> Sent: Wednesday, June 02, 2021 at 7:58 AM
> From: "Thomas Rodgers" <rodg...@appliantology.com>
> To: "Mark Wielaard" <m...@klomp.org>
> Cc: "GCC Development" <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>
> Subject: Re: Update to GCC copyright assignment policy
>
> On 2021-06-01 07:28, Mark Wielaard wrote:
>
> > Hi David,
> >
> > On Tue, 2021-06-01 at 10:00 -0400, David Edelsohn via Gcc wrote:
> >
> >> The GCC Steering Committee has decided to relax the requirement to
> >> assign copyright for all changes to the Free Software Foundation. GCC
> >> will continue to be developed, distributed, and licensed under the GNU
> >> General Public License v3.0. GCC will now accept contributions with or
> >> without an FSF copyright assignment. This change is consistent with
> >> the practices of many other major Free Software projects, such as the
> >> Linux kernel.
> >>
> >> Contributors who have an FSF Copyright Assignment don't need to
> >> change anything. Contributors who wish to utilize the Developer
> >> Certificate
> >> of Origin[1] should add a Signed-off-by message to their commit
> >> messages.
> >> Developers with commit access may add their name to the DCO list in
> >> the
> >> MAINTAINERS file to certify the DCO for all future commits in lieu of
> >> individual
> >> Signed-off-by messages for each commit.
> >
> > This seems a pretty bad policy to be honest.
> > Why was there no public discussion on this?
> >
> > I certainly understand not wanting to assign copyright to the FSF
> > anymore given the recent board decisions. But changing GCC from having
> > a shared copyright pool to having lots of individual (or company?)
> > copyright holders seems like a regression for a strong copyleft
> > project.
> >
> > With individual copyright holders companies no longer have clear way to
> > know whether they are in compliance unless they talk to each and every
> > individual copyright holder (see also the linux kernel, where there are
> > some individuals who randomly sue companies just to get some money to
> > drop the lawsuit). And for users it will be harder to get compliant
> > sources if they can no longer simply ask the shared copyright holder,
> > but instead will have to get enough individual copyright holders to get
> > a distributor into compliance.
> >
> > If we no longer want the FSF to be the legal guardian and copyright
> > holder for GCC could we please find another legal entity that performs
> > that role and helps us as a project with copyleft compliance?
>
> Personally, this would have been my preference.
One thing to consider is whether there exists any legal expertise for this.
This obsession of GCC to disassociate from the FSF is unskilled and unnecessary.
Much effort should rather be put upon doing real work, opposing the European
Union
Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market that came into force on 7
June
2019.
> > I would be happy to setup a shared copyright pool under the Conservancy
> > Copyleft Compliance project for example:
> > https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-compliance/
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Mark
----- Christopher Dimech
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