[tdf-discuss] Re: Oracle Contributor Agreement and LibreOffice contributions

2011-02-24 Thread Alexander Thurgood
Le 24/02/11 16:51, Phil Hibbs a écrit :

Hi Phil,

 
 Nonetheless, saying it's better for us if you don't submit your
 patches to OOo is kind of like saying Lets hope OOo don't spot this
 bug/issue. It's ethically dubious. If this is the official approach,
 then why not just make a clean break with OOo and not even try to
 merge in any future OOo code changes with the LO code?

At a wild guess, because there are not enough devs in the LibO project
to fix all the bugs in the current OOo code and develop new features at
the same time ? There is always hope that some of those rather annoying
bugs that seem rather hard to fix or obscure to determine might actually
get sorted out by the OOo project ;-) Look at Base for example...and I'm
just guessing.

Alex


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[tdf-discuss] Re: Oracle Contributor Agreement and LibreOffice contributions

2011-02-16 Thread Alexander Thurgood
Le 16/02/11 15:28, Christophe Strobbe a écrit :

Hi Christophe,

 
 1. Now imagine that I contribute code to LibreOffice and the
 contribution is accepted. Is it then still acceptable (from a copyright
 point of view) to sign the Oracle Contributor Agreement and submit the
 same code to OpenOffice.org?

Yes.


 
 2. Conversely, if I sign the Oracle Contributor Agreement and submit
 code (and it gets accepted, otherwise the copyright reverts to me), can
 I then still submit the same code to LibreOffice or would that cause
 problems for LibreOffice (because Oracle now shares copyright of the
 code I submitted)?
 2.b. Can I contribute the code to LibreOffice while the acceptance of my
 patch to OpenOffice.org is still pending?


Yes. Articles 2 and 4 of the OCA (see below for extracts) specifically
allow this kind of situation. The assignment provides for joint
ownership, or, in the worst case scenario, a non-exclusive, worldwide,
perpetual licence. You are allowed to do what you like with the
copyrights you retain as initial author.

You agree that each of us can do all things in relation to your
contribution as if each of us were the sole owners, and if one of us
makes a derivative work of your contribution, the one who makes the
derivative work (or has it made) will be the sole owner of that
derivative work

you agree that neither of us has any duty to consult with, obtain the
consent of, pay or render an accounting to the other for any use or
distribution of your contribution.


Alex



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