From: | Magnus Hagander <magnus(at)hagander(dot)net> |
---|---|
To: | Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum <ads(at)pgug(dot)de> |
Cc: | pgeu-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Should PostgreSQL Europe organisation settle down in France ? |
Date: | 2007-09-15 22:23:19 |
Message-ID: | 46EC5B57.3060603@hagander.net |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgeu-general |
Andreas 'ads' Scherbaum wrote:
> Hei Damien, hei all,
>
> On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 02:24:21AM +0200, damien clochard wrote:
>> Over the last few days, I've met almost every "key members" of the
>> PostgreSQLFr association and asked if they would be OK to transform the
>> association into an European purpose one.
>
> i would like to say thank you for all the work you have already done!
Yeah, I'll second that one.
>> Furthermore some of the member of the french "crew" are OK to provide help to
>> create an European non-profit association under the french law. As i said
>> previously it's a very common thing in France and i think this could be done
>> within a few months.
>
> Ok, so since we cannot work against you we should work with you ;-)
> As you told us most of the .fr ppl would not give up your own
> association but they have no problem with creating a new one, we should
> discuss this idea.
Absolutely.
> In contrary, i will use this mail and state the situation in germany:
> For founding an association in Germany you need 7 people (all to be of
> age) and a bylaw. Simple said, thats all.
> But this bylaw will be checked (and maybe refused) by a court. One of
> the BSD groups in germany founded an association last/this year and they
> fought a long time only for the right to have meetings on IRC and
> invitations by mail. And there are other problems too. So german courts
> doesn't seem better than french law ;-)
>
> If one of the other EU countries has more relaxed laws, that would be of
> course an opinion. Any suggestions here?
One important thing is IMHO to pick a country which has a lot of
community people in it. That means France, Germany, possibly Italy,
possibly UK.
There is one very strong argument for doing it in France - we have
several people who have already done it in that environment. They know
what it takes, and how to do it. That's a very good experience, that
we'd be wise to listen to and make use of.
>> Now to answer to Andreas question about the next steps, here's my point of
>> view :
>>
>> 1/ We need to make some kind of poll to see if creating PostgreSQL Europe
>> under the french law is OK for every one, or if there are others
>> possibilities.
>
> For now this seems not a problem for me.
Agreed.
>> 2/ If the "french association" proposition is accepted then we'll have to
>> write together the legal statutes in English ( i have samples of generic
>> statutes we can adapt to our need ). Once the statutes are written, we can
>> translate them in every languages and propose them for acceptance. A wiki
>> could be a good tool for all that stuff, imho.
>
> I can translate it into german too, the only question is if we need a
> officially translation and/or confirmation if the translation is
> correct.
If we have an official translation, we have to be very careful about it.
Translating legal documents isn't easy, since you want all the little
points to still be valid.
>> Any suggestions, critics or addendum to this proposition are more than
>> welcome !
>
> Yea, one: you said 5 month maximal time. Imho we should have the legal
> stuff (in whichever country we will install this association) done end
> of this year. This makes 3 month and we need 1-2 for the court stuff.
The sooner we can start, the better.. ;-)
//Magnus
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