DEB + IAN album art

DEB + IAN

9 tracks Explicit

A narrative album tracing the life of Ian Murdock (1973-2015), the visionary who founded Debian at age 20 and gave the open-source world one of its mo

// Concept

View Concept

A narrative album tracing the life of Ian Murdock (1973-2015), the visionary who founded Debian at age 20 and gave the open-source world one of its most enduring gifts. The album follows his journey from idealistic Purdue student writing the Debian Manifesto, through marriage to Debra (the “Deb” in Debian), to industry success at Sun and Docker, and ultimately to his tragic death at 42 following a violent encounter with San Francisco police.

This is a celebration with a tragic coda - honoring what he built while unflinchingly examining how it ended. The album uses Ian’s own words from his final tweets, documented police reports, and the autopsy findings to tell the story of a brilliant mind failed by the systems around him.

Structure:

The album moves chronologically through Ian’s life, with the sonic palette darkening as the narrative progresses:

  • Tracks 1-4: The bright years (1993-1999) - hopeful 90s electronic, the founding vision
  • Track 5: The pivot (2007-2008) - transitional, dual meaning of “Sun Sets”
  • Track 6: Surface success (2011-2015) - slick but hollow, isolation beneath achievement
  • Tracks 7-8: The end (December 2015) - dark, tense, tragic
  • Track 9: Legacy - bittersweet resolution, the code outlives the coder

Themes:

  • Open source as idealism - The belief that software should be free, developed openly
  • Names and identity - Deb + Ian becomes Debian; a relationship encoded in infrastructure
  • Institutional failure - Police brutality, mental health crisis, systems that don’t care
  • Legacy through code - Debian runs the space station; Ian’s vision outlasted him
  • The cost of brilliance - Asperger’s, alcohol, isolation beneath public success

// Tracklist

  1. The Manifesto

    August 1993 Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana A 20-year-old writes a manifesto And changes everything

    Dorm room at Purdue, twenty years old CRT monitor casting its glow Linux is chaos, distros are a mess S.L.S. is broken, I can do it best Late night coding while the campus sleeps Building something the world’s gonna keep Not for profit, not for fame Just to prove that free can win the game

    I got a vision burning in my chest Software developed in the open, nothing less Community-driven, not some corporate scheme A thousand contributors sharing one dream Quality matters, we maintain with care Every package handled like it’s precious and rare The user comes first, that’s the foundation Building a system for a generation

    This is the manifesto, written in code A declaration for the open road Developed freely in the spirit of guh-new Twenty years old and I’m breaking through This is the manifesto, put it in ink A new way forward, a new way to think From a dorm room in Indiana To every server, every scanner

    January ninety-four, I put it down in text The Debian way, what’s coming next “Developed openly in the spirit of Linux and guh-new” That’s the promise, and I’m seeing it through No closed doors, no secret handshakes Every decision the community makes Name it after love, name it after her Deb plus Ian, let the future blur

    They say a kid can’t change the world But watch me try They say ideals don’t compile But watch them fly From West Lafayette to everywhere A philosophy in the air

    This is the manifesto, written in code A declaration for the open road Developed freely in the spirit of guh-new Twenty years old and I’m breaking through This is the manifesto, put it in ink A new way forward, a new way to think From a dorm room in Indiana The future’s calling, do you hear the signal?

    August 16th, 1993 The Debian Project begins He was just a kid with an idea He had no idea how far it would go

  2. Deb + Ian

    Met her at Purdue, she was everything Debra Lynn, yeah, she made his heart sing Two kids talking futures, late night calls Building dreams together down those college halls She believed in him when nobody else would Saw the vision when no one understood So when it came time to name his creation He wrote their love into the foundation

    Deb plus Ian, that’s the equation Two names combined for a new generation Running on servers from here to the moon Deb plus Ian, Deb-Ian Love compiled, love in bloom

    ‘93, ‘94, they tied the knot Built a family with everything they got Three kids came, a life taking shape While the project grew, spreading state to state Every apt-get install, every upgrade Carries the name of the promise they made He gave her immortality in code A love letter on every machine that’s loaded

    Deb plus Ian, that’s the equation Two names combined for a new generation Running on servers from here to the moon Deb plus Ian, Deb-Ian Love compiled, love in bloom

    Some people carve their names in trees Some people write them in the sand He carved their names in infrastructure Running across every land From embedded systems to the cloud From the server room to space Deb plus Ian, still together In every install, every place

