How Apache open source projects can improve their reputation and longevity by attracting new contributors and by better managing their own brand and trademarks.
Successfully Profiting From Apache BrandsShane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on Apache project brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects, and gain a competitive advantage? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, I'll help show you how your company can successfully profit and "partner" with Apache projects. Apache is happy for you to make a profit off of our software in all sorts of ways - as long as you give credit to our volunteer-led and independent project communities. You may even incorporate Apache brands within your brands, but in specific ways that still give our communities credit. And if you're interested in having more influence over the technology, we have tips for how to contribute to Apache projects in all sorts of ways. We're here to help!
Profiting From Apache Brands Without Losing Your SoulShane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on the Apache brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, Shane can help show business and technical leaders some of the ways they can respectfully and successfully market and position their own services and products in relation to Apache project brands. The key message is: Apache project governance is independent; but we are happy to have businesses build their software and services on any Apache software products. You may incorporate Apache brands within your brands, but in specific ways that still give our communities credit. We're here to help!
Presentation licensed under the Apache License v2.0 allowing broad re-use!
Practical Trademark Law for FOSS ProjectsShane Curcuru
Looking for ways to capitalize on the emerging FOSS brands that are driving innovation? Want to “make a new open source community” for your product, but not sure how to control the trademarks? Wondering if you should let the marketing team run with the great new brand campaign, or if you need to ask the lawyers about trademarks first?
This session will provide an introduction to The Apache Software Foundation – it’s history, organization and principles, and how Apache projects work. You will learn about The Apache Way of managing meritocracy-based and community driven projects as is practiced by all of the 100+ Apache projects, the levels of participation in Apache projects, and how you can get involved. This talk will also touch on the how the Apache governance process and the permissive Apache 2.0 license help ensure longer-lived open source projects, and provide a different opportunity for engagement than some other source communities and license models.
Shane Curcuru was elected as a Member of the ASF in 2002, and has been volunteering on public relations, conferences, brand management, and various other areas at Apache ever since. He also serves as a Director.
Improving Your Apache Project's Image And BrandShane Curcuru
Want to find new ways to draw in contributors to your project? Looking to attract ideas and attention from some of the corporate vendors, but don't want to lose your independence? Don't know how to approach your employer's plans to launch BigCo's SuperLucene product?
Learn how to improve your project's brand, drawing in newcomers as productive contributors, and defending your brand from aggressive vendors. Dealing fairly and firmly with companies mis-using your good reputation seems hard, but it doesn't need to be.
Learn about what uses of Apache brands that are OK, versus infringing uses hungry vendors try to use - and how to stop them. The strong independent reputation of your project and Apache overall relies on every PMC policing their own brand effectively and fairly. The Trademarks Committee is here to help!
In the modern open source world, where licenses and DVCS’ allow instant and infinite forking, the only true control point for a community-based open source project is its name, its logo, and its identity. Your brand is your identity: this is how the rest of the world sees you and your project.
How can a volunteer-led open source project control it’s own identity and brand? How do you manage your project’s brand when most of your volunteers are coders who don’t want to get involved with lawyers or deal with enforcing trademarks? How can the community keep their brand independent and free of commercial influence, so they can ensure the maximum number of people and corporations are interested in participating in their project?
Similarly, how can businesses respectfully use open source brands to their own advantage – without being seen as co-opting and independent or open community open source project solely for their own gain? The desire to control the next hot project for your profit may quickly turn on you when another company simply forks the code under a better marketed service.
Learn the basics of all these topics and more with Shane Curcuru, who volunteers as Vice President, Brand Management for The Apache Software Foundation. Over the past few years Shane has led a group of volunteer ASF Members to define and implement a consistent brand policy for all 100 Apache projects – spanning from the veritable HTTPD and Tomcat to the newest CouchDB and Hadoop.
State of the Feather - Apache:Big Data - BudapestShane Curcuru
An update on the Apache Software Foundation and an overview of its projects. A quick look at how the ASF works and the key events affecting the foundation in recent history.
Successfully Profiting From Apache BrandsShane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on Apache project brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects, and gain a competitive advantage? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, I'll help show you how your company can successfully profit and "partner" with Apache projects. Apache is happy for you to make a profit off of our software in all sorts of ways - as long as you give credit to our volunteer-led and independent project communities. You may even incorporate Apache brands within your brands, but in specific ways that still give our communities credit. And if you're interested in having more influence over the technology, we have tips for how to contribute to Apache projects in all sorts of ways. We're here to help!
