Re: Announce: new branched repos for target userspace utils

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On 12/08/2011 02:46 PM, Nicholas A. Bellinger wrote:
> Really, I honesty don't think forking the code to a distro specific
> version and introducing changes to the codebase without any discussion
> from us (or the list) is fostering healthy FOSS development.

I've published repos to github. I welcome review of the changes I'm
making as well as contributions and bug reports from anyone (and
anything distro-specific is a bug that will be fixed).

I listed the issues on target-devel back in September, and we've
discussed this over Skype repeatedly since then.

> I don't see how our use of the MIT license for contributions dis-engages
> the community-driven model of development any more than what Fedora or
> your employer is also doing wrt contributions using MIT.  Also, none of
> the other major distributions who have included our userspace code have
> a problem with respecting our wishes wrt to outside contributions.

There have been no external contributions to targetcli under MIT
license. If you had licensed your code under MIT, then there would have
been -- at least from me.

RTS can't accept AGPLed code because you ship a proprietary version. RTS
can't release MIT-licensed code because you're worried about your
proprietary competitors shipping it.

This is zero-sum thinking w.r.t. targetcli, but it's completely refuted
by the *other* code you released, the kernel target code! We've seen
major changes and improvements by myself and others. It's crazy you are
ok with that, but you're upset over the library that gets and pokes
values into configfs???

> Also, we are not limiting or obfuscating our code in any way, and
> provide a fully usable free version for all to use and improve.

That's all I'm doing. Your AGPL license gives users the right to modify
the code and redistribute changes without your approval.

> So that said, we would still like an answer from you as to why you think
> it's OK for Redhat to use MIT for contributions or take other more
> drastic measures when it feels necessary to protect it's intellectual
> property position, but not OK for a small company who is funding the
> vast majority of development work to also protect it's intellectual
> property position.

You still have the same rights w.r.t. your code as you did before. All I
did was publish my changes under a license you won't accept, and solicit
the same from others.

-- Andy
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