Dear FSF India friends,
I am looking for a free software substitute for Google forms. I would really appreciate if you can suggest something on urgent basis. I wish to turn down 2 requests in which students are being forced to fill their information in Google forms.
Thanks and regards,
SS
--
Snehal M Shekatkar
Pune, India
https://inferred.co
Below are the comments by Richard Stallman on our rough draft.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [FSF-WG] Re: Update on the article about using free software in
education
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 2021 00:18:53 -0500
From: Richard Stallman <rms(a)gnu.org>
Reply-To: rms(a)gnu.org, Private discussion list for Working Group of FSF
India <fsf-wg(a)mm.gnu.org.in>
To: Private discussion list for Working Group of FSF India
<fsf-wg(a)mm.gnu.org.in>
[[[ To any NSA and FBI agents reading my email: please consider ]]]
[[[ whether defending the US Constitution against all enemies, ]]]
[[[ foreign or domestic, requires you to follow Snowden's example. ]]]
> censor them, and abuse them >
<https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/proprietary.html>.
The name we use nowadays is https://gnu.org/malware/.
> -Proprietary Software is a malware >
<https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/proprietary.html>
Likewise.
Also, there should never be an indefinite article before "malware".
It is uncountable.
> For example, Apple > iPhone's proprietary operating system does
[all of these] >
<https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-call-it-the-swindle.html>.
Nowadays all the major proprietary operating systems for the general public
spy on the users. It's in https://gnu.org/malware/.
> -It is an injustice to require students to sacrifice their freedom
to > proprietary software in pursuit of an education. Educational
Institutes > have a moral responsibility to respect students' freedom.
I would delete the first sentence -- it is weak. The item is stronger
without it. Can you see what I mean?
Furthermore, I would add "and teach students to appreciate it -- for
their own future and their country's future."
> -Educational institutes often expose students to privacy-invading
> technology without any real choice to opt out of it
"Opt out" implies it is a minor choice, a matter of convenience. Some
people prefer garlic on their naan and some opt out of the garlic.
Surveillance is an injustice. I suggest the right word to use here is
"avoid", or perhaps "escape".
> <https://www.eff.org/wp/school-issued-devices-and-student-privacy>.
> Educational institutes should respect students' privacy.
A more powerful point, they must never help a company snoop on
students.
> -Proprietary software makes the institute dependent on the owner of
the > software, while free software makes them independent.
The student is "it", not "them".
> Many instructors [require students to install > proprietary
proctoring software in their own > devices]
This is a sudden shift of topic from "teaching" to "proctoring".
Both topics should be covered. I suggest making them separate items.
Instead of "proctoring", why not say "monitoring"?
> Cloud storage - Nextcloud <https://nextcloud.com/>
"Cloud" is an incoherent term -- can you describe more clearly
what job you're proposing a method to do?
> [should be released under free/swatantra licenses >
only]<https://www.stallman.org/articles/online-education.html>. Two such
> free licenses are CC-BY and CC-BY-SA. The GNU Free Documentation
License > (GFDL) <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html> can also be
used for > educational works.
Would you please list the GNU FDL first?
> A free software named Tux Paint
<http://directory.fsf.org/wiki/TuxPaint> > was used at VHSS Irimpanam
school, Kerala where 11 and 12 years old
You need a second comma after "Kerala". That is a fundamental rule of
English punctuation: an explanatory phrase requires a pause before and
after.
Readers will note the word "was". Did it stop using Tux Paint? If
so, why?
--
Dr Richard Stallman
Chief GNUisance of the GNU Project (https://gnu.org)
Founder, Free Software Foundation (https://fsf.org)
Internet Hall-of-Famer (https://internethalloffame.org)
--
Ravi Dwivedi
My PGP key
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…
From RMS' earlier email I shared the link
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/the-meme-hustler in some discussion
groups. In one group where a lot of open source proponents were present,
I got this response:
> A good post should have acknowledged that "free software" fails to
> address sustainability robustly. This is why "open source" exists in
> the first place. Both "freedom" and "sustainability" are moral goals.
I don't intend to respond to this person myself as they make the
foregone conclusion that free software isn't sustainable and it is
rarely a good idea to respond to that.
On the other hand, I am personally in a life-situation where I'm looking
to build a career. I wish to write lots of free software.
What are some good links to read/listen about "sustainability" in free
software? Things that I can use to think about what to do in life.
