Hi,
Is there any progress at all on the proposed change to the Swazoo license? I see nothing on this list, so I'm guessing nothing is happening, but I have been surprised before. All the best, Bruce -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ |
Bruce Badger wrote:
> Is there any progress at all on the proposed change to the Swazoo license? > > I see nothing on this list, so I'm guessing nothing is happening, but > I have been surprised before. Well, we are still waiting for your decision about my proposal to change license to MIT. As I said all contributors I contacted were for the change or they didn't care about which license is chosen, just that is the best for Swazoo and Smalltalk community. No one was against, except you and Ken Treis, but Ken is willing to listen and compromise. I think I contacted most of contributors, at least from list you made from Store repository. I contacted also Dolphin guys. I remember only Aleksander Bandlelj, who did interface to OpenSSL library, but this one is currently unmaintainable and not part of Swazoo 2.x. I therefore think we have the answer of most if not all contributors and the answer is clear. We are now waiting for you to make a decision and I really hope it will be in line with will of majority. Best regards Janko -- Janko Mivšek Svetovalec za informatiko Eranova d.o.o. Ljubljana, Slovenija www.eranova.si tel: 01 514 22 55 faks: 01 514 22 56 gsm: 031 674 565 |
2008/7/7 Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>:
> Bruce Badger wrote: > >> Is there any progress at all on the proposed change to the Swazoo license? >> >> I see nothing on this list, so I'm guessing nothing is happening, but >> I have been surprised before. > > Well, we are still waiting for your decision about my proposal to change > license to MIT. Heh, you've had my response to that several times (see the list archives). What we need is the list of all the other contributors since the license change discussion can not even start until all the contributors to the current LGPLed code base have been identified. So, do we have the list of all contributors? I made a start on it for you on the basis of what I saw in the Cincom public Store repository. Have you done anything more on this, Janko? Has anything else happened with regard to your proposed license change, Janko? Any progress of any kind at all? Thanks, Bruce -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ |
Bruce Badger wrote:
> 2008/7/7 Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>: >> Bruce Badger wrote: >> >>> Is there any progress at all on the proposed change to the Swazoo license? >>> >>> I see nothing on this list, so I'm guessing nothing is happening, but >>> I have been surprised before. >> Well, we are still waiting for your decision about my proposal to change >> license to MIT. > > Heh, you've had my response to that several times (see the list > archives). What we need is the list of all the other contributors > since the license change discussion can not even start until all the > contributors to the current LGPLed code base have been identified. > > So, do we have the list of all contributors? I made a start on it for > you on the basis of what I saw in the Cincom public Store repository. > Have you done anything more on this, Janko? A complete list of contributors is hard if not impossible to find. You made one out od Store list, but how you'll find all others, from Dolphin for instance? Anyway, we need to decide that a strong majority of contributors is enough for decision. Finding them all is just an utopia. Another possibility is that we separate contributors of main line of development (on VW) from those who ported and maintain ports on other dialects. Main line of contributors is therefore known from your list from Store and we can proceed with license change. Best regards Janko -- Janko Mivšek Svetovalec za informatiko Eranova d.o.o. Ljubljana, Slovenija www.eranova.si tel: 01 514 22 55 faks: 01 514 22 56 gsm: 031 674 565 |
2008/7/7 Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>:
> Anyway, we need to decide that a strong majority of contributors is > enough for decision. Finding them all is just an utopia. This is not about a vote, even if you really did have a majority for one proposal. This is a copyright issue and so each copyright holder must agree. > Another possibility is that we separate contributors of main line of > development (on VW) from those who ported and maintain ports on other > dialects. Main line of contributors is therefore known from your list > from Store and we can proceed with license change. And so end up with n projects? In your role as project leader, you seriously suggest this? I'm reminded of the story of Solomon and the baby for whom two women claimed to be the mother. -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ |
I have no axe to grind about the various contributions to Swazoo. The difference between the licenses seems to be the difference between freedom and control. MIT offers freedom, GPL offers control. Personally I vote for freedom. As to your comments about leadership and Janko, I have to say that in the one year I have been involved with the AIDA community, Janko has demonstrated excellent leadership, just what the community needs. He has responded appropriately to many different situations and led by example, while at the same time encouraging and helping newcomers. Solomon was a judge with keen insight, able to distinguish genuine affection and the wish to share from simple possessiveness. Nicholas Bruce Badger wrote: 2008/7/7 Janko Mivšek [hidden email]:Anyway, we need to decide that a strong majority of contributors is enough for decision. Finding them all is just an utopia.This is not about a vote, even if you really did have a majority for one proposal. This is a copyright issue and so each copyright holder must agree.Another possibility is that we separate contributors of main line of development (on VW) from those who ported and maintain ports on other dialects. Main line of contributors is therefore known from your list from Store and we can proceed with license change.And so end up with n projects? In your role as project leader, you seriously suggest this? I'm reminded of the story of Solomon and the baby for whom two women claimed to be the mother. --
