Dominick,
I don't use the Rcpp package but I have been aware of the changes made to the package over the years.
I don't see what you are after. I don't consider the mention about your contribution in the authors section disparaging in ANY way. It seems reasonable that as the code base grows, your initial contribution to have a smaller and smaller share. That's all it says. If you would start contributing again to the package development, I'm sure that line can be changed. Romain has gone from 0% to a sizeable share in a quick period with some great contributions. Other authors seem to find a way to contribute to the project too.
If it's peer recognition you're after, everybody on this list is already aware that you're the original developer of the package. I personally still have a good memory so I don't need another reminder email on this topic.
I'm sure there are other projects that you can work on, alone or with collaborators, that would benefit the R community.
Cheers, Adrian
On Wed, 1 Dec 2010, Dominick Samperi wrote:
This post asks members of the R community, users and developers, to comment on issues related to the GNU Public License and R community policies more generally. The GPL says very little about protecting the the rights of original contributors by not disseminating misleading information about them. Indeed, for pragmatic reasons it effectively assumes that original authors have no rights regarding their GPL-ed software, and it implicitly leaves it up to the community of developers and users to conduct themselves in a fair and reasonable manner. After discussing these matters with Richard Stallman I think we more-or-less agreed that a GPL "copyright" notice is nothing more than a way to deputise people to serve as protectors of the principles of the Free Software Foundation (FSF). It has nothing to do with protecting the "rights" or the "ideas" of original contributors. There is no peer review, no requirement to explain your contributions, and anybody can essentially do as they please with the software provided they retain the copyright/FSF deputy notice---of course, you can always work-around this last restriction by modifying the implementation and placing it in a new file, because nobody is checking (GPL doesn't require it). The GPL is all about "freedom", not responsibility. It is entirely focused on "deregulation", not on the protection of intellectual property or professional reputations. It serves the useful purpose of making great software more widely available, but it does not dictate how people should behave and should not be used as a moral compass. (See recent book titled "You are not a gadget: a manifesto", a rejoinder to the GNU manifesto.) As a counterbalance I think the community of developers and users need to play a more active role in the evolution of shared values and expectations. In this spirit I respectfully request that the R community consider the following. The author line of the latest release of the R package Rcpp (0.8.9) was revised as follows: From: "based on code written during 2005 and 2006 by Dominick Samperi" To: "a small portion of the code is based on code written during 2005 and 2006 by Dominick Samperi" As it is highly unusual (and largely impossible) to quantify the relative size of the the contribution made by each author of GPL'ed software, this has effectively changed an acknowledgment into a disparaging remark. It is also misleading, because I am the original creator of the Rcpp library and package (it was forked by Dirk Eddelbuettel and is now effectively part of R core development). Incidentally, the README file for Rcpp 0.6.7 shows that my contributions and influence were not confined to the period 2005-2006. A look at the change history of Rcpp would quickly reveal that to be fair other authors of Rcpp (and perhaps other R package authors) should have their contributions qualified with "a small portion of the code", or "administered by", but this is precisely the kind of monitoring that inspired Richard Stallman to say we must "chuck the masks" in the GNU Manifesto. It is obviously a great benefit for the R community to have Rcpp actively supported by the R core team. I am very grateful for this. What I do have a problem with is the fact that my contributions are disparaged by people who have benefited from my past work. It seems to me that there are two possible resolutions. First, if my name is used in the Rcpp package it should be used to provide fair, accurate, and courteous acknowledgement for my past contributions. Second, if this is not possible, then my name should not be used at all. If the second option is selected then the only place my name should appear is in the copyright ("deputy") notices. Incidentally, the fact that the word "copyright" is profoundly misleading in the context of GPL is not a new idea, and the word "copyleft" is sometimes used instead. But copyleft is not used in source files because this would unlink GPL from the well-established legal framework associated with "copyright", making it more difficult for the FSF to enforce its principles (the critical link is provided by the copyright holders or "deputies"). A final clarification: authors of original works do retain a legal copyright on their original work in the sense that they are free to modify this work and release it as non-free software (or under a different free license), but this has no effect on the version that was released under GPL. The latter version and all of its progeny belong to the public (or to the FSF from a legal point of view). Please feel free to express your opinion on these matters. Thanks, Dominick [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel