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881_Bits_from_the_DPL.en.srt
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1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,000
Daniel: Welcome everyone, this is the "Bits from the DPL"
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with our Debian Project Leader, Stefano Zacchiroli
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so, really, give a round of applause, I don't think he need much of an introduction
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Stefano: Thanks
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[applause]
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So, I'm sure you're here because this will be the last time
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I'll bother you with this "Bits from the DPL" speech,
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at least at a DebConf, so thanks for being here.
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In this talk, I'm gonna go through two main parts:
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the first one is some sorts of... a set of mantras
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that have become the way I define Debian today.
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I've presented them to various people before
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I see there is enough people in the room
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that won't be bothered because it's the first time they hear them,
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so I hope you will allow me to go through them.
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And then, after this kind of defining mantras of Debian,
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I will present some of the challenges that I think we have in Debian
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and that we need to take care of
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to guarantee that we have a long and healthy life ahead.
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But before that I'm trying to make the point that we did make history.
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So, this is how Debian started in 1993,
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the first quote.
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1993 is almost twenty years ago.
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Back then there were very few GNU/Linux distributions around,
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and they were... they had troubles,
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and the quality was not stellar
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and people started to think about
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"how can we make GNU/Linux competitive with commercial operating system?"
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and Ian Murdock came up with this great idea of Debian
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and this is where all this started.
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But then we made history at least in two ways:
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one way is a sort of community and social way:
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in a more recent interview of a couple of years ago,
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Ian made the point that Debian has been the first intentional community project;
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there were distributions back then,
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there were Free Software projects back then,
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but Debian was kind of designed with community in mind
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and with the idea that if you want something to scale to the size of Debian today
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we need to have a community behind it.
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So, I think we really made the history
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showing up how a project as big as Debian
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can be made only in a community driven way.
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But then, we also made history in very technical ways:
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twenty years has passed since 1993
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and if we look today at Debian
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we have something like almost forty thousands binary packages,
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in Debian proper;
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we have made twelve releases
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and - who knows? - maybe we'll make the thirteenth before the end of this year;
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we have a project of almost one thousand members;
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and almost two hundreds Debian Maintainers
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that are interested in maintaining some parts of Debian;
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and various thousands of contributors doing a lot of other stuff
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useful for the project.
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We have the largest number of ports
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among - let's say - "major" binary distributions out there.
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We have non-Linux ports:
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we have released a version of Debian that works with a kernel other than Linux.
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We haven't yet release a version of Debian that works with a kernel like Hurd
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but for people who like Hurd and want to try it
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Debian still remains the best choice to do that.
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Well done! This is us, making this!
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Bravo! All of you! We made this!
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But then, one thing is making history
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in some ways, technically or socially
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and a completely different thing is remaining relevant.
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So, in these past three years as DPL
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I faced the problem that people were starting to question
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- that was like a couple of years ago -
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"Do we still need Debian?"
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"Ok, you made history, you made a lot of stuff
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you made derivatives, you made a lot of stuff but ...
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... Do we still need Debian today?"
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I've asked myself how to answer the question
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and a way to answer the question is asking us ourselves
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what's different from what we do and what the other distributions do.
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There are something like three hundreds, four hundreds active Free Software distributions around:
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what is that makes Debian special?
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And I've started to thinking at some answers to that question
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and I've come to five specific traits that make - I think - the Debian Project unique.
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I think it's useful to keep them in mind
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and to remind why we are contributing to Debian and not to some other similar project.
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The first reason,
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and sort of my first mantra that makes Debian special,
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is freedom.
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This seems obvious but there's freedom in many ways.
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The first reason why Debian is special in terms of freedom
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is that we essentially have agreed with our public and with Free Software public in general
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to keep Debian always free.
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We've been promoting the culture of Free Software, not only giving Free Software to people,
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we've been promoting the culture of Free Software since 1993,
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and we have a product which is free the bottom up
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there is an incredibly high amount of dog food in what we do.
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So it is free in the software we give to people
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and it's free in the way we make it.
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Every single bit of the Debian infrastructure is free
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and nobody would accept if we start making Debian using like
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non free stuff in our infrastructure.
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This is kind of peculiar per se.
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And we have also a notion of freeness
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in the process we use.
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People who have been around in Debian for quite a while
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have heard the motto of "There Is Not Cabal!"
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as some sort of joke, several times.
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And we use it in saying that, in thinking that there is some cabal around
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but the point is that if we make this joke
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it means that we really cannot stand the idea that there is someone
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driving Debian behind the curtain,
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driving Debian not in the open.
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So we are free not only in our infrastructure,
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not only in the software we make,
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but also in the way we do things.
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We try to be as transparent as we could be.
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And what is interesting for me
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is that there's some sort of community awareness
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of this kind of attachment we have for freedom.
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Our community trusts us to not betray software freedom principles
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and they think that this is being a very high contribution to Free Software in general
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so we've set some sort of very high bar
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to decide when something is free or not.
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When people need to decide if some software is free or if some license
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should be considered Free Software or not
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they go basically to three entities:
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they go to the Free Software Foundation,
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they go to the OSI,
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they go to Debian
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and they see if that license is considered free
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by those people. And we are one of them.
