Hi Sandro, I agree with you. But I understand that people with less experience on free software are afraid (at the beginning) of freedom. It is a big step to take from closed software and not everyone is willing/brave enough to take it. That's why I say that it is understandable. Not that they are right to think so.
In any case, to me we finally found the main difference between the two organizations. We can collaborate on the open field and work alone on the free field. To me, having other organizations collaborating is a good thing, as long as we understand the difference and don't merge too much (which is another possible step, but not something we decided yet to do). I think that in Spain we have a good example with Geoinquietos, which shares a lot with OSGeo (some people way it is the "white" brand of OSGeo in Spain) but still, it's different. So different that in some regions we have more in common with OSM than with OSGeo. On Fri, Nov 13, 2015 at 10:25 AM, Sandro Santilli <s...@keybit.net> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 13, 2015 at 09:45:23AM +0100, María Arias de Reyna wrote: > >> And as wrong as they are, if their main focus is on >> bussiness, it is understandable they are afraid of freedom. > > I disagree on this point. > I've been make a living out of free software development for over a > decade now, and I know there are many people doing the same. > > Businesses do not need to be afraid of (software) freedom, > but I can see businesses based on distributing non-free software > wanting to be sure they can easily find cheap components to build > their black boxes, and thus offering hosting for such potentially > exploitable components. > > --strk; _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list Discuss@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss