Experience: the Famly Guide to Digital Freedom
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saying that things like common sense, social responsibility, participation, the importance of
being fair and helping others continue to be necessary and important even when the subject is
“what can computers do to improve our life?” These values are not taught in technical
schools, nor they should. The first and most natural place where to teach and learn such
“skills” is the family. The second are local schools, Parishes and youth groups.
I am convinced that it is time for all parents to start acting as parents, that is primary
educators, also in this field. I suggest that doing so is their duty and responsibility, just as it is
to be informed on topics like school programs and menus or toy safety. Above all, I am
convinced that this is a really easy thing to do. There is no need to become a software
professional, or even to own a computer, to do so. A parent must just learn to ask the right
questions, to recognize valid answers, and demand from his or her delegates, from teachers to
elected officials, that they act properly.
3. Catholics and Digital Freedoms
The basic concepts and general proposals presented so far are complete and relevant as they
are for all human beings. At the same time, they can be certainly enriched and promoted in a
Catholic context. The official Catholic Social Doctrine and Social Communication Doctrine
contain many elements which should stimulate Catholics to be more active on the issues
mentioned at the beginning of this paper1, in an open way that would only have positive
consequences not just for Catholics, but for everybody: Catholics just need to acknowledge
the links and act accordingly. Of course, doing so would not mean in any way that certain
concepts and practices "belong" in any way to Catholics, or that all those who believe in, say,
the Free Software ideals carried on by the FSF should also be or become Catholics.
Catholics only have additional reasons, from their own Doctrine, to care about digital
technologies and to apply certain concepts or follow certain practices. As silly as it sounds,
the accusation that “Catholics want to steal Free Software” was the most frequent reaction to
my first papers on these themes or the launch of “Eleutheros – A Catholic Approach to
Information Technology”2, so it is a point that I have to repeat often, explicitly and clearly,
and suggest every Catholic active in this field to do the same.
Here is my first suggestion to any Catholic School or other Institution considering public
activities in this sector of education: how much of the promotional/educational material
which should be produced within such projects could be "packaged" in two separate parts?
Namely, is it possible to organize as much as possible of that material in a form which is
complete, self-consistent and, above all, also usable as-is and relevant for all people of the
target “category” (parents, students, teachers, whatever)? If yes, please evaluate if it wouldn't
be better to “re-package and release”, to use terms from the software world, that material
separately by any specifically Catholic motivation to use it, because this would be a good
thing for at least two reasons.
The first is that in such a format all that knowledge (which may be unacceptable and ignored
if “hidden” inside a Catholic container) would be immediately useful to many more people,
with beneficial consequences for the whole society, Catholics included. The second, more
1 “Free Software's surprising sympathy with Catholic doctrine”, www.linux.com/feature/49533
2 www.eleutheros.it/documenti/manifesto
Marco Fioretti
marco@digifreedom.net