Akshay
Hi Ravi and others,
I had requested a statement from our head, Prof. Mihir Arjunwadkar. Below I am pasting the same, and honestly speaking, the statement is a bit too long. Hence, I haven't included it in the document yet. Please have a look and suggest a feedback. After that we could decide whether to ask him to shorten + modify it.
"The Department of Scientific Computing, Modeling & Simulation, Savitribai Phule Pune University Pune, India, has a long history (more than 20 years) of preferring FOSS over non-FOSS in its academic programmes. We presently offer two academic degree programmes, one in scientific computing, and the other in modeling & simulation. Students from both the programs require substantial interaction with computers and software at an advanced level.
Although markets are filled with non-free softwares targeted specifically at such academic programs, our experience tells us that their use can be avoided. Many high-quality FOSS tools are available, and some of these are, in fact, better than their proprietary counterparts. For example, we have been using Moodle consistently since 2015 to manage courses, conduct exams, and keep track of every single activity related to various courses. All our computer labs and servers run on GNU-Linux based operating systems. We encourage students and faculty to use FOSS tools like python, julia, etc., GNU octave or SciLab instead of MATLAB, Mathics instead of Mathematica, R instead of S-Plus/SAS/minitab/etc., GNU compilers instead of Intel compilers, signal instead of WhatsApp, OpenFOAM instead proprietary CFD tools, etc. This is in addition to departmental services like ticketing system (rt), mail client (RoundCube), git server (gogs), etc.
The ongoing pandemic has seen a big surge for non-free softwares like Zoom and Google meet: We find that freedom-respecting platforms like jitsi meet for video-conferncing, SimpleScreenRecorder and Open Broadcaster Software (OBS) for screen/video recording, etc., work great. Recorded classes are in turn hosted on our Moodle or Nextcloud servers instead of proprietary services like Dropbox, Google drive, etc. This is possible because we maintain our own servers, and decent connectivity/bandwidth is available (through the University) to host these services.
The pandemic also gave us an opportunity to interact with and help sister departments adopt linux, Moodle, and FOSS in general: The assurance of readily available local expertise in FOSS was enough for many to start considering a move to FOSS. Shrinking budgets thanks to the pandemic seem to be providing a financial incentive.
We whole-heartedly encourage and recommend educational institutions, students, teachers, administrators, and decision-makers to start using freedom-respecting FOSS tools. We will be happy to advise (and assist, to whatever extent possible) educational institutions which are considering adoption of FOSS.
(On a factual note, the department does not interfere with the software preferences and decisions related to research funding brought in by individual researchers.)"
--
Snehal M Shekatkar
Pune, India
https://inferred.co
Feb 26, 2021, 11:52 by snehal(a)inferred.co:
> I have contacted him. I should be able to add this by today evening or so.
>
>
> --
> Snehal M Shekatkar
> Pune, India
> https://inferred.co
>
>
>
> Feb 26, 2021, 02:01 by ravi(a)anche.no:
>
>> Snehal, can you please add your institute's example and your head's statement?
>>
>> --
>> Ravi Dwivedi
>> My PGP key https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…
>> _______________________________________________
>> fsf-discuss mailing list -- fsf-discuss(a)mm.gnu.org.in
>> To unsubscribe send an email to fsf-discuss-leave(a)mm.gnu.org.in
>>
>
>
Snehal, I think we can rephrase the line about the use of WhatsApp by
institutes that was in our zeroth rough draft.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [FSF-WG] Re: Update on the article about using free software in
education
Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2021 01:48:01 -0500
From: Richard Stallman <rms(a)gnu.org>
Reply-To: rms(a)gnu.org, Private discussion list for Working Group of FSF
India <fsf-wg(a)mm.gnu.org.in>
To: Private discussion list for Working Group of FSF India
<fsf-wg(a)mm.gnu.org.in>
CC: fsf-wg(a)mm.gnu.org.in
[[[ To any NSA and FBI agents reading my email: please consider ]]]
[[[ whether defending the US Constitution against all enemies, ]]]
[[[ foreign or domestic, requires you to follow Snowden's example. ]]]
> Even important announcements (exam dates, change of schedule) are
> communicated through WhatsApp. A student either joins the WhatsApp
group > or misses everything.
Those words carry a flavor of despair. Please avoid writing or
speaking with a tone of despair or cynicism -- that is
counterproductive.
