- From: Arnold, Curt <Curt.Arnold@hyprotech.com>
- Date: Wed, 6 Jun 2001 08:12:16 -0600
- To: "'www-dom-ts@w3.org'" <www-dom-ts@w3.org>
> [dd] Here we need to keep in mind the Process Document that initiated the > DOM TS activity, which states that the moderator for the TS (the DOM WG > representative at present, hopefully more people) should change the status > for the test once it has been reviewed, allowing for the possibility to take > it to the DOM WG in case of confusion. [ca] Only granting tracker admin rights to the TS moderator, would ensure that only the TS moderator could mark a test as "rejected", "accepted", etc. Anyone could still add comments on the test which would present a record of the TS group's discussion on the issue. > > A general question, though: How do we deal with the fact that the DOM TS > will be published under the W3C document license? Which IPR statement is it > people will be presented with when they use the SF platform? > > [mb] It seems to me that since this is an official W3C activity, that at least the submittal of tests should be via a w3c.org address. Is there any way that W3C could run a copy of SharePoint as well? [ca] The SourceForge Project page will only say that the license is "Other". On the test submittal mockup, I used a placeholder for a statement of the test process IPR. That text could be anything that you want it to be. Any download (.zip, etc) should have the full statement of IPR. Should each test have a "Copyright (c) 2001, MIT..." boilerplate? If you wanted to use a w3 address, you could just put a frameset on the W3C site that enclosed the sourceforge implementation. The SourceForge tracker is actually more closely aligned to what we want to do and is open source, so it could be run on W3C hardware, but I think the framing approach is a lot more expedient.
Received on Wednesday, 6 June 2001 10:12:44 UTC