On 01/05/2016 08:47 AM, Joshua D. Drake wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I had a hard time writing this email. I think Code of Conducts are
> non-essential, a waste of respectful people's time and frankly if you
> are going to be a jerk, our community will call you out on it.
> Unfortunately a lot of people don't agree with that. I have over the
> course of the last year seen more and more potential users very
> explicitly say, "I will not contribute to a project or attend a
> conference that does not have a CoC".
The Brendan Eich fiasco at Mozilla taught me all I need to know about
CoC's and their uselessness and un-enforceability.
>
> Some of us may be saying, "Well we don't want those people". I can't
> argue with some facts though. Ubuntu has had a CoC[1] since the
> beginning of the project and they grew exceedingly quick. Having walls
> in the hallway of interaction isn't always a bad thing.
>
> In reflection, the only thing a CoC does is put in writing what
> behaviour we as a project already require, so why not document it and
> use it as a tool to encourage more contribution to our project?
>
> Sincerely,
>
> JD
>
>
> 1. http://www.ubuntu.com/about/about-ubuntu/conduct
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@aklaver.com