On Mon, Sep 5, 2011 at 10:32 PM, Dave Fisher <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Kay, > >> OK, I've done another svn checkout for the curretn OOo "accepted projects" >> and the put the web info (actually what the OOo site calls "source code" >> which could be a LOT of stuff), and these are now residing in >> >> /home/kschenk/OOoAcceptedProjects >> >> available to those with shell access to people.apache.org > > I've done the same locally with my kenai2website.sh script. > > Most of the OOo website uses a license called Public Documentation License > 1.0. > http://www.openoffice.org/licenses/PDL.html > > It is supposedly MIT equivalent. What I am trying to track down is how the > "Initial Writer" is documented. Once that is done then I think the next step > is to confirm that PDL can be categorized as Category A. > > I do not want to speculate about that until we can confirm how "Initial > Writers" are documented, but I am assuming that documentation contributed to > OOo is OK. If the PDL turns out to incompatible with AL2.0, but permitted on > an Apache hosted openoffice.org or apache-extras, then we are still good. I > know the Rob wants stronger all AL2.0 docs, but for this step we are only > trying to preserve what exists now. >
I think that is fine as a priority: Preserve, classify, segregate, remove/replace only if necessary. We're doing the same for source code, right? Everything gets checked in and then we sort it out. We'll need to have it figured out before we release or graduate, of course/ -Rob > I have seen meta tags like this in a portion of the html: <META NAME="AUTHOR" > CONTENT="<name>">. In that case it may be clear who the initial writer, but > if that is missing I am completely clueless. How would you find this > information? Did the migration to Kenai cause the loss of the necessary > information? Is StarOffice/Sun/Oracle almost always the "Initial Writer"? > > Regards, > Dave > > >> >> >> >> >> -- >> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> MzK >> >> "Music expresses that which cannot be said and >> on which it is impossible to be silent." >> -- Victor Hugo > >
