Hi all,

 I still dont get why are we talking about OSCAF.

 We can have an open source project, where people join/leave freely, anybody
can contribute and the terms of participation are open and clear as any
other open source project.

 On the other hand, we can put our job under a strange foundation, with
confusing membership policy (including paying for.... what?), and an unclear
governance model. AFAICS there is no real job done in that foundation
(Somebody wrote in this thead that there is no much activity).

 Really, as open source contributor i feel very unlikely to contribute to
such organization.

On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 9:24 AM, Sebastian Trüg <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> exactly. If you read the other mails, we currently discuss to do the
> development on a sf page named oscaf which I am the maintainer of (and
> could
> also make Mikkel or Evgeny maintainer, too). Thus, it is a real open
> project
> hosting the ontologies. OSCAF is merely the gateway to the corporate world
> which will be very happy with out efforts + allows companies to have an
> "official" "person" to address.
>

* I don't see any official person from OSCAF in the thread  (They could
answer what the foundation do, who is in there, in what terms, what do they
do, and all the open questions in this thread.)
* Get the impression that the open source community does the job and OSCAF
gets the money
* The infrastructure is sourceforge (free)... why to link it to oscaf?

 Everybody wants a common project to host _and improve_ the ontologies, but
it must be in a open source way to attract contributors/users: clear terms,
meritocracy and so on.

Ivan
_______________________________________________
Xesam mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/xesam

Reply via email to