical fields. Since the FSFE's foundation in 2001, we have been exploring different areas and how Free Software can make a difference.
- Democracy: technology greatly influences today's society. That is why control over technology has to be in the hands of everybody, not just a small group.
- Open Standards: Open Standards allow people to share all kinds of data freely and with perfect fidelity. They prevent lock-in and other artificial barriers to interoperability, and promote choice between vendors and technology solutions.
- Education: Free Software is pedagogically superior, its basic spirit involving freedom and cooperation is the same spirit of education in a democratic environment.
- Public Procurement: Free Software is a perfect fit for the public sector. It is a public resource that government organisations can use, study, improve, and share with each other. For citizens, this means transparency, cost efficiency, and the freedom to interact with their government in the way that suits them best.