|| On Thu, 26 Apr 2007 15:05:27 +0200 || Stefano Maffulli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
sm> It's clear that FSFE doesn't have money spare and it can't give sm> money to third parties easily. But things are rarely black or sm> white. Dozza wasn't asking simply for money from FSFE. You can sm> read his message as a request for help. The answer was a polite answer that we could not supply funds, and an offer for help. So things should have been fine, then. sm> He was really asking that FSFE took the leadership of a global, sm> worldwide activity to defend open standards from being tainted sm> with a not-so-open standard. FSFE has been doing quite a bit in the area of Open Standards, in which ISO is really only one line of battle. Almost every day we are in some way doing things that relate directly to one of the various aspects of the Open Standards debate. But I'm not sure what you mean by "FSFE taking the leadership." In my experience, this could easily occupy five dedicated people full-time, which we would only have if we stopped very much everything else we are doing -- and that is not a good idea, imho. But we are doing our part, be it by speaking to governmental representatives about the issue (as I did today) or working to build stronger alliances for Open Standards (as I will be doing the next days). In these activities we follow the same principles that have guided us in other fields: Seek the points where we can make the most difference and do not lose oversight of the bigger picture over some details. So we are constructively working to build an alliance for Open Standards through the IGF DCOS, are promoting Open Standards through SELF, and we are planning for the eventuality that Microsoft will be able to buy itself an ISO certification. In parallel we do what we can to prevent the ISO certification -- and writing my articles was just one way to create more visibility for that issue and getting more people involved in the debate. But giving 2k EUR to a third party was not what we could do, as I explained. And since you had declined internally to represent FSFE in the Italian standardisation organisation and also told us there were no volunteers to help with this, being present in the Italian standardisation came out as something we could not do. We did not take that decision easy, either, and discussed it for a while, but in the end we had to concede that we cannot be everywhere at the same time. But as also others have pointed out, there are many more things we do on Open Standards, and our offer to help the activities in Italy in any way we can still stands. sm> Dozza, was convinced that with the credibility and the network of sm> contacts of the big FSFE, finding 2500euro would have been a sm> matter of making one single phone call to a couple of people. (1) Again, I'm sorry. But as I also explained in my reply: making those calls on behalf of someone I do not know is not something that is easily done. That is what I meant by the difficulties of a missing track record. sm> Georg took responsibility of managing the opposition to OXML for sm> FSFE, since FSFE team couldn't find anybody else to do the job. No. I had the responsibility for several years now because I am the person who works a lot in the global public policy field, which is where Open Standards are handled. This goes back all the way to 2001 when we started being massively involved in the UN WSIS. Regards, Georg -- Georg C. F. Greve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Free Software Foundation Europe (http://fsfeurope.org) Join the Fellowship and protect your freedom! (http://www.fsfe.org) What everyone should know about DRM (http://DRM.info)
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