Managing a Community is Extremely Hard, But Worth the EffortIt’s up to us how we lead the processGetting involved with Open Source communities was one of the greatest things I’ve done for my personal and professional development, and…
Hey let’s all listen to this guy with the Fight Club avatar. Clearly he will have valuable things to contribute to society…
I think I finally got Code of ConductsA pretty crazy week at DjangoCon Europe in Budapest.Admittedly, I used to be on the fence about Code of Conducts for a long time. I saw what an effect they had on reaching underrepresented parts of our…
It’s great that you’ve created a checklist for women to follow when men are the killers and abusers in your article. You should’ve made a checklist or code of conduct for men, don’t you think?
Its funny — because I have never seen anything cripple the progress of the software industry more than people with attitudes like yours.
The Coral Project Code of ConductWe think that it’s important for every community to have a clear statement of how people are…
There ain’t no good guy, there ain’t no bad guy. There’s only you and me and we just disagreeOur Story so far: Rachel Nabors recently wrote an essay about why she won’t speak at a conference that doesn’t have a code of conduct. She used Jared Spool’s prestigious…
Codes of Conduct are all the rage.Codes of Conduct are generating divisive rage in open source projects. More specifically a Code of Conduct called the Contributor Covenant that is politically charged is causing all sorts of contention.
The Purpose of a Code of ConductLast week on Twitter, there was a large discussion on whether or not Codes of Conduct are necessary for events. Again. For the 1,122,343,241,445th time. The responses were the typical uninformed arguments railing against the “PC police.” Again.