Nicholas
J Moore |
Nicholas,
2008/7/7 Nicholas Moore <[hidden email]>: > I have no axe to grind about the various contributions to Swazoo. The > difference between the licenses seems to be the difference between freedom > and control. MIT offers freedom, GPL offers control. Personally I vote for > freedom. Heh. I vote for freedom too, and the preservation of the same, viz the GPL. Indeed I voted and paid my dues by selecting Swazoo and contributing so much time and energy to it. I don't think that there is sole truth in the philosophical debate. We can observe many well written arguments which suggest that the GPL represents freedom and that BSD-like licenses (e.g. MIT) represent the opposite (because freedoms are not preserved) ... and we see many well written arguments that take the opposite view. The thing is that in the very narrow dimension we are talking about (hell, we're all talking about taking our time to write software and make it freely available) the BSD and GPL are poles apart. One is "credit where credit is due", the other is "share-alike". Why should people who have taken the time to think about this, and then put lots of time and energy into an LGPL project abandon the simple, and to many people very reasonable, share-alike model? This is the question that needs to be answered. So far the only reasoned response is: because another project has settled on a 'credit where credit is due' license. Which is no more compelling than any fad. > As to your comments about leadership and Janko, I have to say that in the > one year I have been involved with the AIDA community, Janko has > demonstrated excellent leadership, just what the community needs. He has > responded appropriately to many different situations and led by example, > while at the same time encouraging and helping newcomers. We have clearly seen very different sides of the man. For our part, we have seen Janko brush asside many years of work without any discussion at all and also seen him ignore the copyrights of other and try to strong-arm a change in the license. I'm glad to hear of his recent good works and hope that this is continued in the future. Oddly, it was in the year that you mention that Janko tried to 'steal' (i.e. infringe upon) people's copyrights. Hmmm. > Solomon was a judge with keen insight, able to distinguish genuine affection > and the wish to share from simple possessiveness. Indeed. Best regards, Bruce -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ |
Dear Swazooers,
Well, I'll stop responding again and again to such accusations and plain lies. Anyone interested can go to the mailing list archive (soon to be put to Nabble for even easier access) and there is evident, how the events went through. Also, those accusations show more that obviously what kind of man we have in our community. I think we'll need to start dealing with that issue soon. Of course I'm also not perfect, I did some mistakes, but I also apologize. For the sake of community, both Swazoo and Smalltalk. I think my contribution to Swazoo is obvious from the timeline I posted yesterday and I'm also very proud that Swazoo achieved such outstanding performance recently. Swazoo is now also acknowledged as a serious choice for the web server in Smalltalk world, which was the main goal in our "manifesto" back in 2000 Camp Smalltalk in San Diego. And from the published timeline it is quite obvious, who spent most years since then improving and recently promoting Swazoo around. So my conscience is clean and I really don't need to answer to such a guy as Bruce is. Best regards Janko Bruce Badger wrote: > Nicholas, > > 2008/7/7 Nicholas Moore <[hidden email]>: >> I have no axe to grind about the various contributions to Swazoo. The >> difference between the licenses seems to be the difference between freedom >> and control. MIT offers freedom, GPL offers control. Personally I vote for >> freedom. > > Heh. I vote for freedom too, and the preservation of the same, viz > the GPL. Indeed I voted and paid my dues by selecting Swazoo and > contributing so much time and energy to it. > > I don't think that there is sole truth in the philosophical debate. > We can observe many well written arguments which suggest that the GPL > represents freedom and that BSD-like licenses (e.g. MIT) represent the > opposite (because freedoms are not preserved) ... and we see many well > written arguments that take the opposite view. > > The thing is that in the very narrow dimension we are talking about > (hell, we're all talking about taking our time to write software and > make it freely available) the BSD and GPL are poles apart. One is > "credit where credit is due", the other is "share-alike". > > Why should people who have taken the time to think about this, and > then put lots of time and energy into an LGPL project abandon the > simple, and to many people very reasonable, share-alike model? > > This is the question that needs to be answered. So far the only > reasoned response is: because another project has settled on a 'credit > where credit is due' license. Which is no more compelling than any > fad. > >> As to your comments about leadership and Janko, I have to say that in the >> one year I have been involved with the AIDA community, Janko has >> demonstrated excellent leadership, just what the community needs. He has >> responded appropriately to many different situations and led by example, >> while at the same time encouraging and helping newcomers. > > We have clearly seen very different sides of the man. For our part, > we have seen Janko brush asside many years of work without any > discussion at all and also seen him ignore the copyrights of other and > try to strong-arm a change in the license. I'm glad to hear of his > recent good works and hope that this is continued in the future. > > Oddly, it was in the year that you mention that Janko tried to 'steal' > (i.e. infringe upon) people's copyrights. Hmmm. > >> Solomon was a judge with keen insight, able to distinguish genuine affection >> and the wish to share from simple possessiveness. > > Indeed. > > Best regards, > Bruce ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsored by: SourceForge.net Community Choice Awards: VOTE NOW! Studies have shown that voting for your favorite open source project, along with a healthy diet, reduces your potential for chronic lameness and boredom. Vote Now at http://www.sourceforge.net/community/cca08 _______________________________________________ Swazoo-devel mailing list [hidden email] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/swazoo-devel |
