 Hello, everyone, and welcome to the WordPress Briefing, the podcast where you can catch quick explanations of some of the ideas behind the WordPress open source project and the community around it, as well as get a small list of big things coming up in the next two weeks. I'm your host, Josepha Hayden-Champosy. Here we go. I'd like to start today with a look at this phrase, free as in free speech. If you're familiar with the WordPress community, you might have heard it from another community member, and if you're not familiar with us, then this may be your first time hearing it. Either way, I think it's important for us to learn a bit more. The full phrase is free as in speech, not free as in beer, and specifically it relates to open source software, but WordPress happens to be a little bit of both of those things. WordPress is literally free. You can go right now to the download section of the WordPress website and own your own copy with the click of a button. There are some costs associated with getting your first site online, but for the software, zero, absolutely nothing. So it's free. But also WordPress is open source, and that's where the free as in free speech part comes in. The four freedoms of open source as laid out in the early 90s are basically the freedom to run the program for any purpose, the freedom to study how the program works and change it so that it does your computing as you wish, the freedom to redistribute copies so that you can help your neighbor, and the freedom to distribute copies of your modified versions, giving the community a chance to benefit from your changes. Some time last year or a couple of years ago, Hugh Lashbrook who works in the WordPress community did an excellent post about the four freedoms using cakes as an example, and I'll drop a link in the show notes to that because it's an excellent illustration. It was going to take too long for this, but I really think that if you're having a little bit of trouble hanging on to this concept of the four freedoms, then that's a great illustration. But it's hard to know how these open source freedoms, how these four freedoms matter on a daily basis. So from a practical standpoint, what this all means is that you can own a copy of the software that is easy to use, easy to study and learn from, easy to change, and easy to share. It also means that once you've shared your changes with others, those changes can also be brought back to the broader community so that they can also benefit from that change, which I am sure made the software a little bit better, just a little bit more functional. But from a philosophical standpoint, this means so much more. The freedoms of open source, when applied at the scale of humanity or even at the scale of 39% of the web, can enable the removal of barriers to opportunity in the world. You don't have to be rich to have an online presence. You don't have to find loopholes in proprietary platforms and hope that they never change their terms of service. You own all of the content that you create on a WordPress site and have the liberty to move it to a new host if you need to or switch your theme if it fits your mood. And there are compounding benefits to that. When it doesn't matter where you connect to the internet or what hard knocks life has dealt you, when your location or language or mobility can't prevent you from opening up a shop to sell your jam or your honey or a site to promote your specific services, that opens up the opportunity for generational wealth that is really hard to tap into otherwise. And if you're not quite ready to come with me on that, then I think you might at least agree that having reliable passive income or an excellently trained lead generation funnel can offer stability in a time when the world is really unstable. I'll drop links to the things that I mentioned here and more in the show notes. As always, if something in here doesn't make sense to you or if you have a question you'd like to have answered, I want to hear from you. You can email me at wpbriefing at wordpress.org. So there you have it, a really quick explanation of why open source matters to me in a day to day basis and why it might need to matter to you too. A little bit free as in free speech, but also a little bit free as in beer. Now it's time for our community highlight. I crowdsourced a few contributor success stories on Twitter and I'm going to highlight them as this podcast progresses over the year. But before I do, I wanted to call out something that I thought was really remarkable and that I enjoyed seeing. About a third of the people who came up as like this person was my buddy, my mentor as I was figuring out how to how to contribute to WordPress and how WordPress as an ecosystem worked. About a third of those people were women and not only are they women, but they are women who were in WordPress leadership. And some of them are women who are currently in leadership in the project. And based on the list that I'm seeing, also women who probably will be in leadership in the future, both in WordPress and wherever else they happen to be to be doing that kind of support work. And I think that's pretty amazing because in technology, of course, there is a pretty understood lack of diversity in the voices that we see. And I haven't checked recently, but for a long time, the number of women that we saw in technology in the technology field was right about 10%. At some point, someone told me it was up to 14. But the women that are showing up and being subject matter experts and being represented in WordPress is above and beyond that every single time. And we're not perfect. We have a lot of things that we have to do. And I, for what I can do, make small little changes in the systems that we have about how we work in WordPress, how we work in the community, how we work with each other. I ask my team reps to do the same thing. And so I think that in the long run, what happens is we will have a more and more welcoming and open community and hopefully keep moving ourselves past that 30% of women that we're seeing and right on out into an excellent 50-50 split. But that's probably a topic for some other podcast. But I promised a community highlight from the crowdsourcing I did on Twitter. And the one that I want to highlight today is from Topher DeRosha. He is one of the folks behind the hero press site in case you've never heard of that. But he had this lovely story to tell. When I was standing on the edge of the contributor pool, I asked Siobhan McEwen for help and she quite kindly pushed me headfirst into docs and it changed everything. I love this story not only because of the people involved, but also it is so evocative. I know that when I started contributing to WordPress, I felt exactly the same way. A pool is exactly right. And that brings us to our small list of big things, our third segment of this show. I have four things on my list for you this week. The first is WordCamp India. They just wrapped up their first ever online event. It ran over three subsequent weekends. So don't forget to check out WordPress.tv or our YouTube channel for some of those excellent sessions. Item number two for you is that WordPress 5.7 is coming up on March 9th and I want to quickly clarify something. There's been a bit of a misunderstanding and I think it's my fault. WordPress 5.7 will not include a full site editing prototype in core. That will still be in the Gutenberg plugin, but item number three, full site editing is coming to WordPress in 2021. And so you'll start seeing some updates and statuses and demos showing up to help people get ready. Keep an eye on WordPress.org slash news or follow your favorite committers on Twitter, which leads me now to my fourth item on my small list of big things. I'm in the process of cleaning up our committer lists so that our new and learning contributors can easily tell who is active and can help them find their way in the project. So that, my friends, is your small list of big things. Thank you for tuning in today for the WordPress briefing. I'm your host, Josepha Hayden-Champosi, and I'll see you again in a couple weeks.