Fully supportive of the new wording. It covers exactly what I was trying to convey, i.e. express what you think but respect that others may feel differently.
Tim > -----Original Message----- > From: Stefano Maffulli [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: 07 June 2012 19:02 > To: Tim Bell > Cc: User Groups Community, OpenStack > Subject: Re: [Openstack-community] DRAFT OpenStack.org Blog Authors > Code of Conduct > > Thank you Tim, I've incorporated your thoughts in the preamble. I'm > publishing this now on the blog itself and if no further comments are > received, I'll assume the policy is in place (until we need to change it, of > course). > > OpenStack.org Blog is the asset owned by the community and a platform > where to share thoughts, ideas, reports and news about OpenStack. All the > authors of blog posts have the responsibility to respect this common space > while being grateful for the opportunity it represents. As a writer you > should > write articles respecting other's opinions, even if you disagree. The > OpenStack Community will benefit from sharing, debating and reflecting > rather than discounting and disparaging others' > thoughts. Remember that as an author of OpenStack.org blog, the > community trusts you to give voice to the community as a whole. > > Writers accept these simple principles: > > Prefer facts to opinions: be always aware that what you publish will be > read > by thousands of people and that your opinion is not necessarily that of the > whole community. Try to stick to facts, like reporting the result of a > meeting, > announcing upcoming community events, describing technical achievements. > Disclose, don't promote: it's good to let people know that a company is > contributing to OpenStack, sponsoring an event and such but the > OpenStack.org Blog is not the place to publish a company's press release. > Contribute to the commons: our blog is licensed under the terms of > Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike version 3 unported. Pay attention > to the license of any material you add to the blog, make sure it's released > under compatible terms. > > On Sat 02 Jun 2012 11:24:47 AM PDT, Tim Bell wrote: > > > > I'd propose to add an additional one regarding respect of other's > > opinions > > > > Articles should be written on the basis of mutual respect of other's > > opinions. There are always many different perspectives on how > > technology can be used. Blog should accept that different views are to > > be considered even if the author does not share them. Communities > > benefit from sharing, debating and reflecting rather than discounting and > disparaging others' > > thoughts. > > > > Tim > > > >> -----Original Message----- > >> From: > >> [email protected] > >> [mailto:openstack-community- > [email protected]. > >> net] > >> On Behalf Of Stefano Maffulli > >> Sent: 01 June 2012 21:50 > >> To: User Groups Community, OpenStack > >> Subject: [Openstack-community] DRAFT OpenStack.org Blog Authors > Code > >> of Conduct > >> > >> Hello all, > >> > >> with the current number of authors on the community blog I think it's > >> a > > good > >> idea to make sure we all have a clear understanding of what it means > >> to > > have > >> an account on such visible community asset. > >> > >> I think it would be good for the whole community to have a brief, > >> clear, understandable code of conduct for all existing authors and > >> for the future > > ones. > >> > >> Below is a draft: please review it and give your opinion. Add your > > comments > >> and if there are no clear oppositions, we'll remove the draft from > >> http://wiki.openstack.org/Website/AuthorsCodeOfConduct. > >> > >> thanks, > >> stef > >> > >> > ========================================================== > ====== > >> ========== > >> DRAFT OpenStack.org Blog Authors Code of Conduct > >> > >> OpenStack.org Blog is the asset owned by the community and a platform > > where > >> to share thoughts, ideas, reports and news about OpenStack. All the > > authors of > >> blog posts have the responsibility to respect this common space while > > being > >> grateful for the opportunity it represents. > >> > >> If you are an author of OpenStack.org blog it means that the > >> community > > trusts > >> you to give voice to the community as a whole. Writers accept these > >> simple > >> principles: > >> > >> * Prefer facts to opinions: be always aware that what you publish > >> will be > > read > >> by thousands of people and that your opinion is not necessarily that > >> of > > the > >> whole community. Stick to facts, like reporting the result of a > >> meeting, announcing upcoming community events, describing technical > achievements. > >> > >> * Disclose, don't promote: it's good to let people know that a > >> company is contributing to OpenStack, sponsoring an event and such > >> but the > > OpenStack.org > >> Blog is not the place to publish a company's press release. > >> > >> * Contribute to the commons: our blog is licensed under the terms of > > Creative > >> Commons Attribution Share-alike version 3 unported. Pay attention to > >> the license of any material you add to the blog, make sure it's > >> released under compatible terms. > >> > >> > ========================================================== > ====== > >> ========== > >> > >> -- > >> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack-community > >> Post to : [email protected] > >> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack-community > >> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
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