Hi, On Thu, 14 Mar 2013, Moray Allan wrote: > On 2013-03-12 14:06, Raphael Hertzog wrote: > >The Debian ecosystem includes many economical actors, be it companies > >or individuals, but we tend to hide those aspects as if they didn't > >exist. > > I don't think that's quite the case. Perhaps Debian's commercial > partnership/sponsorship/supporter activities should be more active, > but they are not intentionally hidden.
I'm not thinking of (financial|hardware) sponsors, but more of the involvment of companies in Debian development. Quite a few DD do contribute to Debian as part of their work, but we show it nowhere. I never use my @freexian.com email even when my contributions are the result of work for my customers. We have many DD working at Credativ, I have never seen Credativ being credited anywhere. HP is recognized for their hardware donations, but I don't remember having seen DD use their HP email for contributions on hppa or other kernel work. Etc. Put this in contrast with the Linux Kernel community. There must be a reason why companies are so shy when it comes to Debian... Speaking for myself, I believe it's a cultural issue. The values we defend, and our strong roots as an independant distribution, some parts of our history (for example the backslash against Canonical), (inadvertently?) give out the message that we don't welcome companies in our development community. > >Despite Debian's non-profit status, IMHO Debian's growth and success > >relies on the capacity of those "actors" to have some "economical > >success". And there are many ways to help those actors, without > >involving any direct flow of money from Debian to them, in particular > >at the press/publicity level. > > Indeed, this is fairly uncontroversial. We already make press releases > about, and otherwise publicise Debian's partners/sponsors/supporters. It's uncontroversial for sponsors that provide money and hardware. Would you do it for companies that contribute features? For example, Linaro funded my work on multiarch. There are probably other examples but as I said, they tend to be not advertised within our community. > >For full disclosure, I'm speaking of experience here since I tried > >to get > >some Debian press coverage of the fundraising for the liberation of > >the Debian Administrator's Handbook. See > >https://lists.debian.org/debian-publicity/2011/10/threads.html#00001 > >for the discussion that happened. > > It's not clear to me that this is closely related to the questions > you asked above. It is about promoting a project that benefits Debian but that also implies someone making money out of it. > In fact, if we want to keep good relationships > with partners/sponsors/official supporters etc. we should probably > restrict how much we allow the commercial activities of individual > Debian members to be advertised through Debian media in an > uncoordinated way, outside our formal programs. How could this have been better coordinated and through which formal program? For reference, I contacted the press team which declined a press release but said that a Debian Project News entry would be ok. Later, when someone added the DPN entry, two other DPN contributors didn't like it because it was a fundraising and because the money was not going to Debian, and they got that entry removed. The text mentionned 12% of the money donated going back to Debian because I find it legitimate to give back something to Debian when Debian helps the fundraising. > Since you say it's just an example, I won't comment more on the > specific case. Feel free to reply privately on that part if you prefer. Cheers, -- Raphaël Hertzog ◈ Debian Developer Get the Debian Administrator's Handbook: → http://debian-handbook.info/get/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-vote-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20130314203410.ga19...@x230-buxy.home.ouaza.com