I do not know who used the logo of FSF-India. However I too feel that for the cause of free software they should not have used logo of a private company which does not even have a democratic structure.
Dear Keraleean,
Are you suggesting that private company / ownership is a bad thing in itself? AFAIK, the Free Software stands for property rights.
"Some people think free software goes against the principal of property ownership. However, if I buy a CD at the store, intellectual property says I don't have ownership rights of a CD. If I did, I could do anything with it I wanted to. Without the bizarre intellectual property game, I own what I buy." - Jonathan Bartlett johnnyb@wolfram.com
And what is bad in a private company?
Canonical is a private company. Red Hat is a private company. Many private companies are already having sustainable business models built on FS.
For instance,
* Perl is supported by the publisher who makes money from Perl books. * GCC and the Win32 port of many GNU tools is supported by Cygnus/RedHat who sell support/consulting services * Various open source initiatives have been supported by Sun make their OS more standard/enhanced. * Apache has been supported by IBM, Sun, and others for their own reasons
These business models have been around for *years* and they show no signs of disappearing anytime soon.
One business model that's often overlooked isn't really a business model. Companies that depends on software that they don't want to specialize in creating (e.g. a software company that doesn't want to create a custom installation package) will often contribute to an existing open source project that specializes in that area (e.g. RPM) because it saves them the money and resources it develop an inhouse solution. They contribute to the main stream of development because the don't want to keep patching their software against the new versions or because they want those features to be a defacto standard. - Anil Wang awang@nospam.com
I have copy pasted both quotes from the comments of an early Linux Today articlehttp://www.linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-05-16-012-20-OP&tbovrmode=3#talkback_area.
Maybe, these arguments seem slightly away from your opposition. But what I was trying to say was, even if FSFI is a private company, they cannot be blamed for that.India's vote against OOXML in favor of ODF as ISO standard was made possible becouse of FSFI. If FSFI had a democratically elected organisational setup, the chapters like FSF Chennai would have been mushroomed overnight and it would have been hijacked by vested interest groups - let alone CPI(M). We have known such things in co-operative society / bank elections, here in Kerala for quite a long time.
-Sebin