    Now every time you boot that system up You’re invoking something that was once enough A snapshot of a moment, ‘93 When two names merged into a legacy She’s the Deb, he’s the Ian in the name A love story hidden in the frame The code remembers what it’s built upon Deb plus Ian, living on

    Deb plus Ian Running on a million machines Deb plus Ian More permanent than wedding rings

  3. The Social Contract

    ‘96, he’s walking off the stage Twenty-three years old, turning the page Handed Bruce the keys, said “take it from here” Built it strong enough to outlast a career Graduated Purdue, diploma in hand But the real degree was the thing he’d planned A system that don’t need a single man Principles over personalities, that’s the plan

    July of ‘97, they put it in writing A social contract, no more infighting “Deb-Ian will remain one hundred percent free” Not a suggestion, that’s a guarantee Give back to the community, hide no flaws Priorities straight, users come first, that’s the cause Every word deliberate, every line a vow Carved it into stone, feel the weight of it now

    This is the social contract, signed in trust Promises made that will never rust Bigger than one man, bigger than fame Write the rules down, let them carry the name This is the social contract, written to last Building the future on the lessons of the past

    The D.F.S.G. laid down the law Free redistribution, source code for all No discrimination, no fields denied License must be open, nothing to hide These words became the definition Open source gospel, the whole world would listen From a mailing list to a movement rising Ian stepped back, but his words kept flying

    Some founders hold on till the bitter end Grip the wheel until the whole thing bends But he let it go, gave the people the keys Stepped back from the throne, let the community lead That’s the paradox of legacy You gotta give it up to make history

    This is the social contract, signed in trust Promises made that will never rust Bigger than one man, bigger than fame Write the rules down, let them carry the name This is the social contract, written to last Building the future on the lessons of the past

    Deb-Ian will remain free That’s the promise That’s the legacy

  4. Apt-Get

    ‘99, Slink drops and the game has changed Package management rearranged No more hunting down libraries one by one No more conflicts, no more damage done Type the command, watch the magic flow Apt-get install, sit back, watch it go Dependencies resolving in a chain Never have to feel that frustration again

    Apt-get, apt-get install One command to rule them all Apt-get, apt-get upgrade This is how the future’s made No more dependency hell Deb-Ian does it well Apt-get, apt-get install One command to rule them all

    Two hundred developers, thousands of packages deep Infrastructure running while the world’s asleep From the server rack to the desktop screen The cleanest system that you’ve ever seen Other distros watching, taking notes This is how a real package manager floats Ubuntu coming, they gon’ build on this Standing on the shoulders of the genesis

    Apt-get, apt-get install One command to rule them all Apt-get, apt-get upgrade This is how the future’s made No more dependency hell Deb-Ian does it well Apt-get, apt-get install One command to rule them all

    Every library linked Every conflict solved Every package synced Problems all resolved This is automation This is how we build Technical foundation Ian’s vision fulfilled

    The terminal glowing green on black Type the words and there’s no turning back Repositories deep, mirrors worldwide Open source flowing like a rising tide This the peak before the fall begins Last track where everybody wins Celebrate the code, celebrate the craft Apt-get install, watch the future draft

    Apt-get install Apt-get upgrade Apt-get The Deb-Ian way

  5. Sun Sets

    2007, corner office, VP on the door From a dorm room dreamer to the corporate floor Sun Microsystems, Emerging Platforms lead Project Indiana, planting Solaris seeds On paper he’s arrived, got the title and the check But something in the mirror doesn’t quite connect The higher that you climb, the farther you can fall And the cracks are spreading underneath it all

    Sun sets, sun sets On the company, on the marriage, on the silhouette Sun sets, sun sets Some things you build can’t save you from regret The name lives on but the love is gone Sun sets

    August of that year, papers getting filed Fifteen years together, three kids, and now exiled Deb plus Ian, that was the promise made Now the plus sign’s broken, just a memory that stays She gets the house, he gets the corner view The project keeps their name, but the love is through Deb-Ian runs on servers coast to coast While the marriage that inspired it becomes a ghost

    Sun sets, sun sets On the company, on the marriage, on the silhouette Sun sets, sun sets Some things you build can’t save you from regret The name lives on but the love is gone Sun sets

    Oracle’s coming, twenty-ten they swallow Sun Another empire ending, another era done He walks out the building with his box of things VP of nothing now, see what tomorrow brings From open source messiah to a resume line The industry keeps moving, leaving him behind

