Disaster Richard Stallman resigns from the Free Software Foundation and his position at the MIT

RMS has resigned from some honorary position at MIT.

To the MIT community,
I am resigning effective immediately from my position in CSAIL at MIT. I am doing this due to pressure on MIT and me over a series of misunderstandings and mischaracterizations.
Richard Stallman
Vice Article
 
I remember his old ED article making reference to him getting filthy spergy secks from fangirls ("the only one who could be considered hot was this one psycho little Jewish chick who looked liked Kirsten Dunst" or something like that >pics or gtfo) on the filthy mattress in the office he used to live in at MIT. I wonder if there's any truth to that; and if he might stand at risk of being #MeToo'd; perhaps not, as he doesn't show a lot of evidence of being much of a sexual being and I find the thought of him being sexually aggressive to be besides horrifying unlikely; more like some of the women in question were thirsting for his cock because of what measure of fame he has. But then again, given the likely emotional stability of said fangirls & the whole wimminz-in-tech stuff in general (although he generally seems to come down in favour of stuff like gender-neutral language, I think he's even used non-pronouns) ... I do wonder. I do not want to think about that mental image though.
 
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It really do be like it is. a bunch of code monkeys doing the needful, which can be thrown at a problem en-masse. I don't know if you know how much it sucks to interview people, and to have such high expectations of people with a good degree, good grades, experience, who can't solve fizzbuzz in any way other than the trivial. The sad reality is that good programmers and engineers are hard to come by, most are just okay.

Having worked in the tech field and the medical field, the software used in the latter is often of absolutely abysmal quality both in UI/UX and engineering characteristics (the front-end database stuff tends to leak memory like a sieve and often crash if one tries to use it at all outside of the box in terms of how one is "trained" to do it; good software doesn't do that, you get trained to do it and then explore and do more, not get trained on its limitations and how to do a select few things repetitively), because of exactly this. There is so much demand for software, since the Internet boom tech jobs have been considered so desirable ("go into tech, make money") and it really takes a special sort of brain (often a slightly autistic one, but by no means always) to write good software which is why there are so many rεταrdεδ trends in software development like "pair programming" and so on, to try and replicate what is a rare skill, like music composition, maybe, and roll it out on an industrial level.

On a superficial level, if you're telling people to produce software, paying them and firing them if they do or don't respectively, you'll probably get something that does the job, but unless they have any real artistry it will be loaded with infuriating problems and limitations both experentially and technically for the end user. Writing software is really like writing literature or music in the sense that orders of magnitude more people can tell what is good or bad than produce anything good, and only people who have a litle knowledge can even really tell that a lot of what circulates is actually bad. The issue is that there is just too much software. The free software spergs do have a point in that some of the problem is redundancy (different groups producing their own [whatever] product); and there is a reason good modern systems still use code from the 80s, because it just works and is solid (when it doesn't, that's a whole 'nother issue) and has no need to change. Efforts to change the good shit on the part of lesser programmers are often disastrous either in UX (the "new" MS Office, with the stupid ribbons on top) or engineering capacities. Not even touching security. That's the really scary part. Another scary part is that way too many of the smart programmers are working with capital-E Evil companies like Google and so on, even if they are working on "free software," so-called.

The average software produced by the average programmer on the average job is like paying a bunch of guys by the note to write a symphony that people won't walk out of before the intermission. Mediocrity a la the snippets of code we've seen from YandereDev predominate. I have seen so much bad code and so many bad sysadmins (often affirmative action cases) when working outside the tech world and had to silently scream to myself; I actually worked for a few months and created a system for managing patient appointments, etc. for a clinic I was working in, that everyone loved, but then got came down on hard because it wasn't certified, etc. while all the alternatives that existed were horrible UX-wise. Because nobody thinks or cares and non-tech people think that the difficulties of dealing with horrible software are just what it is to deal with computers; it isn't; it really is a great experience to work with a great piece of software (or a great library) to do neat things, pity most people never get to feel that feel because mediocrity predominates especially in programs like Web browsers (or even less complicated things) that are an order of magnitude more complicated than last generation's operating systems. That's inevitable, because we want more out of computers than there are developers to give us, under the commercial model, and the open-source model can't really reach everyone, and while the corporate/commercial model produces shit because it herds uninspired programmers together at the bottom of the pyramid, the open source model, produces shit because it herds spergs together all the way through which is a major impediment to getting anything done. It's depressing, really.