Profiting From Apache Brands Without Losing Your SoulShane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on the Apache brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, Shane can help show business and technical leaders some of the ways they can respectfully and successfully market and position their own services and products in relation to Apache project brands. The key message is: Apache project governance is independent; but we are happy to have businesses build their software and services on any Apache software products. You may incorporate Apache brands within your brands, but in specific ways that still give our communities credit. We're here to help!
Presentation licensed under the Apache License v2.0 allowing broad re-use!
Practical Trademark Law for FOSS ProjectsShane Curcuru
Looking for ways to capitalize on the emerging FOSS brands that are driving innovation? Want to “make a new open source community” for your product, but not sure how to control the trademarks? Wondering if you should let the marketing team run with the great new brand campaign, or if you need to ask the lawyers about trademarks first?
This session will provide an introduction to The Apache Software Foundation – it’s history, organization and principles, and how Apache projects work. You will learn about The Apache Way of managing meritocracy-based and community driven projects as is practiced by all of the 100+ Apache projects, the levels of participation in Apache projects, and how you can get involved. This talk will also touch on the how the Apache governance process and the permissive Apache 2.0 license help ensure longer-lived open source projects, and provide a different opportunity for engagement than some other source communities and license models.
Shane Curcuru was elected as a Member of the ASF in 2002, and has been volunteering on public relations, conferences, brand management, and various other areas at Apache ever since. He also serves as a Director.
Improving Your Apache Project's Image And BrandShane Curcuru
Want to find new ways to draw in contributors to your project? Looking to attract ideas and attention from some of the corporate vendors, but don't want to lose your independence? Don't know how to approach your employer's plans to launch BigCo's SuperLucene product?
Learn how to improve your project's brand, drawing in newcomers as productive contributors, and defending your brand from aggressive vendors. Dealing fairly and firmly with companies mis-using your good reputation seems hard, but it doesn't need to be.
Learn about what uses of Apache brands that are OK, versus infringing uses hungry vendors try to use - and how to stop them. The strong independent reputation of your project and Apache overall relies on every PMC policing their own brand effectively and fairly. The Trademarks Committee is here to help!
In the modern open source world, where licenses and DVCS’ allow instant and infinite forking, the only true control point for a community-based open source project is its name, its logo, and its identity. Your brand is your identity: this is how the rest of the world sees you and your project.
How can a volunteer-led open source project control it’s own identity and brand? How do you manage your project’s brand when most of your volunteers are coders who don’t want to get involved with lawyers or deal with enforcing trademarks? How can the community keep their brand independent and free of commercial influence, so they can ensure the maximum number of people and corporations are interested in participating in their project?
Similarly, how can businesses respectfully use open source brands to their own advantage – without being seen as co-opting and independent or open community open source project solely for their own gain? The desire to control the next hot project for your profit may quickly turn on you when another company simply forks the code under a better marketed service.
Learn the basics of all these topics and more with Shane Curcuru, who volunteers as Vice President, Brand Management for The Apache Software Foundation. Over the past few years Shane has led a group of volunteer ASF Members to define and implement a consistent brand policy for all 100 Apache projects – spanning from the veritable HTTPD and Tomcat to the newest CouchDB and Hadoop.
State of the Feather - Apache:Big Data - BudapestShane Curcuru
An update on the Apache Software Foundation and an overview of its projects. A quick look at how the ASF works and the key events affecting the foundation in recent history.
Bending the Rules: Community over Code over Policy.pescetti
My presentation at ApacheCon Europe 2014 showing how policy at the Apache Software Foundation can be adapted to the needs of the open-source projects it hosts, based on the Apache OpenOffice experience.
Embracing InnerSource for your adaptive Digital TransformationPiergiorgio Lucidi
During this session you'll be able to discover how InnerSource will bring a disruptive cultural change for approaching Digital Transformation. Everything will be shared in a smart way to be faster on any change, the meritocracy approach will reward people involved and attract new talents. Finally prepare an action plan with your team for any improvement of your architecture adding new technology bricks when the business needs.