    The irony is heavy if you stop and think He wrote their names in code, an unbreakable link But the flesh and blood version couldn’t make it last The software outlived the love that built the past Every apt-get install still whispers Deb and Ian But the couple that it honored, they stopped believing Sun sets on Solaris, sun sets on the ring Sun sets on everything

    Sun sets On everything he built Sun sets On everything

  6. Containers

    Twenty-eleven, new gig, VP again ExactTarget, building platforms, but where are the friends? Salesforce comes calling, acquisition complete Corner office, stock options, but the victory’s bittersweet He’s packaging solutions while his life’s uncontained Dependencies hidden, but the errors remain Smiling in the meetings, dying in the drive home Success on the surface, but he’s running alone

    Containers, containers Isolated processes, no one maintains us Containers, containers Running in production but the host can’t sustain us Everything packaged, everything sealed Everything hidden, nothing revealed Containers

    November twenty-fifteen, Docker calls his name The hottest tech in infrastructure, peak of the game Four weeks on the job, and the calendar’s thin December’s coming fast, and the walls closing in Girlfriend gone, eviction notice on the door Bottles in the kitchen, empties on the floor Connection’s hard to find when you’re so containerized Now the alcohol’s the only thing that quiets the mind

    Containers, containers Isolated processes, no one maintains us Containers, containers Running in production but the host can’t sustain us Everything packaged, everything sealed Everything hidden, nothing revealed Containers

    Memory limits getting tighter CPU throttled to the bone Container logs nobody’s reading Health check failing, all alone No one’s watching the dashboard No one sees the exit code Container’s about to terminate Under the weight of the load

    The irony’s so thick you could package it up He built the tools for isolation, now he can’t interrupt The process running silent in his head every night Dependencies unresolved, and there’s no one to write A patch for what’s broken in the kernel of his soul Containerized existence taking its toll December twenty-fifth, the countdown begins Three days left to live, and nobody gets in

    Containers Running Isolated Alone

  7. DecemberE

    December twenty-sixth, Pacific Heights at night Eleven-thirty PM, something isn’t right Neighbor’s door, he’s banging, trying to get in Police arrive, and that’s where the nightmare begins Detained at Steiner, put him in the car They say he hurt himself, banging on the bars Treated and released, but the story’s not done Three hours later, here he comes, back where he begun

    December, December The night nobody will remember the same December, December The tweets, the cuffs, the allegations of pain Who do you believe? What really happened that night? December

    Two-forty AM, back at the same address Banging on the doors, screaming, he’s a mess Four misdemeanor counts, twenty-five thousand bail From VP at Docker to a San Francisco jail Then the phone comes out, the tweets start to fly “We’re the police, we can do whatever the fuck we want” “We’re the police, we always win” - that’s the quote Alleged they beat him, humiliated him too A man unraveling where everyone can view

    December, December The night nobody will remember the same December, December The tweets, the cuffs, the allegations of pain Who do you believe? What really happened that night? December

    “I’m not committing suicide today” He typed those words then put the phone away “I’ll write this all up first” - the blog he’d never post Friends calling cops for wellness checks on the coast The same cops he accused, now checking on his life The irony cuts deeper than any knife

    Twitter’s watching, the tech world’s alarmed The founder of Deb-Ian, sounding so harmed He said he’d dedicate his life to fight abuse But the promised documentation never came loose The tweets go dark, the night keeps getting long Something’s very broken, something’s very wrong December twenty-seventh fading into black No one knows the truth, and Ian’s not coming back

    December The tweets The silence The end

  8. Forty-Two

    December twenty-eighth, evening falls They find him in his home, beyond these walls Green Street, twenty-four hundred block The founder of Deb-Ian, the clock has stopped Forty-two years old, born in seventy-three From manifesto dreams to this tragedy A vacuum cleaner cord, they call it suicide But the questions multiply, the doubts divide

    Forty-two, the answer to everything The answer to life, the universe - but what does it mean? Forty-two, the age he never passed So many questions, and no one left to ask What’s the question to the answer? We’ll never know

    The autopsy comes back in July Clinical words for how and why Bruises on his chest, his back, his arms, his legs Extensive contusions, but nobody begs The question that’s obvious: who put them there? Police say squad car, but do we believe? Where? Alcohol in the system, bottles on the floor Medical history noted, but there’s so much more