* who seems an interesting character- see the story of his name change for example
:rainbow-puzzle-piece.jpeg

This ties back into Stallman's comments about age of consent issues. Autists like this just don't understand that some things are the way they are socially and that you are supposed to go along with them. Being autists, they make up some uttery logical but utterly inane and stupid theory to replicate the theory of mind that they don't have, and then they actually go ahead and express it or try to live by it instead of trying to live according to the ways of the world.
 
Interesting, had never heard that story. Covered well by one of the guys involved* here:
https://archive.li/aIwUU

* who seems an interesting character- see the story of his name change for example
yep, that's the one. A sad story, and you see it recur in many places in the lifecycle of software projects - some visionaries, usually mad, likely unwashed, solves a unique problem in a lisp. It actually works and god forbid, it even makes them money. Then comes the time when you need to hire other monkeys to help with the development load. Eventually you'll hire someone who doesn't get it and he'll either want to rewrite the project in java, or rewrite the project to look like java, just with extra parens. It sucks diseased moose wang, and in a few years the org will start shifting towards another interface dead brain language like java, or now go.
 
any real artistry
We're veering wildly off topic but you're hitting the nail on the head here. Most programmers have zero sense of style, and you should absolutely have style in your software. You should look up talks by Kevlin Henny and ignore him poking fun at brexit once in a while, he's a smart guy. He delves deep into the whole "programming is communication and our codebse is the sum of our knowledge". How do you expect someone who can't clearly express themselves concisely in words regarding the domain problem to do so in code? abysmal.
They just throw more developers on the problem and break it down to smaller and smaller ideas until it gets spread infinitesimally thin between all programmers who all write AbstractProxyFactoryBeanManager's
 
Having worked in the tech field and the medical field, the software used in the latter is often of absolutely abysmal quality both in UI/UX and engineering characteristics (the front-end database stuff tends to leak memory like a sieve and often crash if one tries to use it at all outside of the box in terms of how one is "trained" to do it; good software doesn't do that, you get trained to do it and then explore and do more, not get trained on its limitations and how to do a select few things repetitively), because of exactly this.

I have seen absolutely insane shit so old that it can't even be run on any currently existing machines and can only be run in some fucked up VM emulating some very specific hardware. I am glad I have nothing to do with that shit any more.
 
You know what's interesting about every bug in software that was written in a strongly typed language? It passed the type checker and compiled. Types don't assure correctness, they're guard rails against total idiots. There are several ways to overcome that with dynamically typed languages, in particular lisps, such as record types, schema enforcement at critical points in the system, polymorphism on demand, and racket also developed an optional type system which was ported to clojure. a real type system on top of your lisp. (to be fair circlci dropped core.typed, but they moved to schema).
More importantly, with a lot of Lisps, if your program errors, you are dropped into a debugger and still have full access to the system, so you can fix the bug permanently right there and then continue that code path as if the code was working the whole time. Errors don't have to kill you. There's even a style of Lisp programming where you write an intentionally incomplete program, run it, and add more of the program each time you are thrown into the debugger so that you can continue that code-path. Eventually, the program is finished and everything works.

There's a bunch of stories from this from folk who've shipped Lisp products. They get a call that the software has gone wrong, so they remote into the faulty machine, get to the debugger, fix the problem, and continue, without bringing any part of the system down. A similar story is told about the use of Lisp by NASA here, where they talk about patching live code running on Mars:

"I didn't have to worry about the changes we were making to the system on an ongoing basis. I knew they weren't likely to mess up the system or cause it to break. And sure, that was important. We were operating in a 'flight environment' here! To bring a complex, evolving piece of code like this into a flight environment is a feat in and of itself!"