Supporting Apache Brands While Making A Profit - ApacheCon 2014Shane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on the Apache brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, I can help show business and technical leaders some of the ways they can respectfully and successfully market and position their own services in relation to Apache project brands. The key message is: Apache project governance is independent; but we are happy to have businesses build their software and services on any Apache software products.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0
The Apache Way - Dataworks Summit 2017Brett Porter
The Apache Way is a phrase used to describe the style of community-led development that characterises projects at the ASF. This talk covers how the ASF is structured to support that, how we apply The Apache Way, and why that has led to such successful projects.
The Journey of Apache ManifoldCF: Learning from ASF's SuccessesPiergiorgio Lucidi
Every ASF project has a story to tell and behind a story we find people contributing with a real love in technologies.
They share the Open Source philosophy and this honest commitment in terms of personal effort for achieving any kind of improvement for the project means that there are individual contributors following a common light: The Apache Way.
Piergiorgio will describe the path taken by the Apache ManifoldCF Community for getting these results, starting from the incubation process to the promotion as Top Level Project and then engaging new contributors.
Finally Piergiorgio explains how the Community can help with a huge benefit also in the strategic view for a project.
Each contributor shares his own specific expertise on the field and his technological sensibility will bring added value until to drastically improve the scope of the entire project. Listen to the Community!
"Belalang Kupu-Kupu, dari Hama jadi Maha" Inilah skenario bisnis sosial yang kami garap untuk memberdayakan komunitas marjinal penyandang disabilitas.
Melalui strategi 5 C, Connect | Collaborative | Communicate | Commerce | Culture, kegiatan ini akan bergerak menciptakan impact positif bagi perubahan sosial
Bending the Rules: Community over Code over Policy.pescetti
My presentation at ApacheCon Europe 2014 showing how policy at the Apache Software Foundation can be adapted to the needs of the open-source projects it hosts, based on the Apache OpenOffice experience.
Embracing InnerSource for your adaptive Digital TransformationPiergiorgio Lucidi
During this session you'll be able to discover how InnerSource will bring a disruptive cultural change for approaching Digital Transformation. Everything will be shared in a smart way to be faster on any change, the meritocracy approach will reward people involved and attract new talents. Finally prepare an action plan with your team for any improvement of your architecture adding new technology bricks when the business needs.
Supporting Apache Brands While Making A Profit - ApacheCon 2014Shane Curcuru
Does your company want to capitalize on the Apache brand? Are you interested in seeing how closely you can tie your marketing into the latest Apache projects? Do you recognize the importance of supporting the Apache ecosystem, not just with code contributions but other actions?
As VP of Brand Management for all Apache projects, I can help show business and technical leaders some of the ways they can respectfully and successfully market and position their own services in relation to Apache project brands. The key message is: Apache project governance is independent; but we are happy to have businesses build their software and services on any Apache software products.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0
The Apache Way - Dataworks Summit 2017Brett Porter
The Apache Way is a phrase used to describe the style of community-led development that characterises projects at the ASF. This talk covers how the ASF is structured to support that, how we apply The Apache Way, and why that has led to such successful projects.
The Journey of Apache ManifoldCF: Learning from ASF's SuccessesPiergiorgio Lucidi
Every ASF project has a story to tell and behind a story we find people contributing with a real love in technologies.
They share the Open Source philosophy and this honest commitment in terms of personal effort for achieving any kind of improvement for the project means that there are individual contributors following a common light: The Apache Way.
Piergiorgio will describe the path taken by the Apache ManifoldCF Community for getting these results, starting from the incubation process to the promotion as Top Level Project and then engaging new contributors.
Finally Piergiorgio explains how the Community can help with a huge benefit also in the strategic view for a project.
Each contributor shares his own specific expertise on the field and his technological sensibility will bring added value until to drastically improve the scope of the entire project. Listen to the Community!
"Belalang Kupu-Kupu, dari Hama jadi Maha" Inilah skenario bisnis sosial yang kami garap untuk memberdayakan komunitas marjinal penyandang disabilitas.
Melalui strategi 5 C, Connect | Collaborative | Communicate | Commerce | Culture, kegiatan ini akan bergerak menciptakan impact positif bagi perubahan sosial
Wenn man wissen will, was die eigene Applikation so macht, hilft messen. Als Appetizer für diejenigen, die eventuell vor einem ähnlichen Problem stehen. Vortrag bei der PHP Usergroup München.