    Forty-two, the answer to everything The answer to life, the universe - but what does it mean? Forty-two, the age he never passed So many questions, and no one left to ask What’s the question to the answer? We’ll never know

    Asperger’s documented, psychological strain Recent breakup, eviction coming, pouring rain The tweets alleged abuse but they’re gone now too Account deleted, December twenty-nine, right on cue Friends had called for wellness, police came to check But nothing could prevent the wreck

    We got two narratives, pick which one you trust The police report’s official, but is it just? Ian’s tweets paint different, allegations raw But dead men can’t testify, dead men can’t draw The full picture that the living left behind The blog post never written, the truth we’ll never find Forty-two years on this earth, then gone The answer without the question, the silence of the dawn

    Forty-two The answer to life The universe And everything But what was the question, Ian? What was the question?

  9. Fork

    When a parent process dies, the child keeps running That’s the way the code works, no point in shunning The truth of what he built, it’s bigger than one man Deb-Ian still deploys, still follows the plan From a dorm room manifesto to the space station Running on the I.S.S., that’s the foundation More than a thousand developers carrying the torch The project didn’t die, it just spawned a fork

    Fork, fork, the code lives on The coder’s gone but the project carries on Fork, fork, the legacy remains Running on a million machines, through losses and gains When the parent terminates, the children survive Deb-Ian’s still alive

    Ubuntu took the base and made it mainstream Two-thousand-four, fulfilling the dream Every apt-get install echoes what he made The social contract’s still the gold standard of the trade “Deb-Ian will remain one hundred percent free” Those words still binding, binding you and me He wrote himself out of his own story line But the principles he set keep running just fine

    Fork, fork, the code lives on The coder’s gone but the project carries on Fork, fork, the legacy remains Running on a million machines, through losses and gains When the parent terminates, the children survive Deb-Ian’s still alive

    in-memoriam-ian at deb-ian dot org The condolences flowed in from every corner of the world From embedded systems to the enterprise rack His vision pushed forward, there’s no looking back The spiral keeps spinning, the packages install One man’s gone, but he gave us all

    Every server boot is a small resurrection Every dependency resolved, a reconnection To a kid at Purdue who believed software should be free Who named his love in code for eternity The tragedy don’t erase the triumph of the work The pain don’t diminish what he left in the dirt Seeds planted in source, they keep on growing The river keeps flowing, the wind keeps blowing

    Deb plus Ian Still running Still forking Still free From the manifesto to the legacy The code outlives the coder But we remember the name Deb plus Ian Deb-Ian

// Sources & Research

View Sources

Deb + Ian - Research & Source Documentation

This document provides citations and verification for all factual claims made in the album “Deb + Ian.” Every name, quote, date, and event referenced in the lyrics is documented here with authoritative sources.

Purpose: Legal defensibility and accuracy. This album depicts real events and real people. All claims are either:

  1. Matters of public record (official statements, medical examiner reports)
  2. Documented in journalism from reputable outlets
  3. Statements made by Ian Murdock himself (tweets, manifesto, interviews)
  4. Official project documentation (Debian archives)

Table of Contents

  1. Primary Sources
  2. Timeline of Events
  3. Key People
  4. Key Events
  5. Ian’s Career: Deep Dive
  6. The Debian Manifesto: Verbatim Excerpts
  7. Ian’s Personal Life
  8. Ian’s Final Tweets
  9. Track-by-Track Claim Verification
  10. Areas of Creative License

Primary Sources

Official Documents

SourceURLDate
The Debian Manifestodebian.orgJanuary 6, 1994
Debian Social Contract v1.0debian.orgJuly 5, 1997
Debian Free Software Guidelinesdebian.orgJuly 5, 1997
SF Medical Examiner Autopsy ReportReferenced in The RegisterJuly 2016

Official Statements

SourceOrganizationURL
“Debian mourns the passing of Ian Murdock”Debian Projectbits.debian.org
Ian Murdock memorialDebian Projectdebian.org
Docker CEO statementDocker, Inc.Referenced in The Register
OSI memorialOpen Source Initiativeopensource.org

Investigative Journalism

SourcePublicationURL
“Police confirm Ian Murdock arrest before threatened suicide”SFBaysfbayca.com
“Debian founder Ian Murdock killed himself – SF medical examiner”The Registertheregister.com
“Mysterious death of software pioneer Ian Murdock ruled suicide”CNN Moneymoney.cnn.com
“Debian Linux founder Ian Murdock dead at 42”The Registertheregister.com
“Tech world mourns star programmer Ian Murdock”CNN Moneymoney.cnn.com

