Re: a compromise on Evolution?



It was said earlier that Novell would consult its lawyers and get a
statement on the matter, I think any further actions should wait for
that. Ideas are always welcome, though, I believe.

It's also important to keep things in perspective here: We don't have
too much to say against Ximian/Novell, since they have contributed a lot
more to Free Software than anyone ever contributed to Evolution or other
modules. I'm not supporting the copyright transfers as a whole, but I do
believe that it's their right to decide and any positive outcome
(whatever that might be) for the GNOME community on the matter is to be
accepted with joy, and not a "Well, finally, about damn time". Are we in
a position where we can demand further development from Novell? I don't
think so. But we are in a position where we can do whatever we like with
the corporate modules. Both Novell and Gnome have proven to be dynamic
and flexible, so I trust there will be a nice resolution on the matter,
given that the discussion gets a few days to rest so people can consult
the needed people, and propose solutions - if a different solution is
wanted by any part.

Alan mentioned some stuff on patent bombing and new issues to the case
that I don't quite get yet, maybe someone could fill out on this
(objectively, please).

Best regards,
Christoffer

lør, 07,.08.2004 kl. 18.24 -0400, skrev C. Scott Ananian:
> Having read all the posts on this topic with interest, let me suggest the
> following compromise:
>  a) patches to evolution *do* require a copyright assignment, but
>  b) the assignment is to the GNOME foundation (alternatively to FSF)
> 
> The implicit understanding is that the GNOME foundation may offer a
> non-exclusive royalty-free etc license of its contributions back to Novell
> for its proprietary purposes so long as this advances GNOME's own
> interests (ie as long as Novell is contributing to the evolution code
> back, which remains free, etc).  If this agreement has to be made explicit
> the foundation would need to think hard about the exact criteria used.
> This may not be necessary: while Novell is contributing to the codebase,
> the foundation has a strong incentive to continue to license back its
> contributions in order not to have to maintain a fork.  Similarly, Novell
> has a strong incentive to keep its contributions Free, for fear of losing
> access to the (hopefully growing) outside contributions.
> 
> It's not perfect, but it's possibly a way to a) decentralize control over
> the source (David Sugar's post started me thinking about this) while
> b) allowing Novell/Ximian to achieve its own business objectives -- so
> long as these continue to advance the cause of Free Software!
> 
> Some people will undoubtedly still refuse to contribute, because they
> object to Novell's ability to offer proprietary versions of the source
> code.  Novell similarly may object to losing total control of the product:
> the GNOME foundation will have a de facto veto over Novell's proprietary
> plans, so long as GNOME's contributions grow large enough.
> 
> Hopefully, however, both sides will see the benefits as well.
>  --scott
> 
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