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Open Source Orgs Pledge Fealty to United Nations

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Linux Foundation, GNOME Foundation, others pledge to “support the needs of the United Nations”, promote DEl discrimination & RISE.

The article: https://lunduke.substack.com/p/open-source-orgs-pledge-fealty-to

Open Source Orgs Pledge Fealty to United Nations

ā€œWho controls Open Source?ā€ is a fascinating topic.

Some of the largest ā€œOpen Sourceā€ foundations are primarily funded by corporations which, by most estimations, have not historically been fans of ā€œOpen Sourceā€ or ā€œFree Softwareā€.

Case in point, The Linux Foundation — which brings in roughly a Third of a Billion dollars per year — is heavily funded by corporate sponsors such as Microsoft, Hitachi, Meta, & Tencent. All of which derive most of their revenue from proprietary systems. Likewise Mozilla (bringing in over $600 Million annually) isĀ almost entirely funded by Google.

As the saying goes, ā€œHe who controls the purse strings, controls how the money is spent.ā€

And, of course, we must consider the political control (and influence) over Open Source. Many large Open Source Foundations and Organizations have deep, often financial, ties to political activism organizations — both Mozilla andĀ Wikimedia being some of the more well knownĀ examples.

Well.

Buckle up, Buttercup. Because all of this is about to get a whole lot worse.

Enter the United Nations

The ā€œUN Open Source Principlesā€ is a set of 8 core principles which Open Source organizations are vowing to adhere to. 5 of those 8 principles being fairly obvious and, considering the topic, not at all surprising.

Expected things like ā€œMake Open Source the standard approachā€ and ā€œEncourage active participation in Open Sourceā€. Oh, and ā€œMake security a priorityā€.

Ok. Sure. Fine.

I can understand why an Open Source organization might choose to pledge to follow such ideals. In theory, they were possibly doing those things anyway.

But three of the ā€œUN Open Source Principlesā€ raise significant red flags.

The Red Flag UN Open Source Principles

Let’s go over those three, red flag raising items. Which every signatory has agreed to.

ā€œ4. Foster inclusive participation and community building: Enabling and facilitating diverse and inclusive contributions.ā€

Inclusive. Diverse.

Over the last several years these have become code words for ā€œdiscriminate against people we don’t likeā€. We’ve seen this time and time again — with companies likeĀ Red Hat and IBM building entire corporate policiesĀ around what skin color they want in their employees.

All hidden behind words like ā€œInclusiveā€ and ā€œDiverseā€.

And the United Nations wants Open Source organizations to commit to that form of systemic discrimination.

Already, this is not great. But it gets far, far worse.

ā€œ7. RISE (recognize, incentivize, support and empower): Empowering individuals and communities to actively participate.ā€

If you don’t know what RISE is, that sentence reads like a bunch of corporate buzz word mumbo jumbo. But it has a very real,Ā very sinisterĀ meaning.

What is ā€œRISEā€, you ask? It is a codified framework for encouraging exactly the type of discrimination we just talked about — it has become an increasingly widely used tactic among DEI advocates.

RISEĀ is an acronym:

  • RecognizeĀ the contributions of ā€œunderrepresented or marginalizedā€ groups. Highlight the achievements of ā€œdiverseā€ employees over ā€œnon diverseā€ employeesā€.
  • IncentivizeĀ ā€œunderrepresentedā€ groups (with internships, promotions, scholarships, bonuses, etc.) to encourage ā€œdiversityā€. (read: discrimination)
  • SupportĀ ā€œunderrepresented or marginalizedā€ groups with tailored resources to ensure ā€œequitableā€ outcomes. (read: no meritocracy)
  • EmpowerĀ ā€œdiverseā€ individuals with leadership roles in order to promote DEI.

Sometimes discussion around ā€œRISEā€ specifically includes language regarding ā€œDEIā€ and ā€œDiversityā€. Other times that exact language is left out — but the core goals and motives remain consistently DEI focused.

It is, in essence, a corporate-speak, checklist for encouraging discrimination.

Which brings us to the last ā€œUN Open Source Principleā€. The one which, quite possibly, raises the largest red flag of all…

ā€œ8. Sustain and scale: Supporting the development of solutions that meet the evolving needs of the UN system and beyond.ā€

Did you catch that?

Open Source organizations, which sign on to this compact, are pledging to ā€œsupport the development of solutions that meet the needs of the United Nationsā€.

Or, put another way, those organizations are pledging to do the bidding of the UN. Whatever that might be.

The UN is asking these Open Source organizations to pledge fealty to them.

The Open Source Orgs Pledging Fealty

Which Open Source organizations are we talking about? Quite a few of the big names — names which will be very familiar to Lunduke JournalĀ readers — including:
  • The Linux Foundation
  • The GNOME Foundation
  • Eclipse Foundation
  • The Document Foundation (LibreOffice)

And so many others. Heck, even Nextcloud and Matrix have signed on.

Many of these organizations (and others) recently met, in person, at the United Nations in New York to discuss — among other things — this formal agreement. This… compact.

The UN Global Digital Compact

In June of this year, the United Nations hosted ā€œUN Open Source Weekā€ — and invited a who’s who of organizations which control Open Source in one form or another (along with a number of smaller organizations which are politically aligned with the UN).

This gathering was officially named ā€œan Open Community for the Global Digital Compactā€.

Who did the United Nations make a point of inviting to speak to those in attendance?

Let’s go down the list.

The Gates Foundation and Mozilla.

Of course.

Amazon and, I kid you not, The World Bank.

GitLab and Wikimedia Foundation.

I found the inclusion of Mastodon a fascinating one. While Mastodon is small (in most ways — even considering the size of their social media network), they align strongly to the political goals and views of the United Nations (promote Leftist Extremism, censor political opponents).

And, of course, GitHub. Aka… Microsoft.

In addition, representatives from most of the signatories of the ā€œUnited Nations Open Source Principlesā€ agreement were in attendance (including the GNOME Foundation).

Some of the presentations were about things like ā€œEthicalā€ software, interoperability with United Nations systems, ā€œPublic infrastructureā€, digital ā€œcooperationā€ of governments, and (of course) ā€œinclusionā€.

Many presentations — by many organizations — which already raise significant concerns.

But, and this is important, what did they talk about behind closed doors? What was discussed out of the public eye at the (many) meetings and events where attendees were wined and dined?

That remains unknown.

The Lunduke JournalĀ has asked. The UN isn’t talking. Neither are the attendees.

The Three Masters of Open Source

But we now know, with a high level of certainty, that many of the significant Open Source organizations and Foundations now serve three masters:

  1. The Corporations
  2. The Political Activists
  3. The United Nations

I don’t know about you, but I sure wouldn’t want to have those three masters.

As always,Ā The Lunduke JournalĀ encourages representatives and leadership from any organization involved with this story to reach out — for any reason. Corrections, clarifications, or additional information. Considering the professed commitment to ā€œopennessā€ of every organization mentioned in this story, there should be no reason to continue refusing to speak to journalists regarding it.

Likewise, if you would like to become a whistleblower,Ā there are multiple ways to get ahold ofĀ The Lunduke Journal.

Sunlight is the best disinfectant.

And this story needs a heck of a lot of sunlight.


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