Archived Tweets

SourceURL
WikiLeaks Twitter archivetwitter.com/wikileaks
Scribd documentscribd.com

Ian’s Career Sources

SourcePublicationURL
“OpenSolaris: Murdock Speaks on Project Indiana”MCPMagmcpmag.com
“Sun’s Project Indiana to bear fruit”InfoWorldinfoworld.com
Progeny Linux SystemsWikipediawikipedia.org
Progeny archiveArchiveOSarchiveos.org
OSI HistoryOpen Source Initiativeopensource.org
Ian Murdock memorial blogdebian.net archiveianmurdock.debian.net

Ian’s Blog Posts (Archived)

Post TitleDateSource
“How I came to find Linux”August 17, 2015ianmurdock.debian.net
“Do operating systems still matter?”April 17, 2009ianmurdock.debian.net
“What will be the cloud equivalent of the Linux distro?”January 22, 2009ianmurdock.debian.net
“How package management changed everything”July 21, 2007ianmurdock.debian.net

Timeline of Events

The Founding Era (1991-1996)

DateEventSource
April 28, 1973Ian Ashley Murdock born in Konstanz, West GermanyWikipedia
1991Graduated Harrison High School, Lafayette, IndianaPurdue Alumni
1991-1996Attended Purdue University, Computer ScienceWikipedia
August 16, 1993Founded Debian Project at age 20Debian History
1993/1994Married Debra Lynn RoundySources vary on exact date
January 6, 1994Published the Debian ManifestoDebian Manifesto
November 1994 - November 1995Debian sponsored by FSF GNU ProjectDebian History
March 1996Stepped down from Debian leadership, appointed Bruce PerensWikipedia
1996Graduated Purdue with B.S. in Computer ScienceWikipedia

The Community Era (1997-2006)

DateEventSource
July 5, 1997Debian Social Contract and DFSG ratifiedDebian Social Contract
1998-2001Founding director of Open Source InitiativeOSI
March 1999Debian 2.1 “Slink” released with APTDebian History
1999Co-founded Progeny Linux SystemsWikipedia

The Corporate Era (2006-2015)

DateEventSource
January 2006Became CTO of Free Standards GroupWikipedia
March 2007Joined Sun Microsystems as VP of Emerging PlatformsWikipedia
Week of August 10, 2007Filed for divorce from DebraAutopsy report via The Register
January 2008Divorce finalizedAutopsy report via The Register
February 2010Left Sun after Oracle mergerWikipedia
2011Joined ExactTarget as VPCrunchbase
June 2013ExactTarget acquired by SalesforceWikipedia
November 2015Joined Docker, Inc.The Register

December 2015

Date/TimeEventSource
Dec 26, 11:30 PMPolice called to 2400 block Green St, Pacific Heights - reports of break-in attemptSFBay
Dec 26, 11:30 PMMurdock found at Steiner and Union, detained, struggled with officersSFBay
Dec 26-27Police claim he banged his head in squad car, causing injuriesSFBay
Dec 26-27Taken to hospital, treated for abrasions, releasedSFBay
Dec 27, 2:40 AMPolice called again - Murdock banging on neighbor’s doorSFBay
Dec 27, 2:40 AMArrested on four misdemeanor counts, taken to county jailSFBay
Dec 27Released on $25,000 bailThe Register
Dec 27-28Posted series of tweets about police brutality, threatened then recanted suicideWikiLeaks archive
Dec 28Friends called SFPD requesting wellness check after seeing tweetsThe Register
Dec 28, eveningFound dead at 2400 block Green StreetThe Register
Dec 29Twitter account @imurdock deletedThe Register
Dec 30Docker CEO confirms deathThe Register
Dec 30Debian Project announces mourningbits.debian.org

Autopsy Findings (July 2016)

FindingDetailSource
Cause of deathSuicide by asphyxiation (hanging with vacuum cleaner cord)The Register
RulingSuicideCNN Money
Physical findingsExtensive bruises on chest, abdomen, back, arms, and legsThe Register
Medical history notedAlcohol abuse with withdrawal seizures, Asperger syndromeThe Register
Scene findingsMultiple empty wine bottles throughout homeCNN Money
Personal contextRecently split with girlfriend, facing eviction Dec 31The Register

