Bruce Perens wrote:
Josh Berkus wrote:
In theory, yes. In practice, that would amount only to witholding
funds which were requested for something not allowed to 501(c)3s. I
personally can't imagine the PostgreSQL project requesting anything
that wasn't "software in the public interest" related.
The relationship between the non-profit project and the commercial
companies involved in it can be problematical. You can't carry out
activities using non-profit funds whose main purpose is to facilitate
their business.
PostgreSQL.Org doesn't do that except in the sense that it creates
PostgreSQL.
Sincerely,
Joshua D. Drake
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