Re: [Haskell] Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-12-16 Thread Ganesh Sittampalam
Hi,

As mentioned in the committee's annual report
(http://haskellorg.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/first-year-report/), our
attempt to join SFC has stalled because they don't have the capacity to
accept new projects at the moment.

We therefore applied to join SPI (http://www.spi-inc.org/), and they
have now offered us associated project status
(http://www.spi-inc.org/projects/associated-project-howto/).

We intend to accept this offer, but are taking this final opportunity to
seek feedback from the community before doing so.

SPI is very like SFC in what it does and how it operates, so we don't
expect this to make any substantial differences to the FAQ quoted below.

Regards,

Ganesh
on behalf of the haskell.org committee

On 10/05/2011 23:44, Don Stewart wrote:
 Hello everyone.
 
 The haskell.org committee[1], in the interest of the long-term stability
 of the open source Haskell community infrastructure, has decided to
 incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
 recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.
 
 The committee's proposal is that haskell.org incorporate as an entity
 under the Software Freedom Conservancy umbrella organization (the same group
 that Darcs joined recently):
 
 http://sfconservancy.org/
 
 If we proceed with this move, haskell.org will be a legal entity, and
 registered as a non-profit, allowing us to more directly accept
 (US tax-deductible) donations, and to invest in assets that benefit the
 Haskell open source community.
 
 We welcome your feedback on the proposal attached below.
 
 -- Don Stewart (on behalf of the Haskell.org committee)
 
 
 
 
 
 = A proposal for the incorporation of Haskell.org =
 
 In recent years, haskell.org has started to receive assets, e.g. money from
 Google Summer Of Code, donations for Hackathons, and a Sparc machine for use 
 in
 GHC development. We have also started spending this money: in particular, on
 hosting haskell.org itself. There is also interest in running fundraising
 drives for specific things such as Hackathon sponsorship and hosting fees.
 
 However, haskell.org doesn't currently exist as a legal entity, meaning that
 these assets have had to be held on our behalf by other entities, such as
 Galois and various universities. This leads to tricky situations, with no-one
 being sure who should decide how the haskell.org assets can be used.
 
 To solve these problems, we propose that haskell.org applies to become a 
 member
 project of the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC)
 http://conservancy.softwarefreedom.org/. The SFC is a non-profit 
 organization
 that provides free financial and administrative services to open source
 projects. Additionally, it has 501(c)(3) status, meaning donations from the US
 are tax-deductible. The SFC would hold haskell.org's money and other assets,
 and would be able to accept donations on behalf of haskell.org.
 
 The haskell.org committee, as described here [2], will make decisions on
 spending assets and other decisions related to governing the non-profit.
 
 
 Before proceeding, we are inviting input from the community in the form
 of specific objections or queries regarding the plan.
 
 We've tried to answer some of the most likely questions:
 
 Q: Does this mean that my Haskell project must now be covered by a
  copyleft licence such as GPL?
 A: No, but Haskell projects using haskell.org resource should use an
 Open Source licence
  http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical.
 
 Q: Will it still be possible to use community.h.o to host
  non-open-source material, such as academic papers?
 A: An overall minority of such content, as is the current situation, is
 not a problem.
 
 Q: Will it still be possible to have job ads on the haskell.org mailing
 lists and website?
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: Will this affect our ability to host the Haskell Symposium
 http://www.haskell.org/haskell-symposium/  and Industrial Haskell
 Grouphttp://industry.haskell.org/  webpages within haskell.org?
 A: No.
 
 Q: What will be the relationship between haskell.org and other
 organizations such as the Haskell Symposium and Industrial Haskell
 Group?
 A: Those organisations will continue to exist as separate entities.
 
 Q: If an umbrella non-profit organisation The Haskell Foundation was
 created, would haskell.org be able to join it?
 A: Yes. It's likely that in such a scenario, the Haskell Foundation
 would become the owner of the haskell.org domain name, with the cost
 divided between the members. The entity that is part of the SFC would
 be renamed community.haskell.org in order to avoid confusion.
 
 [1]: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Haskell.org_committee
 [2]: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Haskell.org_committee#Operation
 
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 Haskell mailing list
 hask...@haskell.org
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Re: [Haskell] Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-12-16 Thread Ganesh Sittampalam
BTW as with the Don's original message about incorporating, I
distributed this widely to increase awareness, but please restrict any
feedback to haskell-cafe@ and committee@.

Sorry for the noise!

Ganesh

On 16/12/2011 09:08, Ganesh Sittampalam wrote:
 Hi,
 
 As mentioned in the committee's annual report
 (http://haskellorg.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/first-year-report/), our
 attempt to join SFC has stalled because they don't have the capacity to
 accept new projects at the moment.
 
 We therefore applied to join SPI (http://www.spi-inc.org/), and they
 have now offered us associated project status
 (http://www.spi-inc.org/projects/associated-project-howto/).
 
 We intend to accept this offer, but are taking this final opportunity to
 seek feedback from the community before doing so.
 
 SPI is very like SFC in what it does and how it operates, so we don't
 expect this to make any substantial differences to the FAQ quoted below.
 
 Regards,
 
 Ganesh
 on behalf of the haskell.org committee
 
 On 10/05/2011 23:44, Don Stewart wrote:
 Hello everyone.

 The haskell.org committee[1], in the interest of the long-term stability
 of the open source Haskell community infrastructure, has decided to
 incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
 recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.

 The committee's proposal is that haskell.org incorporate as an entity
 under the Software Freedom Conservancy umbrella organization (the same group
 that Darcs joined recently):

 http://sfconservancy.org/

 If we proceed with this move, haskell.org will be a legal entity, and
 registered as a non-profit, allowing us to more directly accept
 (US tax-deductible) donations, and to invest in assets that benefit the
 Haskell open source community.

 We welcome your feedback on the proposal attached below.

 -- Don Stewart (on behalf of the Haskell.org committee)



 

 = A proposal for the incorporation of Haskell.org =

 In recent years, haskell.org has started to receive assets, e.g. money from
 Google Summer Of Code, donations for Hackathons, and a Sparc machine for use 
 in
 GHC development. We have also started spending this money: in particular, on
 hosting haskell.org itself. There is also interest in running fundraising
 drives for specific things such as Hackathon sponsorship and hosting fees.

 However, haskell.org doesn't currently exist as a legal entity, meaning that
 these assets have had to be held on our behalf by other entities, such as
 Galois and various universities. This leads to tricky situations, with no-one
 being sure who should decide how the haskell.org assets can be used.

 To solve these problems, we propose that haskell.org applies to become a 
 member
 project of the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC)
 http://conservancy.softwarefreedom.org/. The SFC is a non-profit 
 organization
 that provides free financial and administrative services to open source
 projects. Additionally, it has 501(c)(3) status, meaning donations from the 
 US
 are tax-deductible. The SFC would hold haskell.org's money and other assets,
 and would be able to accept donations on behalf of haskell.org.

 The haskell.org committee, as described here [2], will make decisions on
 spending assets and other decisions related to governing the non-profit.


 Before proceeding, we are inviting input from the community in the form
 of specific objections or queries regarding the plan.

 We've tried to answer some of the most likely questions:

 Q: Does this mean that my Haskell project must now be covered by a
  copyleft licence such as GPL?
 A: No, but Haskell projects using haskell.org resource should use an
 Open Source licence
  http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical.

 Q: Will it still be possible to use community.h.o to host
  non-open-source material, such as academic papers?
 A: An overall minority of such content, as is the current situation, is
 not a problem.

 Q: Will it still be possible to have job ads on the haskell.org mailing
 lists and website?
 A: Yes.

 Q: Will this affect our ability to host the Haskell Symposium
 http://www.haskell.org/haskell-symposium/  and Industrial Haskell
 Grouphttp://industry.haskell.org/  webpages within haskell.org?
 A: No.

 Q: What will be the relationship between haskell.org and other
 organizations such as the Haskell Symposium and Industrial Haskell
 Group?
 A: Those organisations will continue to exist as separate entities.

 Q: If an umbrella non-profit organisation The Haskell Foundation was
 created, would haskell.org be able to join it?
 A: Yes. It's likely that in such a scenario, the Haskell Foundation
 would become the owner of the haskell.org domain name, with the cost
 divided between the members. The entity that is part of the SFC would
 be renamed community.haskell.org in order to avoid

RE: Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-05-11 Thread Simon Peyton-Jones
Dear haskell.org committee

Great stuff.  Thanks for getting this together.