Key People

Ian Ashley Murdock

AttributeDetailSource
Full nameIan Ashley MurdockWikipedia
BornApril 28, 1973, Konstanz, West GermanyWikipedia
DiedDecember 28, 2015, San Francisco (age 42)Medical Examiner
EducationB.S. Computer Science, Purdue University, 1996Purdue
Medical historyAsperger syndrome, alcohol abuseAutopsy report

Debra Lynn Roundy

AttributeDetailSource
RelationshipIan’s girlfriend (1993), wife (~1993/94-2008)Wikipedia, Autopsy report via The Register
SignificanceThe “Deb” in “Debian”Wikipedia
ChildrenThree children with IanAutopsy report via The Register
Divorce filedWeek of August 10, 2007Autopsy report via The Register
Divorce finalizedJanuary 2008Autopsy report via The Register

Bruce Perens

AttributeDetailSource
RoleSecond Debian Project Leader (April 1996 - December 1997)Wikipedia
Appointed byIan Murdock, March 1996Wikipedia
AccomplishmentsAuthored Debian Social Contract and DFSG; created Open Source DefinitionWikipedia

Key Events

The Debian Manifesto (January 6, 1994)

AttributeDetailSource
DateJanuary 6, 1994Debian Manifesto
AuthorIan MurdockDebian Manifesto
Key principlesOpen development, non-commercial, community-driven, user freedomsDebian Manifesto

Quotable passages from the Manifesto:

“Debian is being developed openly in the spirit of Linux and GNU.”

“The Debian design process is open to ensure that the system is of the highest quality and that it reflects the needs of the user community.”

The Debian Social Contract (July 5, 1997)

AttributeDetailSource
Date ratifiedJuly 5, 1997Debian Social Contract
Primary authorBruce Perens (with community input)Wikipedia
Key commitmentsDebian will remain 100% free; give back to community; not hide problemsDebian Social Contract

APT Introduction (1999)

AttributeDetailSource
First releaseDebian 2.1 “Slink”, March 9, 1999Debian History
InnovationAutomated dependency resolutionWikipedia
ImpactEliminated “dependency hell”Wikipedia

Ian’s Career: Deep Dive

Progeny Linux Systems (1999-2007)

AttributeDetailSource
Founded1999Wikipedia
LocationIndianapolis, IndianaWikipedia
RoleFounder and Chairman of the BoardWikipedia
CTOJohn H. HartmanWikipedia
ProductProgeny Componentized Linux (Progeny Debian)ArchiveOS
ClosedMay 1, 2007Wikipedia

Vision - Componentized Linux: Ian promoted a radical new concept: developing Linux as a collection of modular components rather than as a monolithic whole. This “Componentized Linux” approach was ahead of its time.

“Linux as a collection of components, rather than as a monolithic whole.” — Ian Murdock’s vision for Progeny

Technical Approach:

  • Based on Linux Standard Base (LSB) 3.0
  • Used Anaconda installer (ported from Red Hat)
  • Combined APT package management with Discover hardware detection
  • Aimed to be a “model for developing a component-based Linux”

Legacy: Thanks to open source, the Progeny Platform Development Kit (PDK) lives on and was maintained by 64 Studio after Progeny closed. Murdock was “intensely proud” that Progeny survived the dot-com crash.

Connection to Docker: Progeny’s work on componentized, containerized Linux deployment presaged modern container technology that Docker would later popularize.

Open Source Initiative Board (1998-2001)

AttributeDetailSource
OSI FoundedFebruary 1998OSI History
FoundersEric Raymond (President), Bruce Perens (Vice-President)OSI History
Founding BoardBrian Behlendorf, Ian Murdock, Russ Nelson, Chip SalzenbergOSI History
Ian’s RoleFounding Director (board member, not co-founder)OSI History

The DFSG → Open Source Definition Connection:

  1. Ian founded Debian (1993)
  2. Bruce Perens became second Debian leader (1996)
  3. Perens drafted Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) for Debian (1997)
  4. Perens adapted DFSG into the Open Source Definition (OSD) for OSI (1998)

Ian’s Debian project thus directly influenced the formal definition of “open source” through the DFSG.

Linux Standard Base / Free Standards Group (2006)

AttributeDetailSource
OrganizationFree Standards GroupWikipedia
RoleChief Technology OfficerWikipedia
StartedJanuary 2006Wikipedia
Duration~1 year (until joining Sun)Wikipedia
FocusLinux Standard Base (LSB) standardizationWikipedia

The Free Standards Group later merged with OSDL to form the Linux Foundation.

