On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 3:43 AM Palmer Dabbelt <
pal...@sifive.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 02 Apr 2019 17:31:23 PDT (-0700),
lk...@lkcl.net wrote:
> > On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 12:42 AM Gurjeet Singh <
gur...@singh.im> wrote:
> >>
> >> Not that I'm interested in participating, but just curious
> >> as to how these officially approved groups work.
> >> Is there a mailing list for this group?
> >
> > that's the question that i asked. i had to ask it in the way that i
> > did, using the words that i did, due to issues related to Trademark
> > Law.
> >
> >> Is it open to public?
> >
> > it has not been made clear, hence my question.
> >
> > (as an aside: none of the "official" RISC-V Working Group mmailing
> > lists are open access.)
>
> It's a RISC-V working group and therefor follows the same policies as the rest
> of them. IIRC we're in a bit of a transition from workspace to
groups.io, but
> either way the list (and associated meetings) will only be available to RISC-V
> members. There's a free membership for open source projects, as well as a
> cheap membership for individuals.
monetarily zero cost... as long as they have no conflict of interest
that prevents and prohibits joining. and we have a clear business
case (full transparency and independent third party audit
requirements).
to be clear: it would actually be considered to be *fraud* to have
put in a Grant Application under false pretenses (namely: to state
that we intended to develop a commercial chip in a fully transparent
fashion, then immediately on doing so join a *CLOSED* secretive
group).
> >> How does one request to participate in these lists?
> >
> > again: it wasn't made clear. if however it has been expected that
> > the lists be "RISC-V Working Group Mailing lists", then it is
> > mandatory to sign the "RISC-V Membership Agreement", which prevents
> > and prohibits all and any public discussion or release of information
> > outside of the group without the expressed and explicit consent and
> > approval of the RISC-V Foundation (Section 5).
> >
> > this being what our team absolutely cannot do [enter into secret
> > agreements that interfere with the BUSINESS objectives], hence why i
> > requested clarification.
>
> OK, well, I'm sorry you'll be unable to contribute.
you may be misunderstanding: we have a clear business case for
involvement in the standards development process, and have been
consistently requesting access to resources such that we may
participate in innovation.
we have yet to receive a response.
failure of the RISC-V Foundation to accept this and take it into
account is not an option for the RISC-V Foundation if the RISC-V
Foundation wishes to continue to enjoy the benefits afforded by
Trademark Law.
so we are being excluded from the standards development process,
despite having a clear-cut business case for being included. given
the failure of the RISC-V Foundation to take our business case into
consideration, we are not going to just "give up", and will proceed as
best we can under the circumstances with our business objectives.
acting in good faith as we are, we will endeavour to ensure that our
business objectives are met with the minimum disruption to the wider
RISC-V community, however given that we are clearly being
discriminated against, we cannot and will not be held responsible for
any incompatibilities or non-interoperability: that is clearly down to
the failure of the RISC-V Foundation to take our business objectives
into consideration.
if anyone has a problem with that, particularly that the libre/open
community depends critically on good-will, PLEASE SPEAK UP. it is
very important that you do so, as it will strengthen the case that
substantial damages have arisen to our business objectives as direct
consequence of continued and persistent silence and abdication of
responsibility regarding Trademark Law by the RISC-V Foundation.
(Executive Director once again cc'd so that there is no possibility
that the RISC-V Foundation may claim "It Did Not Know")
> e considered different
> contribution models as part of starting the group, but decided the standard
> RISC-V arrangement was the best fit for this group as well.
this constitutes discrimination. Trademark Law is unfortunately quite
clear: discrimination in this fashion is not permitted. any Tradmark
owner that engages in discriminatory practices irrevocably forfeits
the Trademark.
it is also very clear that persistent failure by a Trademark holder
to respond to communications to resolve such matters also results in
permanent forfeiture, and a consequent loss of right of enforcement.
we're *going* to go ahead, palmer. we *will* meet the business
objective of creating an entirely and wholly libre-licensed RISC-V
hybrid GPU/CPU/VPU that is fully transparent in its development and
manufacture, right to the bedrock, with or without the RISC-V
Foundation's cooperation.
l.