Hi!

> This is exactly what slightly annoys me to be honest. It exactly why
> we need a private group to deal with such events, even rare, or even
> if they will never ever happen again.
>
> Despite numerous people saying that it happens, including me. You
> still say, heh, that's some vague allegations and it happens in
> private anyway. Don't you see what is wrong in your statement? Don't
> you see that this is the wrong way to deal with that?

You state of annoyment is likely continue if you keep using vague
identifiers like "it" without explaining what "it" is. What happens?
Private communications? Sure they do. I acknowledged that. Public
harassment on the list? You never said it happened and neither did
anybody else. Something else? I don't know what.
I don't see anything wrong in trying to define what you talking about
before committing to any solutions to "it". If you want to fix "it",
please define what "it" is and how what you are proposing would fix what
you defined.

> Nothing can prevent someone to use fake emails, fake names or whatever
> I know to do such things. But a CoC is about helping the persons
> involved and avoid situations where public lynching may happen based
> on wrong information.

Saying "it's about helping" is not a guarantee something opposite
wouldn't happen. Relying on "don't worry, we're here to help you, we're
good people, thus we can do no wrong" - I'm sorry but this is not really
enough assurance for the powers you are requesting. I'm completely OK
with actual helping - mediation, etc. - I think I proposed it from the
start. But when you talking about power to hurt back - bans, etc. - then
I think there should be some good explanations when this power is to be
used, not just "trust us, we mean well". Definition should come before
powers.

> No. You simply limit everything to your own view. I did not change my
> terms or definitions but try to make you understand what it means. But
> is rather hard.

You didn't provide definitions for multitude of terms - "it",
"agressivity", "bad behavior", "psychological threat", etc. - and none
of them are obvious. You claim that routinely happens on the list and
that's what driving away many people. That makes me think something that
is routinely happening on the list you consider to be behavior that
should be banned by CoC, and that makes me worried because I don't see
anything worth being called harassment happening, and in my opinion CoC
is meant to deal with that. If you mean for CoC to deal with something
else - then I'd like to know what else and how.

> What is bad enough? Insults? "you are wrong" is not an insult, "you

"Insults" is clear, I know what an insult means, no need to provide the
official list of insults :) But that's not something we routinely see
happening here.

> http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/aggressivity and 1. applies to

1.
characterized by or tending toward unprovoked offensives, attacks,
invasions, or the like; militantly forward or menacing:

Sorry, not very helpful - it is just replacing one set of undefined
things with another - what is offensiveness? Maybe it's offensive to me
that somebody proposes to introduce generics to PHP (sorry, just a
random example :), while we did fine without them for 20 years. Or maybe
it's offensive to me when someone claims I don't understand their
argument, because it questions my mental capacities. Etc. I'm
exaggerating of course, the point is it is very subjective. "menacing"
is also completely subjective - one can feel menaced by a more skilled
debater that would destroy one's arguments, for example. "Forward" is
something we do not lack here, and I think it is a good thing, but is it
"militant"? Who knows.

> Is it more clear?

Not entirely, unfortunately. Again, I have a problem with the following
chain of arguments:

1. There's a set of behaviors X ("it", "aggressivity", etc.) that
routinely happens here on the list
2. This set of behavior scares off (at least some) contributors
3. This behavior is tantamount to harassment and is the reason why we
should create CoC and have CRT with punitive powers
4. Once we do that, we will be able to stop this set of behaviors or at
least substantially diminish it, to the point where the contributors
mentioned in (2) are no longer reluctant to participate
5. Doing that would not substantially hurt our ability to hold
discussions and reach hard decisions in a consensual manner

I accept 1 and 2, but starting from 3 down I think all claims are false,
and in fact, with my current understanding of X, I think that 4 and 5
are mutually exclusive. Maybe I do not understand what X is - that's why
I ask for clarifications.
-- 
Stas Malyshev
smalys...@gmail.com

-- 
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to