--
Dr Richard Stallman
Chief GNUisance of the GNU Project (https://gnu.org)
Founder, Free Software Foundation (https://fsf.org)
Internet Hall-of-Famer (https://internethalloffame.org)
--
Ravi Dwivedi
My PGP key
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…
We had a meeting to finalize our stand on videoconferencing systems. We
got the following draft which we consider as final. I request Siddharth
ro publish it on FSF India website.
Thanks!
---
Title: Better than Zoom and Google Meet: Try these Free Software powered
video conferencing apps and services
We recommend you to use free software
<https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw> powered video conferencing
software like Jitsi<https://jitsi.org/> and
BigBlueButton<https://bigbluebutton.org/>. Since they are free software,
the software is under user's control, and they give the user the freedom
to run their own server which gives users full control over their
communications.
We would like to highlight that the FOSDEM 2021 conference which used
only free software (Matrix and Jisti) and hosted 30,000 attendees
<https://matrix.org/blog/2021/02/15/how-we-hosted-fosdem-2021-on-matrix>
which shows that for large conferences also we need not depend on
proprietary software.
Problems with proprietary videoconferencing systems
In the pandemic time, our communications are being held via nonfree
video conferencing software like Zoom, Google Meet etc.[Link to point 1
of Further Reading section] Hosting video conferencing via non-free
software gives away control of our communications.
Video communications on Zoom are done via Zoom's central server which
mistreats users in various ways such as snooping on users
<https://web.archive.org/web/20210104084812/https://www.vice.com/en/article/…>
and shutting down accounts of activists
<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/jun/11/zoom-shuts-account-of-us…>.
Zoom also censored an event with Palestinian activist Leila Khaled and
other events criticizing its censorship
<https://theintercept.com/2020/11/14/zoom-censorship-leila-khaled-palestine/>.
A Zoom executive reported on users to China, and snooped on meetings
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/12/18/zoom-helped-china-surv…>.
If they discussed the Tien An Men Square massacre, he terminated the
meetings and the participants' accounts, on the orders of China. What
made it possible is that Zoom's design lets staff snoop on every
conversation as it passes through the server.
Further, Zoom's developer has done a lousy job in protecting your
privacy
<https://citizenlab.ca/2020/04/move-fast-roll-your-own-crypto-a-quick-look-a…>.
Surveillance and censorship are the consequences of the power Zoom has
over its users because of its nonfree software and centralized server.
It is Zoom's unjust power over their users that we oppose. This power
bring users at the mercy of the entity(Zoom in this case) providing the
service. The same is true for other non-free conferencing systems like
Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Skype <https://stallman.org/skype.html> etc.
Nonfree programs should never be trusted for privacy even if they say
that the communications are end-to-end encrypted. It could send the
unencrypted version to the owner of the software when asked, bypassing
the encryption. A company that sold encryption systems to 100 countries
was controlled by US and German intelligence, [and the equipment spied
on the governments that used
it]<https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/feb/11/crypto-ag-cia-bnd-germany-i…>
which means that you should never trust a proprietary encryption code to
protect your privacy .
Therefore, we suggest you to reject any nonfree/proprietary software.
How can free software powered video-conferencing systems solve the problem?
If the users communicate using free software installed in a server
controlled by the users or a server run by a trusted service provider,
they get full control over their communications. This gives them control
over the policies of the service and data collection.
With Free Software like Jitsi and BigBlueButton, you have a choice of
service providers, and you are not forced to host your video meetings on
any particular server, say, Jitsi's central server. You can also host
the service in countries with better Free Speech laws instead of forced
to follow only Chinese law, in case of Zoom. This is like dissenters
taking refuge in other countries to avoid persecution by oppressive
governments.
Jitsi instances usually have maximum capacity of 70 participants at a time.
A list of Jitsi instances is here
<https://wiki.chatons.org/doku.php/la_visio-conference_avec_jitsi> and a
list of BigBlueButton instances is here
<https://wiki.chatons.org/doku.php/la_visio-conference_avec_big_blue_button>.
We did not try all the instances mentioned in these links. This is just
a list for users to try different instances. We suggest you to read the
policies of the servers before hosting your communications there.
Autistici's Jitsi instance <https://vc.autistici.org/> supports
recording without using Dropbox or any other nonfree software service
(other Jitsi instances usually require a Dropbox account) and
live-stream without using YouTube (other services usually support
live-streaming with YouTube only) on their own server. To record your
meeting on Autsitici's server, you can click 'Start Recording' when you
want to start and after 'Stop Recording', you will be sent a link in the
Jitsi chat, and you can download the recording in your device.
