On 11/18/2012 12:37 PM, Rafael Goncalves Martins wrote: > On Sun, Nov 18, 2012 at 3:32 PM, Rich Freeman <ri...@gentoo.org> wrote: >> On Sun, Nov 18, 2012 at 11:52 AM, Rafael Goncalves Martins >> <rafaelmart...@gentoo.org> wrote: >>> Yeah, but I think that there's a big difference about any developer >>> being allowed to create a project under the gentoo umbrella and create >>> a project and claim it as Gentoo sponsored without any review of the >>> council. I agree that it can exists in the Github account, or even in >>> our own infrastructure, but say that Gentoo supports it without a >>> previous analysis of the council is wrong IMHO. >> >> In practice there is no difference. About the only "sponsorship" >> Gentoo projects get most of the time is hosting, and considering that >> they stuck this one on Github they're not really even getting that. >> >> That said, I see no reason why this project would be any less eligible >> for other forms of sponsorship than other projects are, assuming that >> somebody can make a compelling pitch for the Trustees. The Foundation >> is aimed to further Gentoo in particular in FOSS in general, so >> obviously we don't spend a lot on individual projects. When we do it >> tends to be in proportion to how it benefits the entire community, and >> I'm sure that community sentiments would be balanced accordingly. >> However, there aren't "real" projects and "wanna-be" projects in >> Gentoo. >> >> Rich >> > > Hmm, pretty cool! Then I can create a stupid project, put it on gentoo > infra and claim it as being Gentoo sponsored. Good to know, thanks! >
Those are the rules. We checked before we started.
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