From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: judge.packham@gmail.com (Chris Packham) Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2015 17:10:32 +1200 Subject: Kernel contributions from organisations and individual privacy In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: To: kernelnewbies@lists.kernelnewbies.org List-Id: kernelnewbies.lists.kernelnewbies.org It's not a concern for the _employer_ (unless we say something particularly inflammatory), in fact the organisation sees the benefit of the company name getting out there in technical circles. It's more a case of the _employee_ not wanting their name to show up in mailing list archives, similar to people that don't want a phone book listing or twitter/facebook/google+. One option is for someone (like me) to do the submission and work with upstream to get the change accepted, I don't have a problem with this but it does mean that if/when I move on I take the kudos (as well as the criticism) with me and the company loses out. On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 4:58 PM, Jason Ball wrote: > I had a similar situation and managed to route patches via an intermediary > to protect my employers anonymity at the time. You may (should) be able to > find an appropriate sponsor depending on the nature of the customisations. > > > > On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 7:19 PM, Chris Packham > wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> This came up at work today and I'm not sure where the best place to >> ask is. I almost went straight to the lkml but I figured I'd start >> with newbies first. >> >> We've been using the Linux kernel in our products for a number of >> years now. We're doing all the right things w.r.t GPL compliance but >> we're not actively pushing that much upstream. This means we're >> effectively maintaining our own Linux fork with very few resources. >> I'm trying to avoid this by encouraging developers to get their >> changes upstreamed. >> >> This is good for our organisation because we don't have to re-do our >> changes when we need to take a new kernel version. Most developers see >> this as a good career building for them. But some developers value >> their individual privacy over career progression. >> >> My initial response to that was well we can just make a dummy gmail >> account or even setup a swdept@$organisation shared address. But >> SubmittingPatches actually says to sign patches with your real name >> not a pseudonym. >> >> Does this basically mean people that value privacy are unable to >> contribute? >> >> Thanks, >> Chris >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Kernelnewbies mailing list >> Kernelnewbies at kernelnewbies.org >> http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies > > > > > -- > > -- > > Teach your kids Science, or somebody else will :/ > > jason at ball.net > vk2vjb at google.com > callsign: vk2vjb > >