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GNOME Foundation Board

The Board of Directors governs the GNOME Foundation, the non-profit organization behind the GNOME Project. For general information, see the Foundation wiki page and web pages.

Board Members

Roles and Responsibilities

General Responsibilities

In addition to the above roles, all board members are required to:

Meetings

The board has its regular meeting on the second Monday of every month.

Public minutes of board meetings are sent to foundation-announce, foundation-list, and archived on the wiki. See the following section to see what is minuted.

General information on meeting minutes

The Board publishes its meeting minutes in for archival at https://wiki.gnome.org/FoundationBoard/Minutes. The minutes are also sent to the foundation-announce@gnome.org and foundation-list@gnome.org mailing lists.

The secretary of the board (understood to include either the secretary, vice-secretary, or their deputy) is responsible for recording the minutes during board meetings.

During each meeting, it is customary for the Board to review and finalize the minutes of its last meeting, and to publish them as soon as possible. Given the frequency of Foundation Board meetings (once every two weeks), Foundation members should expect to see published minutes no later than two weeks after the meeting to which they correspond.

Please see the Guidelines on meeting minutes, approval, and confidentiality for more information.

Confidential topics

In many nonprofit organizations, it is common practice for the minutes of the board meetings to be confidential. Given the mission of the GNOME Foundation, the board should aspire to more openness than this common practice, and historically the GNOME Foundation has published its board meeting minutes publicly by default, except for topics where the board saw a need for confidentiality.

Sometimes a topic discussed in the board meeting should not be included in the published minutes. This is at the discretion of the board, and can be for reasons of individual or organizational privacy, or it can be due to a need to speak candidly or critically of a person, situation, or organization. Example confidential topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

Finally, another guiding principle is that when someone speaks with the expectation that they are speaking in confidence, a record of the conversation must not be published retroactively in the future.

If applicable, published meeting minutes may contain a summary of confidential topics, that omits any confidential details.

There are no “temporarily confidential” topics. It happens often that a topic contains no confidential information, but should not be published until some action item is completed: e.g. an announcement is made, or correspondence is answered. In that case, if the action is not completed when it is time to publish the minutes, the foundation-announce list should be notified.

Who to contact when

The GNOME Foundation has staff and committees that handle much of the GNOME Foundation's business. Most inquiries about GNOME Foundation business should be directed to info@gnome.org.

For questions about licensing the GNOME Foundation's trademarks, please contact licensing@gnome.org.

The board of directors can be contacted at board-list@gnome.org. They should be contacted for inquiries about committees, policies, and board meetings. The board is also the last point of escalation in case you have an issue that you feel has not been satisfactorily handled elsewhere in the GNOME Foundation.

More tips:

Resources

More resources, including legal resources and documents, can be found on the resources page.

Archive

Old pages we don't use any more.

Notes

Note to board members: this page is visible to the public. Please put private information in FoundationBoardPrivate.


2024-10-23 11:07