Shane M. Coughlan wrote:
Sam Liddicott wrote:
Georg C. F. Greve wrote:
There are people presenting "Microsoft Office on Wine" as "Free Software best practice" and they would certainly ask to be listed on any such initative -- most companies understand this to be a very good tool of customer acquisition and thus have a vested interest in being mentioned.
I think that one step is to recognize the different types of
activities.
Here you have recognized that making closed source software
available to
people moving to open source systems as one type of activity. It is a supporting activity. Another step will be to classify different activities against these
types.
Here you recognize the MS Office on Wine presentation as such an
activity.
Different types of activities have different degrees of goodness as
well
as different degrees of ambiguity of goodness.
Here - as they say - is the rub. It's ever so important to make sure that the defining line between good activities and bad activities is drawn a the right place. Companies with a closed agenda will attempt to apply 'freedom' or 'open' certification and recognition to their products if allowed. Loop-holes, back doors and flaws in any part of the GBN reasoning will be taken advantage of.
Indeed. I'm suggesting that we work out what data we need and then gather it so that we can understand exactly what types of activities we are intending to draw a line between.
This suggests that some ideals need to underpin the GBN concepts: (1) Any term, reference or certification must be watertight against misapplication or abuse. Each term, reference or certification must therefore support both the four freedoms and the Gnu Manifesto without exception.
Also, one may harbour a felon, or nourish one of the kings enemies, there is room to say that one has aided someone else who lives by the four freedoms and supports the GNU manifesto; i.e. merely a "friend." This is not quite the same as (2) below.
(2) Within the context of the above the GBN needs to provide a methodology of entry for firms that currently provide sales, support or services for software that is not free. In other words, there should be a method for ensuring that companies that wish to become free can do so. (3) The GBN needs to ensure that companies who operate completely according to the ideals of the four freedoms and the Gnu Manifesto will be rewarded for their accomplishment.
yep.
Perhaps the most difficult matter is (2). That's where - as Georg and others pointed out - big nasty holes could appear. Transition methods are not something that will be easy to work out. On the other hand, to refuse a method of transition would marginalize the GBN in the context of computing in general and fail companies that have a genuine wish to convert.
Let there be a lowly level of membership that involves paying money and providing information which will be used to provide awards of recognition and value. Those lowly members will have provided
support by
giving money to kick-start the whole thing. Membership rules can always be tightened a year later to cut out those who are seeking a cheap
badge.
I don't agree with the idea of having loose rules and tightening them later.
The loose rules provide low membership which we CAN discontinue when such low membership is no longer appropriate, such as when "friends" become "hangers-on." Higher membership will have higher rules reflected in (3) above.
I believe the thought behind this suggestion is to promote inclusion, and that's great, but I further believe that such an action would undermine the legitimacy of the GBN. Consistency is very important and the GBN will be under both close appraisal and pressure when it is launched. There are certainly interest groups who would use any indication of confusion, lack of cohesion or coherency as an opportunity for criticism.
It would be far better if the GBN had classification problems, membership remit and organizational structure fully formed before it goes public. This would make it easier to sell, would make it more robust, and ensure that critics could only judge it for what it is: a network to bring software freedom into the business arena.
I quite agree, hence my suggestion that we look at areas of classification and the range of values within each classification that relevant companies and their activities fall into.
Once we have that, we draw a couple of lines to delineate requirements for levels of membership and identify supporting activities to help companies progress.
Sam