Free as in Freedom
Free as in Freedom
Free as in Freedom
0x65: Linux Foundation's Community Bridge
47 minutes Posted Apr 2, 2019 at 6:21 am.
Segment 0
fiscal sponsorship work.
Public Interest, which is a FOSS fiscal sponsor that predates Conservancy.
advice.
Foundation.
being associated with a Linux Foundation sub-org.
“competitive” threat from this initiative.
Segment 1
members.
according to their by-laws.
citing the ArduPilot/DroneCode example.
model”
article about Community Bridge.
Segment 2
diversity and security issues for FOSS projects.
project that PSU students wrote.
Segment 3
0:00
47:17
Download MP3
Show notes
Bradley and Karen discuss and critique the new initiative by the Linux Foundation called
CommunityBridge. The podcast includes various analysis that expands
upon their
blog post about Linux Foundation's CommunityBridge.
Show Notes:
Segment 0 (
00:36)
Conservancy helped Free Software Foundation and GNOME Foundation begin
fiscal sponsorship work. (
07:50)
Conservancy has always been very coordinated with Software in the
Public Interest, which is a FOSS fiscal sponsor that predates Conservancy. (
08:26)
Conservancy helped NumFocus get started as a fiscal sponsor by providing
advice. (
08:53)
The above are all 501(c)(3) charities, but there are also 501(c)(6)
fiscal sponsors, such as Linux Foundation and Eclipse
Foundation. (
10:00)
Bradley mentioned that projects that are forks can end up in different
fiscal sponsors, such as Hudson
being in Eclipse Foundation, and Jenkins
being associated with a Linux Foundation sub-org. (
10:30)
Bradley mentioned that any project — be it SourceForge, GitHub, or
Community Bridge — that attempts to convince FOSS developers to use
proprietary software for their projects is immediately suspect
(
12:00)
Open Collective, a
for-profit company seeking to do fiscal sponsorship (but attempting to
release their code for it) is likely under the worst
“competitive” threat from this initiative. (
19:50)
Segment 1 (
21:23)
Projects that use CommunityBridge are
required to act in the common business interest of the Linux Foundation
members. (
27:30)
Board of Directors seats at the Linux Foundation are for sale,
according to their by-laws. (
28:50)
Bradley advises that you should not put anything copylefted into
CommunityBridge — given Linux Foundation's position on copyleft and
citing the ArduPilot/DroneCode example. (
29:50)
CommunityBridge appears to
only allow governance based on the “benevolent dictator for life
model” (
31:40), at least with regard to who controls the money
(
34:30)
Bradley mentioned the LWN
article about Community Bridge. (
33:22)
Segment 2 (
36:54)
Karen mentioned that CommunityBridge also purports to address
diversity and security issues for FOSS projects. (
37:00)
Bradley mentioned the code hosted on k.sfconservancy.org and also the Reimbursenator
project that PSU students wrote. (
42:00)
Segment 3 (
42:44)
Bradley and Karen discuss (or, possibly don't) discuss what's coming up
on the next episode. Fact of the matter is that this announcement wasn't written yet when we recorded this episode and we weren't sure if 0x65 would be released before or after that announcement was released. We'll be discussing that topic on 0x66.
Send feedback and comments on the cast
to <oggcast@faif.us>.
You can keep in touch with Free as in Freedom on our IRC channel, #faif on irc.freenode.net, and
by following Conservancy on
identi.ca and and Twitter.
Free as in Freedom is produced by Dan Lynch
of danlynch.org.
Theme
music written and performed
by Mike Tarantino
with Charlie Paxson on drums.
The content
of this
audcast, and the accompanying show notes and music are licensed
under the Creative
Commons Attribution-Share-Alike 4.0 license (CC BY-SA 4.0).