I wouldn't blame Lisp for the shittiness of software. We've been in a perpetual software crisis since we started coding. I personally blame the utter lack of mathematical sophistication of the majority of programmers and the lack of any sort of formal methods. That lack of sophistication is, if anything, responsible for Lisp's downfall. Instead, MIT have sold us the idea that the current generation's Lisp is fucking Python. There's your software shittiness.

This is one place where mission critical code, such as the stuff running on aeroplanes, gets a let off. That code is written to engineering standards that would throw out 99.9% of all code written today. Even the 737 MAX code looked to be working to spec. It just happened that the spec was clueless.
 
This copy of Stallman's 'rider' text, from a few years ago but no doubt developed over a number of decades, is an interesting read, and makes very clear a number of things:
  1. he certainly hasn't been creaming it as a result of his activities for the promotion of free software over the decades
  2. he absolutely will not budge from his principles (at least in situations like pre-planned events where doing so would be unneccessary)
  3. while neuroatypical (doesn't even like olives!) he deeply cares about the welfare of other people- and animals- and has worked on techniques to ensure that he is not a burden on those he is around
Dealing with cultural/social clash:
In some places, my hosts act as if my every wish were their command.
By catering to my every whim, in effect they make me a tyrant over
them, which is not a role I like. I start to worry that I might
subject them to great burdens without even realizing. I start being
afraid to express my appreciation of anything, because they would get
it and give it to me at any cost. If it is night, and the stars are
beautiful, I hesitate to say so, lest my hosts feel obligated to try
to get one for me.

When I'm trying to decide what to do, often I mention things that
MIGHT be nice to do--depending on more details, if it fits the
schedule, if there isn't a better alternative, etc. Some hosts take
such a tentative suggestion as an order, and try moving heaven and
earth to make it happen. This excessive rigidity is not only quite
burdensome for other people, it can even fail in its goal of pleasing
me. If there is a better alternative, I'd rather be flexible and
choose it instead--so please tell me. If my tentative suggestion
imposes a lot of trouble on others, I want to drop it--so please tell
me.

When you need to tell me about a problem in a plan, please do not
start with a long apology. That is unbearably boring, and unnecessary
-- conveying useful information is helpful and good, and why apologize
for that? So please be practical and go straight to the point.

Forget wasting money on hotels- and opinions on parrot protection:
I am willing to stay in a hotel if there is no other way.
Please book the hotel for me and arrange to pay the hotel directly.

But please DON'T make a hotel reservation until we have fully explored
other options. If there is anyone who wants to offer a spare couch,
or even some spare floor, I would much rather stay there than in a
hotel (provided I have a door I can close, in order to have some
privacy). Staying with someone is more fun for me than a hotel, and
it would also save you money. Floor space is sufficient because I
bring an air mattress with me...

If you can find a host for me that has a friendly parrot, I will be
very very glad. If you can find someone who has a friendly parrot I
can visit with, that will be nice too.

DON'T buy a parrot figuring that it will be a fun surprise for me. To
acquire a parrot is a major decision: it is likely to outlive you. If
you don't know how to treat the parrot, it could be emotionally
scarred and spend many decades feeling frightened and unhappy. If you
buy a captured wild parrot, you will promote a cruel and devastating
practice, and the parrot will be emotionally scarred before you get it.
Meeting that sad animal is not an agreeable surprise.

Attack the system!
If you buy bus or train tickets for me, do not give my name! Big
Brother has no right to know where I travel, or where you travel, or
where anyone travels. If they arbitrarily demand a name, give a name
that does not belong to any person you know of. If they will check my
ID before I board the bus or train, then let's look for another way
for me to travel. (In the US I never use long-distance trains because
of their ID policy.)

Don't give them your name either: please pay for the ticket in cash.
 
While we're talking about Lisp a bit, I remember reading that old 'Lisp Curse' article a while back (https://archive.li/L7Y0W). It was a pretty interesting take they had: that the reason Lisp doesn't enjoy the success of more mainstream languages is because Lisp is too powerful, and that the programming language itself is a magnet for super-autists that can't play nice with each other.

