Bradley Kühn's computer science career briefly involved proprietary software development after high school. His sour experience in this area was one of his motivations for sticking with a career in non-profit work. Since graduate school, Kühn has worked only for non-profits. He was hired full-time to work at the FSF in late 2000, and was promoted to
executive director in March 2001. Kühn launched FSF's Associate Membership campaign, formalized its
GNU General Public License (GPL) enforcement efforts into the
GPL Compliance Labs, led FSF's response to the SCO lawsuit,
authored the Affero clause of the original version of the AGPL, and taught numerous
CLE classes for lawyers on the
GPL. Kühn left the FSF in March 2005 to join the founding team of the
Software Freedom Law Center with
Eben Moglen and
Daniel Ravicher, and subsequently established the
Software Freedom Conservancy in April 2006. At both the FSF and SFLC, Kühn has been involved with all the major efforts in the United States to enforce the
GPL. At SFLC, he assisted Eben Moglen, Richard Stallman, and
Richard Fontana in the drafting of the GPLv3, and managed the production of the software system for the GPLv3 Comment Process, called
stet. He advocated strongly for inclusion of the Affero clause in GPLv3, and then assisted with the production of the
AGPLv3 after the FSF decided to write a separate Affero version of GPLv3. Prior to 2010 Kühn was FLOSS Community Liaison and Technology Director of the
Software Freedom Law Center and was president of the
Software Freedom Conservancy. In October 2010 he became the Conservancy's first Executive Director. In 2010 Kühn founded the
Replicant project together with Aaron Williamson, Graziano Sorbaioli and Denis ‘GNUtoo’ Carikli, aiming at replacing proprietary
Android components with free software counterparts. Kühn is in fact the Registrant of the Replicant.us domain. Since October 2010 Kühn has co-hosted, with Sandler, the Free as in Freedom podcast, which covers legal, policy, and other issues in the FLOSS world. Kühn and Sandler had previously co-hosted a similar podcast, the Software Freedom Law Show. On March 20, 2021, he received the 2020
Advancement for Free Software Award. == Poker ==