Simon Phipps

1222 points
Simon Phipps (smiling)
Southampton, UK

Computer industry and open source veteran Simon Phipps started Public Software, a European host for open source projects, and volunteers as President at OSI and a director at The Document Foundation. His posts are sponsored by Patreon patrons - become one if you'd like to see more!

Over a 30+ year career he has been involved at a strategic level in some of the world’s leading technology companies. He has worked in such hands-on roles as field engineer, programmer and systems analyst, as well as run a software publishing company. He worked with networking standards in the eighties, on the first commercial collaborative conferencing software in the nineties, and helped introduce both Java and XML at IBM.

In mid-2000 he joined Sun Microsystems where he helped pioneer Sun’s employee blogging, social media and community engagement programmes. In 2005 he was appointed Chief Open Source Officer at Sun Microsystems, coordinating Sun’s extensive participation in Free and Open Source software communities until he left in 2010. In that role he oversaw the conversion to Free software of the full Java platform and the rest of Sun’s broad software portfolio, all under OSI-approved Free licenses.

He takes an active interest in several Free and Open Source software organisations and also serves as a director of the UK's Open Rights Group, campaigning for digital rights. He was previously instrumental in the revival of the Open Source Initiative, serving as a director and as its President, a role to which he has now returned. A widely read thought-leader, he publishes regularly both on his own blog and in many other places such as IDG’s InfoWorld.

Authored Content

Copyrights vs. human rights

I wrote last week about the "Typhoid Mary" of internet restriction laws, observing how Wikileaks has confirmed that a wing of the US Government - the US Trade representative…

On copyright aggregation

A collaborative activity dubbed Project Harmony is now under way between corporate and corporate-sponsored participants in the free and open source software communities (not…

Authored Comments

<cite>Right now, licencess can negotiate for such warranties.</cite>

I think you mean "they can try". But in most cases the troll has them over a barrel with the threat of injunctive relief, and I'm not aware of any actually doing so.

<cite>Are you aware of any mechanisms presently used that compel warranties, in an IPR context or otherwise?</cite>

No, I'm not. This is the reason for my proposal; create an automatic right to such a warranty.

That's exactly the sort of activity I'm hoping the new Membership approach will encourage. Right now OSI is just 10 people, but with a global membership it will become possible for projects to form to tackle campaigns like this.