The origin of Kune relies on the community behind
Ourproject.org. Ourproject aimed to provide for
Free Culture (social/cultural projects) what
SourceForge and other
software forges meant for
free software: a collection of communication and collaboration tools that would boost the emergence of community-driven free projects. However, although Ourproject was relatively successful, it was far from the original aims. The analysis of the situation in 2005 concluded that only the groups that had a
techie among them (who would manage
Mailman or install a
CMS) were able to move forward, while the rest would abandon the service. Thus, new free collaborative tools were needed, more usable and suitable for anyone, as the available free tools required a high degree of technical expertise. This is why Kune, whose name means "together" in
Esperanto, was developed. The first prototypes of Kune were developed using
Ruby on Rails and Pyjamas (later known as Pyjs). However, with the
release of Java and the
Google Web Toolkit as free software, the community embraced these technologies since 2007. In 2009, with a stable codebase and about to release a major version of Kune, Google announced the
Google Wave project and promised it would be released as free software. Wave was using the same technologies of Kune (Java + GWT, Guice, XMPP protocol) so it would be easy to integrate after its release. Besides, Wave was offering an open federated protocol, easy extensibility (through gadgets), easy control versioning, and very good real-time edition of documents. Thus, the community decided to halt the development of Kune, and wait for its release... in the meanwhile developing gadgets that would be integrated in Kune later on. In this same period, the community established the
Comunes Association (with an acknowledged inspiration in
Software in the Public Interest) as a non-profit legal umbrella for free software tools for encouraging the
Commons and facilitating the work of
social movements. The umbrella covered Ourproject, Kune and Move Commons, together with some other minor projects. In November 2010, the free
Apache Wave (previously Wave-in-a-Box) was released, under the umbrella of the
Apache Foundation. Since then, the community began integrating its source code within the Kune previous codebase, and with the support of the IEPALA Foundation. Kune released its Beta and moved to production in April 2012. Since then, Kune has been catalogued as "activism 2.0" and citizen tool, a tool for NGOs, multi-tool for general purpose (and following that, criticized for the risk of falling on the
second-system effect) and example of the new paradigm. It was selected as "open website of the week" by the
Open University of Catalonia, and as one of the
#Occupy Tech projects. Nowadays, there are plans of another federated social network, Lorea (based on
Elgg), to connect with Kune. == Feature list ==