Yeah, unless this is someone at the FSF, you don't really get to tell your attorney what tools they use. Sure, FSF could try and find someone who aligns with their beliefs, but often that's not feasible.
From the garbage pile: "Could the FSF not find any law firm that, in addition to talking about or for Free software, does not use .NET, OOXML, and almost everything Microsoft? Even in 2025?"
One, no you cannot. Lawyers live in the world of Microsoft Office. Two, one does not choose a law firm based off the tools they use.
If you are familiar with pacer or ACMS - it is an old antiquated system. You can’t submit PDFs for example generated from anything other than Adobe Acrobat or exported from Microsoft word.
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[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 16.3 ms ] threadLawyers will use whatever tool they know best for their job. And protip, LibreOffice is rarely that
Oh wait https://www.libreoffice.org/discover/libreoffice/
A DOCX file alone isn't enough evidence that MS Office was used.
The export features in Libreword is pretty good.
https://help.libreoffice.org/25.2/en-US/search?P=Docx&DEFAUL...
From the garbage pile: "Could the FSF not find any law firm that, in addition to talking about or for Free software, does not use .NET, OOXML, and almost everything Microsoft? Even in 2025?"
One, no you cannot. Lawyers live in the world of Microsoft Office. Two, one does not choose a law firm based off the tools they use.
I’ve tried Star / Open / Libre Office every year since 9x. They still aren’t as robust as Word 6 for Windows 3.1 released 35 years ago.
Presumably, compatibility concerns forced them to.
Adobe and Microsoft must love that.