In reply to this post by Bruce Badger
Bruce
Bruce Badger wrote: Would you have devoted the same time and energy if Swazoo had already been licensed under MIT when you joined the project?Nicholas, 2008/7/7 Nicholas Moore [hidden email]:I have no axe to grind about the various contributions to Swazoo. The difference between the licenses seems to be the difference between freedom and control. MIT offers freedom, GPL offers control. Personally I vote for freedom.Heh. I vote for freedom too, and the preservation of the same, viz the GPL. Indeed I voted and paid my dues by selecting Swazoo and contributing so much time and energy to it. The two kinds of license are structured and expressed very differently. Their psychological effects are also very different. When faced with opposing reasonable arguments we need to be clear about the interpretation we are placing on the terms involved. You must define freedom for this to be meaningful. Whose freedom, freedom to do something or freedom from something for instance?I don't think that there is sole truth in the philosophical debate. We can observe many well written arguments which suggest that the GPL represents freedom and that BSD-like licenses (e.g. MIT) represent the opposite (because freedoms are not preserved) ... and we see many well written arguments that take the opposite view. This needs to be clarified in order to understand what it is that you seek. Do you want to be free to restrict how others use your code? Or do you want to be free to change the code of others? Or something else? Who are the people that you are talking about?The thing is that in the very narrow dimension we are talking about (hell, we're all talking about taking our time to write software and make it freely available) the BSD and GPL are poles apart. One is "credit where credit is due", the other is "share-alike". Why should people who have taken the time to think about this, and then put lots of time and energy into an LGPL project abandon the simple, and to many people very reasonable, share-alike model? I don't think this accurately depicts the reason for the request to change. My understanding from re-reading all the emails is that the motive is to achieve acceptance in the broadest Smalltalk community. It is not because another project has settled on a 'credit where credit is due' license, although that would be a consequence of the change. I have seen no reference to that as a reason, although you have raised it several times.This is the question that needs to be answered. So far the only reasoned response is: because another project has settled on a 'credit where credit is due' license. Which is no more compelling than any fad. The term 'fad' appears to be dismissive, what is the point you are trying to make? The behaviour you describe is not evident in the email chain I have seen which discusses the license change. Janko has championed the cause of license change, as a good leader would, and why not? I saw no evidence of strong-arm tactics on his part, quite the reverse.As to your comments about leadership and Janko, I have to say that in the one year I have been involved with the AIDA community, Janko has demonstrated excellent leadership, just what the community needs. He has responded appropriately to many different situations and led by example, while at the same time encouraging and helping newcomers.We have clearly seen very different sides of the man. For our part, we have seen Janko brush asside many years of work without any discussion at all and also seen him ignore the copyrights of other and try to strong-arm a change in the license. I'm glad to hear of his recent good works and hope that this is continued in the future. This is inappropriate language among people who are contributing to the open source movement. It is very serious to publicly accuse somebody of trying to steal and you need to back up your claim. What was it that he tried to steal and how would you have suffered loss?Oddly, it was in the year that you mention that Janko tried to 'steal' (i.e. infringe upon) people's copyrights. Hmmm. Best regards, Bruce I am trying to understand your objections to the move to MIT. It is not yet clear to me whether this lies in the design of the license or some personal animosity on your part, as expressed in your comments above. We need to separate these two things because if it were to be the latter, then you would be in the position of allowing your personal feelings to adversely affect the whole community, something I am sure you would not want. Nicholas --
Nicholas
J Moore ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsored by: SourceForge.net Community Choice Awards: VOTE NOW! Studies have shown that voting for your favorite open source project, along with a healthy diet, reduces your potential for chronic lameness and boredom. Vote Now at http://www.sourceforge.net/community/cca08 _______________________________________________ Swazoo-devel mailing list [hidden email] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/swazoo-devel |
In reply to this post by Janko Mivšek
