[this statement is available online at http://s.apache.org/XCP]

The Apache Software Foundation Statement on Apache OpenOffice.org

On 1 June 2011, Oracle Corporation submitted the OpenOffice.org code base to 
The Apache Software Foundation. That submission was accepted, and the project 
is now being developed as a podling in the Apache Incubator under the ASF's 
meritocratic process informally dubbed "The Apache Way". 

OpenOffice.org is now officially part of the Apache family. 

The project is known as Apache OpenOffice.org (incubating).

Over its 12-year history, the ASF has welcomed contributions from individuals 
and organizations alike, but, as a policy, does not solicit code donations. The 
OpenOffice.org code base was not pursued by the ASF prior to its acceptance 
into the Apache Incubator. 

The Apache OpenOffice.org Podling Project Management Committee (PPMC) and 
Committer list are nearly 10 times greater than those of other projects in the 
Apache Incubator, demonstrating the tremendous interest in this project.

As with many highly-visible products, there has been speculation and conjecture 
about the future of OpenOffice.org at Apache. More recently, destructive 
statements have been published by both members of the greater FOSS community 
and former contributors to the original OpenOffice.org product, suggesting that 
the project has failed during the 18 weeks since its acceptance into the Apache 
Incubator.

Whilst the ASF operates in the open –our code and project mailing lists are 
publicly accessible– ASF governance permits for projects to make information 
and code freely available when the project deems them ready to be released. 
Apache OpenOffice.org is not at risk.

As an end-user-facing product, OpenOffice.org is unique in comparison to the 
other nearly 170 products currently being developed, incubated, and shepherded 
at the ASF. Considered to be "ingredient brands", countless competing Web 
server, Cloud computing, data handling, and other solutions behind the products 
serving millions of users worldwide are, unbeknown to most, "Powered by Apache".

And we're OK with that.

More than 70 project Committers are actively collaborating to ensure that the 
future of the OpenOffice.org code base and community are in alignment with The 
Apache Way. The project's extensive plans include assessing the elements 
necessary to update a product that hasn't had an official release in nearly a 
year; parts of the product's functionality encumbered by non-Apache-Licensed 
components; and a code base that has been forked and maintained by a community 
pursuing market dominance. As such, it is critical that we remain pragmatic 
about the project's next steps during this transition phase.

We understand that stakeholders of a project with a 10+ year history --be they 
former product managers or casual users-- may be unfamiliar with The Apache Way 
and question its methods. Those following the project's migration to process 
and culture unique to the Apache community may challenge the future 
sustainability of the project.

Such concerns are not atypical with the incubation of Open Source projects with 
well-established communities -- the successful graduation of Apache Subversion 
and Apache SpamAssassin, among others, are proof that The Apache Way works.

As an all-volunteer organization, we do not compensate any contributors to 
develop Apache code. We do, however, support those individuals with relevant 
expertise to pursue consulting/remuneration opportunities with interested 
parties, but must reiterate that they are barred from doing so on behalf of the 
ASF or any Apache initiatives -- be they Top-level Projects (TLPs) or emerging 
products in the Apache Incubator and Labs. Otherwise, they would be in 
violation of the Apache trademark policy, which the ASF strongly defends in 
order to protect its communities.

At the ASF, the answer is openness, not further fragmentation. There is ample 
room for multiple solutions in the marketplace that are Powered by Apache. We 
welcome differences of opinion: a requirement at Apache is that a healthy 
project be supported by an open, diverse community comprising multiple 
organizations and individual contributors.

We congratulate the LibreOffice community on their success over their inaugural 
year and wish them luck in their future endeavors. We look forward to opening 
up the dialogue between Open Document Format-oriented communities to deepen 
understanding and cease the unwarranted spread of misinformation.

We welcome input and participation in the form of constructive contributions to 
Apache OpenOffice.org. There are myriad ways to help, from code development and 
documentation to community relations and "help desk" forums support to 
licensing and localization, and more. 

The way to move this forward is via the ASF, which owns the OpenOffice.org 
trademark and official code base. This is our chance to be able to pull 
together our talents towards a cohesive goal and protect the project's 
ecosystem.

At a minimum, we owe that to the hundreds of millions of users of 
OpenOffice.org.

-- the ASF Press team and Apache OpenOffice.org incubating mentors


- Join the Apache OpenOffice.org project MeetUp at ApacheCon, 7-11 November 
2011 in Vancouver, BC, Canada. For more information, visit http://apachecon.com/

- For more on Apache OpenOffice.org see 
http://incubator.apache.org/openofficeorg/
- For more information on the Apache Incubator see http://incubator.apache.org/
- The ASF trademark policy can found at http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/


"Apache", "OpenOffice.org", and "ApacheCon" are trademarks of The Apache 
Software Foundation. All other brands and trademarks are the property of their 
respective owners.

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