---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Diane Peters <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Mar 29, 2012 at 4:52 PM
Subject: Jordan Licenses
To: [email protected]


Dear all,



We've been watching the various email exchange regarding the Jordanian
licenses here at HQ, and feel compelled to respond given what appears to be
misinformation about the status of the Jordanian licenses and the
circumstances surrounding the decision not to launch.



The reality is that the licenses were not sufficiently far along or up to
our standards for publication as of the launch of the project in Amman
quite a long time ago now.  The decision was not an easy one to take, and
involved many conversations in the weeks leading up to the event and very
late night conversations with members of the Jordanian team just hours
before.  In the end, the agreement was reached and a final decision made,
albeit reluctantly, that the licenses were not ready to be turned on and
required further review.  You might hear any number of reasons given for
why we felt that was the case.  For CC, one key reason was that the
Jordanian team had misunderstood that all six licenses needed to be
prepared for the launch, and with a relatively short period of time between
learning this and the launch date, there was simply insufficient time for
them to prepare the other licenses with the degree of confidence we require
of all ports, and for everyone to engage in the thorough review and
iteration process all ports must go through.  Again, this was an
unfortunate misunderstanding.  But of course CC has never (before or since)
launched a single license without the others in the suite.  Everyone  regretted
that the decision had to be made, but it was the absolutely correct
decision to make at the time and all of us involved on behalf of CC at the
time stand firmly behind it.  CC did take that decision closely and
transparently with the Jordan team.



Thereafter, there was no coordinated or concerted effort to complete the
licenses though everyone from HQ at the launch event committed to doing so.
 Shortly after the event, the Jordanian licenses were pulled from our
porting queue altogether for lack of attention, change over in the team,
etc..



Although the Jordanian team was not able to complete the port, their hard
work did served as a base for the Egyptian licenses.  The Egyptian licenses
are the product of close and dedicated collaborations among many lawyers
and legal leads in the region.   We are delighted to be on the final
proofing stages that will see those launch very shortly.



Other than a very few isolated 3.0 ports, we are now focusing the bulk of
our legal efforts on drafting 4.0, which will be published just days from
now for public comment.  We are keen to set up a community call shortly to
explain the decisions underlying the 4.0 draft and to field suggestions for
improvements.  Please look for more information on that shortly.  Whether
you are able to participate in some fashion in that call or other forums,
we hope to hear from many or you one way or another during the public
discussion on 4.0.  We also hope you will celebrate with us the launch of
the Egyptian licenses very shortly.  And of course, thanks to all of you in
the region who have supported porting efforts and our other important work
in the region.



For any of you who have lingering questions about the status of the
Jordanian licenses, I need to ask that you contact me off list, though
please do not expect that to result in a revisit of decisions made very
long ago now, or for a debate over reasons.    We have no intention of
re-opening those discussions or events, which are now quite long passed.  We
prefer to focus constructively on all of the other fantastic
accomplishments that have taken place in the intervening years and our
bright future.



Best,

Diane




-- 
Diane M. Peters, General Counsel
Creative Commons
cell: +1 503-803-8338
skype:  peterspdx
email:[email protected]
http://creativecommons.org/staff#dianepeters

______________________________________

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