In the modern open source world, where licenses and DVCS’ allow instant and infinite forking, the only true control point for a community-based open source project is its name, its logo, and its identity. Your brand is your identity: this is how the rest of the world sees you and your project. Your brand is most of what your users see, and is a key way to attract new contributors.
How can a volunteer-led open source project control it’s own identity and brand? How do you manage your project’s brand when most of your volunteers are coders who don’t want to get involved with lawyers or deal with enforcing trademarks? How can the community keep their brand independent and free of commercial influence, so they can ensure the maximum number of people and corporations are interested in participating in their project?
Similarly, how can businesses respectfully use open source brands to their own advantage – without being seen as co-opting an independent or open community open source project solely for their own gain? The desire to control the next hot project for your company's profit may quickly turn on you when another company simply forks the code under a better marketed service.
Learn the basics of all these topics and more with Shane Curcuru, who volunteers as Vice President, Brand Management for The Apache Software Foundation. Over the past few years Shane has led a group of volunteer ASF Members to define and implement a consistent brand policy for all 100+ Apache projects – spanning from the veritable HTTPD and Tomcat to the newest CouchDB and Hadoop.
SFO15-TR1: The Philosophy of Open Source DevelopmentLinaro
SFO15-TR1: The Philosophy of Open Source Development
Speaker: Jorge Ramirez-Ortiz
Date: September 22, 2015
★ Session Description ★
FLOSS - Free / Libre Open Source Software [1] What _is_ “the community”? What do they want from you? What do you get in return? [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free\_and\_open-source\_software
★ Resources ★
Video:
Presentation:
Etherpad: pad.linaro.org/p/sfo15-tr1
Pathable: https://sfo15.pathable.com/meetings/302926
★ Event Details ★
Linaro Connect San Francisco 2015 - #SFO15
September 21-25, 2015
Hyatt Regency Hotel
http://www.linaro.org
http://connect.linaro.org
The big DAM debate: Open source VS. proprietary softwareResourceSpace
This slide deck aims to:
- Help you decide whether to host your new DAM system in the cloud or with an on-premise solution
- Explores the differences between open source and proprietary software
Summarizing some common mistakes when building/launching a new API. Additionally, some strategies to follow in order to create the best product in an API.
Managing the Software Supply Chain: Policies that Promote Innovation While Op...FINOS
Jeff Luszcz, Flexera Software: Managing the Software Supply Chain: Policies that Promote Innovation While Optimizing Security and Compliance.
Do you build software, sell software consulting services, or contribute to the open source community? Understanding your software supply chain and learning the best way to manage them is worth your time. As the consumption of open source and other third party software increases, companies who know how to manage and influence the supply chain have a competitive advantage over those who don’t do it as well. Developers, Architects, and IP attorneys need to understand the long term impact of leveraging Open Source and Third Party software in their enterprise software, internal tools and web services. Join Jeff Luszcz, VP of Product Management at Flexera, as he walks through best practices to manage OSS in the financial services world.
Some of the discipline and principles the "Paypal as a Service" is using to create a REST API driven platform across all of Paypal engineering.
As presented at @APIWorld 2014 in San Francisco 9/17
Winning the Cage-Match: How to Successfully Navigate Open Source Software iss...Black Duck by Synopsys
A blow-by-blow discussion of key open source software-related issues and deal points from the point of view of buyer/investor vs. seller/investee. Understanding the key legal and technical risks, as well as strategies for mitigating them, will help you to speed and smooth negotiations, avoid protracted due diligence and get better deal terms, increasing overall value.
OSSF 2018 - Jilayne Lovejoy - Training: Intro to Open SourceFINOS
This training session will cover some of the topics from the OpenChain curriculum, including:
introduction to intellectual property law as related to open source
introduction to open source licenses
overview of using open source software in products and open source license compliance
considerations for open source contributions and projects
The goal of this session is to provide basic foundation knowledge of open source software upon which to start building policy, process and practices within your organization.
What is SaaS vs Open Source | Open Source CMS (Content Management System) vs ...ClickTecs
If you are reading this, you have probably come to a crossroad while building a website or an online application. Is it better to use a SaaS platform or is it better to use an Open Source Platform? That is the question? The answer to this dilemma will hopefully be determined below.
In this post, we define ‘Platforms’, ‘CMS’, ‘SaaS’ and ‘Open Source’, and we will break down the pros and cons of Software as a Service when compared to the pros and cons of an Open Source Content Management Systems.
