Hi

Thanks for the hints about existing slides. Here is my presentation:
http://www.slideshare.net/ksobkowiak/integrate-yourself-with-the-apache-software-foundation-47366192.

I didn't have to much time to check whether there are still any issues against  
the ASF policy.  I tried to make no
issues.  But if you find any please let me know about this. I'll correct them 
and re-send the slides to the conference
secretary before this presentation appears on the conference site.

Feel free to re-use the content.

Regards
Krzysztof

On 04.04.2015 23:11, Ross Gardler (MS OPEN TECH) wrote:
> Anyone can do whatever they want with whatever level of attribution they feel 
> is appropriate where my decks are concerned. No need to complicate things 
> with policies or best practice guidelines for anyone to worry about. Just do 
> what feels right.
>
> Thank you for sharing the world of the ASF, I hope my decks can help (I have 
> many more I'd you are looking for something specific).
>
> Sent from my Windows Phone
> ________________________________
> From: Shane Curcuru<mailto:a...@shanecurcuru.org>
> Sent: ‎4/‎4/‎2015 1:15 PM
> To: dev@community.apache.org<mailto:dev@community.apache.org>
> Subject: Re: Presentations about Apache Software Foundation
>
> On 4/3/15 11:01 AM, Krzysztof Sobkowiak wrote:
>> My intention is to simply look how other more experienced people do this. 
>> But after Ross's answer a new question was
>> born in my head. What does exactly the Apache License mean for slides? How 
>> can the Apache licensed slides be reused?
>>
>> Regards
>> Krzysztof
> As Ross noted, it doesn't matter what kind of content it is, if it says
> "Apache License 2.0" then it's available under that license, and the
> terms of that license apply.
>
>   https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
>
> In a practical sense for any slides you get from one of these frequent
> Apache speakers on the previous links, that means you're welcome to
> re-use anything in those slides except for the trademarks (i.e. don't
> somehow claim the title or main catchphrase from a previous slide deck
> was your own creation - which is unlikely in any case) for creating your
> own slides or other educational materials.
>
> A best practice is certainly to license your content under the Apache
> license or a permissive style CC license, and to provide some sort of
> credit back if you re-use a bunch of content.
>
> It would be interesting if ComDev wanted to writeup some details of best
> practices for how to provide attribution and licensing metadata in
> common slide creation software, especially Apache OpenOffice.  We do
> have plenty of Apache-related presentations that many Apache committers
> have re-used from each other back and forth.
>
> For a legal perspective, you'd need to talk to your lawyer. 8-)
>
> - Shane
>

-- 
Krzysztof Sobkowiak

JEE & OSS Architect
Apache Software Foundation Member
Apache ServiceMix <http://servicemix.apache.org/> Committer & PMC chair
Senior Solution Architect @ Capgemini SSC <http://www.pl.capgemini-sdm.com/en/>

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