|
tbm
|
fc37e3923f23
|
10 years ago
|
|
|
|
keynote2k
|
6a6f6503e6ee
|
10 years ago
|
|
|
|
keynote2k
|
b36d3820b41c
|
12 years ago
|
|
- edited "competitive bids" language to broaden scope from software developers to all "technical service contractors." - made a few grammatical and wording changes to the section re: Community Members' (lack of) influence over a Project's technical direction
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
f907711217dd
|
13 years ago
|
|
s/some/substantial/g because the real concern is a serious substantial interest rather than a de minimus.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
15c79ec10141
|
13 years ago
|
|
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
12558464484d
|
13 years ago
|
|
Be clear about what state and federal laws we mean.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
c27b5ada301a
|
13 years ago
|
|
cjl asked: I believe it is important to be very specific about reimbursement for travel as this is probably one of the moret common forms of financial transactions in many projects. It would be unfortunate if PLC members were made ineligible (or unduly burdened) in requesting travel funding on an equal footing with other project members.
We've explicitly stated now that legitimate reimbursements are not compensation.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
e7865e7fce1a
|
13 years ago
|
|
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
037424ead4f2
|
13 years ago
|
|
cjl raised this issue:
As a practical matter, this one is difficult may be difficult for Sugar Labs to achieve (particularly, "permitted to hear") as our PLC discussions are held in an open IRC forum and openness is a philosophical position within our project. Can we narrow this restriction for PLC members to "participate" while allowing "hearing" on an equal footing with all project members?
This change reworks that section to allow for after-the-fact reading of logs and/or minutes by the conflicted Person, but does not allow them to attend the meeting except to disclose facts, etc.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
a513f015d2ad
|
13 years ago
|
|
cjl suggests that: While "available bandwidth" is common enough jargon in our community, perhaps this should be changed to "interest and availability". We accepted the change since "bandwidth" is indeed jargon.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
e2c18b409d7b
|
13 years ago
|
|
cjl from the Sugar Labs committee raised the following concern:
In theory, engagement in the proposal drafting process might allow a conflicted person to "tip the scales", thereby justifying their exclusion. However; in practice, it may be that the conflicted person is the only PLC member with the requisite technical expertise or situational awareness to draft a suitably detailed proposal. Is it possible to acknowledge that the rest of the PLC should generally be capable of taking advantage of the conflicted persons special knowledge and contributions to the drafting without allowing the creation of "an uneven playing field".
This change allows the conflicted PLC Person to "disclose material facts and to respond to questions" to the drafting process, but does not allow them to do the drafting themselves.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
d92b393c3961
|
13 years ago
|
|
After discussion with Denver and Tony, we narrowed these sections to "for-profit", since we decided that non-profit "competition" wasn't an issue of direct concern in these scenarios.
|
|
Bradley M. Kuhn
|
1ca3ced3fd87
|
13 years ago
|
|
Converted format from LaTeX to asciidoc
|