Zynot Foundation Forks Gentoo
deque_alpha writes "The Gentoo Linux distribution has been forked by a group of Gentoo developers and community members. This fork is being placed under the control of the non-profit Zynot Foundation, which will "hold the source code, trademarks, and any other intellectual property developed by and for its community." The goals of the fork include improving stability and cross-platform reliability to bring the Gentoo-developed technology to the enterprise and embedded arenas." Another reader points out Zack Welch's long article at Zynot.org on reasons for forking the Gentoo distribution.
and so on. This document implies that he himself could be removed from the board of directors once it is run completely by the community, although I doubt that would happen.
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/ 9606
You miss the point, though. The true admin of the server can still do whatever he wants, by authenticating with the SELinux policy system. Even if the server gets rooted, it's all for naught without being able to authenticate with SELinux. If you understand anything about security, you know how valuable that can be for a system that needs hardcore security.
"You tried your best and failed miserably. The lesson is...never try. Heh!" -Homer
If you read the article he claims that much of their existing infrastructure is either directly or indirectly on loan from him...
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Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
Instead the weekly news summary is filled with the joyous harmony of discussion on why certain liscences deserve to be punished for not being free enough. I like the debian package system but theres a lot of far out techno-politicals involved as well. I guess it hasn't been to large of a turn off though since I'm still using it ;).
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Actually we're going nonprofit soon. This has been repeatedly mentioned on the gentoo-dev mailing list by drobbins.
When have we ever tried to pass ourselves off as a nonprofit? We're currently a for-profit. We're going nonprofit soon. We've always been upfront about our current situation. We're not making any money, by the way.
When Source Mage was first being formed (which itself was after a series of ugly fork-related situations) everyone made sure to put a lot of effort into creating strong Debian-like guidelines to ensure that it would be controlled by its community and not have to deal with the corruption that seems to be present at Gentoo. It will be interesting to see if this controversy will push any users toward switching to Source Mage. More info about it here.
Though of course, I must say, you should probably save yourself the trouble of compiling all that crap anyway and just get yourself a real distro.
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Daniel Robbins's reply reads like it was written by the Iraqi Information Minister...
~Dalcius
Rome wasn't burnt in a day.
The original
The fork
Thats just the two versions of XFree86, I havn't even bothered to include any commercial X servers (E.g. Metro, Sun etc.)
Apt+dpkg are quite large for PDA's, weighing in at 1.5 megs after pruning out the obvious things like manual pages. Apt is also dependent on libstdc++, which is another 600k. 2.1 megs for package management, not the greatest idea when you are dealing with a device with only 16MB of onboard storage space.
Alternativly you can use ipkg, which is rather buggy, but has the benefit of fitting in 116KB of space. Compiling just frightens me. Some of this stuff takes a while to compile on my desktop.
Ian Murdock handed the reins of the Debian project to Bruce Perens in 1996. Progeny was founded three years later in 1999. To say that the kind of control that Gentoo Inc has over Gentoo Linux is similar to any relationship between Progeny and Debian is to stretch the comparison to the breaking point if you ask me.
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