2004 Annual Report
Software in the Public Interest, Inc.
Prepared as of July 1, 2004 on August 11, 2004
At the July 1, 2004 Software in the Public Interest (SPI) annual meeting,
the Board asked the President of SPI to collect submissions and prepare
an annual report. Then-President Ean Schuessler's term expired before
the report could be completed. Incoming President John Goerzen completed
the report and presented it.
SPI's 2003 annual meeting was held July 8, 2003. The 2004 meeting
was held July 1, 2004.
Submitted by John Goerzen, Report Editor
1.1 President's Letter
Fellow Hackers and Friends,
SPI's seven short years have been a wild ride. We've seen Free Software
has grow from a philosophy into a movement that is becoming a way
of life. We've truly come of age. Every IT organization in the world
has a Free Software strategy or is under working to adopt one. Linux
provided Microsoft the adversary no one thought possible. Fortunes
were won and lost. Powerful new friends appeared. Legal pitfalls,
bad legislation and surprising traitors have all so far failed to
stop the phenomena we all love. SPI survived these stormy seas and
is still working to bring commercial quality support services to Free
Software projects everywhere.
We have had our own internal challenges as well. The runaway growth
of the movement has tested the will and even the physical ability
of our all volunteer staff to the limit and beyond. We've made mistakes
and even had a few disasters. None of these problems have proven fatal
thanks to the dedication of our membership, officers, supporters and
pro-bono volunteers. The journey has been a learning process.
We've had some real successes along the way as well. Debian, the shining
star of SPI projects, has continued its rocket powered growth. In
2004 Netcraft Ltd. announced that is the Debian the fastest growing
web server OS in the world. The Brazilian government announced comprehensive
plans to implement Debian nationally. New maintainers and the number
of available packages continues to grow on a daily basis.
This is truly exciting and challenging time to be involved with SPI.
The potential of Free Software is no longer a dream. It is a reality.
Every day more and more people depend on Free Software to communicate
with their friends and family, to run their businesses and to satisfy
their creative urge. With that success comes a great new responsibility.
Every new Free Software project must show professional competency
and commitment or face failure. Today, more than ever, there is a
need for SPI and the services it provides.
I'm truly proud to have played a part and thank each of you for the
opportunity. Let's make the next seven years just as unbelievably
amazing.
Happy Hacking,
Submitted by Ean Schuessler, SPI President
The following report was submitted by an SPI committee:
2.1 Bylaws Committee
The Bylaws committee was established with resolution 2003-01-06.wta.2
with a 1-year charter. The committee's purpose is to review SPI's
bylaws and advance specific suggestions for improvement. On January
5, 2004, the Board adopted resolution 2004-01-05.dbg.1, which removed
the expiration provision.
The committee issued its first bylaws amendment recommendations on
July 1, 2003 according to its original charter. A vote was not held
immediately because the membership committee was in the process of
ensuring the integrity of SPI's membership roster. In January, 2004,
the Board adopted resolution 2004-01-06.wta.4, calling for a vote
among the membership once the membership committee's work was complete.
That vote began on March 2, 2004.
While the vote was in progress, the Board received advice both from
SPI's legal council and others that certain provisions in the new
proposal may need adjustment for full legal compliance. On March 2,
2004, the Board suspended the vote until these issues could be fully
considered. As of July 1, that analysis has not yet been completed.
Submitted by John Goerzen, chair of the Bylaws Committee
Board members as of July 8, 2003:
-
Ean Schuessler (President)
- John Goerzen (Vice-President)
- Wichert Akkerman (Secretary)
- Branden Robinson (Treasurer)
- Ian Jackson
- Martin ``Joey'' Schulze
- M. Drew Streib
- Manoj Srivastava
- Bruce Perens
- Benjamin ``Mako'' Hill
Board members as of July 1, 2004:
-
Ean Schuessler (term expires on July 1, 2004) (President)
- John Goerzen (Vice-President)
- Wichert Akkerman (term expires on July 1, 2004) (Secretary)
- Jimmy Kaplowitz (Treasurer)
- Branden Robinson
- Ian Jackson
- Martin ``Joey'' Schulze
- Bruce Perens
- Benjamin ``Mako'' Hill
- David Graham
Changes that occurred during the year:
-
Manoj Srivastava resigned (source: 2003-10-14.iwj.6).
