ok Staman isn't against ownership and you understand nothing of it's position.
Copyright have a huge impact on the society and copyright on software is the same concept as copyright on anything else, including marketing method, workforce management, books, news and scientific articles.
The aim is to give power to the big company possessing the rights and nothing to the user. Not a lot for the creators either.
Stallman's concern began when this trend began and he felt it was an hindrance in its work. It since developed in a very general movement were "intellectual property" is a tool used to give some "right holders", often not the creator, all right over something and anything vaguely related. It's now also used to control the information, to fight free software and deter concurrence.
Everything in this paragraph is false. Linux is at least on par with windows technically.
Yeah, until you want a GUI.
In which case Debian, for instance, is way superior to windows, with both gnome, kde, or, my favorite : xface.
Which ones are doing quite well?
Canonical (Ubuntu) exists only due to Shuttleworth's largesse. In 2008, he suggested he'd close it down if it didn't make money within 3-5 years, so who knows how that will turn out.
Red Hat is doing well, but offers no consumer products because the company believes it can't make any money from them. That might be OK for people running a server, but I don't believe that computers should be restricted to people running servers. Moreover, due to RH's restrictions on branding, a free distribution of RHEL actually requires quite some effort to produce (the CentOS project). RH puts up barriers to make free distribution harder.
It's hard to know how well SUSE is doing, but Novell is haemorrhaging money. So "not well enough", clearly.
Slackware? Mandriva? God, who even cares about them. Really, which commercial Linux distros are doing quite well, and more importantly, which ones are mass market?
Ubuntu must be stable by now, Mozilla is doing good in spite of the crisis, Novel has basically betrayed free software so no one care.
And of course you aren't counting the fact that Microsoft is doing everything to keep his monopolist position on the market. Even if it's illegal.
Stallman has received the following recognition for his work:
* 1986: Honorary lifetime membership of the Chalmers University of Technology Computer Society
* 1990: Exceptional merit award MacArthur Fellowship
* 1990: The Association for Computing Machinery's Grace Murray Hopper Award "For pioneering work in the development of the extensible editor EMACS (Editing Macros)."[79]
* 1996: Honorary doctorate from Sweden's Royal Institute of Technology
* 1998: Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer award
* 1999: Yuri Rubinsky Memorial Award[80]
* 2001: The Takeda Techno-Entrepreneurship Award for Social/Economic Well-Being (武田研究奨励賞)
* 2001: Honorary doctorate, from the University of Glasgow
* 2002: United States National Academy of Engineering membership
* 2003: Honorary doctorate, from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel
* 2004: Honorary doctorate, from the Universidad Nacional de Salta.[81]
* 2004: Honorary professorship, from the Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería del Perú.
* 2007: Honorary professorship, from the Universidad Inca Garcilaso de la Vega.
* 2007: Honorary doctorate, from the Universidad de Los Angeles de Chimbote.
* 2007: Honorary doctorate, from the University of Pavia[82]
* 2009: Honorary doctorate, from Lakehead University [83][84]
Yeah, this prankster accomplished nothing.