gnuboot/site/index.md

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2021-05-18 14:21:48 +02:00
---
2021-11-13 06:48:07 +01:00
title: Free your BIOS today!
2021-05-18 14:21:48 +02:00
...
### What is this? ####
GNU Boot is a free software project aimed at replacing the proprietary
boot firmware that comes with computers with free boot software.
### Project status and need for help ####
Right now GNU Boot is still in its early stage.
It should be relatively safe to use the [previous release
candidate](https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnuboot/) (GNU Boot 0.1-rc1) as is
has minimal changes on top of Libreboot 20220710 (the last 100% free
release of Libreboot) and also because several people tested it and
didn't report any blocking issue.
However we need a lot of help for fixing the website as most pages are
out of date or still refer to Libreboot or libreboot.at instead of GNU
Boot.
This is very important because the website also contains all the
project documentation, including the installation instructions (we
also need help testing them).
See the [page about contributing to GNU
Boot](/software/gnuboot/web/git.html) for more details on how to
help GNU Boot.
### How this project came to exist ####
We believe computer users deserve to control all the software they
run. This belief is the key principle of the Free Software Movement,
and was the motive for developing the GNU operating system and
starting the Free Software Foundation. We believe computer user
freedom is a crucial human rights.
In order to achieve our goal, it is crucial that we call a program
"free" or "libre" only when it is indeed free in its entirety. When
we talk about specific programs, we must not muddle the facts about
what is free and what is not. If people start referring to a progran
as "libre," when parts of it are not in fact libre, that tends to lead
the community astray.
Unfortunately, such a muddle happened last year with a boot program
that was free software and is called Libreboot: the development team
added nonfree code to it, but continued to use "Libre" in its name.
Libreboot was first released in 2013. It has been widely recommended
in the free software community for the last nine years. In November
2022, Libreboot began to include non-libre code. We have made
repeated efforts to continue collaboration with those developers to
help their version of Libreboot remain libre, but that was not
successful.
Now we've stepped forward to stand up for freedom, ours and that of
the wider community, by maintaining our own version -- a genuinely libre
Libreboot, that after some hurdles gave birth to this project: GNU Boot.