On Nov 29, 2013, at 12:12 , Guido van Rossum <gu...@python.org> wrote:

> The question is, how effective will the alternative solution (banning him) 
> be? I worry that it's just going to make things worse.

I think that is a legitimate concern and likely outcome.

> The key thing to understand here is that you can't win an argument with 
> Anatoly. You can only avoid *getting* into one.

Right.  We can't change other people's behavior.  We can at best encourage 
change.  In this case, I'm doubtful that banning would serve as an 
encouragement.  I understand the many of us get annoyed and frustrated by his 
comments and the multiple re-opening of the tracker issue thing the other day 
was certainly uncalled-for behavior on his part.  But it was likely fueled in 
part by people's reaction to his comments.  I think the more important issue 
here is not his behavior but our behavior in how we react to behavior like 
this.  *That* is something we can reasonably try to change.  Why is it that we 
find him so annoying, enough to advocate fairly drastic measures like banning?  
There have been and will be others who behave similarly.  I don't propose to 
try to answer that question: it's one that each of us will have our own answer 
to.

But taking the active step of banning could become additional fuel.  Since he 
has repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to ignore the advice and admonitions 
of others in our communities, it seems to me that a quite reasonable response 
is to, in turn, ignore him and just not engage with him.   Comparing his 
behavior to some of the recent, on-going cases of wildly inappropriate behavior 
on python-list (not involving Anatoly), I think it would be hard to justify to 
the world banning Anatoly for his relatively minor annoyances when it took so 
long to do something about one help vampire whose behavior and the community's 
reaction severely damaged its atmosphere and really did scare new people away.  
(Yes, there are other important differences but this is about perceptions.)

> I guess I haven't managed to teach you all well enough how to do this. 
> Honestly it's not easy. :-(

It's not but it is an important skill.

> When I see this kind of thing happen to people who have already contributed 
> positively but haven't been around long enough to recognize specific trolls I 
> usually send them an off-line message suggesting to ignore the troll. This 
> happens a few times a year, and it's not just Anatoly.

Sound like exactly the right thing to do.

--
  Ned Deily
  n...@acm.org -- []


_______________________________________________
python-committers mailing list
python-committers@python.org
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-committers

Reply via email to