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Having a true open governance is very important for a successfull open source project. If there are few gatekeepers who accept commits from a very small number of contributors, this is not really a true open source project, it is rather a (free) source code project. "Open governance" is an important "label" to stick to a project.
While it is hard to automatically determine if there is a true open governance or not from a git repository without human interpretation of the bylaws and how-to-contribute files, we can try and monitor the number of contributors whose patches get accepted.
As an example, please check the Zephyer RTOS vs FreeRTOS: the former is hosted by the Linux Foundation and has seen contributions from 300+ individuals in the last two years while the latter has always been driven by 2-3 people only and released under a dual license (open source with exception / commercial).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Governance is a big issue and one that we should certainly attend to in the CHAOSS project. I think we definitely need to account for metrics around governance as I think they are directly tied to things like inclusion.
we can implement this via the Contributor Diversity metric as well as even counting how many submitters there are from each company, as a further degree of open or closed governance - eg Elephant Factor vs actually one or two gatekeepers.
Having a true open governance is very important for a successfull open source project. If there are few gatekeepers who accept commits from a very small number of contributors, this is not really a true open source project, it is rather a (free) source code project. "Open governance" is an important "label" to stick to a project.
While it is hard to automatically determine if there is a true open governance or not from a git repository without human interpretation of the bylaws and how-to-contribute files, we can try and monitor the number of contributors whose patches get accepted.
As an example, please check the Zephyer RTOS vs FreeRTOS: the former is hosted by the Linux Foundation and has seen contributions from 300+ individuals in the last two years while the latter has always been driven by 2-3 people only and released under a dual license (open source with exception / commercial).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: