Re: When we detect that a 16550 was in fact part of a NatSemiSuperIO chip
From: Alan Cox
Date: Sun May 22 2005 - 17:26:46 EST
On Sul, 2005-05-22 at 22:50, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> You mean DCO, not OSDL ("Developer's Certificate of Origin").
>
> And yes, I'll update the SubmittingPatches to state explicitly that the
> sign-off is a public record.
The DCO yes.
> So how about just something like the appended? Along with making a very
> public announcement on linux-kernel for the next kernel release (rather
> than this discussion that is taking place under a fairly obscure subject),
> that should make sure that people are aware of the fact that the thing
> isn't exactly private.
It actually doesn't help. EU privacy law rather sensibly is "opt-in".
Putting the statement in the DCO, which is a document and submission
agreement works because you have to agree to it, putting it in a
document is probably not "opt-in".
You have to -actively- agree to the DCO to submit a change, and that is
what makes it work (whether you put something in submitting patches or
not that is more explanatory).
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