On another note that's probably unrelated to my previous paragraph I promise, Richard Stallman was also a proud advocate for Lisp (https://archive.li/0aXLf):
The most powerful programming language is Lisp. If you don't know Lisp (or its variant, Scheme), you don't know what it means for a programming language to be powerful and elegant. Once you learn Lisp, you will see what is lacking in most other languages.
...
My favorite programming languages are Lisp and C. However, since around 1992 I have worked mainly on free software activism, which means I am too busy to do much programming. Around 2008 I stopped doing programming projects. As a result, I have not had time or occasion to learn newer languages such as Perl, Python, PHP or Ruby. I read a book about Java, and found it an elegant further development from C. But I have never used it. I did write some code in Java once, but the code was in C and Lisp (I simply happened to be in Java at the time ;- ).

(Seriously though, Lisp is definitely worth a try for anyone that's into programming.)
 
This has been going around a bit in the past day or so but on the 18th, Red Hat put out an open letter to the FSF asking them to pick a diversity hire to lead their organization.

To the Board of Directors of the Free Software Foundation (FSF):
The free software movement draws strength from an environment that is collaborative, inclusive and respectful. Diverse groups of people from all walks of life and nationalities come together and use their strengths and life experiences to contribute, share ideas, challenge the status quo, and improve technology for all. Everyone, including those who have been underrepresented and marginalized in technology, should be able to freely participate to produce useful software including in open source communities.
Red Hat urges the FSF board to seize the opportunity during its current leadership succession by appointing a president and members of its board that are more diverse, including from a national, racial and gender perspective.

Diversity in tech is a smokescreen for corporate control.
 
Naivestallman.jpg

[/nsfw]
 
I hope you aren't suspicious of why IBM, in collusion with broken autogynophiles, would join an effort to attack free software. There would be no reason to have such suspicions, no reason at all.
IBM isn't the worst company for open source projects but they do have a very "corporate" mindset towards things. I know for a fact that before the buyout Red Hat had a reputation of being the cancer killing Linux among some. Red Hat both is responsible for the rise of "lennartware" and they employ troons who defend pedophiles.

I wonder what's on that troon's page right now:
1569102222223.png
1569102274459.png
Oh....
 
Without sounding Mad At The Internet, fuck Wired with a rake
Accused of minimizing the harms from sexual assault and child sex slavery, the free-software icon has been banished. Now begins the hard work of making tech welcoming and inclusive.
Facade of the Neoclassical MIT 'Barker Engineering Library' with great dome illuminated at dusk architect William Welles...

Richard Stallman, the 66-year-old programmer and animating spirit behind the free-software movement, was banished this week. He was told to leave the MIT offices he worked from, and sometimes slept in, for decades. He was removed as president of the Free Software Foundation, an organization he founded in 1985.
The moves were in response to Stallman’s objectionable comments on the Jeffrey Epstein case posted to an MIT email list, which confirmed a new reality: Minimizing the harms from sexual assault, sex slavery, and sex with children is simply beyond the pale. But more than this one man’s story, Stallman’s banishment can be seen as a first reckoning for so many dreams deferred, as Langston Hughes delicately describes lives thwarted before full bloom.
Stallman is typically called eccentric or strange or, more frequently—and by the MacArthur Foundation, no less!—a genius. But the occasional WIRED contributor was, most significantly, accused of being a formidable impediment to the careers of women interested in the free-software movement and computer science more generally.
The testimony was all there on Twitter to read. Christine Corbett Moran, a technical group supervisor at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab, wrote of meeting Stallman in her first year at MIT at a hacker conference—he’s a legend, he’s a hero. She’s 19. She is introduced as an MIT student; she’s wearing an MIT shirt. He asks her out on a date. She says no. He moves on. (Stallman did not respond to requests for comment.)