Project Indiana / Sun Microsystems (2007-2010)

AttributeDetailSource
HiredMarch 19, 2007InfoWorld
TitleVP of Emerging PlatformsWikipedia
ProjectProject Indiana (OpenSolaris distribution)MCPMag
LeftFebruary 2010 (after Oracle acquisition)Wikipedia

Project Indiana Vision: Ian aimed to apply Debian’s distribution model to Solaris.

“It’s not about copying Linux or making a Linux clone. It’s about the distribution model that Linux pioneered… It’s about combining the enterprise-class capabilities, innovation and backward compatibility of Solaris with that distribution model. It’s about the best of both worlds.” — Ian Murdock, 2007

“Solaris today, like most operating systems, is a monolithic product. With Project Indiana, we are turning it into more of a collection of software held together by a package system. There will be a core that defines the application compatibility environment, and a package system that can pull from a large repository of software.” — Ian Murdock, 2007

Legacy:

  • Project Indiana led to the OpenSolaris distribution
  • After Oracle acquired Sun (2010), Oracle discontinued OpenSolaris
  • Community forked to create OpenIndiana (September 14, 2010)
  • Ian’s work influenced Solaris 11 development

Docker, Inc. (November 2015)

AttributeDetailSource
JoinedNovember 2015The Register
TitleMember of Technical StaffDocker statement
Duration~6 weeks (joined November, died December 28)Timeline

Docker CEO Ben Golub’s Statement:

“Ian helped pioneer the notion of a truly open source project and community… with Debian, he set an early model for how companies can work with and be part of open source communities.”


The Debian Manifesto: Verbatim Excerpts

From Ian Murdock’s original manifesto (January 6, 1994):

On Debian’s Purpose

“Debian is being developed openly in the spirit of Linux and GNU.”

“Debian is a brand-new kind of Linux distribution… developed openly rather than by isolated individuals.”

On the Problem

“SLS is quite possibly the most bug-ridden and badly maintained Linux distribution available.” — Ian’s critique of the leading 1993 distribution

On Open Development

“The Debian design process is open to ensure that the system is of the highest quality and that it reflects the needs of the user community.”

“By involving others with a wide range of abilities and backgrounds, Debian is able to be developed in a modular fashion. Its components are of high quality because those with expertise in a certain area are given the opportunity to construct or maintain the individual components of Debian involving that area.”

On Non-Commercial Values

Ian argued that working with the Free Software Foundation would demonstrate:

“Linux is not a commercial product, and never should be”

Yet he also believed it could compete commercially, citing GNU Emacs and GCC as proof that free software could succeed in the marketplace.

On User Focus

“Individuals cannot anticipate community requirements without direct input.”

Source: The Debian Manifesto


Ian’s Personal Life

Marriage and Divorce

DetailInformationSource
WifeDebra Lynn Roundy (“Deb” in Debian)Wikipedia
Married~1993/1994 (sources vary)Wikipedia, Wikidata
ChildrenThreeAutopsy report via The Register
Divorce filedWeek of August 10, 2007Autopsy report via The Register
Divorce finalizedJanuary 2008Autopsy report via The Register

Context from Autopsy Report

FindingDetailSource
Medical historyAlcohol abuse with withdrawal seizures, Asperger syndromeThe Register
Scene findingsMultiple empty wine bottles throughout homeCNN Money
RelationshipRecently split with girlfriendThe Register
Living situationFacing eviction (end of Dec 2015)The Register

Ian’s Final Tweets

Ian posted a series of tweets on December 27-28, 2015, before his death. The account was deleted December 29. Content is verified through archived screenshots.

Verified Tweet Content (paraphrased from archives)

ThemeContentSource
ArrestStated he was arrested, accused of assaulting a police officerWikiLeaks archive
Police quoteQuoted officers: “We’re the police, we can do whatever the fuck we want”Archives
Police quoteQuoted officers: “We’re the police, we always win”Archives
Assault allegationClaimed he was beaten by policeMultiple archives
Sexual assault allegationClaimed female officer “ripped off his underwear”Archives
BailReferenced the $25,000 bail amountArchives
Initial suicide threatInitially threatened suicideSFBay
Recantation“I’m not committing suicide today. I’ll write this all up first”Archives
PledgeVowed to dedicate life to fighting police abuseArchives
PromiseSaid he would write full account on his blogArchives

Note on Tweet Verification

The original tweets were deleted with Ian’s account. Archives exist via:

  • WikiLeaks Twitter account (posted archive link)
  • Scribd document with screenshots
  • Contemporary news articles quoting/paraphrasing content

Track-by-Track Claim Verification

To be completed as lyrics are written. Each lyric making a factual claim will be verified against sources above.

