On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 11:09 PM, Robert Bradshaw
<rober...@math.washington.edu> wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 11:25 AM, Viviane Pons <vivianep...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I feel this is going nowhere...
>>
>> We should start with the assumption we all agree on something: we want the
>> sage mailing list to be place where no one is bullied and where we can
>> express our different point of views safely and with respect. I think we all
>> want that whether we voted yes or no to the code of conduct itself. It is a
>> sensitive matter because if we don't feel we have this, then it can affect
>> our involvement into the project itself.
>>
>> I think everyone's actions so far toward the code of conduct has been
>> motivated by this goal, on both side.
>>
>> I don't know who wrote the code of conduct that was proposed and, honestly,
>> I don't really care. It was maybe a mistake to do it this way and I agree
>> that Vincent's proposal to work on it on a wiki is better. But I don't think
>> they did it with bad intentions. And seeing how things are now, I understand
>> they don't want to say anything and to defend themselves against being a
>> conspiracy, a secret police or something.
>>
>> Rather than pointing fingers on how things should have been done, and why
>> were they done this way... I think we should try to find a solution to our
>> problem which is the goal I stated: the sage mailing list to be place where
>> no one is bullied and where we can express our different point of views
>> safely and with respect. (Of course, this will never be perfect, the idea is
>> to make our best)
>>
>> Some of us thought a code of conduct will help to reach this goal and there
>> was a big debate on the first thread about this very question. There was a
>> vote and even though the legitimacy of the vote is contested, it still says
>> something: there are a quite a bunch of people (a majority of the voters)
>> who think things are not good enough the way they are and wanted a code of
>> conduct.
>>
>> So now, in the spirit of a consensus, what should we do? Keeping the code of
>> conduct as it is is not good, it divides the community and some people feel
>> excluded and disagree with the process. Leaving things as they were is not
>> good either, as some people expressed in a vote that they wanted a change
>> and they might complain if the vote is ignored (and once again, it's because
>> they feel sage would be a better and safer place with the code). For the
>> same reason, voting again on the same question is not good, as whatever the
>> result is, some people will feel excluded.
>
> +1 for focusing on what to do in the future, rather than mistakes made
> in the past.
>
>> Is it possible to find a compromise on which people are mostly ok? For
>> example, I proposed to have some "guidelines" instead of an actual code.
>
> I, personally, would be in favor of this, which wasn't really an
> option in the vote (which felt like a false dilemma between accept the
> status quo and accept that code).
>
>> And Vincent proposed to work on a wiki to make a better text.
>>
>> Also, the process itself was an issue. To those who contest the vote: in
>> what condition would you accept whatever the result is? What would you
>> propose to do?
>
> Consensus is better than voting, but is sometimes hard to find when
> there is a bimodal (or more) distribution of opinions. I'd take the
> time to craft a better text, then put it up for another vote. (Despite
> the fact that open source projects are not democracies, it's hard to
> assign weights...so I don't know any better).

http://wiki.sagemath.org/CodeOfConduct

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"sage-devel" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to sage-devel+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sage-devel@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-devel.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to