FOSS Academic

FOSS Academic

Robert Gehl

Hi! This blog is meant to do two things. First, one goal is to explore life as a “FOSS Academic” – someone who uses Free and Open Source technologies to do academic work. I’m hoping that my discussions of FOSS technologies in an academic setting help others – students, professors, university administrators – understand the benefits and values of FOSS in the academy. I’m not a developer, but I am a professor who’s been using FOSS to do his job for over a decade. I call this goal of exploring FOSS tools in the academy Goal 1. Second, this blog has Goal 2: writing a book about a FOSS topic. After some consideration, I decided to write a book about Mastodon and the fediverse. The book is out now! Sometimes, the two topics will collide in a single post. My intent here is to be more open about my own research process and writing.

Latest Posts

"Tux the penguin papercraft" by Siobhan Rohlwink-Coutts is licensed with CC BY-NC-ND 2.0. As a university professor, I do a lot of different things, many of them having to do with technologies. I engage in research, write articles and...
Just a quick update: I am now set up in my office at the University of Calgary in Alberta. I've come here on a Fulbright Canada Fellowship, and one of my goals is to study Canadian alternative social media. On this first full day of...
NB: This is an introductory statement for the Contemporary Social Media Platforms and Creative Practice 2018, an online discussion I'm participating in. Thanks to Judy Malloy, a Visiting Faculty Member at the School of the Art Institute...
There's furor over the latest revelation that the world's largest corporate social media site, Facebook, sells personal data to those who want to manipulate its users. The story -- this time -- is about Cambridge Analytica, a...
Tried logging onto Galaxy2, a Tor-based social networking site I've participated in since its inception in early 2015. It's been down for a while, and like many Dark Web sites, it looks like it's gone for good. We get a rare note about...
Chitra Nagarajan's piece in the Guardian, "What Does a Feminist Internet Look Like?", is an excellent call to action for taking feminist principles and applying them to technology usage and governance. I won't recap it here; you ought to...
I have two new alternative social media-related publications.
As readers of my scholarly work know, I've been arguing that corporate social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter present activists with a sort of double-bind: on the one hand these sites have powerful network effects, which...
I'm happy to announce that my paper on the Twitter alternatives rstat.us, Twister, Quitter, and Gnu social has been accepted to the online journal Fibreculture. The paper, "Building a Better Twitter: A Study of the Twitter Alternatives...
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