Hi,
On 09/02/16 12:33, Derick Rethans wrote:
[snip]
- Texts should be void from ambiguity.
I couldn't agree more. Ambiguity has a chilling effect on speech, and will
damage the quality of discourse on internals.
Having said that, I think that the CoC being proposed is too wordy, and
still
quite ambiguous, some examples of statements I think are problematic:
1. "Make sure you know what you are talking about." - ambiguous and hostile
wording, which really isn't going to change anything.
2. "It is better to be descriptive than to be concise" is in clear conflict
with "Write ... as little as you can get away with" and both address the
same point.
3. "never attack a person's opinion" - challenging opinions is very
important
in technical discussion.
I will submit a pull request later with some suggested amendments to improve
clarity and remove duplicates.
- Although their CWG dealt with plenty of cases, no punitive action
has occured as parties would often step back themselves. In most
cases, a gently reminder was all that was necessary.
- A Code of Conduct without *any* 'teeth' would not be beneficial.
These statements appear to be in direct conflict with each other.
If the Drupal CWG have not needed to impose punishments as a result of
their
CoC, and in the history of Internals you could count the bans on one hand,
then I really don't see why we need to go to the lengths of establishing
committees and punishment procedures.
I feel that the CoC has a much greater chance of achieving consensus if
we don't
try to impose a 'court of law' alongside it, especially considering that
most
proposals for a 'court' have been secretive and focused on privacy
rather than
on transparency (the opposite of all well-functioning legal systems).
- We should be reluctant to limit the scope of the Code of Conduct and
Contributor Guidelines.
This is an ambiguous statement, do you mean scope of enforcement (i.e.
spaces
outside of PHP technical spaces) or something else? Would you mind
clarifying and
also providing a brief summary of what lead to this conclusion?
Again, I think that the CoC has a much greater chance of achieving
consensus if we
aren't trying to use it to police behavior outside of our spaces.
I feel that the "Contributor Guidelines" are now in a reasonable shape
to do a quick poll to gauge acceptability. As this is not a formal RFC
vote, it's simply done through an online poll:
http://twtpoll.com/y6hs4ndsfiki485
I've submitted a vote, not sure if I should as I don't have karma to
vote on RFCs.
I think this is a lot better (and more technically-focused) than the
Contributer
Covenant, so it's a step in the right direction, but I still think it
needs some
refining to be 'production-ready'.
- Matt Prelude.
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