| I can vouch for this. It's especially embarrassing when you first mention it to them privately and resolve the issue, and then go ahead and mention it in the meeting anyway, or use it as an excuse for new policies set in that meeting. There is one particular space I left because of this, but I will not elaborate.
This analogy is not appropriate. Consider if someone wrote something on a whiteboard, or hung something in their office, which violated the code of conduct. Would you speak to them privately, but leave it up for everyone to see, without ever addressing it publicly? To outside observers, that behavior would appear to be acceptable. There is no way for them to understand that a violation occurred. On Thursday, October 27, 2016 at 11:07:50 AM UTC-5, Pietro Gagliardi (andlabs) wrote: > > > On Oct 27, 2016, at 11:49 AM, Andrew Gerrand <a...@golang.org > <javascript:>> wrote: > > I have done this before, and it has not gone well. People feel humiliated > when called out publicly. > > Imagine this happened in a workplace. Do you bring it up at the team > meeting? Or take them aside and mention it to them in private? > > I can vouch for this. It's especially embarrassing when you first mention > it to them privately and resolve the issue, and then go ahead and mention > it in the meeting anyway, or use it as an excuse for new policies set in > that meeting. There is one particular space I left because of this, but I > will not elaborate. > > > On Oct 27, 2016, at 11:44 AM, Nigel Vickers <rhe...@gmail.com > <javascript:>> wrote: > > Hallo Aram, > I have checked both of the Projects and the issue lists and as far as I > can see you have not been involved in previous discussions or involved in > either of the projects involved. I have checked the previous reddit and > parts of the discussion which are indeed not intelligible. As such this was > a initial post in the matter by you , it constitutes a request for > information with the reason why. Can you confirm my assesment? > > Nigel Vickers > > You seem to be confused about Aram's affiliations: he is not a worker on > Iris or any of the projects it stole from; he is a member of the Go team > itself (or if that is not true, then he is one of its top contributors), > and his most known contribution was the Solaris port. > > > On Oct 27, 2016, at 11:52 AM, Russ Cox <r...@golang.org <javascript:>> > wrote: > > I am sending this message to golang-nuts bcc golang-dev in an attempt to > unify the two discussions into one discussion in one place. I picked > golang-nuts because that is roughly a superset of golang-dev. > > Did golang-dev stop sending emails? I haven't received anything since > October 16. Or should I contact Google Groups support and/or my email > provider? > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.