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] is ] which can be ], studied, examined, ], and ]d by everyone who has a copy. This type of software, which was given its current name in 1983, has also ] "]", "software libre or libre software", "FOSS", and "]". The term "Free" refers to it being ], rather than being free-of-charge. | ] is ] which can be ], studied, examined, ], and ]d by everyone who has a copy. This type of software, which was given its current name in 1983, has also ] "]", "software libre or libre software", "FOSS", and "]". The term "Free" refers to it being ], rather than being free-of-charge. | ||
The ] was launched in 1983 with the primary tactic to write free software replacements for the ] that society relied on. Examples of well-known free software packages include ], the ], ], and ], and on network servers, ] and ]. | The ] was launched in 1983 with the primary tactic to write free software replacements for the ] that society relied on. Examples of well-known free software packages include ], the ], ], and ], and on network servers, ] and ]. |
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Free software is software which can be run, studied, examined, modified, and redistributed by everyone who has a copy. This type of software, which was given its current name in 1983, has also come to be known as "open-source software", "software libre or libre software", "FOSS", and "FLOSS". The term "Free" refers to it being unfettered, rather than being free-of-charge.
The free software movement was launched in 1983 with the primary tactic to write free software replacements for the non-free software that society relied on. Examples of well-known free software packages include GNU, the Linux kernel, Mozilla Firefox, and OpenOffice.org, and on network servers, FreeBSD and Apache.