2008/7/8 Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>:
> Well, I'll stop responding again and again to such accusations and plain > lies. So, you deny announcing version 1.0 of Swazoo wihout any prior discussion on this list and excluding from that release all the OpenSkills work that had been over the years immediately prior to your 1.0 release? and You deny telling the Squeak community that Swazoo had been relicensed under a BSD-like license without any prior discussion on this list? No, I didn't think so. Heh - and I see you have blocked access to the archive: " messages have been excluded from this view by a project administrator.". Thank goodness for the Wayback machine. That's what showed up your previous dirty when trying to persuade the Squeak community that I was "lying" about Swazoo being under the LGPL from inception to date - as it still is. Just open the Sourceforge archive, Janko, and let others judge for themselves. ... but I'm guessing you can't edit the sourceforge archive, hence the new one? > I think my contribution to Swazoo is obvious from the timeline Heh, if it were true and if it reflected the amount of code contributed, then perhaps. > ... Swazoo achieved such outstanding > performance recently. Swazoo is now also acknowledged as a serious > choice for the web server in Smalltalk world ... and I'm glad the small bits of code you extracted from Hyper helped with that. But just think how much further along we had been if you had not excluded Hyper in the first place. Regards, Bruce -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsored by: SourceForge.net Community Choice Awards: VOTE NOW! Studies have shown that voting for your favorite open source project, along with a healthy diet, reduces your potential for chronic lameness and boredom. Vote Now at http://www.sourceforge.net/community/cca08 _______________________________________________ Swazoo-devel mailing list [hidden email] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/swazoo-devel |
In reply to this post by Nicholas Moore
Nicholas,
> Would you have devoted the same time and energy if Swazoo had already been > licensed under MIT when you joined the project? There were several Smalltalk HTTP server projects I could have worked with at the time, but only Swazoo was under the LGPL, so I decided to work with Swazoo. So the answer to your question is no. If Swazoo had not been under the LGPL I would not have made contributions to it. > You must define freedom for this to be > meaningful. Whose freedom, freedom to do something or freedom from something > for instance? Must I? :-) I can say that I prefer the share-alike model because I believe that this preserves freedoms. That is, once a piece of software is made freely available, it remains freely available. If people are willing to invest time and energy into making some software which other find useful, and then make that software available at no immediate cost, I really don't think it's too much to ask that people just share and share alike. > I don't think this accurately depicts the reason for the request to change. > My understanding from re-reading all the emails is that the motive is to > achieve acceptance in the broadest Smalltalk community. I don't buy into the idea that because one Smalltalk project selects a license all other Smalltalk projects should be compelled to select the same one. We can all choose. Let's turn this around, though. What would happen, do you think, if we suggested moving Squeak to a GPL like license or if we suggested moving GNU Smalltalk to a BSD-like one? I think we'd find that people would say that they were invested in a particular viewpoint and that they didn't want to change, thank you very much. For myself, I'm OK with change, but I would still like us to be using a share-alike license on this project. > The behaviour you describe is not evident in the email chain I have seen Heh - well, Janko has blocked access to the archive, so I'm not surprised you can't see it the Swazoo mail list history. But I can tell you that no mention at all was made on this list of a proposal to change the license of Swazoo until after I found that Janko was already telling people the license had been changed. I'm sure you saw the thread on the Squeak list. If not, let me know and I'll send you a link to their archive. > Janko has championed the cause of > license change No. Janko acted first (e.g. told the Squeak community that the license had changed) and only when he was put right by wiser heads in the Squeak community did he initiate any discussion here. It was the same with Swazoo 1.0. No prior discussion, Janko just acted first (made version 1.0 and put out a press-release type thing) and only *afterwards* did the discussion start about why he had excluded Hyper. A good leader would have discussed ideas with the team *before* putting them into action. And for things like a license change, clearly quite a bit of work has to happen before one can say that the license really has changes - just look at how long it all too for the Squeak guys. > I saw no evidence of strong-arm tactics on his part, quite the reverse. ? I guess you really have not seen the Squeak thread, then? > It is very serious to publicly accuse somebody of trying to > steal Janko was guilty of copyright infringement and in doing so has stolen a great deal of my time. This is indeed a serious matter, I agree. Regards, Bruce -- Make the most of your skills - with OpenSkills http://www.openskills.org/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsored by: SourceForge.net Community Choice Awards: VOTE NOW! Studies have shown that voting for your favorite open source project, along with a healthy diet, reduces your potential for chronic lameness and boredom. Vote Now at http://www.sourceforge.net/community/cca08 _______________________________________________ Swazoo-devel mailing list [hidden email] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/swazoo-devel |
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