Ho hum, time to dispell some FUD, for those who have better things to do than play at IRC politics and aren't aware of the history.
In a change from all the other people who get up on their soapbox without disclosing their political standpoint: I've been maintaining the OPN server codebase for about a year now, and have a peripheral involvement in the administration of the network. I endeavour to stay out of political matters wherever possible, although I do habitually shoot down people who make silly/irrelevant arguments (about anything, not just the network). My personal interest in OPN is as a platform to drag IRC-like communication out of the dark ages it has been mired in for the last 10 years or so. (It's not the only place this could be done, but many networks are not interested in such changes). Personally, I don't much care about what irc.debian.org points to. I don't use that DNS name for anything; if it changes, I'll still be on the same #debian* channels on OPN that I've always been on. On Fri, Aug 16, 2002 at 05:55:27PM +0200, Josip Rodin wrote: > That sounds like OPN is turning into a business, > not a free community network. OPN (the network) != PDPC (the non-profit corporation) [and Josip is fully aware of this, having been told numerous times when he's tried to say this in the past]. Also, what exactly is wrong with businesses? [See below] > There was disgruntlement within OPN with this and other things, and at least > two small groups of people previously involved with OPN "forked" their own > OPN-like networks in the recent history, lilofree.net and oftc.net. The > first one is obviously spiteful and likely not worth looking at, but the > other one is a much more interesting. The acronym stands for "Open and Free > Technology Community", they've got a constitution, a neutral mission > statement and have recently become a project that SPI sponsors, which means > they're pretty serious. As others have noted, Josip is involved with OFTC, so take this opinion with all due scepticism. Aside from the fact that OFTC are not currently sending fundraising messages to their users, I can see no appreciable differences in their constitution. [Side note: be wary of the OFTC web pages. There's plenty more bullshit on them, read them with the scepticism that everything on the web deserves.] > I talked to some OPN people and to some OFTC people, exploring our options. > An OPN source that wishes to remain anonymous ;) has told me that lilo would > like to keep #debian (and #debian*), so if we showed that we really dislike > the fundraising spam, they might stop sending it. Insert standard rant about abuse of the word "spam". Observe that with a single command at the start of every connection (I'm working on ways to make it a one-shot command that persists for all connections by the same user, but that will take time to implement), the relevant messages are eliminated. > We have successfully worked with OPN for years. Several Debian developers > were also OPN admins, and several still are. I would hate to see us depart, > but OPN definitely seems to be going into a different direction than > we are. This is just grandstanding. Many resources are provided to Debian by commercial organisations - auric and klecker are hosted by visi.net and VA (for now) respectively, and I don't see anybody complaining that these companies do not share any objectives with Debian. [The following paragraph discards all political bullshit and is based purely on technical merits] I will note here that OPN and OFTC are far from the only IRC networks in the world. In my opinion, DalNet or WebChat would be better suited to hosting Debian than OFTC; they have established complaints procedures and have demonstrated in the past that they are capable of running large networks in a reasonably stable manner. They are maintained by people with years of experience in these matters; WebChat runs the ConferenceRoom server (the only commercial ircd) which, I'm not afraid to say, is hugely better than the current free versions. That said, OPN does not host *any* "official" Debian stuff. #debian is run by the network itself; several other channels are run and frequented by developers, but so what? The Debian project itself does not run any channels there. So, what should criteria should we have for such DNS names? Should we reserve *.debian.org for official Debian services? Should we add dozens of aliases for everybody that runs a Debian service? [How about {planet,portal}.debian.org CNAME debianplanet.org?] Should we pick some services based on technical or political merits? Should we pick services based on the number of Debian members which can be found there? [This may include your local pub. It's about as relevant to the project as any other services.] If we arbitrarily endorse individual projects, who is deciding which ones? The constitution has this to say: > 4. The Developers by way of General Resolution or election > 4.1. Powers > > Together, the Developers may: > > 5. > Issue nontechnical policy documents and statements. > > These include documents describing the goals of the project, its > relationship with other free software entities, and nontechnical > policies such as the free software licence terms that Debian software > must meet. > > They may also include position statements about issues of the day. The only procedure in the constitution under which such statements can be made is to issue a GR. Also, I would strongly object to anybody issuing position statements on behalf of the project without quorum, and possibly majority (should we permit some 50 or so developers to speak for the project as a whole?). Note that I do not currently have the answers to any of these questions. I object to any action until we have answered them. -- .''`. ** Debian GNU/Linux ** | Andrew Suffield : :' : http://www.debian.org/ | Dept. of Computing, `. `' | Imperial College, `- -><- | London, UK
pgpZUAjwDwOB9.pgp
Description: PGP signature