On 4/5/21 10:46 AM, Matthew Sacks wrote:
So far response has been more yay than nay.

Next steps to turn this into a teak initiative?

Vote?

Podling setup or is this going to be an Infra service?

There are, I believe, two possible ways forward here:

1) We request a VM from infra, and someone volunteers to stand this up and maintain it.

2) We persuade Infra that this is a necessary service that they should host for the Foundation.

My recommendation would be to go route 1 to start, and then judge, based on adoption, whether 2 is justified. The problem with 1, of course, is that it requires a volunteer who is willing to move forward with it and keep it alive.


The https://www.badgr.org looks like a good way to implement, maybe.


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 7:25 AM Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> wrote:

This sounds cool!

On Mon, 5 Apr 2021 at 08:20, lidong dai <dailidon...@gmail.com> wrote:

wow, I like this idea very much!



Best Regards
---------------
DolphinScheduler PMC chair
Lidong Dai
dailidon...@gmail.com
---------------


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 9:16 PM Matthew Sacks <matt...@matthewsacks.com>
wrote:

Note text: “something like”. I didn’t advocate using NFT’s themselves.


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 5:43 AM Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:

AaaaH .. No NFT please :).

J.


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 2:30 PM Matthew Sacks <
matt...@matthewsacks.com>
wrote:

Does Badgr have some kind of certification method to validate the
badge
authenticity?

I was thinking something like NFT’s for the badge graphic.


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 5:26 AM Rich Bowen <rbo...@rcbowen.com>
wrote:



On 4/5/21 8:19 AM, Daniel Gruno wrote:
I had a similar idea some years back, but with a slightly more
tongue-in-cheek approach.

Some sample "merits" I had in mind then:

- 1,000 commits within a year
- 5,000 commits in total
- 1,000 emails to our lists
- Annoyed Sally more than 5 times
- Caused at least one CVE
- *Fixed* at least that one CVE...

Well, you can see what I'm talking about. It's probably not
what
many
people would be wanting... :p  (I would tick all the above
boxes
btw!)

But activity-based merits could be a fun comdev projects. We
have
access
to the stats through Kibble, so we could auto-generate a bunch
of
them.

Elsewhere in the thread I mention https://www.badgr.org/ which
has a
small advantage that it already exists and has an active
developer
community. I wonder what ability there is to feed data from
Kibble
into
Badgr.

And I think I qualify for the "Annoyed Sally" badge a *bunch* of
times
over. :D

--Rich


On 05/04/2021 14.10, Jarek Potiuk wrote:
I like the idea.

It's very similar to what has already been done at the
ApacheCon
every
year. you got the "badges" that you could attach to your
generic
"conference badge".

https://twitter.com/wusheng1108/status/1171101885664595968

J.


On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 1:43 PM Liu Ted
<tedl...@yahoo.com.invalid

wrote:

I like this idea.

Ted Liu

     在 2021 年 4月 月 5 日週一,時間:16:42 , Matthew Sacks
<matt...@matthewsacks.com>
寫道:   Summary: Digital Merit badges
ASF participation and responsibility are based on merit. So
like
other
merit-based organizations, why not have a digital merit
badge. It
would
slow your name and summarize your involvement and
contributions
(volunteer,
committer, member, board member, founding member, etc.).
Also, what projects you work on.

Other examples of design: Trust Certification badges:






https://trustarc.com/truste-certifications/enterprise-privacy-certification/


What it’s not: social score, that’s not what I’m proposing.

If an ASF member, committee, and volunteer involvement are
based
on
merit,
why not have a digital merit badge that shows what they’ve
done?

Like other organizations based on merit, there are usually
badges
recognizing one's contributions to that contributor.

I’m thinking to list the following on the badge:
- committer, member, volunteer, board member, founder, etc
- year joined

If you click the badge, it will take you to a profile page
with:
- Projects they contribute/contributed to
- Apachcon participation, presentations, etc
- Apache.org personal homepage (if they have one)

  From a marketing perspective, it also expands the ASF
“brand”
and
reputation. You have many of the best software engineers and
IT
professionals in the world helping make better software
available
to
commercial companies as well as public organizations and
individuals

If LinkedIn displayed a dynamically generated badge
validated by
an
ASF-hosted infra API (blockchain validated) on Roy Fielding
or
JimJag’s
LinkedIn page, for example, wouldn’t that be of interest in
expanding
ASF
reach? It could increase volunteering, donations, page
views, and
more
benefits.

Not just LinkedIn, but maybe RedHat, Microsoft, maybe Apple
(probably
not),
Oracle, IBM, AWS, Google could get a Platinum sponsor badge
to
show
their
pride for supporting the ASF as a major corporation. More
corporations will
follow suit.


Thoughts?

--
Thank you, Matthew






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