Things I wondered about are:
- who will run the haskell.org entity?
- how are they chosen?  do they have fixed terms? 
- how are they accountable to the Haskell Community
  (eg an a brief annual report would be good; 
 since money is involved, accounts perhaps)

None of these look like being problems to me, but I think we should have a page 
that sets out these matters -- a kind of constitution for haskell.org, if you 
like -- as part of the process.

Simon

| -Original Message-
| From: libraries-boun...@haskell.org [mailto:libraries-boun...@haskell.org] On 
Behalf
| Of Don Stewart
| Sent: 10 May 2011 23:45
| To: hask...@haskell.org; Haskell Libraries; GHC Users Mailing List; 
haskell-cafe;
| commit...@haskell.org
| Subject: Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org
| 
| Hello everyone.
| 
| The haskell.org committee[1], in the interest of the long-term stability
| of the open source Haskell community infrastructure, has decided to
| incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
| recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.
| 
| The committee's proposal is that haskell.org incorporate as an entity
| under the Software Freedom Conservancy umbrella organization (the same group
| that Darcs joined recently):
| 
| http://sfconservancy.org/
| 
| If we proceed with this move, haskell.org will be a legal entity, and
| registered as a non-profit, allowing us to more directly accept
| (US tax-deductible) donations, and to invest in assets that benefit the
| Haskell open source community.
| 
| We welcome your feedback on the proposal attached below.
| 
| -- Don Stewart (on behalf of the Haskell.org committee)
| 
| 
| 
| 
| 
| = A proposal for the incorporation of Haskell.org =
| 
| In recent years, haskell.org has started to receive assets, e.g. money from
| Google Summer Of Code, donations for Hackathons, and a Sparc machine for use 
in
| GHC development. We have also started spending this money: in particular, on
| hosting haskell.org itself. There is also interest in running fundraising
| drives for specific things such as Hackathon sponsorship and hosting fees.
| 
| However, haskell.org doesn't currently exist as a legal entity, meaning that
| these assets have had to be held on our behalf by other entities, such as
| Galois and various universities. This leads to tricky situations, with no-one
| being sure who should decide how the haskell.org assets can be used.
| 
| To solve these problems, we propose that haskell.org applies to become a 
member
| project of the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC)
| http://conservancy.softwarefreedom.org/. The SFC is a non-profit 
organization
| that provides free financial and administrative services to open source
| projects. Additionally, it has 501(c)(3) status, meaning donations from the US
| are tax-deductible. The SFC would hold haskell.org's money and other assets,
| and would be able to accept donations on behalf of haskell.org.
| 
| The haskell.org committee, as described here [2], will make decisions on
| spending assets and other decisions related to governing the non-profit.
| 
| 
| Before proceeding, we are inviting input from the community in the form
| of specific objections or queries regarding the plan.
| 
| We've tried to answer some of the most likely questions:
| 
| Q: Does this mean that my Haskell project must now be covered by a
|  copyleft licence such as GPL?
| A: No, but Haskell projects using haskell.org resource should use an
| Open Source licence
|  http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical.
| 
| Q: Will it still be possible to use community.h.o to host
|  non-open-source material, such as academic papers?
| A: An overall minority of such content, as is the current situation, is
| not a problem.
| 
| Q: Will it still be possible to have job ads on the haskell.org mailing
| lists and website?
| A: Yes.
| 
| Q: Will this affect our ability to host the Haskell Symposium
| http://www.haskell.org/haskell-symposium/  and Industrial Haskell
| Grouphttp://industry.haskell.org/  webpages within haskell.org?
| A: No.
| 
| Q: What will be the relationship between haskell.org and other
| organizations such as the Haskell Symposium and Industrial Haskell
| Group?
| A: Those organisations will continue to exist as separate entities.
| 
| Q: If an umbrella non-profit organisation The Haskell Foundation was
| created, would haskell.org be able to join it?
| A: Yes. It's likely that in such a scenario, the Haskell Foundation
| would become the owner of the haskell.org domain name, with the cost
| divided between the members. The entity that is part of the SFC would
| be renamed community.haskell.org in order to avoid confusion.
| 
| [1]: http://www.haskell.org

Re: Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-05-11 Thread Yitzchak Gale
Don Stewart wrote:
 The haskell.org committee... has decided to
 incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
 recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.

