On Monday, November 10, 2003, at 04:20 PM, Justin Erenkrantz wrote:

--On Monday, November 10, 2003 21:05:16 +0000 Stephen Colebourne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

What I see and what I fear is having the control of the projects which I
currently have being taken away and placed in the hands of people who have
committed no code, have answered no user queries, don't use the language
(Java) and have no sense of the complex component history and personality
matrix of the commons community.

I think you're missing the fact that you'd (or any other sizable committers on the projects that would migrate over) be on the Apache Commons PMC if you were to bring a project here. So, you would be legally empowered to control the project.


The whole point is to *legally* and *ethically* return control to the committers by having them on the PMC - not to have the power vested in some remote bureaucratic entity like it is in Jakarta. -- justin


Why do you call it a 'remote, bureaucratic entity'? I would argue that it logically can't be if the allegation that it does nothing is true :)


I assume the problem just goes away if each commons component has representation on the PMC?

--
Geir Magnusson Jr                                   203-247-1713(m)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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