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Last active August 29, 2015 14:10
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ASF publishes long-overdue Code Of Conduct
We pride ourselves at the Apache Software Foundation on our principles of "community
over code" and "don't be a jerk", but, alas, we've been slow to codify some of these
things in public. Part of this, I'm sure, is that we all *just know* how we're
supposed to treat people, and so you shouldn't have to say, right?
But, of course, you do have to say. In part because some people don't know. In
part because everyone needs to know that we consider it important enough to stand
up and talk about it.
I was approached at ApacheCon by someone who had noted that we referenced a Code of
Conduct on the Apache.org website, but that no such document actually existed
anywhere on our site. This person was from the CouchDB community, who have devoted
hundreds of hours and email messages over the last few months crafting their Code of
Conduct - http://couchdb.apache.org/conduct.html - which addresses everything from
what's acceptable on mailing lists to what do do if someone is being a jerk. This
seemed like a great starting point for conversation, and the ASF has adopted this
as our initial Code of Conduct, with minor edits removing the CouchDB-specific language.
No doubt, we'll get criticism for being so slow to do this, and we're ready to admit
that. But it's never too late to take steps in the right direction, and we feel that
this is an important one.
You are encouraged to join the conversation on the Community Development mailing
list - http://www.apache.org/foundation/mailinglists.html#foundation-community -
if you have changes you'd like to see in that document, or if you'd like to
discuss any other aspect of the Apache community. For example, we've already
have someone bring up the subject of punitive measures for infractions, which
can be a rather contentious issue. We'd love to hear your perspective on this,
and help us continue to move in the right direction.
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