-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I guess some of this was a case of people being too busy. I finally received word back this morning.
Response from Stuart Metcalfe: I'm too busy, I'll pass this on. (Anthony Lenton) Response from Anthony Lenton: Summarization of discussion on IRC.. The branches being made private was a side effect A private team was subscribed [we just finished resolving this] The current Launchpad login is not open sourced It's not part of launchpad The new Ubuntu login will not be open sourced It's not part of launchpad either The current OpenID modules will continue to work Work will be done to ensure a smooth transition The Ubuntu login will still communicate with launchpad the way the Launchpad login does Also.. There are other modules Canonical has been working on with similar functionality that they want to open up as well. [Ex] https://edge.launchpad.net/wordpress-launchpad-integration So.. this is much better news than I thought. I'm sorry for all the gloom in the last email. I guess all the dark clouds were all resulting from: 1) People being extremely busy 2) The way launchpad works a) Anthony and I are both waiting to hear back about whether this is a bug in launchpad or not. With this new information I'm much more excited about the future of this OpenID integration and I'm excited again about their continued growth. As for any questions about Drupal 7.. Over the next week (~6 days) I will try to devote ~100 hours to development projects within my own company pertaining to Drupal. This will be a large learning curve from the way D6 and D5 work. There are massive and unimaginable changes from D6 to D7. Even more than from D5 to D6. However, they are better documented. With this better documentation and a heap load of prior knowledge (this upcoming dev time), I have a feeling that I will have no issues having all of these modules ready prior to D7 release time. I hope this clears up any concerns anyone else had. It's cleared up any concerns of mine. As for that other response: On Wed, 3 Mar 2010 10:01:59 -0500 Chuck Frain <chuckfr...@pobox.com> wrote: > Perhaps a good Loco project would be to send some material on the > benefits of Open Sourcing software under the AGPL > [SNIP] Teach them how people can help them > grow through contributions from a community of people that work on > projects because they want to help the whole and make things stronger. I completely agree. I think we should get some really really smart guys to teach a lesson about the various licenses out there. For instance, the BSD license is amazingly unrestrictive. If you license your project under that you might be opening your project more than your liking. After the lesson [ #u-classroom maybe? ] I think we should build out a wiki as a group that even the most novice of users can refer to. Then they can really understand what the license they are using means. On that subject, I also like the idea of an page for a break down of each license and what each piece means. Example for BSD license: <cite> Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. </cite> If anyone redistributes your source code the copyright must be kept as it is written above. It must also include the following conditions and disclaimer. That one is extremely well written but points on this such as the following are not so clear. <cite> Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. </cite> Users may not understand that as long as this license stays available to anyone using the code in one way or another, anyone can freely reuse this code in a commercial product and resell it for whatever they see fit. Obviously opensource.org does an excellent job of keeping this information public. Perhaps instead of our own wiki we could work with them to improve what they have and maybe work out a way to build in this 'beginner info / breakdown' into their own site. Or perhaps our own wiki is the best place for this. > > Perhaps the people at this Canonical place that is behind the Launchpad > project just don't understand the benefits of Open Source software and > needs a little education on the topic. Many projects Canonical gets into are under GPLv2/3 and AGPLc2/3. They are in part bound by restrictions within the license itself. If the project is a sub project of another project that is licensed in GPLv2 then your project legally needs to be GPLv2. You can't even apply v3 to it. That is part of the (lack of) 'backward compatibility' in these licenses. Actually.. In order for a project (say Drupal GPLv2) to move to v3 they need to get confirmation from ALL contributors [both Drupal dev and devs of other modules (both public and private)] that they are willing to let the project move to v3 and that they will move their license with it. GPL covered all of its bases very well; this is an unfortunate side effect of being protected by such a solid license. If any large company understands Free Open Source Software (FOSS) I think it would be Canonical. Launchpad is AGPLv3. As a company they will need to keep some things closed. There are a massive number of reasons I can see for this. Besides.. just because they don't release the source doesn't mean it's not open source. As for my own company, we decided to deal exclusively with FOSS. That is part of our business plan. With this, we intend to undergo a massive project that we imagine will bring in a large amount of cash flow. We have no intention of releasing the source code until we are in a position that our release of the code will not hinder our ability to succeed. If we release too early any other competition could come along, pick up our code, attach advertising, use what they already have as a more established company, then destroy us. There's also the concern of security. If they release the source and you notice a tiny hole in security, it could be a very serious problem. Beside that point.. where would you intend to use this. This will obviously be extremely customized to their configuration. A business is all about strategy. They have done an excellent job 'for the most part' of stating exactly what their intentions are and following through on exactly what they say. When it comes to my own company, I won't consider even letting the other owners of the company see what I have until I hit a point where I feel this is secure enough that releasing any source won't be a potential gaping hole into my servers. > > On Tue, 02 Mar 2010, Michael Lustfield wrote: > > > I have been asked by a few people what will happen to the drupal > > - -launchpad openid modules that seamlessly created users based on > > existing launchpad users because of the ubuntu login change. > > > > Frankly, I have no clue. I no longer have any access to these branches > > through the web interface. I don't know if this is a bug in launchpad > > or not, but we can at least still grab branch content from the > > following urls. > > > <snipped> > > > It's a bleak message full of sad. I'm sorry for that too. > > - -- Michael Lustfield Kalliki Software Network and Systems Administrator -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkuOiKMACgkQ3y7Nst6YLGUJ4gCeLfbR4/eoRRyUfnDd8HokFcKP VWEAn0NChwVDj8NfrXgK75S1aVQ0d5+T =6Vgh -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- loco-contacts mailing list loco-contacts@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/loco-contacts