Hi Dmitry,
On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 11:53 PM, Dmitry Konchalenkov
wrote:
> Andrew,
>
> Thanks for looping in other members! I'm sorry if my email came across the
> wrong way. The tracking code has nothing to do with intentions: it’s being
> applied by a popular Gmail plugin. I’ve disabled the plug-
Dmitry Konchalenkov wrote:
>Second, RhodeCode’s CLA does not require any copyright assignment.
There is very little policy-outcome-difference between a CLA like this one:
https://rhodecode.com/rhodecode-cla
and a CAA.
It violates the concept of "inbound=outbound", a system of contribution
For good measure, I should clarify that I'm speaking on behalf of
myself, not my employer nor the Kallithea project. The "MIT-licensed
changes welcome" is thus not a promise, just an assumption. ;-)
/Søren
On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 12:37 AM, Søren Løvborg wrote:
> Hi Dmitry,
>
> It doesn't matter i
Dmitry Konchalenkov writes:
> Andrew,
>
> Thanks for looping in other members! I'm sorry if my email came across the
> wrong way. The tracking code has nothing to do with intentions: it’s being
> applied by a popular Gmail plugin. I’ve disabled the plug-in for this reply.
>
> I want to follow up
Hi Dmitry,
It doesn't matter if you require copyright assignment or MIT licensed
patches. Different name, same game: You're clearly trying to build a
business on 1) having an AGPL code base and then hoping that
organizations find the AGPL terms sufficiently onerous that they'll
pay for a GPL excep
Andrew,
Thanks for looping in other members! I'm sorry if my email came across the
wrong way. The tracking code has nothing to do with intentions: it’s being
applied by a popular Gmail plugin. I’ve disabled the plug-in for this reply.
I want to follow up on just two points: collaboration and Rhod
[Cc'ed Kallithea mailing list]
Hi Dmitry,
On 31/08/16 19:30, Dmitry Konchalenkov wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
>
> My name is Dmitry, I recently joined RhodeCode. I saw your email on the
> Mailing List of Kallithea and decided to reach out to you directly, hope
> it is appropriate.
Well, actually I find