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[[!meta title="Emacs saves the Web"]]
[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2023 Yuchen Pei"]]
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# Emacs saves the Web
Yuchen Pei (he/him, pronounced: "eww-churn pay"), IRC: dragestil, <mailto:id@ypei.org>, <https://ypei.org>, mastodon: dragestil@hostux.social

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On one hand, Emacs is the crown jewel of the GNU Project for its
customisability and the ability to effortlessly convert users to
hackers. On the other hand, today many of the sticky issues with
proprietary software proliferation stems from the web, including the
Javascript trap[1] on the client side and the SaaSS trap[2] on the
server side. So enters the topic of this talk. I will briefly talk
about these issues and existing solutions, followed by ideas and
demonstrations on how Emacs can fix user freedom on the web, including
(from realistic to dreamy): emacs clients for specific websites and
services i.e. replacing read-only javascript forced on your browser
with hackable free elisp packages, emacs-based browsers aka universal
frontends and elisp version of users-cripts / greasemonkey / haketilo,
write-once-run-everywhere elisp programs (e.g. the emacs web server
and (nonexistent?) emacs mobile app UI framework), and remote emacs
servers that can be shared by a group of hackers running server
programs written in elisp, thus eliminating the SaaSS trap.

- [1] <https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/javascript-trap.html>
- [2] <https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/who-does-that-server-really-serve.en.html>

About the speaker:

Yuchen is a computer programmer, mathematician and free software
advocate based in Melbourne, Australia. He is addicted to writing
Emacs packages[3], of which a few has made into ELPA. He likes to
claim to be the only free software advocate in Australia, in the hope
that someone will correct him and point him to fellow comrades
fighting for user freedom in Oz.

- [3] https://g.ypei.me

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