Also on Twitter, Star Simpson recalls taking a walk on the MIT campus with an upperclassman, who points out all the foliage in one woman professor’s office and tells her that women in computer science keep plants because, as the rumor went, Stallman hates them. “I am still struck by the idea that all of the professors in the lab would keep special charms and amulets to ward off a specific person,” she writes. “If nothing else, this is an incredible illustration of the lack of functional recourse that professional women there previously had.” A message is sent: No one in power is going to protect you. If you want to survive, you’re on your own. Better get creative.
So much of life is about girding oneself against disappointment and adversity, but must those lessons begin freshman year at MIT?
Most of the testimony against Stallman is from women who opted out of the free-software movement but stayed in tech, even though the sensible decision upon meeting Stallman and his enablers may well have been to leave the field entirely. When news leaked out Monday night of Stallman’s punishments, there was an explosion of joy, rage, disbelief and “what now?” frenzy on Twitter. Many of his critics expressed precisely the same message: Now begins the hard work of making the free-software movement welcoming and inclusive.
Hardly a household name, Stallman is the stuff of myth among male techies—a John Henry who single-handedly tried to beat Big Tech at its own game, with a touch of Robin Hood thrown in. He was seen as a freedom fighter on behalf of the little people being surveilled, overcharged, and disempowered.
Back in the 1980s, Stallman was a researcher at MIT angered at the thought of the public’s being at the mercy of big companies and their hegemonic proprietary software. He proposed leading a team to code an operating system that could be freely shared and modified. Supported by his 1990 MacArthur grant, Stallman travelled the world giving talks about this dream, and along the way he met a young undergraduate in Finland in 1991—Linus Torvalds—who took up the cause and created Linux, which keeps the tech giants’ computers operating without onerous licensing fees.

During his work on the operating system that would become Linux—which Stallman insists be called GNU/Linux to acknowledge the part he worked on—Stallman devised an ingenious licensing system, which has come to be known as copyleft. (GNU is, of course, a recursive acronym that stands for GNU’s not Unix.) A copyleft license shares code with anyone who wants to use it under the condition that any additions to the code likewise be shared with further recipients. Wikipedia, among other things, operates that way—you contribute to Wikipedia, you are sharing with everyone.
Stallman has been a singular figure in geek culture for nearly four decades, dubbed “the last of the true hackers” by Steven Levy in his 1984 book Hackers, and more recently lionized by the likes of xkcd, the Randall Munroe comic strip beloved by the programming class.
Stallman is a recurring character in xkcd, a swashbuckling foe of the Microsoft, drawn as a beard attached to a stick figure, scabbard at his side. He speaks heroically: “Cease this affront to freedom or stand and defend yourselves.” And, notably, the Stallman of xkcd has no problem with women, and women have no problem with him. In one case, he encounters a talented programmer and invites her to join the movement—unlikely, given Stallman’s treatment of women face-to-face; in another strip, a woman programmer is said to have a picture of Stallman next to her desk.
In one fanciful strip, which imagines the world ending in 2050, the caption reads: “One of the survivors, poking around in the ruins with the point of a spear, uncovers a singed photo of Richard Stallman. They stare in silence. ‘This,’ one of them finally says, ‘This is a man who BELIEVED in something.’ ”
Stallman becomes an inspiration for the great man myth of Silicon Valley, the brilliant programmer who codes to change the world. He battles the status quo and the stupid—usually one in the same. He is invariably misunderstood and harshly judged by those who fear his powers. Later, he becomes so enthralled by his vision that he excuses—and is excused for—all the wreckage around him. Sound familiar? Is Mark Zuckerberg—the brilliant young man who dreamed of connecting the world and instead made everyone isolated and angry—very different? Is Sergey Brin or Larry Page?
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I first spent time with Stallman a decade ago, in Buenos Aires, where I was covering Wikipedia’s global meetup for The New York Times. He was invited to speak there, though he made clear that his project doesn’t adhere to Wikipedia’s more decentralized anyone-can-edit, no-one-is-in-charge philosophy.
“The way free software works is, I may write a program, and I will put my version in a site, and I might then let some other people work on it with me, but I’ll decide who can work on it,” he told me. “I’m not going to let just any unknown person install changes in my version. But you, once you download a copy, you are free to distribute copies, you can make changes, you can post your version wherever you want. And then you control your version. And then they could use my version or they cooperate with me, or they could use your version and cooperate with you or make their own versions and post them. So every user has freedom. But every version that is being distributed is under the control of some group.”
The accounts from women about the pall that Stallman cast at MIT first appeared on Twitter a year ago—the reason then was a call to remove a joke he made about abortion in the official manual for the project he runs. When the manual describes the “abort function,” Stallman inserted a note about how federal regulations might change how the project deals with “aborting.” Not a particularly funny joke, and certainly not useful. The addition, which dates to the 1990s, represents another example of Stallman trampling personal boundaries. Those who removed the joke said they didn’t believe women should have to navigate Stallman’s thoughts about abortion while reading a coding guide.
Stallman was insistent that he would not withdraw the joke: “On this particular question, I made a decision long ago and stated it where all of you could see it. If you would like me to change it, it is up to you to convince me to change my decision.”
This is a lesson we are fast learning about freedom as it promoted by the tech world. It is not about ensuring that everyone can express their views and feelings. Freedom, in this telling, is about exclusion. The freedom to drive others away. And, until recently, freedom from consequences.
After 40 years of excluding those who didn’t serve his purposes, however, Stallman finds himself excluded by his peers. Freedom.
Maybe freedom, defined in this crude, top-down way, isn’t the be-all, end-all. Creating a vibrant inclusive community, it turns out, is as important to a software project as a coding breakthrough. Or, to put it in more familiar terms—driving away women, investing your hopes in a single, unassailable leader is a critical bug. The best patch will be to start a movement that is respectful, inclusive, and democratic.



