Hi Tudor,
I recognize the impedance with mail as an expression medium and most of
the time it was like you said, except when Stef addressed to me with
"It is amazing how you like talking" (is this some kind of invitation to
"just shut up!"? Is that a "remainder" I have not written enough code to
have a valid voice here?).
For me, if someone has no the time for a detailed response, going with:
"GPL is a plague", "You can argue I don't care" or "Pharo is MIT.
Period.", or fighting the person instead of fighting the argument, makes
more harm that good. No clarification, because lack of energy or time,
seems better that these alternative "clarifications". Not all the people
is trying to start a holy war anytime makes a suggestion or shows a
different position. Sometimes we're just trying to contribute and
understand, even when we come from different places, interests and life
paths.
Thanks for pointing the LGPL issue (so, 3 BSD, MIT, public domain are a
good fit). At least I made my contribution by pointing the Etoile place
where there is a *rationale* behind a license choosing that makes this
licensing issues clearer for newcomers.
Energy is low today, but putting things in perspective, most of the time
community is welcoming, even if particular interactions among people are
not.
Cheers,
Offray
On 08/09/16 11:40, Tudor Girba wrote:
Hi Offray,
I am sorry you feel down.
The wording of Stef did appear strong. However, please keep in mind that email
is a terrible medium for expressing and transmitting feelings. I would kindly
ask you to reconsider the emails and focus on the content and you will see that
the wording was not about the external project but about the decisions that
relate to the licensing of Pharo itself. As Esteban and I clarified, Pharo is
MIT and will remain MIT. There is a long history of why this is so and a huge
amount of effort to make it clean MIT. To keep it clean we have to be aware of
the implications of another kind of a license, and our clarifications were
about how we, those that work on the main Pharo code, will not touch a GPL code
and that this might have a counter productive impact on the originator of the
code in question (due to a lack of engagement from other people).
Please also keep in mind that we do not want to prevent people from choosing
their own licenses. The decision of the license belongs exclusively to the
creators of the code. We are only looking for the interests of the core of
Pharo to make sure that you will continue to have whatever options you choose
on top of it. And you will always be free to choose what you want for your
projects.
Just a note about other licenses you mentioned: in the context of Pharo, LGPL
has the same effect as GPL given that there is no concept of binary reusability
in our system. So, for that purpose, we also do not touch LGPL.
A final point: when someone says that "we decided something a long time ago”,
it is easy to take it as a “this is it, just take it”, but that would be a bit
unfair. A more fair alternative is to understand that time is scarce and sometimes
we just do not have the available energy to provide all clarifications on demand
right at that point.
Please let’s focus on building things together, even if there are
misunderstandings or seaming differences in opinion. We need everyone’s energy.
Cheers,
Doru
On Sep 8, 2016, at 9:53 AM, Offray Vladimir Luna Cárdenas
<offray.l...@mutabit.com> wrote:
Nice to know something good came out after taking all the heat. In my case I learn about
licensing with the reasons behind and not "just take it!"...
My sources of information, the main spec.st site, made my mistake about dual
license a valid misinterpretation and even the idea that there are other
non-viral licenses: LGPL, 3 clause BSD, public domain that can integrated in a
MIT licensed project, with the rationale behind [1], seems a good thing to make
explicit
[1] http://etoileos.com/dev/licensing/
Kind of down though, after seeing how a community leader can go after other
people who don't share his views/knowledge and is just trying to contribute,
understand and be part of the community. Today would be a slow day for me in
Smalltak... maybe is time to take a walk a leave it for a time.
Cheers,
Offray
On 08/09/16 06:00, Hernán Morales Durand wrote:
I consider GNU AGPL v3 a fair license choice which protects somehow authors.
After some talks with friends today, I began to consider it useless for a niche
community like Smalltalk *and* solo projects. I then read all your mails, many
posts in other communities, and finally asked for advices. Conclusion: The
ideal license option for me was not yet invented.
Now about parasite behavior and easy living for freeloaders.
- I doubt Smalltalkers are in position for doing anything valuable against
parasites. GPL scares a niche community. All of us having MIT code published
can be stealed and we have no legal options to defend our work/authorship. That
should be addressed one day.
- However, I would like one day to read people releasing software under
whatever license they want and not to be pointed them. That's a matter of
freedom. I feel we are far away from there.
- I hope we can talk about interesting Territorial features, what do you need,
what could be modeled better, etc. Licensing is boring, really.
I re-licensed Territorial to MIT for the nice Pharo people, for the nice
Smalltalkers, people who helped me here in mailing lists, or sending supportive
private messages, and for cool users with nice intentions.
Hernán
PS: Updated User Manual: http://bit.ly/2c4RrCJ
--
www.tudorgirba.com
www.feenk.com
"Next time you see your life passing by, say 'hi' and get to know her."