- David Graham was elected to the board on November 29, 2003 in an election
initiated by 2003-10-14.iwj.6.
- Jimmy Kaplowitz was appointed as new treasurer on February 20, 2004,
having run unopposed in an election for that position.
- M. Drew Streib was removed by the Board on July 1, 2004 (resolution
2004-07-01.dbg.2) due to the board meeting attendance policy.
Submitted by John Goerzen
4.1 Accounting Issues
Volunteer accounting services have been a serious problem for SPI
virtually since its inception. In 2004, SPI initiated a comprehensive
audit of its past financial records. Brainfood, Inc., a Texas corporation,
provided pro-bono clerical assistance in processing the backlog
of mail that had overwhelmed the volunteer SPI Treasurers.
Submitted by Ean Schuessler
4.1.1 Audit Results Summary
The audit revealed more than $18,000 of uncashed donation checks.
Other investigations by the SPI Treasurer revealed SPI was the victim
of some fraud due to publishing the SPI bank account number for online
donations.
Submitted by Ean Schuessler
4.1.2 Corrective Actions
The Board and membership engaged in extensive discussions about the
causes of and best methods to address the problems encountered. The
Board authorized apology letters to be sent to all contributors that
could be reached, along with their original checks. Checks that had
not yet expired were to be deposited as soon as possible.
On May 4, the Board affirmed, via resolution 2004-05-03.bp.2, the
ability of the President and Treasurer to work together to take the
necessary steps to solve the problem. At the same meeting, the Board
approved resolution 2004-05-04.dbg.2, giving the Treasurer a limited
budget and discretion to take necessary steps to solve problems without
further Board approval, with an expiration in six months.
Submitted by John Goerzen
4.1.3 Preventing Re-Occurrence
The Board, Treasurer, officers, and membership continue to work on
ways to make our organization resilient in the face of such problems
in the future. Greater transparency has been asked of our treasurer,
and various proposals for professional or voluntary assistance are
under consideration. Some have expressed the desire to wait with major
structural changes until we have passed the immediate problem and
can more clearly analyze the specific failures.
The Board authorized the new treasurer to obtain a Post Office box
dedicated solely to SPI matters to provide a stable correspondence
address. The Board also authorized expedited posting of draft meeting
minutes to help keep the membership better informed of SPI news.
Submitted by John Goerzen
4.2 Account Balances
As of June 30, 2004, SPI held $568.64 and $238.27 in two checking
accounts at American Express Centurion Bank. As of July 13, SPI held
$39,504.43 in an American Express Financial Advisors AXP Cash Management
Fund.
Submitted by John Goerzen based on earlier reports from Branden
Robinson
Chapter 5 Member Project Reports
During the past year, wxWidgets (formerly wxWindows) was invited to
become a SPI member project.
The following report was received from an SPI member project:
5.1 Debian Project
The Debian Project is an association of individuals who have made
common cause to create a free operating system. This operating system
that we have created is called Debian GNU/Linux, or simply Debian
for short. Debian is by far the most significant SPI project and represents
the majority of SPI's membership and financial transactions.
Submitted by Ean Schuessler
SPI is a non-profit organization which was founded to help organizations
develop and distribute open hardware and software. We encourage programmers
to use the GNU General Public License or other licenses that allow
free redistribution and use of software, and hardware developers to
distribute documentation that will allow device drivers to be written
for their product.
SPI was incorporated as a non-profit organization on June 16, 1997
in the state of New York. Since then, it has become an umbrella organization
for projects from the community.
In 1999, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the United States government
determined that under section 501 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code
SPI qualifies for 501 (c) (3) (non- profit organization) status under
section 509 (a) (1) and 170 (b) (1) (A) (vi). This means that all
donations made to SPI and its supported projects are tax deductible
for the donor.
Submitted by Ean Schuessler
This document was translated from LATEX by
HEVEA.