Fabian Arrotin
2011-Jul-08 17:01 UTC
[CentOS-docs] CentOS 6 (and 5.6) doc on http://www.centos.org/docs
Hi documentation team, As CentOS 6 is now being released to the mirrors, it would be a good time to think about putting the accurate documentation on http://www.centos.org/docs Red Hat changed their documentation license in the past and they are now using the CC-by-SA license. My own understanding (but IANAL) is that we can just share the documentation , and just linking back to upstream without modifying the documentation. That would be easier for newer doc as every 'bit' that is CentOS specific should/would be in our release note wiki page for that version. Read the "Legal Notice" section for example on that page : http://docs.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Deployment_Guide/index.html As well as the CC-by-SA license here : http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ What are your ideas on that ? Fabian
Ed Heron
2011-Jul-08 20:14 UTC
[CentOS-docs] CentOS 6 (and 5.6) doc on http://www.centos.org/docs
On Fri, 2011-07-08 at 19:01 +0200, Fabian Arrotin wrote:> Hi documentation team, > > As CentOS 6 is now being released to the mirrors, it would be a good > time to think about putting the accurate documentation on > http://www.centos.org/docs > Red Hat changed their documentation license in the past and they are now > using the CC-by-SA license. > My own understanding (but IANAL) is that we can just share the > documentation , and just linking back to upstream without modifying the > documentation. > That would be easier for newer doc as every 'bit' that is CentOS > specific should/would be in our release note wiki page for that version. > > Read the "Legal Notice" section for example on that page : > http://docs.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Deployment_Guide/index.html > > As well as the CC-by-SA license here : > http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ > > What are your ideas on that ? > > FabianAs a relatively independent project, it is not fair to expect the upstream provider to bear the network load of serving their documents to CentOS users. It is my impression that we could and should 'adapt' the documentation by removing the upstream provider logos and other marks (as applicable) and mark the documentation as CentOS documentation. Obviously, including references to the original document. This would give the CentOS project the ability to edit out the aspects that are specific to the upstream product, such as the contract number during install. The most obvious downside is that any documentation updates released by the upstream provider would have to be merged into the CentOS documentation. The most obvious upside is that we could modify [our version of] the documentation directly without submitting (though possibly also submitting) bug reports against the original docs. We would want to release our modifications with the same CC-by-SA license so others could use them as appropriate. I remember a short discussion, on this list, mentioning the change of license a while back.