Dear GNU maintainer, You are receiving this message because you are listed as responsible for a GNU package in the ‘maintainers’ file on fencepost.gnu.org. If you think this is inaccurate, or if you no longer want to be contacted about this initiative, please let us know about it. On January 28th, we emailed you regarding on-going work by the authors of this message to devise a “GNU Social Contract”. The goal of this document is to state the core values GNU maintainers and uploaders who have endorsed it are committed to uphold. It is both an agreement among us, GNU contributors, and a pledge to the broader free software community. Additionally, we think it can be a first step towards formalizing a transparent and collective governance of the GNU Project. Version 1.0 of the GNU Social Contract is appended below and can also be seen at: https://wiki.gnu.tools/gnu:social-contract Feedback on the draft was taken into account as documented at: https://wiki.gnu.tools/gnu:gsc-feedback We now invite you to send a message, by February 24th, preferably signed with your OpenPGP key, to gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org and social-contract@gnu.tools, containing one of the following statements: • I, maintainer of package X, endorse version 1.0 of the GNU Social Contract, available at . • I, maintainer of package X, do not adhere to version 1.0 of the GNU Social Contract, available at . The current status is maintained at: https://wiki.gnu.tools/gnu:social-contract-endorsement Thanks in advance for your participation! - Ludovic Courtès - Andreas Enge - Carlos O’Donell - Mark Wielaard - Andy Wingo ········································································ # GNU Social Contract 1.0 --- These are the core commitments of the GNU Project, which creates and distributes a software system that respects users' freedoms. ## The GNU Project respects users' freedoms The GNU Project provides software that guarantees to all users the _Four Essential Freedoms_, without compromise: 0. The freedom to run the program as they wish, for any purpose. 1. The freedom to study how the program works, and change it so it does their computing as they wish. 2. The freedom to redistribute copies so they can help others. 3. The freedom to distribute copies of their modified versions to others. The GNU Project adopts policies that encourage and enable developers to actively defend user freedom. These policies include using _copyleft licenses_, designed to ensure that users’ freedoms cannot be stripped off, when appropriate. Besides upholding the Four Essential Freedoms, the GNU Project pays attention to new threats to users' freedom, and responds to them as they arise. ## The GNU Project provides a consistent system The GNU Project develops an operating system, the _GNU System_, as well as a set of applications. Each software component developed by the GNU Project is referred to as a _GNU package_. GNU package developers work together to ensure consistency across packages. ## The GNU Project collaborates with the broader free software community The GNU Project works together with other free software projects to advance its goals, and aims to extend the reach of the project beyond the GNU System. ## The GNU Project welcomes contributions from all and everyone The GNU Project commits to providing a harassment-free experience for all contributors. It wants to give everyone the opportunity of contributing to its efforts on any of the many tasks that require work. It welcomes all contributors, regardless of their gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, level of experience, or any other personal characteristics.