Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > What's the difference between my employer trying to get me to do something > unethical that violates an agreement with Debian or someone else trying to > get me to do the same? Are you focusing on the increased difficulty of > telling one's employer no? If so, remember that you can resolve a > conflict of interest by refusing *either* party; if I can't resolve the
This is quite an easy statement to make; it's actually far harder to do in real life if/when the need arises, you know. > non-Debian issue creating the conflict of interest, I would resign the > Debian position. This is a distinction that doesn't interfere with Resigning the from the Debian position may very well get you nothing else but a pink slip from your employer. > resolving the issue. (Not to mention that one's employer is far from the > only party in one's life that one may not be able to easily say no to.) JB. -- Julien BLACHE - Debian & GNU/Linux Developer - <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Public key available on <http://www.jblache.org> - KeyID: F5D6 5169 GPG Fingerprint : 935A 79F1 C8B3 3521 FD62 7CC7 CD61 4FD7 F5D6 5169 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]