Stepping into the Future of the FSFans Community
TL;DR FSFans is moving to a federated forum to make discussions more open and participant-driven. Join at fedi.fsfans.club or !fsfans@fedi.fsfans.club. Everyone follows simple community rules and can manage their own interactions—there are no traditional “members,” only participants.
In the recent years, we saw a lot of changes to the free software movement and more importantly the free software communities. Among them, Free Software Foundation and its community might be the largest one, and currently fraught with conflict. The allegation on Richard Stallman, the article "The Free Software Foundation is dying" from Drew DeVault, the non GeNUine boot shenanigans, all these have kept the community in debates and arguments. Unfortunately, we also saw that similar is happening to more and more communities like movim.
The Problem
So are free software communities dominated by separatists and doomed to vanish? While Freach once gave an answer: free software communities are doomed to fragment into many small groups that then freely collaborate. Why? Because everyone has their value system and it's impossible to align everyone! So people with similar minds may get together and have fun.
How can a free software community make progress then? We didn't see more small communities collaborating. Instead, we saw the dissolution of small communities and the formation of a new community, which, in my opinion, has no use. It seems it's a spiral loop that keeps going forever. And free software enthusiasts would eventually be disappointed by the fact that their efforts in the community get lost.
If there is one thing that free software enthusiasts do share, it must be the belief of the free software philosophy. People gather together for the same exact goal but may end up getting hurt by each other. There must be some kind of protection, which conventionally falls on the moderators.
The Goal
Today we try to address the aforementioned problem which can be summarized to:
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Build a platform that respects and accepts free software enthusiasts as many as possible;
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On which, it judges people as less as possible. Meaning, the participants are responsible to protect themselves instead of (mainly) the moderators;
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On which, information gets shared across all the participants equally. They should be backed up in case any of the contributions from a hacker gets lost.
The Solution & Our First Step
To accomplish the said goal, we decided to go fedi! A federated BBS-like system would likely address them, in our case, we chose PieFed and created a public community which can be joined from fediverse: https://fedi.fsfans.club/c/fsfans.
We are going to, more and more, direct discussions there instead and use IM only for some hangouts. And I want to emphasize again:
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In the federated community, we welcome as much people as possible, if agreed with some basic rules: https://fsfans.club/community/rules.html;
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And in which, moderations would happen more infrequently. People are encouraged to block those who annoy or hurt others to protect themselves;
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And in which, the traditional idea of "membership" no longer works. There are only "participants".
To join the community, you can either pick a Lemmy/PieFed instance and enter the
address !fsfans@fedi.fsfans.club or sign up at the official instance https://fedi.fsfans.club.
Final words
We know this won’t magically fix every problem in free software communities. But it’s a start, one that values autonomy, resilience, and openness above personalities and politics. If you believe in the original spirit of free software, then you’re already part of this journey. The FSFans community is simply offering a space where that spirit can breathe again. We invite everyone who shares these values to participate, contribute, and help shape what comes next.