On Sat 2021-11-06 11:32:35 +0100, Martin Steigerwald wrote: > Pierre-Elliott Bécue - 06.11.21, 11:06:58 CET: >> That being said, the name is indeed outdated, and "Debian Archive >> Team" sounds quite nice. > > Agreed. I like this name.
Yes, please. "Debian Archive Team" is fine. This is fair amount of work, but it will help make debian not seem quite as archaic as I'm sure it seems to new prospective users or developers. Thus it is valuable work. But a GR does not seem necessary. The way to do this is to consult with the people already on the team and the DPL. Select a new name, figure out what work needs to be done to make the change. Make a plan, have someone to drive it, and persist. It will probably take at least a full debian release cycle. Changing names is hard, even if you don't have reactionary pushback. Many things might be touched by this: e-mail addresses; mailing lists; text in debian policy or the developer's reference; DNS labels; OpenPGP certificates; SSH host information; wiki entries; software like dupload; etc (fortunately, the archaic team name doesn't appear in the Constitution or the DFSG). Consider upgrade paths and how to deprecate the old name safely: when updating e-mail addresses, can you create an alias from the old label to the new address? How about DNS records? How should we handle mailing list archives? When/how should you send a deprecation warning when people use the old label? Have a timeline that acknowledges the work involved, and plans when to take each step. For example, changing DNS records, e-mail addresses, and cryptographic associations will probably be slower/more cumbersome than changing human-readable labels. Be prepared to revise the workplan when someone discovers some other place that the old name is embedded. You need to find someone or someone(s) who have the capacity and the skills to actually carry out the right work -- or who at least can keep track of the work and encourage/support the folks who have the permissions to do it to get it done. No one should object to this work if it's done with this kind of thoughtfulness, care, and attention to detail. Helping the project through this transition would be a great contribution to Debian, because it fixes a silly stumbling block that existing developers have already learned how to ignore, but that does actually hold the project back from welcoming new members who might have never heard of FTP (or of using the term "master" to mean administrator for a machine) before. This work is *not* the kind of contribution that maps cleanly to a facility at packaging free software for redistribution. This is a great example of why we need more than just package-maintainers as debian developers. There are probably many other parts of the project that need this kind of attention and effort, and we should absolutely *not* scare people off who want to help fix things. But let's not make it harder to fix than it already needs to be by dragging a GR into the mix as well. --dkg PS For people who are concerned that a retreat from the term "master" is somehow the language police run dangerously amok, it's worth asking why you feel so committed to the term "master" that you would fight to keep the project we all work on using terminology we all can acknowledge is confused and outdated. If someone is excited to improve the project, even if you don't have the capacity to help them do it, at least *let* them do it!
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