n0toose
Posts
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My blogpost about all the cool opensource stuff happening in our gov is done. -
My blogpost about all the cool opensource stuff happening in our gov is done.@Gina @jbouter ... I think this might not be doable before the third cocktail hits, sorry. š
Our logic is "the infrastructure is 'free to use' but you have to give something back", but we are remodeling our terms in a manner that considers the fact that people use Pages to host their personal webpages.
This requirement is enforced more strictly for the CI.
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My blogpost about all the cool opensource stuff happening in our gov is done.@Gina @jbouter The repository doesn't have a license + README file so it won't go through the auto-approval thing (but that's normal for websites); our only actual hard requirement would be e.g. providing blog posts under a Creative Commons license (or another license, that's just an example), which I couldn't establish.
See our (soon-to-be-merged) ToU: https://codeberg.org/Codeberg/org/pulls/1219
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My blogpost about all the cool opensource stuff happening in our gov is done.@Gina @jbouter Keep in mind that Codeberg Pages is actually relatively unstable and we have been working on solutions to improve its availability - if you're trying to host a "high-stakes" blog (dutch gov dept?), we would like to take a more careful look to help out and not have you get disappointed later down the line.
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My blogpost about all the cool opensource stuff happening in our gov is done.@Gina @jbouter It's a bureaucracy, but if you make a request under https://codeberg.org/Codeberg-e.V./requests and follow the template, you will be automatically approved with a bot (that has had this ability for a week or two). If the auto-approval criteria don't kick in, Codeberg volunteers usually take between 20-180 minutes.
This is to prevent abuse and "remind" people of our ToU, but it's unconventional. If you want, feel free to provide me with a repository link and I'd do it for you if it checks out.