What is the OpenSocial Foundation?
The OpenSocial Foundation is a non-profit corporation created to
sustain the free and open development of OpenSocial specifications.
The Foundation helps facilitate the development of new
specifications and ensures that the technical direction remains in
the hands of the community.
How do I get involved with OpenSocial?
There are a variety of ways to get involved with OpenSocial:
- Get started building social apps
- Become an "OpenSocial container" by hosting social apps
- Contribute to the evolution of the spec (spec process)
- Become an OpenSocial Foundation member
- Members of the foundation are able to nominate and elect 2
community representatives for the Board of Directors.
What is the structure of the OpenSocial Foundation?
The OpenSocial Foundation is a nonprofit public benefit corporation
registered in the state of California. The Foundation consists of
individual members and a Board of Directors.
The officers of the foundation are:
- Mark Weitzel, President
- Karthik Suri, Treasurer
- TBD, Secretary
What is the structure of the board of directors?
The board of directors consists of 7 seats as follows:
- 5 corporate seats: The 5 corporate directors are designated by
companies that are nominated and (re)elected by the outgoing board
each year. The initial corporate directors are designated by: hi5,
Flixster, MySpace, Google, and Yahoo!. To ensure stability in the
early days of the Foundation, Yahoo!, MySpace and Google will each
designate a corporate director for a bootstrapping period of 3
years.
- 2 community seats: The 2 community representative seats are
nominated and (re)elected by the entire membership each year. The
community is free to nominate and vote on any foundation member as
long as that individual is not employed by a company designating a
corporate director.
Both corporate and community directors may serve multiple terms if
reelected.
The current Board of Directors:
- Chris Cole, MySpace
- Jason Gary, IBM
- David Glazer, Google
- TBD
- Cody Simms, Yahoo!
- Paul Lindner, Community Representative
- Mark Halvorson, Community Representative
Who can join as a member?
Membership is free and open to anyone. To join the Foundation,
individuals must complete and submit a simple application.
What is the role of the member?
Members nominate and elect the 2 community directors each year.
Why am I being asked for my employment information?
When joining the Foundation, individuals are asked to provide their
employment information. Employers typically own the intellectual
property rights in works created by employees within the scope of
their employment. The Foundation asks for your employment
information to confirm that you and your employer are following the
Foundation's intellectual property management process. Membership
in the Foundation is open to anyone, but participation in
specification work is limited to those individuals and companies
covered by a valid intellectual property rights agreement.
How are the community directors elected?
After your membership application has been accepted by the
Foundation, you're welcome to nominate individuals to represent the
community on the board of directors by submitting a nomination.
We'll publish the timeline for the rest of the process in the
coming weeks.
What is the OpenSocial Foundation intellectual property
management process?
In order to contribute to or otherwise participate in the
development of a specification, you must first accept the
Foundation's contribution agreement. By accepting the contribution
agreement, you do two things.
- Grant the Foundation and all third parties a Creative Commons
copyright license to your contributions.
- Affirm your good faith intent to promise not to assert any
patent infringement claims against any party for making, using,
selling, or distributing any product or service that implements a
final specification to which you contribute.
You may then participate in the development of the specification by
contributing language and ideas to the applicable specification
working group. Some ongoing specification discussions can be found
at
http://groups.google.com/group/opensocial-and-gadgets-spec/topics.
Once a specification to which you are contributing is close to
final, the Foundation will request that you approve that version of
the specification. Upon your receipt of the request, you must
either make a patent non-assertion promise regarding that
specification or withdraw from participation in the specification
(and the Foundation will remove your contributions from the final
specification). Once approved by all contributors, that version
will become final.
For more information about IPR management, please review the
complete IPR legal document. The contribution agreements are not
yet available, but will be available in the coming weeks.