Hi Frans, (I am answering this email in the same group, as it also addresses some of the problems of various mailinglists and has its home on debian-powerpc.)
On Thu, May 11, 2006 at 06:22:29PM +0200, Frans Pop wrote: > On Monday 08 May 2006 11:18, you wrote: > > it was brought to my attention that you are not reading debian-powerpc, > > thus I am forwarding my email to you directly. > > That is correct, mainly as I do not have a powerpc system myself. For being a very important list to powerpc users, it was underinformed about the incident. > > b) The social and personal side is important. Sven's emails are clearly > > showing this, but some of the responses by Thomas and > > others did not reflect this. > > Yes, but Sven's emails are also only showing one side of the issue. It is only natural that Sven's emails show his side which I have considered before answering. Still others answered with technical arguments only, which stroke me as strange. My point in general is, that this is not a nice way to treat a volunteer and does the organisation no good, no matter how bad a volunteer might have behaved. > I have not replied to the various threads because I have no interest in > prolonging this discussion. Best to avoid a long discussion is to have a clear and understandable statement you can point people to. To me not having this from the start clearly has prolonged the discussion. > The second reason was that there was a > mediation going on by the DPL and his "second in command" and I did not > want to interfere in that. This is a good reason to hold communication for a while. I am bit astonished by the result of the mediation, though, as there obviously was no agreement between made between the parties. That is sad. > > My part is: Writing this comment to help the situation. > > I am also speaking up to support Sven. I believe > > that he was bit badly treated in the thread. > > No matter what he did to contribute to the situation, > > this list has people which are new to the problem. > > Well, I'm afraid we disagree there and I don't feel that someone who has > not followed all that's happened over the last year on the various lists > and IRC channels (mostly d-boot and d-kernel, but elsewhere as well) can > really judge the rights and wrongs here. As I have stated earlier: I have only read debian-powerpc and been working from this. As there will be other people doing so, Sven, just like anybody, deserves a fair treatment to this audience, which cannot know what has happened on other channels. > Also, this is not really about right or wrong, but about having some fun > while working on Debian in general and the installer in particular. > Having fun is very important when it comes to a volunteer based project > and I'm afraid that Sven was reducing the fun for several core members of > the d-i team in a way that has become unacceptable. Giving an understandable examples in a statement for this, would be fair treatment. This would be a step after personal communication to try to improve the situation has failed. Assuming that Sven had the distressing personal situation he wrote about, there should be enough base to make a new attempt and forgive some of the heat. To me it still actually looks like this was used to Sven's disadvantage which I would not have happen to me on a general basis. But that is beside the point, if you and the other core members of the d-i team are not willing to do this, no one can force you. > > What could have been done better? > > If Sven's commit rights have been revoked and he got "kicked out", > > it would be very good to give a reasonable explanation > > that people can be point people to. > > The usage of the phrase "kicked" by Sven, > > seems to indicate that there was > > no common position why he left the d-i team. > > "Kicking out" Sven from the d-i team had already been discussed twice this > year. Eventually we did not have to "kick him out" as Sven himself > resigned from the team. If the personal situation Sven write about is true, you cannot really count the "resignation". > We (I) revoked his commit access mainly because of the broken personal > relationships between Sven and other members of the d-i team. > IMO it is not good that someone who is not friendly towards a team has > commit access to their source repository. In the long run that will only > lead to new conflicts. It is much better to have a clean break and maybe > resume a normal working relation later on when things have calmed down > and people are willing to work together again. I agree with the clean break, if both conflicting parties agree to it. > Note that it is just as easy to grant commit access as it is to revoke it > and I do not exclude the possibility that Sven will be allowed commit > access again in the future. There will have to be major changes in his > attitude for that to happen though. I am assuming that Sven knows those criticism of him. And my hope is there is a good way to integrate him as a volunteer for good. [ I have deleted some of the other points as they are discussed elsewhere. Thanks for responding, though. ] > P.S. I will probably not be replying to any replies to this mail as almost > everything has been said at least several times already. I really would > like to put this behind us and start working on d-i again. Regards, Bernhard
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