Open Source and the Open Usage Commons, with Chris DiBona
Jul 15, 2020•50 min•Ep. 112
Episode description
An open source license grants rights on copyright and patents, but not trademarks. Chris DiBona has some ideas on how to address that. He has spent his career in open source, including over 15 years running Google’s Open Source Programs Office, and is one of the directors of the new Open Usage Commons. It launched last week with three projects - Angular, Gerrit and Istio - transferring their trademarks. Chris joins Adam and Craig to talk about Google’s work in open source, and why a new organisation is needed.
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- Announcing Kustomize support for Pulumi
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- AKS adds console RBAC and policy integration
- Kublr adds in-place upgrades and external clusters
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- VA Linux
- San Mehat
- Google Search Appliance
- Maintainer of Git
- Author of Git
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- WASM became a W3C standard
- Google Summer of Code
- Open Usage Commons
- Debian Free Software Guidelines
- Google Contributor License Agreement
- Istio governance: Steering Committee and TOC
- Silicon Valley
- Chris DiBona on Twitter
- Open Source at Google