It depends on the purpose of the confluence space.   If the space is used at 
all for "official" project related material, an ICLA must be on file.   
"official" project related material includes (but is not limitted to):

1) The project web site
2) Anything going into a "release"
3) Any "official" documentation

Documentation, on a wiki or in SVN, is a project owned resource and MUST have 
the same legal protection as the source code.   Thus, the ICLA must be on file 
for it.

If the space is just for discussion things and similar, then no, an ICLA would 
not be required.

Dan


On Wed June 17 2009 10:38:41 am Benson Margulies wrote:
> Grant,
>
> That's not the policy as we've had it explained to us at CXF. If it's
> content on www.apache.org, any contributor has to have a CLA.
>
> Dan, do I have this right? Is there some difference between Confluence
> and cwiki?
>
> --benson
>
> On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 9:35 AM, Grant Ingersoll<[email protected]> wrote:
> > On Jun 17, 2009, at 9:29 AM, Benson Margulies wrote:
> >> At CXF, permission to modify the confluence wiki is only granted to
> >> people with a CLA on file? Obviously, I have one, but do you need to
> >> grant me karma
> >> here before I can edit?
> >
> > We aren't distributing the wiki as a part of the release, so anyone with
> > an account should be able to modify it.

-- 
Daniel Kulp
[email protected]
http://www.dankulp.com/blog

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