Jitsi instances like 8x8.vc has an Indian dial in (not toll-free but a
number in Mumbai) number to join the audio conference. So people with
unlimited talk time but not a good internet connection can also join these.
<https://tube.tchncs.de/> and other PeerTube instances that support
live-streaming can be another option.
<https://joinpeertube.org/instances> has a list of PeerTube instances
and you can filter the list by choosing 'Video maker' profile and 'Yes'
to 'And do live streams' option. Apps like NewPipe<https://newpipe.net/>
and Fedilab support watching PeerTube videos and live streams. OBS
<https://obsproject.com/> can be used to stream classes live.
BigBlueButton instances generally have more capacity than Jitsi
instances and instances like https://meet.nixnet.services can scale up
to 270+. Mixed approach of live-streaming and using separate text chat
for questions can increase the limits.
BigBlueButton supports white board, presentations, live-streaming on
YouTube. We suggest you to avoid live-stream on YouTube.
BigBlueButton doesn't need any app on mobiles to work, people can simply
join via any web browser.
Chiguru also runs a BigBlueButton server
<https://classmeet.chiguru.tech/> especially for online classes and
includes paid plans according to your needs.
Conferences conducted using only free software
In the pandemic time, we also saw the successful organization of
conferences using only free software.
FSCI<https://fsci.in/> and Free Software Foundation of
India<https://fsf.org.in/> conducted Free Software Camp
(https://camp.fsf.org.in) entirely using Big Blue
Button<https://videos.fsci.in/accounts/fscamp/videos>. Conferences
DebConf<https://debconf20.debconf.org/about/debconf/> and MiniDebConf
Online India 2021
<https://wiki.debian.org/DebianIndia/MiniDebConfOnlineIndia2021> were
also held using Jitsi and Vogol for live-streaming the conference and
Etherpad + IRC chat were used by the audience to ask questions. Free
Software Foundation<fsf.org> conducted their annual conference
'LibrePlanet' in 2020 online [without the use of any nonfree/proprietary
software]
<https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/libreplanet-2020-in-person-component-ca…>.
The FOSDEM 2021 conference was conducted using only free software which
hosted 30,000
attendees<https://matrix.org/blog/2021/02/15/how-we-hosted-fosdem-2021-on-matrix>
which shows that there is absolutely no reason that [any online
conference should require proprietary software]
<https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2021/feb/08/just-say-no-to-zoom/>.
Add this screenshot here-
https://matrix.org/blog/img/upload_07145dc9cf8d5ae22b6eaf91a63dd8d6.jpg
The article uses the term 'FOSS' which stands for 'Free and Open-Source
Software' which we avoid because we stand for freedom and therefore
prefer 'free software' over 'FOSS'. Any organization seeking to run a
conference can either hire their own people, hire some of the people who
organized FOSDEM to deploy the technology for you. If they can host
their conference using only free software, other organizations can do it
too.
Educational Institutes should switch to free software
Educational institutes all over the world are conducting
lectures/webinars via nonfree software.
We suggest educational institutes to adopt free software alternatives
like Jitsi, BigBlueButton and avoid nonfree software for lectures and
conferences. Conferences can be held using only free software similar to
the above mentioned conferences. Educational institutes have a
responsibility towards their students and teachers to respect their
freedom and privacy. Students should not be forced to give away their
freedom and privacy to attend lectures, webinars to build their career.
If you are from an educational institute, and need help in switching to
free software services which respect your freedom, we will be glad to
help you. Please do not hesitate to contact us in this regard
<https://fsf.org.in/contact>.
Ways in which students can resist
To show rejection of nonfree software, students can resist in various ways.
Students can get in touch with each other and send collective letters to
teachers or their administration to create awareness about the problems
that proprietary software poses. To raise awareness, they can share this
article.
They can ask their teachers to make recordings from the Zoom calls and
post the recordings where they can download them later. We suggest free
software like upload.disroot.org or PeerTube for sharing video lectures.
Or else ask teachers to post the pertinent visual materials so that
students can get them before the class, and they can record the audio
themselves. That way they can attend the classes without running any
nonfree program.
Students can also set up kludges to avoid running nonfree video chat
programs. For instance, the teacher (or one student) could point a
camera at a screen showing the Zoom call, and stream that camera and mic
to the students who want to stay off Zoom. There can also be a kludge
for them to speak and send their voice to the Zoom call.
