Giter VIP home page Giter VIP logo

berneout-pledge's Introduction

The Berneout Pledge

The Berneout Pledge is a simple tool for hassle-free open-source contribution licensing. It's short, simple, and easy with GitHub and BASH. No paper. No bots. No ties.

The Berneout Pledge is experimental legal technology, in active development, provided free for the public good. Nobody involved in the project will answer to you, financially or professionally, for any problem you have because of it. Formal contributor license agreements use older, better known legal mechanisms, and pose less risk. Get a lawyer if you need one.

For Contributors

The Berneout Pledge is a short pledge you can make to show that:

  1. You understand common intellectual property traps and the basic responsibilities of a good open-source contributor.

  2. Unless you say otherwise, you offer contributions to others' projects on the same terms they offer the project to you and everybody else.

Alas, these cannot otherwise be expected or implied.

To make the pledge:

  1. Create a GitHub account if you don't already have one.

  2. Fork the official GitHub repository and clone it to your computer.

  3. Read the pledge file. Make sure you understand and agree with it. Do research if you need it!

  4. Run the included sign-pledge.sh script and follow the prompts. If you sign the pledge, it will create a new commit for you that will be easy for projects to verify.

  5. Push the new commit to your fork on GitHub.

The end result should be a fork of the official repository at https://github.com/{you}/berneout-pledge with one additional commit. Like this one.

If you change your mind about the pledge later, remove your fork from GitHub.

For Maintainers

Of the current popular contributor licensing approaches, the Berneout Pledge works most like the Developer Certificate of Origin used in Linux kernel development. A few important differences:

  1. By signing, folks making the Berneout Pledge take specific, individual action to show they understand the basics and norms of contributor licensing and offer their stuff accordingly.

  2. The Berneout Pledge helps educate contributors about works made for hire, transparency, and the need to get permission to contribute code from work.

  3. The Berneout Pledge is easier and friendlier to read. No cross-references. No legal-style numbering. No license header. Just five paragraphs.

  4. The Berneout Pledge is designed for GitHub Flow, rather than Kernel or Git Flow. Commits come direct from their contributors, rather than through a gauntlet of reviewers and subsystem maintainers. There are no metadata tags, like Signed-Off-By, to add. Contributors show their agreement by signing forks of the pledge under the same GitHub user names they use to contribute, making them easy to check, even for new and one-time contributors.

For Everybody

The most important thing the Berneout Pledge does is present contributor licensing as it is. Giving as you take and watching out for others are awesome things open-source people do and should be proud of doing, not ritual dances to appease fancy-pants jerks. Nobody "complies with" the Berneout Pledge. That's not how any of this stuff works.

Longer term, the Berneout Pledge might help make the case that licensing contributions on the project's public terms is the norm, and should be implied wherever open-source happens. Section 5 of Apache 2.0 was a good start. The Berneout Pledge builds steam for "inbound=outbound" even under other important licenses that don't mention what's expected.

berneout-pledge's People

Contributors

kemitchell avatar rohieb avatar squeek502 avatar timmc avatar

Stargazers

 avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar

Watchers

 avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar

berneout-pledge's Issues

Question on the pledge's viability if deleted from the contributor's repository

@kemitchell I just finished reading your fantastic article on the MIT license as well as all the comments, and I saw the mention about the pledge. I find it extremely promising.

Question on the wording here:

This pledge applies to all the contributions I offer, so long as I
make this pledge available at: (user-owned repository)

What does this mean for previous contributions, if the contributor decides to take the pledge down, or delete their github account?

The intuitive thing is to have one pledge per organization and store the signed pledges in git, but that means losing a little scaling nicety of the pledge. More importantly, commits can easily be faked. This can be remedied by asking users to gpg-sign their commits, but now we're back to a system even more daunting than CLAs.

License

Your tool doesn't explicitly say what the project license is. This is a bit ironic, wouldn't you say? ๐Ÿ˜‰

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.