> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dr. Michael Stehmann [mailto:anw...@rechtsanwalt-stehmann.de] 
> Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2021 10:45 AM
> To: dev@openoffice.apache.org
> Subject: Who is the Project? was: OS2 code
> 
> Hello,
> 
> Your question is valis. But the answer is might be a little fuzzy.
> 
>  From a formal view an Apache Project needs a PMC with some 
> members and 
> some committers (all PMC members are "committers", but some 
> committers 
> might not be PMC members).
> 
> But that is not the whole truth, esp. not for the Apache 
> OpenOffice project.
> 
> This project and its community is much larger than the PMC 
> and the group 
> of "committers". There are people doing for example user support in a 
> great way without being committers. (They do not need 
> committer's rignts 
> for doing it.) There are some more examples.
> 
> Someone can also do a job normally a committer does if (s)he has a 
> committer as "sponsor".
> 
> So being part of the Apache OpenOffice project and its 
> community depends 
> oo a nonformal acceptance by "peers", not on a formal status.

I would like to express a criticism [1] in this regard:

But to be able to do certain things in the project, _which essentially 
determine the direction of the project_ (e.g. release) depends very much on the 
status.

Unfortunately, some project members are denied this status for no reason. (I 
write "no reason" because it was explained to me that there are no personal 
reasons for this)



[1]
Excuse me, but I would like to state right away: I am expressing factual 
criticism here and am not writing a 'poisoned mail' or conducting a personnel 
discussion.


Jörg


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