How to start and join a meeting via Jitsi and BigBlueButton?
Find a Jitsi service that suits your needs
<https://wiki.chatons.org/doku.php/la_visio-conference_avec_jitsi> and
create a room with a random name or a name that you can remember. Share
the meeting link with attendees.
Joining a Jitsi meeting is as easy as clicking a link and loading it in
your browser(Recent versions of Chromium and Firefox) or Android or iOS
Jitsi Meet apps and does not require creating any accounts. Jitsi
meetings can also be password protected so that only invited attendees
can join.
Find a BigBlueButton instance that suits your needs
<https://wiki.chatons.org/doku.php/la_visio-conference_avec_big_blue_button>
and sign up for an account. Once you are logged in, you can create rooms
and share the links with attendees. Joining a BigBlueButton meeting is
as easy as clicking a link and loading it in your browser (Recent
versions of Chromium and Firefox) either on your laptop/desktop or on
your mobile.
Need help? Contact us
If you would like to switch to free software powered services like Jitsi
and BigBlueButton, and you need help in this matter, feel free to
contact us here <https://fsf.org.in/contact>. We would be very glad to
help you.
For further reading:
[1] Members of UK parliament were forced to use Zoom in order to vote
<https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/apr/20/mps-expected-approve-plans…>.
[2] Americans are getting evicted because they could not attend a court
hearing carried out via Zoom
<https://www.npr.org/2020/06/19/880859109/zoom-call-eviction-hearings-they-l…>.
[3] Why Schools Should Exclusively Use Free Software
https://www.gnu.org/education/edu-schools.html
------
--
Ravi Dwivedi
My PGP key
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…
Pad Link: <https://pad.disroot.org/p/educationfreesoftware>
I have a proposal to slightly change the flavor of the article about the
educational institutes that we were discussing.
The new idea is to write a short and precise article to catch attention
and link to GNU articles and their directory
<https://www.gnu.org/software/free-software-for-education.html>. The
main reason to write the article then is to take a stand on the issue
and write in Indian context.
I would like to request for suggestions on how can we give Indian
context to the article. If you find a reference better than
<https://www.thehindu.com/education/ground-zero-gre-and-the-network-of-aspir…>
of proprietary proctoring software being used by educational institutes,
then please add it in the pad.
Below is the zeroth rough draft.
---
Title: Educational Institutes should use software that respects freedom
We urge educational institutes to use only free software for teaching so
that the students do not have to give away freedom and privacy. In
general, any computer user should use free software for their freedom
but educational institutes have additional reasons to insist only on
free software <https://www.gnu.org/education/edu-schools.html>. Their
choice of proprietary software is forced upon students taking away their
privacy. It is their moral responsibility to respect students' freedom
and privacy.
The GNU website lists free software that can be used in schools and
educational institutions of all levels.
<https://www.gnu.org/software/free-software-for-education.html>. The
Free Software Foundation keeps a comprehensive database of educational
software at the Free Software Directory
<https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Category/Education>.
In the pandemic time, we saw educational institutes switching to online
mode for teaching. Unfortunately, they have chosen proprietary software
to do the job. Remote education does not require giving up rights to
freedom and privacy
<https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/remote-education-does-not-require-givin…>.
Many instructors [require students to install proprietary proctoring
software in their own
devices]<https://www.thehindu.com/education/ground-zero-gre-and-the-network-of-aspir…>
which is a very unjust practice in itself. It is shameful that the
article does not criticize the main issue-requiring students to install
proprietary proctoring software in students' own computer. Such
invigilation software, by design, runs even when the owner of the
computer tries to stop it from running long after the exam is finished
and takes full control of the computer which subjects users to abuse.
Software whose functioning mistreats the user is called malware and such
a proctoring software is a malware as many other proprietary programs
are <https://www.gnu.org/proprietary/>.
Free Software Recommendations
Jitsi and BigBlueButton can be used to conduct live classes
<https://fsf.org.in/article/better-than-zoom>. The Jitsi instance
<vc.autistici.org> allows you to live stream lectures without use of any
proprietary software and record lectures and download them in your
device without use of any proprietary software.
Even important announcements (exam dates, change of schedule) are
communicated through WhatsApp. A student either joins the WhatsApp group
or misses everything. Element, Quicksy or Conversations app can be used
as an instant messenger because they respect user's freedom and privacy
<https://fsf.org.in/article/better-than-whatsapp/>.
