- Jonathan Oxer
Jonathan Oxer (born
July 26 ,1970 ,London ,England ) is a computerprogrammer ,Debian developer, author, entrepreneur, and Free Software activist. He lives inMelbourne , Victoria,Australia with his wife and their two children.Early Life and Education
Jonathan Oxer was born at St Mary Abbott's Hospital in London, England to Australian parents who were working in London at the time. In late 1970 his parents returned to Melbourne, Australia.
Oxer's primary education was at
Blackwood Community School , a small alternative school created in the mid 1970's by a group of parents. The school was known for having an unstructured learning program that mixed students across all year levels and did not use scheduled class times [cite web|url=http://www.fcs.vic.edu.au/docs/TimsThesis.pdf|title=Education for Peace Requires the Growth of the Whole Child] .Oxer's secondary education was at
St Michael's Grammar School where he completed his HSC in 1989. In 1987 Oxer was one of a group of students from the school who conducted an extra-curricular project to use information published by researchers at IBM Zurich, theUniversity of Alabama , and theUniversity of Houston to create a sample of yttrium-barium-copper-oxide (YBCO ) superconductor capable of exhibiting superconducting properties at the temperature of liquid nitrogen, which at the time was the highest-temperature superconductor yet created [cite web|url=http://jon.oxer.com.au/blog/id/275|title=Old friends and superconductors] Oxer's contributions to the project included writing software to plot the optimum cooling curve of the material to maximise crystal alignment during the annealing process.Free Software
Debian Project
Oxer was admitted to the
Debian Project in August 2002. [cite web|url=https://nm.debian.org/nmstatus.php?email=jon%40ivt.com.au|title=Debian new maintainer status page for applicant Jonathan Oxer|publisher=Debian Project] He subsequently convened the Debian Miniconf in a different city every year in conjunction with Linux.conf.au: Perth in 2003, Adelaide in 2004, Canberra in 2005, Dunedin (New Zealand) in 2006, Sydney in 2007, and Melbourne in 2008.Linux Australia Inc
Oxer was elected President of
Linux Australia onJanuary 25 ,2005 , [cite web|url=http://lists.linux.org.au/pipermail/linux-aus/2005-January/011266.html|title=Unofficial Election results|publisher=Linux Australia] serving three consecutive terms. He was also nominated for the 2008 election but did not accept the nomination.Early in his first term Oxer was the focus of controversy surrounding the application for a trademark in Australia for the term "Linux". In many countries the trademark "Linux" is registered by or on behalf of the
Linux Mark Institute , an organisation which administers the trademark on behalf ofLinus Torvalds . Following an attempt by an unassociated commercial entity known as Linux Australia Pty Ltd to register the trademark within Australia, Linux Australia agreed to act as an agent of Linux Mark Institute to contest the pending trademark application by Linux Australia Pty Ltd and submit a counterclaim for the trademark. Subsequent action taken by Linux Australia included presentation of a request for support for the trademark application to a number of FOSS-related businesses in Australia by a lawyer acting on behalf of the organisation. As a result of the way the letter was worded some recipients misinterpreted it as a demand for payment for use of the trademark, causing a negative backlash within the FOSS community [cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/next/linux-trademark-protection-comes-at-a-cost-for-some/2005/08/15/1123957995044.html|title=Linux trademark protection comes at a cost for some|publisher=Fairfax] .Jon Hall , President of Linux Mark Institute, subsequently defended the actions of Linux Australia Inc and confirmed that the application was submitted on behalf of the organisation [cite web|url=http://lists.linux.org.au/archives/linux-aus/2005-August/msg00084.html|title=Linux trademark in australia] . The trademark applications by both Linux Australia Pty Ltd and Linux Australia Inc were ultimately denied [cite news|url=http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Linux-trademark-bid-rejected/0,130061733,139212227,00.htm|title=Linux trademark bid rejected|publisher=ZDNet Australia] .During his incumbency Oxer was a vocal opponent of changes to Australian intellectual property law mandated by the
Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement , and in particular the broader definition of technological protection measures. [cite news|url=http://www.itwire.com/content/view/4619/53/|title=Linux Australia urges Govt to support free competition|publisher=ITWire] [cite news|url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/security/digital-rights-and-wrongs/2006/09/26/1159036539208.html?page=fullpage|title=Digital rights and wrongs|publisher=Fairfax]Cryptography
Oxer has coordinated the large PGP/GPG keysigning parties at every Linux.conf.au from 2004 onward, and to assist with key collection and management for large groups created the keysigning.org website. He also administers keys.keysigning.org, the only keyserver in the subkeys.pgp.net network geographically located in Australasia.
RFID Implant
In March 2006 Oxer used a veterinary RFID tag implantation tool to implant an RFID tag under the skin of his left arm [cite web|url=http://jon.oxer.com.au/blog/id/86|title=Jondo the Mandroid is RFID enabled] , and subsequently modified his house to allow the implanted tag to control items such as the door locks [cite news|url=http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php/id;396147352;pp;1|title=Ohm Sweet Ohm: Outgoing Linux Australia president's hot-wired home|publisher=Computerworld] . He was subsequently labelled "Australia's geekiest geek" in The Age [cite news|url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/technology/meet-australias-geekiest-geek/2008/03/03/1204402351058.html|title=Meet Australia's geekiest geek|publisher=The Age] and Sydney Morning Herald [cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/technology/meet-australias-geekiest-geek/2008/03/03/1204402351058.html|title=Meet Australia's geekiest geek|publisher=Sydney Morning Herald] .
Author
Oxer is author of several books relating to computers and e-business:
* How To Build A Website And Stay Sane (Oft Press, 2005)
* Ubuntu Hacks (O'Reilly, 2006)
* How To Build A Website And Stay Sane, Second Edition (Lulu, 2007)
* Quickstart Guide to Google AdWords (Lulu, 2008)References
External links
* [http://jon.oxer.com.au/ Oxer's weblog]
* [http://keysigning.org/ keysigning.org]
* [http://www.stay-sane.com/ How To Build A Website And Stay Sane]
* [http://www.ubuntuhacks.com/ Ubuntu Hacks]
* [http://www.adwords-quickstart.com/ Quickstart Guide to Google AdWords]
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