Advocacy 101: Your role in passing pro-FOSS legislation
E148 | Sat 15 Jul 5:30 p.m.–6:30 p.m.
Presented by
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Kevin O'Reilly
@kevin_oreilly7
https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevin-o-reilly-repair/
Kevin O'Reilly is a leader in the Right to Repair movement. As the Right to Repair campaign director at the Public Interest Research Group, or PIRG, he leads the group's work on medical and agricultural Right to Repair. Kevin's research has demonstrated how modern tractors are engineered to restrict independent repair, how dealership consolidation further erodes farmers' repair choices, and how Right to Repair would save U.S. farmers $4.2 billion per year. He has organized hundreds of farmers and medical repair technicians from all over the country to push for change at all levels of government, and worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level to develop and advance effective legislation. Most recently, he was a leader in the coalition that passed the country's first agricultural Right to Repair law in Colorado. Kevin's work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, NPR, Politico and more.
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Kyle Wiens
@kwiens
https://www.ifixit.com
Kyle Wiens is a software engineer and the CEO of iFixit, the repair community known for open source repair manuals and product teardowns. iFixit has empowered hundreds of millions of people to repair their broken stuff. Kyle led the international coalition that legalized Right to Repair, has testified before the US Copyright Office and the International Trade Commission, and he is involved in developing global environmental standards.
Kyle regularly speaks on design for repair, service documentation, and the environmental impact of manufacturing. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harvard Business Review, Wired, Popular Mechanics, and the Wall Street Journal.
Kevin O'Reilly
@kevin_oreilly7
https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevin-o-reilly-repair/
Kevin O'Reilly is a leader in the Right to Repair movement. As the Right to Repair campaign director at the Public Interest Research Group, or PIRG, he leads the group's work on medical and agricultural Right to Repair. Kevin's research has demonstrated how modern tractors are engineered to restrict independent repair, how dealership consolidation further erodes farmers' repair choices, and how Right to Repair would save U.S. farmers $4.2 billion per year. He has organized hundreds of farmers and medical repair technicians from all over the country to push for change at all levels of government, and worked closely with legislators at the state and federal level to develop and advance effective legislation. Most recently, he was a leader in the coalition that passed the country's first agricultural Right to Repair law in Colorado. Kevin's work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, NPR, Politico and more.
Kyle Wiens
@kwiens
https://www.ifixit.com
Kyle Wiens is a software engineer and the CEO of iFixit, the repair community known for open source repair manuals and product teardowns. iFixit has empowered hundreds of millions of people to repair their broken stuff. Kyle led the international coalition that legalized Right to Repair, has testified before the US Copyright Office and the International Trade Commission, and he is involved in developing global environmental standards.
Kyle regularly speaks on design for repair, service documentation, and the environmental impact of manufacturing. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harvard Business Review, Wired, Popular Mechanics, and the Wall Street Journal.
Abstract
We've discussed and dissected how we can piggyback on the success of the Right to Repair movement to advance FOSS and take back control of the software in our stuff. Dialogue is important—but we'll need to take action to cement our ideas into concrete, lasting change.
In this workshop, we'll discuss some of the first steps needed to build an effective campaign and equip attendees with the basic organizing and advocacy skills needed to start building a movement.
We've discussed and dissected how we can piggyback on the success of the Right to Repair movement to advance FOSS and take back control of the software in our stuff. Dialogue is important—but we'll need to take action to cement our ideas into concrete, lasting change. In this workshop, we'll discuss some of the first steps needed to build an effective campaign and equip attendees with the basic organizing and advocacy skills needed to start building a movement.