Re: CoC [Final v2]
От | Joshua D. Drake |
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Тема | Re: CoC [Final v2] |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 56A5796F.1060709@commandprompt.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: CoC [Final v2] ("David E. Wheeler" <david@justatheory.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: CoC [Final v2]
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Список | pgsql-general |
On 01/24/2016 02:42 PM, David E. Wheeler wrote: >> 1. If person B is not in the Pg community then it is up to the Rails community to deal with it. >> >> 2. If person B is in the Pg community they can request help. >> >> I am open to wording on #2. I tried a couple of times but had trouble not making it a larger declaration that I thinkit needs to be. > > How do you define “in the Pg community”? Is it someone who has posted to a known forum at least once? Someone who has beento a conference? What if they have never participated in a community forum, but use PostgreSQL at work? Maybe they wouldeventually submit a bug report or ask a question. How do you gauge that? > > Me, I don’t think you can. If someone reports abusive behavior by a member of the Pg community, it should not matter whetheror not the person doing the reporting is a member of the community, only that the reported abuser is. In retrospect I revoke my support of this idea entirely. It just isn't our jurisdiction. If doesn't happen in our yard then it isn't our business. I would also note that this document isn't going to be the end all of enforcement. Ultimately -core has the final say. -Core can determine on its own if it wants to enforce against a particular community member (with or without the CoC). Sincerely, JD -- Command Prompt, Inc. http://the.postgres.company/ +1-503-667-4564 PostgreSQL Centered full stack support, consulting and development.
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