Hello Andrea,
Le Sat, 30 Oct 2010 17:10:07 +0200, Andrea Pescetti <[email protected]> a écrit : > Charles-H. Schulz wrote: > > We initially agreed not to request the assignment of copyright for > > code contributions, and we can only witness that it's been so far > > the right decision: Many developers have joined us and contribute > > Honestly, I believe new developers joined because the bar for > contribution was lowered to the point that anyone who can use a text > editor can contribute to the code, even if he is unable to build > LibreOffice. The Easy Hacks were a nice way to attract new people. Of > course the paperwork reduction may have helped too, but I don't see > it as the most effective improvement. The paperwork was only a practical detail: not relinquising your copyright is the most important. > > > 3) ... In the CVS (and even SVN) there was a real hierarchy. ... > > BTW; LibreOffice uses Git, which is a distributed SCM. > > So did (and still does) OpenOffice.org with Mercurial, another > distributed SCM. But I don't believe this is relevant. > > > 4) the notion that we cannot change license because we don't have > > copyright assignment needs to be put to rest once and for all today. > > There is a very simple explanation with respect to this issue; ask > > any lawyer and he/she will confirm this: Sun/Oracle has licensed > > the OOo code under LGPL v3. They could have put "LGPL v3 or later" > > or "LGPL v3 or +". But they didn't. And that's what makes > > impossible to turn OOo into a different license unless the sole > > copyright owner agrees to change it, which is unlikely with Oracle. > > Well, if you take for granted that cooperation between Oracle and the > Document Foundation will forever be impossible then you are right. > But who knows what will happen in months, years? If Oracle changes > attitude and wants to discuss licensing with the Document Foundation, > the Document Foundation will be in the awkward position of > "representing" the LibreOffice developers only in theory, because any > agreement would then need to be confirmed with every developer; while > with a copyright agreement/assignment in place, the Document > Foundation could effectively represent a measurable percentage of the > codebase, and its opinion be weighed accordingly. So we do take for granted that Oracle will not contribute to the Document Foundation, because that's what Oracle clearly implied in their last press release and what they told us (informally). This has to be very clear from now on. We are still open for future discussions, of course, but what you seem to imply is that conditions for a cooperation would require the document foundation to assign copyright (the contributions of the LibreOffice developers) back to Oracle again. Well this is something that will never ever happen. If Oracle wants to work with us, if we find a way to cooperate, I can assure you that the condition will not be that we give our copyright to Oracle. Everybody can keep its own copyright and it will be a very healthy situation. Best, Charles. > > Best regards, > Andrea Pescetti. > -- Unsubscribe instructions: Email to [email protected] Posting guidelines: http://netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html Archive: http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/ *** All posts to this list are publicly archived ***
