On Sat, May 25, 2002 at 04:51:28PM -0400, Mathieu Gauthier-Pilote wrote:
What is it?
The Free Software Clause is an initiative of the Free Software Foundation * which aims to promote the use and development of free software within all types of organizations. Consequently, any organization finding itself in agreement with the principles of the Free Software Clause is invited to adopt it by inserting it inside its constitution or social contract.
- = For now, the Free Software Clause draft is an initiative of Mathieu
Gauthier-Pilote (that's me, hello), but with your help we can make it good enough so it deserves to be endorsed by the FSF, and to be adopted by members of the GNU Business Network.
I'm confused. To me, the statement "is an initiative of the Free Software Foundation" means that it has been reviewed and endorsed by the FSF. But that's in contradiction with "we can make it good enough so it deserves to be endorsed by the FSF"
Is the FSF aware of what your doing? (please keep in mind that I'm not making any judgment on the importance of your work, I just want to figure out how the work is being done).
The Clause can be found right now in the drafts CVS directory of the FSF Europe on savannah.gnu.org :
- fsfe/fr/drafts/clause_logiciel_libre.txt - for the original French
version
- fsfe/drafts/free_software_clause.txt - for my (inaccurate) English
translation (Please FIX ME!)
It is not a good idea to keep the two versions in separate directories and with different names. The way the website has been organized, you should put the two files in the same directory and use the same name prefix, adding "fr" and "en" suffixes to distinguish the two language versions.
Regards, Jaime