Decades-long victory, bold Apple survey findings, legal workshop success & our 50th podcast episode - FSFE

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Decades-long victory, bold Apple survey findings, legal workshop success & our 50th podcast episode

April brought LLW, where we gathered with Legal Network members to

discuss a wide range of legal and licensing topics. One of them was the

DMA, legislation that is keeping us busy: we are exposing how Apple

keeps blocking third-party developers, denying their interoperability

requests. On a brighter note, over ten years of advocacy paid off: the

EC is protecting users' right to install any software on radio devices.

And we reached episode 50 in our SFP!

"I spent all of my training budget this year on coming to LLW, but just
the networking itself has already paid off!" LLW 2026 participant

European policy news: RED and DMA interoperability

We are starting this new month with great news: after more than ten

years of persistent advocacy, we have a significant win to celebrate.

The European Commission has decided to protect users' right to install

any software on their radio devices, [abandoning

the article in the Radio Equipment Directive that threatened to

undermine this freedom](https://fsfe.org/news/2026/news-20260430-01.en.html). This decision shows that persistent,

evidence-based engagement with EU policy processes can achieve, and

protect, software freedom. But this is also only possible when we have

the long-term resources and stability to stay in the room, follow the

process, and act at the right moment. That is exactly [why we need your continued

support](https://fsfe.org/donate/donate.en.html).

Meanwhile, we have monitored how[Apple is

implementing its interoperability obligations under the DMA](https://fsfe.org/news/2026/news-20260420-01.en.html). Our

recently released report [“The

challenges of regulating interoperability: Analysing Apple’s

request-based approach under the Digital Markets Act”](https://download.fsfe.org/campaigns/device-neutrality/FSFE-DMA-AppleReport-v1.pdf) sheds light on

how Apple has handled those requests in practice. Our analysis shows how

56 interoperability requests under the Digital Markets Act have produced

no concrete solutions by Apple, and how their refusals contradict their

own official documentation, leaving third-party developers locked out of

iOS and iPadOS, despite the European Commission’s latest specification

decision.

Following our publication, we published a [summary

of the report in the Tagesspiegel Background (DE)](https://background.tagesspiegel.de/digitalisierung-und-ki/briefing/wird-europa-seine-eigenen-regeln-durchsetzen). In

the contribution, we explain how interoperability can be a powerful tool

to break tech monopolies in the mobile market, and how its enforcement

in the DMA is needed to empower Free Software developers.

Software Freedom Podcast: episode 50 about NGI

And more European news! Did you know that the FSFE is a partner of

the European initiative Next Generation Internet Zero? Under this

umbrella, the FSFE supports NGI0 grantee projects on legal and licensing

issues, as well as helping them to become REUSE compliant. Although this

project is ending next year, we are also happy to announce the new

initiative that will follow in its steps: the EU project Restack. Listen to

the [latest

episode of our podcast](https://fsfe.org/news/podcast/2026/episode-50.en.html)in which Bonnie and Gabriel discuss NGI0,

introduce Restack, and explain why we need sustainable long term funding

for fostering the Free Software ecosystem. If you know a Free Software

project, or you have an idea that can contribute to an open, resilient,

trustworthy, sustainable, and human-centered internet, you can apply for

NGI0 funding:https://nlnet.nl/funding.html.

By the way, this is episode 50 of our podcast! We want to take a

moment to thank every single one of you on the other side, listening to

the Software Freedom Podcast. Fifty episodes in, and it is your

curiosity, your support, and your commitment to software freedom that

keep this going. We are truly grateful to our community and our

listeners! And if you are a newcomer, [you can find all our episodes

here](https://fsfe.org/news/podcast.en.html).

From the stages: LLW and more!

But that is not all that has happened in the last weeks! A few weeks

ago [the

Free Software Legal & Licensing Workshop 2026 took place in

Berlin,](https://fsfe.org/news/2026/news-20260427-01.en.html) bringing together over 100 legal and compliance

professionals, technologists, and policy experts from all over the

globe. The LLW, organised by the FSFE, continued to explore the evolving

legal landscapes impacting Free Software, with many discussions focusing

on how software licensing is impacted by the advent of large language

models and AI. Ths event was, once again, possible thanks to our 2026

sponsors: our Diamond sponsors Mercedes and Red Hat; the Sapphire

sponsors Amazon (AWS), Microsoft, and Siemens; Topaz sponsors Bosch,

Ericsson, and Google; and our Ruby sponsors Bird & Bird, Eclipse

Foundation, and Liferay.

Not only at LLW did we learn about legal topics. Check out our Mastodon handle, where we

regularly post poll questions on legal topics. They can come in handy in

unexpected places: thanks to one of those polls, this editor actually

knew an answer at the Pub Quiz during OggCamp 2026!

Speaking of which, these past weeks have been busy on the events

front. After seven years, we were thrilled to return to OggCamp, where

we ran an information booth and gave presentations. We also attended

FOSS North, and last weekend joined the Augsburger Linux Info Day, where

we delivered a keynote and a workshop.

In the coming weeks, our volunteers will be at the Festival de Tecnologia Popular de Setúbal, the Tübingen

Digital Freedom Days, and more! Check events.fsfe.org.

From the Ada workshop

The illustrated story of ‘Ada &

Zangemann’ continues reaching kids (and adults) worldwide. Recently,

the Austrian Ministry of Education released [an online course about

‘Ada & Zangemann’](https://www.eduvidual.at/course/view.php?id=218862) with really cool exercises (and for students of

German it can also be a great way to practice their German skills with

Ada).

Your support helps us move our work forward

We may be behind the wheel, but you’re the ones keeping us moving

forward. You can also support us, contribute to our work, and join our community. Are you using social

media? If so, do not forget to follow us there! You can also follow the

FSFE news in your RSS Reader.

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About the FSFE

Free Software Foundation Europe is a charity that empowers users to

control technology.

Software is deeply involved in all aspects of our lives. It is important

that this technology empowers rather than restricts us. Free Software

gives everybody the rights to use, study, share, and improve software.

These rights help support other fundamental rights like freedom of

speech, freedom of press, and privacy.