Free Software Foundation India

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The FSF India logo, By Niyam Bhushan
The FSF India logo, By Niyam Bhushan

The Free Software Foundation of India, is a sister organisation to the Free Software Foundation. It was founded in Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), the capital of Kerala in 2001,[1] as a non-profit organization.[2] The FSFI advocates to promote the use and development of free software in India. This includes educating people about free software, including how it can help the economy of a developing country like India. FSF India regards non-free software as not a solution, but a problem to be solved. Free software is sometimes locally called swatantra software in India.

In 2003, after meeting with FSF founder Richard Stallman, the President of India Dr. Abdul Kalam[3][4] urged Indian computer scientists and professionals to use free and open source software [5] in research and development.[6]

Contents

The FSF India Logo

The left side of the FSF India logo resembles the famed Ashoka Chakra, that also appears on the Indian national flag, while it's right half is a depiction of a compact disk. The combination of both symbols is intended to draw attention to the similarity between political freedom and free software, the latter of which the FSF promotes.

The Ashoka Chakra, in addition to being a long standing Hindu symbol of time, also resembles Mahatma Gandhi's charkha (spinning wheel) and thus in the current context, may symbolize the Indian independence movement which resulted in India's freedom from British occupation.


Structure

Board of Directors

Working Group

  • Abhas Abhinav
  • Baishampayan Ghose
  • Frederick Noronha
  • Jitendra Shah
  • Mahesh T Pai
  • Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay
  • Sasi PM
  • Sayamindu Dasgupta
  • Satish Babu
  • Sunil Mohan Adapa
  • Suraj
  • Tathagata Banerjee
  • Warren Brian Noronha

Webmasters

  • Anivar Aravind
  • Baishampayan Ghose
  • Sayamindu Dasgupta
  • Sunil Mohan Adapa

See also

References

External links

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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