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The Software Freedom Conservancy is an organization that provides a non-profit home and infrastructure for free/open source software projects,〔〔 established in 2006.〔〔 As of April 2014, Conservancy had 30 member projects, including Boost, BusyBox, Git, Inkscape, Samba, Sugar Labs and Wine.〔 == History == Conservancy was established in 2006.〔〔 In 2007 Conservancy started coordinated GPL compliance and enforcement actions, primarily for the BusyBox project,〔 see BusyBox GPL lawsuits. Later, the BusyBox maintainer Rob Landley who supported initially these lawsuits, regretted his decision and criticized the suing practice of the SFC. In October 2010, Conservancy hired its first Executive Director, Bradley M. Kuhn〔 and a year later, its first General Counsel, Tony Sebro.〔 In May 2012, Conservancy took on GPL compliance and enforcement for several other member projects, and for a number of individual Linux kernel developers.〔〔 In March 2014, Conservancy appointed Karen Sandler as its Executive Director, with Bradley M. Kuhn taking on the role as Distinguished Technologist.〔〔 As of April 2014, Conservancy had 30 member projects, including Boost, BusyBox, Git, Inkscape, Samba, Sugar Labs and Wine.〔 In February 2015, the Outreachy program (formerly the Free and Open Source Software Program for Women) announced that it was moving from The GNOME Project to become part of Conservancy. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Software Freedom Conservancy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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