Chris Gianelloni wrote:
On Mon, 2007-07-16 at 06:45 -0500, Andrew Gaffney wrote:
That was my thought as well. We (the developers) owe nothing to the community at large. We are volunteers, and if we want to treat Gentoo as our own personal toy (which we currently aren't), then so be it.

Exactly.

I work on Gentoo because I want to work on it.  It scratches an itch
that I have.  I like using it personally and also professionally.  I
find it easier to help improve Gentoo, thereby making it better for
myself, than to simply ask others to fix it for me and hope that they're
interested in changing things in the same manner as I am.  This is
exactly why I became a developer and why I still am a developer.

That being said, I know that I, as well as many other Gentoo developers,
will gladly accept payment to work on what YOU want me to work on, but
until such time as I am in someone else's employ, I'll be working on
what I choose to work on myself.

If you don't like what a developer is working on or would rather they
work on something that interests you, offer to pay them.  Unless they're
your employee, they owe you nothing.

Maybe you should change the Gentoo philosophy: http://www.gentoo.org/main/en/philosophy.xml

Us, the Gentoo Proletariat, respect the developers because of the great work they do for free but that doesn't absolve you of any responsibility towards Gentoo, quite the opposite. The Gentoo philosophy and how it states the need for Gentoo to accomodate the needs of it's users establishes a minimum level of responsibility from the Distro to it's userbase so basically stating "I do what I want and how I want" is not in keeping with the way Gentoo was meant to be run and shouldn't be how it is being run at this moment in time.
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