Track 01: The Manifesto

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
Founded at age 20Born April 28, 1973; founded August 16, 1993Wikipedia
Purdue studentAttended Purdue 1991-1996Purdue
Manifesto publishedJanuary 6, 1994Debian

Track 02: Deb + Ian

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
Name originDebra + Ian = DebianWikipedia
Dating when foundedDebra was his girlfriend in 1993Wikipedia
MarriageMarried ~1993/94Wikipedia, Wikidata

Track 03: The Social Contract

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
Stepped down 1996Left active leadership March 1996Wikipedia
Social Contract 1997Ratified July 5, 1997Debian

Track 04: Apt-Get

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
APT introducedDebian 2.1 “Slink”, March 1999Debian History
Dependency resolutionAPT’s key innovationWikipedia

Track 05: Sun Sets

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
Joined Sun March 2007VP of Emerging PlatformsWikipedia
Divorce filed Aug 2007Week of August 10, 2007Autopsy report via The Register
Divorce finalized 2008January 2008Autopsy report via The Register
Left after OracleFebruary 2010Wikipedia

Track 06: Containers

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
ExactTarget 2011Joined as VPCrunchbase
Salesforce acquisitionJune 2013Wikipedia
Docker Nov 2015Joined as Member of Technical StaffThe Register

Track 07: December

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
First arrest Dec 26 11:30 PMConfirmed by SFPDSFBay
Second arrest Dec 27 2:40 AMConfirmed by SFPDSFBay
Four misdemeanor countsConfirmed by SFPDSFBay
$25,000 bailConfirmedThe Register
Police quotes in tweetsArchivedScribd

Track 08: 42

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
Died December 28, 2015ConfirmedMedical Examiner
Age 42Born April 28, 1973Wikipedia
Extensive bruisingAutopsy found bruises on chest, abdomen, back, arms, legsThe Register
Ruled suicideSF Medical Examiner rulingCNN Money
Recent breakupConfirmed in autopsy reportThe Register
Facing evictionEnd of month (Dec 31)The Register

Track 09: Fork

Lyric/ClaimVerified FactSource
1,000+ developers“more than 1,000 people currently involved in Debian development”Docker statement
Runs on space station“running on everything from embedded devices to the space station”Debian memorial
Ubuntu derivativeUbuntu based on DebianWikipedia

Areas of Creative License

The following elements are not verified or represent creative interpretation:

ElementTypeNotes
Internal thoughts attributed to IanInterpretationAny lyrics suggesting what Ian was thinking/feeling are creative interpretation based on known facts
Exact dialogue during arrestsUnverifiedOnly Ian’s version (from tweets) is documented; police version differs
Emotional statesInterpretationDescriptions of mood/emotion are inferred from circumstances
Specific details of relationship with DebraLimited documentationThe romance is documented; specific moments are creative
Sequence of final hoursPartially documentedGeneral timeline known; hour-by-hour details are not

Competing Narratives (December 2015)

The album acknowledges but does not definitively resolve the competing accounts:

Police version:

  • Murdock was intoxicated and tried to break into neighbor’s home
  • He was violent during detention
  • Injuries were self-inflicted (banging head in squad car)
  • He showed no signs of being suicidal during booking

Ian’s version (from tweets):

  • He was beaten by police
  • He was sexually humiliated (underwear removed)
  • Officers said “We can do whatever we want”

Autopsy findings (facts):

  • Extensive bruising documented
  • Cause of death: suicide by hanging
  • Medical history of alcohol abuse, Asperger syndrome
  • Recent personal crises (breakup, eviction)

The album presents Ian’s tweets as his documented words without definitively claiming which account is true.


  • Public Figure: Ian Murdock was a public figure in the technology community. Commentary on his public life and documented events is protected speech.
  • Truth as Defense: All factual claims are supported by primary sources as documented above.
  • Ian’s Own Words: His tweets are his own public statements and are quoted/paraphrased from archives.
  • Medical Information: Autopsy findings were released publicly and reported by multiple news outlets.
  • Sensitive Material: The album treats his death and mental health struggles with respect while remaining factual.