Can you find any position statement that says there's any animosity?
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did you actually read that post? it talks about how the projects are different and can work together. and are not competing. also, the latest mapzen blog post is about the Linux Foundation. to get to the blog post you're talking about you have to go back 4 pages.
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Clever tactics to ignore OSM and/or to pretend how different the projects are. And you interpret that as positive communication for
#OSM?1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
You should try that positive communication for OSM thing. It might help your case. As it is, this thread is a strong example of why organizations like Linux Foundation or Mapzen would want to stay far away from being associated with the OSM community.
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I just expect
@Mapzen +@linuxfoundation declare & attribute their data source. OSM is maturing faster you may think. I love to see more orgs&companies using#OSM. IMO this thread is an example how they should be strongly reminded on what "giants shoulders they are standing upon"1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Yes. And it also shows how open needs to be open. How might we
@openstreetmap collaborate and learn with other open organizations? And how can we improve as a community?1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes -
Replying to @HeatherLeson @sfkeller and
What is an "open" organisation? Seriously.
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Thanks for the question. An
#openorg prioritizes the following principles: transparent, inclusive, adaptable, community, collaboration. Via@opensourceway and open ambassadors. Free resources (books, articles):https://opensource.com/open-organization/resources/open-org-definition …1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @HeatherLeson @sfkeller and
Which excludes for example the Linux Foundation .....
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Replying to @sp8962 @HeatherLeson and
... and I don't think the definition is actually useful, it is just two pages of hand waving as there are no actual hard well defined requirements (compare it to https://opendefinition.org/od/2.1/en/ or https://opensource.org/osd )
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Well, before you judge the definition, perhaps read the books and articles. Also, would it not be more helpful to consider why it is hard to talk about open principles in OSM?
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