Noam Cohen
is a journalist and author of The Know-It-Alls: The Rise of Silicon Valley as a Political Powerhouse and Social Wrecking Ball, which uses the history of computer science and Stanford University to understand the libertarian ideas promoted by tech leaders. While working for The New York Times, Cohen... Read more

The controversial pioneer of free software resigned from MIT over his remarks on Jeffrey Epstein and Marvin Minsky. Stallman won’t be the last.
Richard Stillman

Photograph: Michael Debets/Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images


A few days ago I got a tweet directed to me:

If I find another copy of the Blue Cover version of Hackers could I get you to autograph it again? The one I currently have was signed by you and Richard Stallman at LinuxWorld in 1999, and I'm afraid I'm going to have to burn or shred it.
This requires some decoding: Thirty-five years ago I wrote a book called Hackers. The last section centered on a hugely odd young man who considered himself the lone survivor of an unsung subculture of information sharing at MIT. He was, he said, like Ishi, the last of the Yahi people, the sole member of his indigenous tribe. Stallman, aka RMS (his email handle), later achieved fame in the digital realm as the champion of free software. Last week Stallman (who has in the past written for WIRED) penned some comments related to the Jeffrey Epstein case that implied sex with young women was not “sexual assault.” A deep dive into his archive revealed some questionable comments about pedophilia. Now Stallman is a pariah, even to former fanboys who find themselves flinging books into the flames to immolate his signature.
Yesterday RMS resigned from MIT and the Free Software Foundation he founded. For those who have followed his free-software movement, Stallman leaving MIT is like the big dome on Massachusetts Avenue itself getting an eviction notice. But after decades of tone-deaf comportment and complaints now emerging from women about his behavior, Stallman’s time was up.
The moment goes beyond Stallman, a MacArthur “genius” grant recipient and author of key pieces of the open source software that basically runs our world these days. MIT itself is melting down because of Epstein, the now deceased serial rapist who insinuated himself into the Media Lab with his money and what its leaders considered his charm. The lab’s director, Joi Ito (who was a contributing writer to WIRED), resigned under pressure, and now people are calling for the ouster of MIT’s president, who apparently OK'd the payments. But the Stallman affair touches on something else: a simmering resentment about the treatment of women by the scruffy brainiacs who built our digital world, as well as the Brahmins of academia and business who benefited from the hackers’ effort. With the Epstein revelations that resentment has boiled over.
Stallman put himself in the path of that outrage by contributing to a CSAIL mail thread defending the late artificial intelligence guru Marvin Minsky. (The acronym stands for the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab.) In a deposition, one of Epstein’s victims says he instructed her to have sex with Minsky. Stallman reacted in a way that anyone who knew him would not be surprised to see. Instead of considering the pain of a young person treated in such a manner, he nitpicked about whether such a case would be a proper instance of “sexual assault,” since the young woman, he reasoned, would have seemed to be presenting herself to Minsky willingly. (It is far from resolved whether Minsky had sex with the woman.) In the email thread there is another classic Stallman-ism: He wanted to read the actual deposition, but it was only available in a Google Doc. Stallman boycotts all commercial software, and had to ask someone to send it to him.
Stallman showed a similar blindness more than 10 years ago with idiotic comments on pedophilia, opining that 14-year-old girls have free will and therefore may not be victims of older men who have sex with them. More recently he recanted, saying that people took pains to explain to him that girls actually suffer harm from those interactions, and that his mind was changed. He did not respond to requests for comment by the time of this article's publication.

