On Thu, Oct 4, 2018 at 12:17 PM Michał Górny wrote: > On Thu, 2018-10-04 at 11:14 -0400, Alec Warner wrote: > > Summary: > > The short version of the bug is that a non-trivial number of developers > > cannot commit with an SoB line because their company has not yet reviewed > > the new Gentoo Copyright GLEP, and so they lack company approval to > attach > > SoB lines or agree to the DCO. > > > > The bug requests that a reprieve be granted until the company reviews the > > new policy and (hopefully) grants approval. This would be in the form of > an > > allowlist where specific identities (approved by some delegate of council > > && trustees) do not require an SoB line to commit for some period of > time. > > Apologies for my tardy reply. > Don't you think that requiring approval for allowlist means double > standards? I mean, even if you assume that all requests would be > granted, the requirement of approval provides for this 'delegate' > selecting which developers are granted this privilege and which are not. > > In other words, I would rather suggest that the reprieve is granted for > everyone and that the allowlist is maintained by Infra as part of opt- > out hook intended to avoid developers accidentally missing the tag. > So basically this would be similar to the gentoo-dev-whitelist, where anyone can do anything, but there is auditing? I think this goes against my general feeling is that this is a *specific* group of developers whom have raised a *specific legal problem* for their contributions. Based on that I'm happy to grant them a reprieve on that basis. I'm less happy to grant a reprieve to everyone; because its not clear what the basis for the reprieve would be. > > > Proposal: > > I propose the board grant this reprieve, for whitelisted accounts for 90 > > days, with no extension. Williamh will supply the initial list of > accounts, > > to be reviewed verbally by a board delegate and a council delegate. > > > > If the company cannot return a decision in 90 days, we can revisit the > > motion with any updated data. > > I'm confused. This really reads like 'no extension; except we will vote > on extension if necessary'. > There are no extensions in this proposal, but the proposal does not limit the actions of the future board. So you read correctly, yes. > > > If the company returns a decision before 90 days, the whitelist program > > will be terminated (regardless of decision reached.) Note that if the > > company decides that approval will not be granted, we will in effect be > > unable to accept commits from these developers on work time. > > Does this imply the reprieve will be granted only to the employees of > one particular company, or will it extend to all developers in similar > situation? In the latter case, will the decision of one company affect > the status of the reprieve for other developers? > Tying it back the first part of my reply, this proposal grants a specific reprieve on a specific basis. If other people want reprieves based on other basis's[0], I'm happy to listen to them. > > -- > Best regards, > Michał Górny >