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So first point, which I think is determining what we do in Debian, is freedom. Software freedom.
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Second point is a kind of perfectionism
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which sometimes strikes back on us
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sometimes makes that...
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it gets in the way of some of our choices
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but we do have a sort of culture of technical excellence.
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We have the Policy, which is where we have codified our quality needs for packages;
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we have a huge amount of testing: we have Lintian, we have Piuparts;
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we have automatic testing to see that packages matches our Policy;
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we have maintainers who are software experts.
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We try to discourage people to maintain software in Debian if they only know about packaging
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we try to encourage people to maintain software they use
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and software of which they are experts
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and this is huge in terms of users support.
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So when a user comes to us
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comes to the respective maintainer of some software in Debian,
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usually he find someone that knows about that specific piece of software.
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This, for us, is quality.
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We have packages that are all up to the same quality requirements
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and there are no packages... there is no distinction in the Debian archive that says
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"we try to have this quality requirements for one part of the archive
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and a different one for another part of the archive".
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And also when we say "we release when it's ready"
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it's our way to say that
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we know we cannot commit yet to a specific date
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because we fear finding issues, quality issues, just before that release date
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and we fear compromising our release quality for that specific date.
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So when we say "we release when it's ready"
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is also a matter of quality.
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Third point, and something important for what I'm going to tell you next,
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is independence.
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If you look around at the ecosystem of distributions out there
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you won't find many distributions where
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you cannot pinpoint a company that is backing the distribution.
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Among the big distribution, we are one of the very few
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that is completely run on a volunteer basis
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that have no corporate or some sort of hierarchical structure
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where the decisions come from top down.
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We have no single company babysitting us
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and we essentially live up to donations,
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in terms of time, so volunteers contributing time to Debian
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and donations in terms of money.
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This is very remarkable
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in the ecosystem of today, especially in Free Software distributions.
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And once more we have a phenomenon of community awareness:
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our community seems to trust that, due to this independence of us,
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decisions in Debian won't be taken due to some profit reasons
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or other kind of reasons than our own core values.
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So, independence is another very important value, for me, that motivates me to contribute to Debian.
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And then, we have decision making.
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Decision making is something that is very well codified in our Constitution.
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The basic rule, which I started to call a while ago do-ocracy
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- actually I picked it up from someone but I don't remember from whom I did pick it up,
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but it seems to be sticking around -
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essentially it says that if someone is responsible to do some kind of work in Debian,
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as long as is doing that work, well, they decide how to do it.
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Nobody can go there and say: "you need to do that work in that way",
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unless
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they are ready to commit and do the work themselves.
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And this is the default rule.
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All decisions in Debian, by default, are taken this way
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and then we have also democracy:
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we have come to some kind of potential correction on how we take decisions.
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So we are allowed to take decisions all together,
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in a democratic way, voting on stuff.
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We are wise enough to that only, and in general, for political reasons
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and for philosophical reasons
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we try not to do that for technical reasons
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but we can do that even for technical reasons.
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So we try to use this
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as some sort of way to make the default way of taking decisions works.
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And what this means?
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This means that is very easy to have an impact on Debian
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if you know how to do something in Debian, and nobody is doing that,
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you can pick it up
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and if you start doing it, you will decide how to do that.
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So, this is why is very is to have an impact on Debian thanks to the way we take decisions
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but it also means that the reputation in the project follows work
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if you have a good reputation in the project is usually because you've done a lot of work
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and a lot of very high quality work.
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And finally, once more, it means that there are not imposed decisions
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it's not like the people who own the infrastructure
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or who employ people
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can decide how decisions are made
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decisions are made this way.
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And last point,
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we've ended up being as some sort of root
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of a huge ecosystem of derivatives.
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I believe you all know what derivatives is about:
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you take an existent distribution,
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you start compiling packages,
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you add your own packages, you change stuff
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and you obtain a completely new distribution.
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This is something that started to happen in the last
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- started to happen massively -
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in the last - let's say - ten years
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and that really changed the way in which distribution products are made.
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Derivatives can focus on customization
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and benefit from all of the work that is done by their mother distribution
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and Debian ended up being at root at something like
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140 active distributions
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according to distrowatch.
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That means that the work we do in Debian
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is not only relevant for our own - let's say - "direct" users,
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is useful for the users of all this sort of distributions
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which include the most popular distributions out there.
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People out there, even if they do not know, rely a lot on the work which is done in Debian
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and I think that this is great.
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All in all, my point here is that Debian has a very important role to play
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in the Free Software ecosystem in general
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and if we fail at doing what we are supposed to do
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not only the direct users of Debian will fail.
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I think Free Software in general will suffer from a failure in Debian on delivering what we are about.
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So the question is:
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are we up to what we are supposed to do in Free Software in general?
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And I've seen some challenges that I would like to discuss with you.
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The first challenge is staying healthy
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and staying healthy
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for a Free Software project, for a volunteer Free Software project, essentially means
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being able to recruit people
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to find new volunteers that year after year join the project
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and if you have heard me talking at DebConf on the past two years