Innovating Inference - Remote Triggering of Large Language Models on HPC Clus...Globus
Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently the center of attention in the tech world, particularly for their potential to advance research. In this presentation, we'll explore a straightforward and effective method for quickly initiating inference runs on supercomputers using the vLLM tool with Globus Compute, specifically on the Polaris system at ALCF. We'll begin by briefly discussing the popularity and applications of LLMs in various fields. Following this, we will introduce the vLLM tool, and explain how it integrates with Globus Compute to efficiently manage LLM operations on Polaris. Attendees will learn the practical aspects of setting up and remotely triggering LLMs from local machines, focusing on ease of use and efficiency. This talk is ideal for researchers and practitioners looking to leverage the power of LLMs in their work, offering a clear guide to harnessing supercomputing resources for quick and effective LLM inference.
Providing Globus Services to Users of JASMIN for Environmental Data AnalysisGlobus
JASMIN is the UK’s high-performance data analysis platform for environmental science, operated by STFC on behalf of the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). In addition to its role in hosting the CEDA Archive (NERC’s long-term repository for climate, atmospheric science & Earth observation data in the UK), JASMIN provides a collaborative platform to a community of around 2,000 scientists in the UK and beyond, providing nearly 400 environmental science projects with working space, compute resources and tools to facilitate their work. High-performance data transfer into and out of JASMIN has always been a key feature, with many scientists bringing model outputs from supercomputers elsewhere in the UK, to analyse against observational or other model data in the CEDA Archive. A growing number of JASMIN users are now realising the benefits of using the Globus service to provide reliable and efficient data movement and other tasks in this and other contexts. Further use cases involve long-distance (intercontinental) transfers to and from JASMIN, and collecting results from a mobile atmospheric radar system, pushing data to JASMIN via a lightweight Globus deployment. We provide details of how Globus fits into our current infrastructure, our experience of the recent migration to GCSv5.4, and of our interest in developing use of the wider ecosystem of Globus services for the benefit of our user community.
Check out the webinar slides to learn more about how XfilesPro transforms Salesforce document management by leveraging its world-class applications. For more details, please connect with sales@xfilespro.com
If you want to watch the on-demand webinar, please click here: https://www.xfilespro.com/webinars/salesforce-document-management-2-0-smarter-faster-better/
Unleash Unlimited Potential with One-Time Purchase
BoxLang is more than just a language; it's a community. By choosing a Visionary License, you're not just investing in your success, you're actively contributing to the ongoing development and support of BoxLang.
Large Language Models and the End of ProgrammingMatt Welsh
Talk by Matt Welsh at Craft Conference 2024 on the impact that Large Language Models will have on the future of software development. In this talk, I discuss the ways in which LLMs will impact the software industry, from replacing human software developers with AI, to replacing conventional software with models that perform reasoning, computation, and problem-solving.
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
Enhancing Project Management Efficiency_ Leveraging AI Tools like ChatGPT.pdfJay Das
With the advent of artificial intelligence or AI tools, project management processes are undergoing a transformative shift. By using tools like ChatGPT, and Bard organizations can empower their leaders and managers to plan, execute, and monitor projects more effectively.
How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
OpenFOAM solver for Helmholtz equation, helmholtzFoam / helmholtzBubbleFoamtakuyayamamoto1800
In this slide, we show the simulation example and the way to compile this solver.
In this solver, the Helmholtz equation can be solved by helmholtzFoam. Also, the Helmholtz equation with uniformly dispersed bubbles can be simulated by helmholtzBubbleFoam.
Experience our free, in-depth three-part Tendenci Platform Corporate Membership Management workshop series! In Session 1 on May 14th, 2024, we began with an Introduction and Setup, mastering the configuration of your Corporate Membership Module settings to establish membership types, applications, and more. Then, on May 16th, 2024, in Session 2, we focused on binding individual members to a Corporate Membership and Corporate Reps, teaching you how to add individual members and assign Corporate Representatives to manage dues, renewals, and associated members. Finally, on May 28th, 2024, in Session 3, we covered questions and concerns, addressing any queries or issues you may have.
For more Tendenci AMS events, check out www.tendenci.com/events
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I ...Juraj Vysvader
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I didn't get rich from it but it did have 63K downloads (powered possible tens of thousands of websites).