Thanks, good news! And thanks for posting to multiple
lists for maximum public notification to the community.

Can the committee now designate a single list for further discussion
please?

Thanks,
Yitz

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Re: Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-05-11 Thread Ganesh Sittampalam
On 11/05/2011 10:33, Yitzchak Gale wrote:
 Don Stewart wrote:
 The haskell.org committee... has decided to
 incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
 recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.
 
 Thanks, good news! And thanks for posting to multiple
 lists for maximum public notification to the community.
 
 Can the committee now designate a single list for further discussion
 please?

Sorry about the noise. I think haskell-cafe is the best choice for
further discussion.

Please, everyone send further followups to any message in this thread to
just haskell-c...@haskell.org and commit...@haskell.org, or just to
commit...@haskell.org if you want to respond privately.

Ganesh
(haskell.org committee member)

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Proposal to incorporate Haskell.org

2011-05-10 Thread Don Stewart
Hello everyone.

The haskell.org committee[1], in the interest of the long-term stability
of the open source Haskell community infrastructure, has decided to
incorporate haskell.org as a legal entity. This email outlines our
recommendation, and seeks input from the community on this decision.

The committee's proposal is that haskell.org incorporate as an entity
under the Software Freedom Conservancy umbrella organization (the same group
that Darcs joined recently):

http://sfconservancy.org/

If we proceed with this move, haskell.org will be a legal entity, and
registered as a non-profit, allowing us to more directly accept
(US tax-deductible) donations, and to invest in assets that benefit the
Haskell open source community.

We welcome your feedback on the proposal attached below.

-- Don Stewart (on behalf of the Haskell.org committee)





= A proposal for the incorporation of Haskell.org =

In recent years, haskell.org has started to receive assets, e.g. money from
Google Summer Of Code, donations for Hackathons, and a Sparc machine for use in
GHC development. We have also started spending this money: in particular, on
hosting haskell.org itself. There is also interest in running fundraising
drives for specific things such as Hackathon sponsorship and hosting fees.

However, haskell.org doesn't currently exist as a legal entity, meaning that
these assets have had to be held on our behalf by other entities, such as
Galois and various universities. This leads to tricky situations, with no-one
being sure who should decide how the haskell.org assets can be used.

To solve these problems, we propose that haskell.org applies to become a member
project of the Software Freedom Conservancy (SFC)
http://conservancy.softwarefreedom.org/. The SFC is a non-profit organization
that provides free financial and administrative services to open source
projects. Additionally, it has 501(c)(3) status, meaning donations from the US
are tax-deductible. The SFC would hold haskell.org's money and other assets,
and would be able to accept donations on behalf of haskell.org.

The haskell.org committee, as described here [2], will make decisions on
spending assets and other decisions related to governing the non-profit.


Before proceeding, we are inviting input from the community in the form
of specific objections or queries regarding the plan.

We've tried to answer some of the most likely questions:

Q: Does this mean that my Haskell project must now be covered by a
 copyleft licence such as GPL?
A: No, but Haskell projects using haskell.org resource should use an
Open Source licence
 http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical.

Q: Will it still be possible to use community.h.o to host
 non-open-source material, such as academic papers?
A: An overall minority of such content, as is the current situation, is
not a problem.

Q: Will it still be possible to have job ads on the haskell.org mailing
lists and website?
A: Yes.

Q: Will this affect our ability to host the Haskell Symposium
http://www.haskell.org/haskell-symposium/  and Industrial Haskell
Grouphttp://industry.haskell.org/  webpages within haskell.org?
A: No.

Q: What will be the relationship between haskell.org and other
organizations such as the Haskell Symposium and Industrial Haskell
Group?
A: Those organisations will continue to exist as separate entities.

Q: If an umbrella non-profit organisation The Haskell Foundation was
created, would haskell.org be able to join it?
A: Yes. It's likely that in such a scenario, the Haskell Foundation
would become the owner of the haskell.org domain name, with the cost
divided between the members. The entity that is part of the SFC would
be renamed community.haskell.org in order to avoid confusion.

[1]: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Haskell.org_committee
[2]: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Haskell.org_committee#Operation

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