Educational institutes can send email for announcements because students
won't be forced to use any proprietary software or any specific service
provider. PeerTube can be used to live stream lectures or uploading
recorded lectures.
Some JRF scholarships in India have a provision to provide laptops to
students. We recommend that the college and the students choose laptops
which can run fully free software <https://ryf.fsf.org/products>.
-----
--
Ravi Dwivedi
My PGP key
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…
Dear All,
We have proposal to publish a statement on fsf.org.in urging especially
educational institutes to adopt free software for video conferencing and
avoid Zoom, Google Meet and other nonfree software.
We had a meeting about this and created the very rough first draft. We
have just collected the points but have not organized them yet. The pad
link is here https://pad.disroot.org/p/videoconferencing . Please send
your comments/suggestions as a reply in the mailing list or directly in
the pad.
Thanks a lot!
Attendees: Praveen, Bady, Ravi, Ashutosh
The draft is also pasted in the mail here:
[Title] Better than Zoom and Google Meet: Try these Free Software
powered video conferencing apps and services
Goal
- Raise awareness about dangers of nonfree videoconferencing software
- Suggest alternatives
Article structure:
- Short summary
- Educational institutes are using nonfree software and promoting
specific brands
- Problem with nonfree software
- Problem with promoting specific brands
- Alternatives/concepts
- Ways to resist-- what can students do?
- Conclusion
In the pandemic time, our communications are being held via nonfree
video conferencing software like Zoom, Google Meet etc. Educational
institutes all over the world are conducting lectures/webinars via
nonfree software. Students are forced to give away their freedom and
privacy to attend classes and build their career.
Any non-free software controls the user while any free software is
controlled by its users. When we are talking about free software, we are
not talking about price, we are concerned about freedom. Hosting video
conferencing via nonfree software gives away control of our
communications. Participants are forced to sign EULA(an unjust contract
with the developer). This leads to surveillance, censorship etc.
Censorship by Zoom--
Link 1:
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/jun/11/zoom-shuts-account-of-us…
Link 2: Zoom censored an event with Palestinian activist Leila Khaled
and other events criticizing its censorship
https://theintercept.com/2020/11/14/zoom-censorship-leila-khaled-palestine/
Also we need to question the need for live conferences for regular
classes. Why can't recorded classes work? Questions can be asked
asynchronously.
Why do we limit the numbers when we can actually reach to anyone
interested? We are adding artificial barriers to knowledge.
RMS Suggestion:
Students can also set up kludges to avoid running nonfree video chat
programs.
For instance, the teacher (or one student) could point a camera at a
screen showing the Zoom call, and stream that camera and mic to the
students who want to stay off Zoom. There can also be a kludge for
them to speak and send their voice to the Zoom call.
With Free Software like Jitsi and BBB, we have a choice of service
providers and host the service in countries with better Free Speech laws
instead of forced to follow only Chinese law in case of Zoom. This is
like dissenters taking refuge in other countries to avoid persecution by
oppressive governments.
Educational institutes should not promote specific brands.
Peer-pressure etc.
Features of Big Blue Button: white board, presentations, video streaming
Jitsi instances usually have max capacity of 70 participants at a time.
BBB instances have more capacity and instances like meet.nixnet.services
can scale up to 270+ Mixed approach of live streaming and using separate
text chat for questions can increase the limits.
BBB doesn't need any app on mobiles to work, people can simply join via
any web browser.
vc.autisitici.org support recording without using dropbox or any other
nonfree software service (other instances usually require a dropbox
account) and live stream without using youtube (other services usually
support live streaming with youtube only).
jitsi instances like 8x8.vc has an Indian dial in (not toll free but a
number in Mumbai) number to join the audio conference. So people with
unlimited talk time but not a good internet connection can also join
these conferences.
media.ccc.deb and other peertube instances that supports live streaming
can be an option. Apps like NewPipe and Fedilab support peertube. OBS
can be used to stream classes live.
FSCI and FSFI conducted Free Software Camp (https://camp.fsf.org.in)
entirely using Big Blue Button. DebConf and MiniDebconf were also held
using jitsi and vogol to live stream the conference and etherpad + irc
chat for questions.
https://framapiaf.org/@ChatonsOrg/105633611000307871 - expand with the
actual links
--
Ravi Dwivedi
My PGP key
https://keys.openpgp.org/vks/v1/by-fingerprint/430F5BE41D681CD30711B9AE4D03…