I know I should not engage, but from my perspective, Daniel is in a great deal of pain, and this should not be ignored. I don't want to see him banned, but I don't see him willing to let go and move on. He feels a great deal of pain over perceived injustices, and wants to right them, but the Debian community has moved on a long time ago (and probably would like it to stay that way). I think Daniel has concerns about corruption, suicides, and mistreatment of community members, and these are important topics to explore, but I also think that Daniel would be healthier if he let go of what is in the past and work on smaller things closer to him, to perhaps prevent the past from repeating itself. He doesn't let go because it still hurts freshly, like a broken bone that doesn't heal. This is why I do say we have to talk about these things in forums where other people think it is not appropriate. None of Daniel's pain would have come to light without it. In some of the communities where Daniel expresses concern, there have been suicides, and possibly because those people's pain was ignored or dismissed.
But here I go, engaging...
If you are an employee of a company then you sign an employment contract and the contract usually has a paragraph in it where they tell you that you give the employer full copyright in all the code that you create. That is why employees don't have legitimate interest but open source developers do have a legitimate interest in using the trademark.
What was the language regarding copyright holder rights in the Debian developer agreement you signed in order to be an official Debian developer?
Some of the misfits started undermining my right to recognition in 2018. I will never consent to somebody taking my name off the list of authors just as a landlord will never consent to somebody just moving in to a house without paying rent.
But Daniel, you are not the landlord; Debian is a collective. You were
evicted as a tenant because you trashed the place. From the WIPO findings, the Complainant (Debian) says
'The Respondent (Name Redacted), is not associated with Debian. He is neither a Debian Developer, nor a member of the Debian community. He was formerly a Debian Developer, but was expelled from the project some years ago for engaging in behaviour which was destructive to Debian’s reputation and to the community itself. He has not been a member of the Debian Project since 2018. He is also banned from participating in the Debian community in any form, including through technical contributions, participating in online spaces, or attending conferences and/or events. He has no right or standing to represent Debian in any capacity, or to represent himself as a Debian Developer or member of the Debian community."
The findings state:
"Moreover, the Panel considers that even the Respondent websites that contain overt criticism of the Complainant could not justify the use of those disputed domain names as nominative fair use for criticism sites."
...
"In the present case, the Panel finds that the Respondent had actual knowledge of the Complainant’s distinctive and long-established DEBIAN mark as a former DEBIAN Developer who prominently displays the Complainant’s trademarks on the Respondent’s websites and links to the Complainant’s DEBIAN trademark policy. Despite those explicit references to the Complainant’s trademark policy, the Respondent ignored the provision requiring permission to use the DEBIAN mark in domain names, as every one of the disputed domain names violates that provision."
Daniel, if you had registered the domains to protect the Debian name from the dilution of added TLDs, and turned over those domains in advance, that would have been a wonderful gesture on your part. Unfortunately, it appears that in some cases you were using the domains to post content critical of Debian. I appreciate that you were wanting to bring these issues to light, but no, this was the not the way to do it.
And Daniel, according to the Debian complaint, even the signature you use in this forum, "Debian Developer," is contrary to Debian's rights to restrict representation of Debian by others.
If you were not there working on Debian with us, if you did not read debian-private, and if you are not a doctor, why do you now consider yourself an expert on both Debian and mental health?
I do not consider myself an expert on either. I see something that says "maybe you should see a doctor about that."