2006 5
GigaOm Tells Of Our Purchase Of GSPACE
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We bought Gspace from Rahul Jonna, its developer. But because of Leo´s birth, I don´t have time to blog the whole story so I communicated with Om Malik who, after congratulating me for the birth of my forth child (and enquiring if I was on my way to build a sports team;), kindly volunteer to blog the story.
Thanks Om for sharing the story of our purchase and our plans to integrate Gspace with the FON Liberator with the blogging community.
Even though FON is less than a year old, we have offices in China, Korea, Japan, Netherlands, France, Sweden, Germany, Italy, Spain, UK and US. We also deliver our Foneras in all of the EU. But if you live in a country where we cannot ship Foneras to, we recommend that either you buy one and have it shipped to a friend in a country where we can ship to, or if you or a friend show up in person to a FON office anywhere in the world and simply show your passport and a ticket that proves that you are going to a destination that we can´t ship to. We will trust you as a FONero and give you 3 Foneras for free to take to your country.
Example, you are a Chilean who travels to San Francisco, you are a Malaysian in Hong Kong, you are a Senegalese in Paris, an Argentine in Madrid, etc. Just come to our offices and you will get up to 3 Foneras to take with you back home and start spreading the FON Movement. If you have any questions about this promo pls write to Nina. We have already implemented this with Latin Americans who come to Madrid.
2006 2
Viva Yat Siu and the Hong Kong FONero Team!
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
Yesterday we launched in Hong Kong. First my apologies to the people of Hong Kong. I am really sorry I was not there for the FON party, but my wife is due any moment now and my fourth child should be born this week, so I could not attend. I hope you understand.
Second, I want to congratulate Yat Siu and his team. Guys you did an AMAZING job. Bravo! What follows are links to pictures of the event and news coverage. If you have any more links, please send them to me and I will publish them.
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Today El Mundo reports that the record companies, and copyright associations of Spain were dealt a heavy blow when a music downloader was absolved in a lawsuit in Santander. Basically, the judge said that file sharing for recreational/private use is not a crime in Spain. This was good news to the 48 year old accused man for whom the DA was asking that he be given 2 years in jail.
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2006 1
BBC Report on FON focused on France
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2006 31
Me Lucky Cabron Won Porra
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Today is my lucky day. I won the FON German Lottery. This is how it works. When we launch a new country at FON all employees chip in with 3 euros each and we individually guess how many FONeros we will get in a certain amount of time. We do this for fun, but we also do it cause we have found that our collective knowledge is a good guess of what is actually going to happen.
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2006 31
FON Publishes Source Code
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Here it is! (click on “aquí está”). Please send your ideas on how to improve the code to Iurgi and we will all be tremendously grateful.
Also do let us know if you would like to do Openwrt projects, since we are offering grants for interesting ones.
2006 31
Germans “Hacked” the Fonera Promise, But We Love It!
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
What happened is that we wanted to give Germany a boost and I blogged an article that said that we had chosen Germany and Austria, the countries with the most reliable FONeros, to implement the FON Promise. The objective here was to quickly establish ourselves as the number one network in Germany ahead of T-Mobile. With Austria, since Austrians speak German, we felt that they would feel bad if they saw the web site in German promoting an offer that they could not get, so we brought them along for the ride.
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2006 30
Visit Tummyrumble…Through FON
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Today we introduced a feature at FON by which people who have personalized their sign up pages appear in our maps as a green point with a white star in it. So, randomly, I went to Fon Maps looking for a FONero who had personalized his FON Sign Up Page, so when roaming linuses or aliens find his WiFi signal they learned about him/her.
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During Franco´s dictatorship Spain was a very Catholic country. After more than 3 decades of democracy, Spain is not a Catholic country anymore. First, loss of religion became apparent with the legalization of divorce and contraceptives and the promotion of sex ed. This was followed by the decriminalization of abortion, the acceptance of drug possession for personal consumption (drug users are not criminals in Spain, but treated instead as medical patients) and a general acceptance of premarital sex. Later, gambling in public places became commonplace, prostitution was legalized and regulated, and gay marriage became legal as well. So other than euthanasia, I can´t think of anything that the Church used to opposed that is not legal now in Spain. While 95% of the Spanish youth declared in the 60s that religion played some role in their life, now only a third do.
Religion in Spain is mostly becoming tradition. People marry in churches because they are beautiful and full of history, not because they actually practice. They still teach religion in most schools, but to most it is as if they were teaching Spanish history, the history of a country that used to be religious but is not anymore. Now the only religious group in Spain are Muslim immigrants, whose views on society are surprisingly similar to those of the Franco. Nudity, for example, was a big “no no” at that time and it continues to be so for Spanish Muslims. For others, nudity makes part of the daily press in Spain. Nudist beaches and regular beaches are mostly mixed, and most people don´t mind.
But not only is Spain liberal in most matters previously opposed by the Catholic Church. Spain is also tolerant in other unexpected ways. For example, in Spain the use of P2P programs to download music for personal consumption is not a punishable offense. In Spain, people openly use Ares, Vuze, eMule for legal and what in other countries is illegal content without fear of being prosecuted. The only truly illegal activity is people who download music/movies, print CDs or DVDs and sell them. And this is but one example of a legislative system that, when faced with choices that involve tolerance vs restriction, it generally opts for tolerance, to the point that Spain has become one of the most tolerant countries in the world. As a result, Spain has become an incredibly popular immigration destination. Indeed I am one of them, I moved to Spain from NYC in 1995.
If anything, Spain proves that societies do not fall apart when they give up religion and almost everything that was illegal for religious reasons, becomes legal. Moreover, I believe that if Spain had not given up its repressive form of religious expression, it would not have been the success that it is now. For those, mostly in America, who believe that religion somehow makes countries more ethical, Spain proves the opposite. With a good secular and free Kindergarden to University education system Spain has less violent crime, less people in jail and certainly less policemen per inhabitant than mostly religious USA. The key distinction between USA and Spain, or Europe in general, is that while most people in Europe dislike the same activities that people in America dislike, the trend over here is not to make these activities a crime but to find more tolerant and reasonable ways to deal with them. In this way, Spain can focus its police resources to deal with serious crimes such as terrorism.