License Approval Process

Hollenbeck, Scott shollenb at netsol.com
Mon Feb 14 13:00:24 UTC 2000


Thanks for the suggestions.  I just sent a copy directly to both Eric and
Richard and will report back if I hear anything.

Scott Hollenbeck (mailto:shollenb at netsol.com)
Network Solutions, Inc. Registry

-----Original Message-----
From: Jacques Chester [mailto:Thunda at downunder.net.au]
Sent: Sunday, February 13, 2000 9:55 PM
To: license-discuss at opensource.org
Subject: Re: License Approval Process


Hello again all;

J C Lawrence wrote:
> 
> On Sun, 13 Feb 2000 18:40:26 -0500
> Rafi M Goldberg <rafimg at usa.net> wrote:
[..]
> > It is unfortunate that the powers that be @ opensource.org only
> > seem to be interested in gaining the support of large corporations
> > and those who decide to just use an existing license...  I hope
> > that's not actually the case, but it doesn't look good.

ESR certainly receives considerable flammage
to this effect, I am sure. Hopefully he's
reading this and is prepared to defend himself.
Hello, Eric! *waves*

I'm not immune from my share of throwing stones
from glass houses myself, so I guess I'll take
the position as Devil's Advocate(1) on this one.

I'm not prepared to hand Eric the prize for
making the hacker community rise as fast and
as far as it has. I *will* say that his impact
in the process cannot be discounted. Whether
you agree with his message or not, I think
it's clear that the messenger certainly
brought some of the memes into the corporate
intelligences.

> I would suggest emailling the principles directly (ESR and Perens)
> in the case of slow response.

With the caveat that Perens isn't at the OSI
anymore.

And, to give your license a baptism of fire,
you may prefer to email it to Richard Stallman
instead (rms at gnu.org). You will have few
email conversations quite as challenging, I
assure you.

be well;

> J C Lawrence                                 Home: claw at kanga.nu

JC.


(1) Just a note on where that term comes from.
The Catholic church, in deciding on whether to
make someone into a saint, appoints a "Devil's
Advocate", whose job it is to fight the
approval of that person to sainthood. Your pointless
trivia for the day.



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