Project governance #27
Replies: 3 comments 5 replies
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LicenseTo make the project sustainable, we must define its limits from the beginning, including on a legal level. I think we want to maximize useful contribution and limit non-contributing forks or the temptation to plunder our code. I suggest changing the MIT license to a less permissive one. This will be an added incentive for code feedback (AWS uses Apache v2 for its SDKs, and if we're looking for systematic PR of improvements, GNU GPLv3 is a good choice). |
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Website and social networkWe need contributors. Let's build a very basic communication strategy to attract them:
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Github organizationTo create a sense of belonging, to gather a strong community of reliable contributors and maintainers, it is good to create a common banner. In this concern, it would be a good complement to host the project in its own Github organization to attract volunteers. It's a little early to talk about it, and at the same time migrating a repo after it's been widely released is tedious... |
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It's a bit early in the project lifecycle, and techies aren't always keen on these topics so feel free to close this thread 😉. However, I find it best to talk about them quickly to avoid the complexities of migration, if we find success later.
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