FWIW, I am both an active #libtechwomen participant and someone who is so thoroughly charmed by zoia I am frequently bothered she isn't right there *in my real life*. (Yes, I have tried to issue zoia commands during face-to-face conversations with non-Code4Libbers.)
I think a collaboratively maintained bot with a highly open ethos is always going to end up with some things that cross people's lines, and that's an opportunity to talk about those lines and rearticulate our group norms. And to that end, I'm in favor of weeding the collection of plugins, whether because of offensiveness or disuse. (Perhaps this would be a good use of github's issue tracker, too?) I also think some sort of 'what's zoia and how can you contribute' link would be useful in any welcome-newbie plugin; it did take me a while to figure out what was going on there. (Just as it took me the while to acquire the tastes for, say, coffee, bourbon, and blue cheese, tastes which I would now defend ferociously.) But not having zoia would make me sad. And defining zoia to be woman-unfriendly, when zoia-lovers and zoia-haters appear to span the gender spectrum and have a variety of reasons (both gendered and non) for their reactions, would make me sad too. @love zoia. Andromeda On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 10:38 AM, Karen Coyle <li...@kcoyle.net> wrote: > ... and BTW, if people see Zoia as a bit of a problem during the > conference, doesn't that mean that Zoia is a bit of a problem all of the > time? Is there a reason to be polite and inclusive during the conference > but not every day? Could this have any relation to the felt need to create > #libtechwomen? > > kc > > -- > Karen Coyle > kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net > ph: 1-510-540-7596 > m: 1-510-435-8234 > skype: kcoylenet >