On Wed, Nov 5, 2025 at 1:29 PM Art Manion <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 2025-11-05 05:30, Peter Gutmann wrote: > > The problem is that individuals can't be CNAs, which means you'd need to > do > > something like going through the cost and overhead of setting up a shell > > corporation or similar to meet the checkbox requirement that an > individual > > can't be a CNA but the same individual fronted by a paper entity can. > > > > Does anyone know what the thinking behind this is? It excludes any OSS > > project that doesn't have some entity fronting it from being a CNA. If > by > > "major" you mean "lots of people involved in the project" then there are > > probably entities fronting them but if you mean "lots of users and > critical to > > Internet operation" then see the famous xkcd cartoon, and that person > can't be > > a CNA. > > I believe that there are no strict requirements to be a non-individual > legal > entity and that in practice, a somewhat informal "project" can be a CNA. > > Individuals as CNAs are rare, but here is one: > > https://www.cve.org/partnerinformation/ListofPartners > > - Art > > > Although there isn't a requirement for a legal entity, the operational side of a CNA requires more than one person to manage. One example is that different points of contact are required for communication between us and the CNA so we always have a way to reach it. Another one is that the CNA will be handling its organization's user base in CVE Program's systems, and that requires redundancy so the CNA would not be stuck in case a member leaves. This and other good practices may be what prevents 'individuals' CNAs from being accepted in favor of teams. It should not be a one person endeavor. -- Pedro Sampaio | Red Hat Product Security 851525C5A98E9DEB7E650ABDFAC8296FBC674B8F
