Linux: Difference between revisions

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
m (Added the Linux mascot Tux.)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Tux.svg|200px|thumb|Tux, the communal mascot of Linux.]]
'''Linux''' is a [[Free and open-source software|free and open-source]] [[UNIX]]-like kernel developed by [[Linus Torvalds]]. Linux is managed with the version control system <code>git</code> and licensed under the [[GNU General Public License]]-2.
'''Linux''' is a [[Free and open-source software|free and open-source]] [[UNIX]]-like kernel developed by [[Linus Torvalds]]. Linux is managed with the version control system <code>git</code> and licensed under the [[GNU General Public License]]-2.



Revision as of 22:09, 2 January 2023

Tux, the communal mascot of Linux.

Linux is a free and open-source UNIX-like kernel developed by Linus Torvalds. Linux is managed with the version control system git and licensed under the GNU General Public License-2.

Linux is often bundled with GNU utilities.

History

Linus Torvalds released the Linux Kernel in source-code form in 1991.[1] The next year, in February 1992, Linux was released under the GNU General Public License.[2]

NVIDIA's Open-Source Boycott on Linux

In 2011, the NVIDIA Corporation refused to provide open-source GPU drivers;[3] Linux developers were forced to reverse engineer proprietary NVIDIA GPUs to develop open-source drivers, to which NVIDIA provided horrendous support.[citation needed]

Linus Torvalds famously responded to the boycott with a middle finger and a curse word: "NVIDIA, Fuck you!"[4]

NSA Interrogation

In 2013, Nils Torvalds reported that the National Security Agency contacted Linus Torvalds with a request to add backdoors into Linux.[5]

Linux distributions

Linux distributions (operating systems that use Linux) often use GNU coreutils.

State-developed

Many states have developed a Linux-based operating system to develop sovereign economies and break dependence on Microsoft Windows, which has backdoors usable by the Central Intelligence Agency.

Attacks by Microsoft

External Links

References