- From: Jim Ley <jim.ley@gmail.com>
- Date: Sat, 28 Aug 2004 13:43:44 +0100
On Sat, 28 Aug 2004 12:26:55 +0000 (UTC), Ian Hickson <ian at hixie.ch> wrote: > On Sat, 28 Aug 2004, Jim Ley wrote: > > So that has changed from the previous situation where you made it very > > clear you were doing this as an individual. > > You are mixing two things. First, WHATWG only recognises individuals, not > companies. Could you explain what this means? > Requesting an "urgent reply" for something like this would only serve to > reduce my credibility within the company. but it's clear from this mailing list that this is an issue that the WHAT-WG wants resolved (it's not just me who's asked about it) So I see no reason why it should, you're just the spokesman here. > You still haven't replied to my request for an explanation of an example > of how Opera could ever get to the stage where it would be in Opera's > interests to revoke the license. A derivative work that defined Opera's implementation as non-conformant, resulting. > You also haven't replied to my question about what it is you wanted > permission for Me, I don't want permission to do anything right now, I just wanted clarification of why a WHAT-WG specification is copyright a single vendor, because I believe that limits the options of what could be done - I don't want an open licence etc. I want it to be owned by someone, I just don't want that someone to be a public company - I'd much rather it was copyright Ian Hickson as an individual because I believe that to be more trustworty than a company that could be bought at any time. Of course so could you, but I believe that risk is less. The reason I supported the placing of it in the PD was that subsequent work could then be copyright the WHAT-WG, not because I wanted it to be forever Public Domain. Jim.
Received on Saturday, 28 August 2004 05:43:44 UTC