Hi, Perhaps we have been too long tolerant for the behavior that many see problematic (myself included). The challenge is the mix of valid and invalid items. It is easier to react to things that are clear violations to our CoC: http://quips-qt-io.herokuapp.com/quip-0012-Code-of-Conduct.html and nothing else.
On the positive side, we have not had that much of these over the years. We have not been banning people regularly, so we also lack a bit of precedence with this. Technically it is a trivial thing to remove someone from a mailing list. The challenging part is to decide when it is time to do that. Yours, Tuukka From: Interest <interest-boun...@qt-project.org> on behalf of Massimiliano Maini <maxma...@gmail.com> Date: Thursday, 29. April 2021 at 14.23 To: Bernhard Lindner <priv...@bernhard-lindner.de> Cc: interest@qt-project.org <interest@qt-project.org> Subject: Re: [Interest] L Word Yeah, maybe that's part of the problem but, as you said, the solution should be simple: he leaves the mailing list or, if that's not possible, the admins "make him leave". On top, with his ramblings and often totally wrong assertions (the "April's fool link"-gate scandal has been absolutely hilarious, almost as the subsequent attempt to regain some credibility, yeah .. nice try) he has now managed to scare the hell out of me the next time I'll be tied to a medical device: the mere chance he may be behind it now makes me extremely nervous. Even if it's only a blood pressure monitor. Losing valuable people in the mailing list and, at some point, the mailing list at all is like throwing away a Ferrari because a pidgeon keeps shitting on it. I'd argue that getting rid of the pidgeon is a more sensible solution. On Thu, 29 Apr 2021 at 12:05, Bernhard Lindner <priv...@bernhard-lindner.de> wrote: > > The main problem isn't trolling. The main problem is: Roland comes from a > completely > different world. The world of functional safety. This world is difficult and > a completely > different from conventional software development. It is particularly > different from > smartphone and web development. And it doesn't have much to do with desktop > software > development. I have also been in this world for more than 3 years. A world > where > programming is the least important thing. Where documentation is important. > And the law. > And prison. And accuracy and multi-level tests and reliability and > verification and > validation and standards. And many years of support. And certifications. A > person who has > worked in this world for a long time has different priorities. Roland calls > this "True > Software Engineering". > > Obviously, Qt has nothing to do with this type of software engineering. And > it's obviously > not suitable for functional safety (at least not if you take it seriously). > > What I don't understand is why Roland doesn't just leave the mailing list and > forget about > Qt. Qt is not suitable for use in his industrial sector, so I can't > understand why he > spends so much time writing about the conflict between the reality of Qt and > the reality > of his industrial sector. If I were him, I would have given up trying to > influence Qt's > strategy a long time ago. > > (Actually, I'm about to give up my hopes for desktop development with Qt). > > So, Roland, why are you keeping the conflicts going? > > -- > Best Regards, > Bernhard Lindner > > _______________________________________________ > Interest mailing list > Interest@qt-project.org > https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest
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