Cyaniclab : Software Development Agency Portfolio.pdfCyanic lab
CyanicLab, an offshore custom software development company based in Sweden,India, Finland, is your go-to partner for startup development and innovative web design solutions. Our expert team specializes in crafting cutting-edge software tailored to meet the unique needs of startups and established enterprises alike. From conceptualization to execution, we offer comprehensive services including web and mobile app development, UI/UX design, and ongoing software maintenance. Ready to elevate your business? Contact CyanicLab today and let us propel your vision to success with our top-notch IT solutions.
SOCRadar Research Team: Latest Activities of IntelBrokerSOCRadar
The European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation (Europol) has suffered an alleged data breach after a notorious threat actor claimed to have exfiltrated data from its systems. Infamous data leaker IntelBroker posted on the even more infamous BreachForums hacking forum, saying that Europol suffered a data breach this month.
The alleged breach affected Europol agencies CCSE, EC3, Europol Platform for Experts, Law Enforcement Forum, and SIRIUS. Infiltration of these entities can disrupt ongoing investigations and compromise sensitive intelligence shared among international law enforcement agencies.
However, this is neither the first nor the last activity of IntekBroker. We have compiled for you what happened in the last few days. To track such hacker activities on dark web sources like hacker forums, private Telegram channels, and other hidden platforms where cyber threats often originate, you can check SOCRadar’s Dark Web News.
Stay Informed on Threat Actors’ Activity on the Dark Web with SOCRadar!
Field Employee Tracking System| MiTrack App| Best Employee Tracking Solution|...informapgpstrackings
Keep tabs on your field staff effortlessly with Informap Technology Centre LLC. Real-time tracking, task assignment, and smart features for efficient management. Request a live demo today!
For more details, visit us : https://informapuae.com/field-staff-tracking/
Accelerate Enterprise Software Engineering with PlatformlessWSO2
Key takeaways:
Challenges of building platforms and the benefits of platformless.
Key principles of platformless, including API-first, cloud-native middleware, platform engineering, and developer experience.
How Choreo enables the platformless experience.
How key concepts like application architecture, domain-driven design, zero trust, and cell-based architecture are inherently a part of Choreo.
Demo of an end-to-end app built and deployed on Choreo.
We describe the deployment and use of Globus Compute for remote computation. This content is aimed at researchers who wish to compute on remote resources using a unified programming interface, as well as system administrators who will deploy and operate Globus Compute services on their research computing infrastructure.
Listen to the keynote address and hear about the latest developments from Rachana Ananthakrishnan and Ian Foster who review the updates to the Globus Platform and Service, and the relevance of Globus to the scientific community as an automation platform to accelerate scientific discovery.
1. How To Keep Your Apache®
Project's Independence
Shane Curcuru
VP, Brand Management
The Apache Software Foundation
How To Keep Your Apache®
Project's Independence
Shane Curcuru
VP, Brand Management
The Apache Software Foundation
2. Introduction
• Shane Curcuru - VP, Brand Management, The Apache Software
Foundation
• Volunteer, appointed by Apache Board of Directors
• Defne and implement trademark & brand policy for all 200+ Apache
project communities
• Provide trademark support for projects
• Involved at Apache since 1999
• Not a lawyer
• Questions? <trademarks@apache.org>
3. Topics
• Apache Project Independence
• Trademark concepts brief overview
• Adjectives, nominative use, consumer confusion, and registration
• PMC Branding Responsibilities
• Policing Third Party Brand Use
• Granting Third Party Permissions
• When To Work With trademarks@
• Resources / Q&A
5. PMCs: Be independent
• Apache projects are governed independently
• Treat all participants / contributors fairly
• Apache software products are also independent
• Clearly branded, eg, Apache Foo
• Independence = Apache Foo software performs useful functions,
without additional (proprietary) software
http://community.apache.org/projectIndependence
This is required of all Apache projects
6. PMCs: Be inclusive
• An inclusive community relies on independence from commercial
infuence (a requirement for Apache projects)
