Framasoft
Framasoft is a French non-profit association under the loi 1901, founded in 2004 to advance popular education through the promotion of free and open-source software, with a focus on digital emancipation and ethical alternatives to centralized proprietary services.[1][2]
Originating in 2001 as an online directory of free software by educators Alexis Kauffmann, Paul Lunetta, and Georges Silva, the organization has grown to host over 40 projects, including privacy-respecting online tools like Framapad for collaborative editing and Framadate for scheduling, while employing around 10 staff and relying on donations and volunteers.[2][1]
Its most notable initiative, the "Dégooglisons Internet" campaign launched in October 2014, deployed nearly 40 free services as alternatives to Google products between 2014 and 2019, aiming to counter data centralization and surveillance; many were later phased out or federated to encourage broader decentralization and sustainability.[3][2]
Framasoft's efforts extend to developing software like PeerTube for decentralized video hosting and publishing resources on free culture, underscoring its commitment to commons-based peer production and resistance to corporate dominance in digital infrastructure.[4][2]