In Israel one member of the community (eyal levin) founded a non-profit
open-business. the business is not related to ubuntu but it will certainly
help financially to our LoCo team for achiving the ultimate goal of more
Linux and FOSS in Israel.

On Wed, May 7, 2008 at 1:05 PM, Neil Coetzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  Very relevant topic. Zimbabwe is also considering registering as a
> non-profit organisation. Being a part of another non-profit organisation
> (Round Table), I don't think we'd have any "legality" problems in Zimbabwe
> (as long as we keep audited accounts), provided that this is 'allowed' by
> the Ubuntu Community. It would be particularly important for us in Zimbabwe
> since, with our current economic situation, there are often shortages of
> cash and donations can only be received into a bank account. To open a bank
> account, we would need to be a formal association.
>
> On Wed, 2008-05-07 at 00:01 +0200, Søren Bredlund Caspersen wrote:
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> in the Danish LoCo team we are currently considering the possibility
> of forming a 'formal' association, which would be a legal entity. This
> would be done to enable the team to administrate money to pay for
> posters, rent locations for release parties and so on.
>
> However some have mentioned that Canonical might have a problem with
> this from a legal point of view (trademarks, etc.). So can someone
> 'official' (Jono Bacon?) confirm or deny that?
>
> Regards
> Søren Caspersen
>
>
>
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>
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