• Committer & PMC member diversity is the best way to maintain long-
term independent project governance
• Actively seek out new contributions with “low hanging” bugs; review
patches quickly and thoughtfully
• Encourage positive contributions; mentor new contributors to
become committers and PMC members
• Promote real-world stories of how project software helps end users
8. What are trademarks?
• A trademark is the legal instantiation of your brand
• Your trademark is the specifc name or logo a consumer (user of your
software) associates with a downloadable software program
• Trademarks are about preventing consumer confusion as to the
source of goods within a specifc feld of commerce
• Trademarks protect consumers by ensuring expectations of quality,
functionality, etc. available from a specifc vendor
• Trademark vs Brand:
• A brand includes many elements – names, logos, look and feel – parts of
which are specifc trademarks that signify your product or service
9. Trademarks are adjectives
• Trademarks legally are used to describe the actual goods: I buy
Kleenex® brand tissues
• We run Apache CouchDB™ software and Apache Hadoop®
software
• … but in common usage we just write: we're running Python
• Use as an adjective and marking with TM and (R) is important on your
homepage & download page
• … not as important in other places
• Your project name is not necessarily a trademark, although it may be
a service mark
10. Registered trademarks
• In most countries, common law rights accrue from actual use of a
name™ or logo™ to identify goods – without any registration
• Trademarks may also be registered® with the USPTO, the
EU/Community Trade Mark, and other individual country
governments – improves our rights
• Every country has different registration laws
• Some are “frst to fle” like China, Korea; most are “frst to use”
• Apache PMCs may request registration – now recommended
• Email tm-registrations@apache.org to request registration
11. Nominative use is OK
• Nominative use for trademarks ~= fair use for copyright
• Other people may use the trademark to describe your goods
• Personal blogs, newspaper articles, technical mailing list discussions
are almost always nominative use
• Nominative use even allows people/companies to post bad reviews of
your software product
• Not OK:
• Infringement is when a third party uses your marks in a way that
may mislead consumers as to the true source of goods, or
confuse users as to which company provides a software product
12. Nominative use is OK
• Nominative use for trademarks ~= fair use for copyright
• Other people may use the trademark to describe your goods
• Personal blogs, newspaper articles, technical mailing list discussions
are almost always nominative use
• Nominative use even allows people/companies to post bad reviews of
your software product
• Not OK:
• Infringement is when a third party uses your marks in a way that
may mislead consumers as to the true source of goods, or
confuse users as to which company provides a software product
GNOME ALERT!
15. PMCs: Be responsible
• PMCs are responsible for their own brand:
• Have a consistent brand and use it
• Be aware of how your brand is used in the marketplace
• Be respectful of other brands and the Apache brand
http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/responsibility
16. PMCs: Be consistent
• Your use of your Apache Foo™ brand is the reference
implementation
• Annotate your own trademarks (both words and logos) with ™ or ®
to make their status clear to others
• Ensure consistency in your website
• In your documentation, frst and most prominent uses
• On your download page: download Apache Foo™ software
• In publicly visible parts of your product UI
• Trademark law is not a compiler: the general consumer perception is
what counts, and that is what you can actively manage
17. PMCs: Be aware
• Be aware of how other companies use your project brand
• Situations that require your action to protect your brand/trademark:
• Inappropriate third party use of your brand may cause
confusion as to the source of software products
• It is important for the PMC to review and respond here
• Fairness to all users is critical – both with outsiders and with
companies who are contributing to your project
http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/reporting
• Unlikely to be a problem: personal blogs, press articles, software
reviews, benchmark reports, forum discussions, emails on dev@...
18. PMCs: Be respectful
• Treat other organizations’ trademarks respectfully
• Charitable or community-based projects have no business infringing
on others’ trademarks
• Be liberal in attribution and giving credit to other communities or
companies
• Respond calmly and professionally if a third party asks for/demands
changes; always cc: trademarks@
19. PMCs: Register your mark
• Recommended policy is to register your software product name
• The ASF will register most Apache product names for software goods
in the US, if requested by the PMC
• If your project is very popular, you can can request additional
registrations in other jurisdictions like the EU/CTM
http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/register
20. PMCs: Policing Use Of Your
Project Brand
PMCs: Policing Use Of Your
Project Brand
21. Police brand use privately
• When a third party is improperly using your project's brand, the PMC
needs to take action and ask for corrections!
