On 08/13/2018 11:14 AM, Alexandre Franke wrote: > On Mon, Aug 13, 2018 at 4:21 AM Michael Hall <mh...@gnome.org> wrote: >> Hello Engagement Team, > Hi, > >> With the next release of GNOME fast approaching, I wanted to extend an >> invitation to use https://gettogeter.community/ as a way to grow the >> local GNOME communities around the world, and bring them together to >> celebrate the release. > (Careful, there was a typo here: it’s https://gettogether.community/ with an > h) > > Looks good. I guess the plan would be to use this instead of the usual > wiki pages. In that case, a bit of wiki gardening to reflect that > direction would be a good idea. > > The privacy policy mentions possible collection of identifying data, > but nothing about being able to get them erased. I *think* the website > is not compliant with GDPR. What do you reckon?
I used a generic privacy policy generator, because I'm not a lawyer and I needed something in order to use external authentication systems :) GetTogether itself doesn't collect anything other than what you choose to give it, and you can change that at any time. There's not currently a way to delete your user account, but that can be added with a bit of work. I'm not sure what all GDPR requires. >> GetTogether is a free and open source group event hosting platform that >> was written with GNOME in mind, based on BoFs from GUADEC 2017. The >> instance on https://gettogether.community/ is free for anybody to use, >> and making it available to GNOME is my way of giving back to the project. > I am thankful for that! I want to encourage people around me to use > it, but lack of localization is an issue. Is it on your roadmap? Yes, it absolutely is! I have GetTogether setup in Transifex already, and Django natively supports localization. But there is work needed to go through the codebase and mark any strings for translation (it's very hit or miss right now) > > The service also looks like something the GNOME Foundation could more > actively support. Even if it’s not GNOME branded (and I think it > should remain so), it helps us with our mission. If the cost of > running that service starts to be a problem for you, consider reaching > out to the board of directors about it. Thanks! Hosting is pretty cheap right now, and I have hopes to be able to get recurring sponsorship (from GNOME and other orgs) to make it sustainable and still free for all users. There is a longer-term goal to be able to host branded instances, so for example events.gnome.org could point to a view that shows only GNOME teams and events. It's also possible to host your own instance and federate event data between them (what is federated is pretty limited right now, but some contributors are looking into making it fully ActivityPub compliant). > Cheers, > -- Michael Hall mh...@gnome.org _______________________________________________ engagement-list mailing list engagement-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/engagement-list