Space: Apache OpenOffice Community 
(https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS)
Page: (Draft)List Conduct Policy 
(https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OOOUSERS/%28Draft%29List+Conduct+Policy)

Change Comment:
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Subtly re-worded in some places to remove ambiguity, removed redundant 
double-spaces and non-breaking spaces.

Edited by David McKay:
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h2. 1 Respect one another

Discussion is the cornerstone of a project like this and the sharing of 
viewpoints is crucial, as is understanding and accepting that many views will 
differ from your own. By all means debate rigorously and defend your view point 
stoutly, but avoid abrasive dialogue and personal attacks. Give leeway to 
people who do not have English as a first language. Pause before taking insult, 
and pause before responding. There is a difference between robust discussion 
and steamrollering. Civility is paramount. Manners cost nothing; we are all 
capable of self-moderation, and of being aware of our conduct.

h2. 2 Remember the Apache OpenOffice Mission

“To create, as a community, the leading international office suite that will 
run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data 
through open-component based APIs and an XML-based file format.”


The AOO project is a place for finding open-source solutions to document 
creation and consumption. We believe in making AOO freely available because we 
are the sort of people who welcome diversity in others, creativity of all sorts 
and who enjoy finding the best in all situations.

h2. 3 Be Nice

Not only are there lots of people on this list whose first language is not 
English there are some busy readers who, by necessity, have to read things 
quickly. If other list members are telling you they do not understand what you 
wrote, or take your innocent phrasing in a poor light, take it as a signal that 
your writing style is too idiomatic or too technical (unlikely but possible) 
for others to follow easily. This does not necessarily mean you are mean, wrong 
and bad, so just be nice and reword the passage. Assume people are not in 
"attack mode." We are all on the same team here.

h2. 4 Don't Respond When You are Angry

Assuming people are not in attack mode means that if you think they are, just 
now, then probably you are just misunderstanding their point. Ad hominem 
attacks, e.g., "You are too dumb to get this," are a sign that you yourself may 
not have a good-enough handle on the issue to explain your point clearly.

h2. 5 Relax

Always remember that unless there is a \*darn\* good reason, nothing gets 
decided at the ASF in less than 72 elapsed hours, so your reply can wait until 
morning. You might even get lucky, and when you check back somebody else will 
have posted either what you wanted to say, or something close enough that you 
can work with it. Remember that the members of a community mailing list will 
get to the list when they can. Most of us do this in our spare time, and in 
different time zones. Perhaps the rule of thumb could be to respond no more 
than once per hour, or once per day, to any given thread. The highest frequency 
of responses does not necessarily “Win” in a community of equals. The most 
concise and useful post tends to win, because furthering the dialog and 
advancing the community's goals is what we all desire.

h2. 6 Get to the point

Write as tersely as possible and edit down as much possible so that other 
people who are just as busy as you may quickly get your point without ending up 
defensive. Of course, balance is needed. Do not let brevity get in the way of 
providing enough information. Remember that people must understand your post in 
order to understand your point.

h2. 7 Consider trimming the post to which you are responding

People who read emails on small screens are not the only ones who are 
frustrated by picking important new information out of tons of stuff they have 
already read. To trim a post, one simply remove any parts of the post to which 
one is replying that are not important to understand ones reply. If the 
response to one of these posts is, “What? I do not understand,” then it may be 
that too much of the context may have been removed.

h2. 8 What happens on a private list, stays on that list

There are only a few private lists on the project. The PPMC list and the 
Security Team list come to mind. Anything you read in a private list is by 
default a private affair and not to be spoken of, or copied to, other people 
who are not members of that private list.


h2. 9 There are going to be exceptions to the rule

All of these guidelines are subject to sanity-testing. A person posting child 
porn on any Apache.org or Apache OpenOffice list will be reported to the 
appropriate authorities and will not be able to complain that their list 
privacy has been violated. Ramping up to a release, there are a lot of postings 
at high frequency. Sometimes it unavoidably requires a long post to say what 
needs to be said.

h2. More Useful Stuff

Apache Tips for Email Contributors --
<[http://www.apache.org/dev/contrib-email-tips.html|http://www.apache.org/dev/contrib-email-tips.html]>
[http://www.apache.org/dev/contrib-email-tips.html|http://www.apache.org/dev/contrib-email-tips.html]


Apache OpenOffice Mailing Lists --
[http://incubator.apache.org/openofficeorg/mailing-lists.html|http://incubator.apache.org/openofficeorg/mailing-lists.html]<[http://incubator.apache.org/openofficeorg/mailing-lists.html|http://incubator.apache.org/openofficeorg/mailing-lists.html]>

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