• Assume ignorance rather than malice
• Use reporting guidelines to determine if the use is (or is not!) a
problem
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/reporting
• Always contact third parties privately (but be sure to cc: trademarks@)
• Private, direct contact allows all parties to save face
• Public confrontations often escalate, potentially damaging
everyone's reputation
22. Be professional and polite
• Whenever contacting anyone about improper brand use:
• Be professional – you are talking to managers/marketers
• Be polite – many cases are resolved through simple discussion
• Be frm – state the ASF's clear ownership of the marks
• Be specifc – quote specifc uses that we request to be changed
• Most potential infringements cases are resolved through discussion
between private@, trademarks@, and the other party
• Be patient – discussions take time to resolve
• Legal threats are never the frst step
23. Get legal advice
• The ASF has pro bono corporate counsel from DLAPiper
• Send any legal questions, especially any from outside the ASF, to:
• trademarks@ for anything brand-related (private archive)
• legal-internal@ for any specifc legal question the PMC has on
behalf of the project (private archive)
• legal-discuss@ for any general legal questions that can be
discussed publicly (public archive)
• Never grant exception to brand policy without trademarks@ approval
• Never give legal advice (unless you actually are an ASF counsel)
• Never respond to an outside lawyer without asking ASF counsel
24. PMCs: Granting Third Party
Permissions
PMCs: Granting Third Party
Permissions New Policy!
25. Granting third party permissions
• PMCs may directly grant certain third party permissions for
specifc uses (events, domains, swag / merchandise) of their
project marks
• Best practices / improved how-to guides being rolled out
• Respond promptly: acknowledge the question even if the answer
is not ready yet
• Respond professionally: many requesters are marketers or
lawyers, not coders
• Respond privately: keep on private@ unless OP used dev@
26. Responding to third party requests
• Only grant specifc permissions as noted in policy
• Events; domain names; services; merchandise
• Do not grant exceptions dealing with software product names
• But: you can allow “Powered By” names/icons (For..., Plugin...)
• Be consistent and fair when granting permissions
• Does a use of your project's brand by a third party / other company:
• Maintain clarity about the source of Apache software?
• Help the image, impact, or reach of your project community?
• Ask trademarks@ for help anytime you have a question!
27. When To Work With Trademarks@When To Work With Trademarks@
28. Trademarks@ sets policy
• The ASF owns all Apache trademarks on behalf of the projects
• PMCs are required to comply with trademark policy; PMCs
otherwise defne and promote their own brand
• Project brand design, like technical direction, is completely up to
PMCs
• trademarks@, like press@, operations@, infra@, etc. are here to serve
the needs of all Apache projects
29. Dealing with diffcult parties
• Any time a third party responds negatively, or when another company
lawyer is involved – ask trademarks@ to help craft your reply
• Any diffcult negotiations should be done by VP, Brand Management,
with appropriate legal counsel
• Most corporations respond to offcial titles
• Patience is required: trademark issues are rarely time critical
• Legal threats are never the second step
30. Trademark enforcement & legal action
• A Cease & Desist (C&D) is considered a last resort, when all other
approaches have failed
• Trademark litigation is expensive and risky
• Consider the public image of “attacking” a third party
• Most issues can be resolved with polite, frm, and private discussion
with the right parties
• A very few serious issues end up being resolved with more visible
actions: making a public case; restricting PMC or commit access;
or the board unilaterally restructuring a project
32. Thank You!
• Thanks to all Apache Members
• Thanks to all Apache committers and PMCs
• Thanks to members of Apache Trademarks Committe
• Thanks to DLAPiper counsel: Mark Radcliffe, Dash McLean, Nikkya
Williams, Carol Anne Bashir
• Thank you to companies who respect Apache brands
33. Trademark Resources - External
• Formal policy for third party use
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/
• Third party requesting permission for events
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/events
• Third party requesting permission for domains
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/domains
• All other questions
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/contact
34. Trademark Resources – For PMCs
• Policy for PMC websites
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/pmcs
• Linking to third party sites/products/services
• http://www.apache.org/foundation/marks/linking
• Project Independence is required for PMCs
• http://community.apache.org/projectIndependence
• Questions? <trademarks@apache.org> and relevant
<private@project.apache.org>
35. Questions?
Please feel free to fnd Shane with any
questions this week!
Or, Look for the Ask Me! Buttons, and just ask!
@ShaneCurcuru
http://communityovercode.com/
37. But it's open source!
• Apache License, v2.0
• 6. Trademarks. This License does not grant permission to use the
trade names, trademarks, service marks, or product names of the
Licensor, except as required for reasonable and customary use in
describing the origin of the Work and reproducing the content of
the NOTICE fle.