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Stallman’s foibles are legend in the computer science world. People who never met him know about his quirks. There are many. When he travels to give speeches, he likes to stay with hosts rather than at hotels. A few years ago, a list of instructions emerged for those lucky hosts. It made the Rolling Stones look easy to please. He specifies, for example, that he likes parrots and would love to interact with a friendly parrot, but he hoped his hosts would not feel obliged to therefore buy a parrot just for his visit.
Generally, the word inappropriate doesn’t seem to be in his vocabulary. He once invited a friend of mine to lunch at a fancy restaurant, and she accepted, on the condition that he comb his hair and wear suitable attire. After a pleasant meal, he asked her if she minded if he danced. (Stallman is famously a lover of folk dancing.) “Go ahead,” she said, and he pranced around the tables, solo, in high-stepping glee, oblivious to the discomfort of diners.
That same obliviousness probably led to jokes in bad taste on email lists, and the scrawled name card on this door at MIT, where he was until yesterday a Visiting Scientist. “Richard Stallman,” it read, in black Sharpie, “Knight for Justice (Also: Hot Ladies).”
That name card is an image in the recent Medium post of MIT alumnus Selam Jie Gano, in which she demanded that he be tossed off the campus. Her essay is an example of the raised voices of women at MIT in the post-Epstein era, and maybe even in the tech world at large. “There is no single person that is so deserving of praise their comments deprecating others should be allowed to slide,” she wrote. “Particularly when those comments are excuses about rape, assault, and child sex trafficking.”
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If the question was When does obliviousness become inexcusable? Selam Jie Gano had an answer. Now. Especially when it goes hand in hand with a culture where, for decades, casual sexism has not been called out. Last week MIT graduate danah boyd, accepting a well-deserved award from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, unloaded on her alma mater, citing years of sexual harassment, including an inappropriate comment from Minsky. The outrage is real and justified. This is the moment for amends.
And it’s certainly a terrible moment for Richard Stallman to dismiss the pain of sexual abuse by way of a semantic argument.
Stallman keeps a running log of “political notes”—things that catch his interest, where he’ll post a link and often a comment. (That was the source of his earlier remarks on pedophilia.) On Monday, between entries on the Sacklers’ financial dealings and climate change, he slipped in a personal comment that ended an era, in many ways: “I am resigning effective immediately from my position in CSAIL at MIT. I am doing this due to pressure on MIT and me over a series of misunderstandings and mischaracterizations.” Later, the Free Software Foundation announced that its founder and president had resigned from that as well.
There are tragic threads to this Stallman story. His inability to understand the hurt that comes from insensitivity led to his expulsion from the world he knew and loved. I worry what will happen next for him. But the greater tragedy is how long it took for such behavior to become disqualifying. While Stallman is uniquely Stallman, he was also a representative of a culture that failed to welcome the women who could have led hacking, and computing, to even greater heights. Stallman is now more alone than I found him 35 years ago. But do not call him the last of his kind. More will fall as the reckoning continues.
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Steven Levy
covers the gamut of tech subjects for WIRED, in print and online, and has been contributing to the magazine since its inception. He has been writing about technology for more than 30 years, writing columns for Rolling Stone and Macworld; leading technology coverage for Newsweek; and cocreating a... Read more
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