On 08/12/2015 08:27 AM, Jim Perrin wrote:
So,
A couple questions here:
- Are there equivalent guidelines for projects like Fedora, oVirt,
KDE,etc to review/compare against?
There are, though I believe they are in a bit of bang-up shape. Here is a quick list of what I found thus far:
KDE: https://community.kde.org/Promo/People/social_media, (which has a link to a great guide at http://www.lydiapintscher.de/whitepapers/Social_Media_Guide_For_Free_Softwar...)
openSUSE: https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Social_media_contacts
Fedora: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Marketing_social_networks#Proposed_strategy
(Fedora may be a bit out of date; I am currently talking to their board and some of this seems like it's not been implemented.)
Projects like oVirt, which are sadly not as organization-diverse as CentOS and Fedora, are not terribly applicable examples in this case, since their social policies are really in line with the sponsoring organization (in oVirt's case, Red Hat). I want to foster a policy that's in line with CentOS' governance.
- Question for the community-at-large, who else would be interested in
participating?
On 08/11/2015 11:23 AM, Brian Proffitt wrote:
[snip]