You may have seen, a few days ago, that the Fedora project announced[1] a new Code of Conduct for their community.
What you may not have known is that the CentOS project was involved in the crafting of that Code, so that we could also use it here.
Yeah, I know, this is something we should have done a long time ago. But, you know what they say about the best time to plant a tree. (The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is today.)
As we continue to work to make all aspects of the CentOS Project more open and transparent, it is important that we create an open, welcoming community where all people, from all backgrounds, feel safe in their participation. This allows for a broader contributor pool, with more ideas and more community ownership of the resulting outcomes.
And it's just the right thing to do.
It is our intent to take the text of the Fedora CoC, and replace 'Fedora' with 'CentOS' everywhere, and propose it here. There will, of course, be other small changes to the text (Board vs Council, and so on) but not to the details of the Code itself, and how we intend to address reports. We're holding off on those edits so that our version doesn't drift from theirs, during their 2 week comment period. (Ends April 26th.)
The document is derived from the Contributor Covenant, along with work that has been ongoing in the Fedora project for some time. Note also that the Contributor Covenant is also the source material for the CoC used by the Linux kernel project.[2]
To that end, we encourage you to engage in the discussion around the Fedora CoC, because any changes made there will influence what we end up with here. And we also encourage discussion on centos-devel[3], for anything that you feel is specific to our community.
--Rich, on behalf of the CentOS Board of Directors
[1] https://communityblog.fedoraproject.org/policy-proposal-new-code-of-conduct/
[2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?i...
Le 19/04/2021 à 18:42, Rich Bowen a écrit :
And it's just the right thing to do.
I've been a member of this list for many years, and I must say it's one of the more civilized discussion platforms in the Linux galaxy.
Most of the times, discussions are educated and civilized, most folks are armed to the teeth with facts and figures, and while discussions *might* get heated and I *might* even have read the occasional swear word here and there, I've never felt the need for the bureaucratic equivalent of an "ad usum delphini" mailing list.
But then, if you insist, here's a Code of Conduct.
1. Be nice.
2. Have fun.
3. Take no shit.
Cheers :o)
Niki