Every Linux dev who has pushed for a supportive Linux community seems to be being subjected to threats of reporting under the new CoC. The whole point of the CoC is to provide a mechanism for resolving problems. Go ahead. Report me. Let's see how the system works.
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Replying to @kc8apf
It's not a great code of conduct. You'd be better off taking feedback from that part of the community and treating their concerns about the quality of the code seriously.
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Replying to @misterohno @kc8apf
I wrote the code of conduct in my office (based off a professional training in the area) and I never mistakenly gave any of the people who are required to abide by it the impression that it is meant to justify inferior product, bully people, or have a political bias
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Replying to @misterohno @kc8apf
I feel like this one doesn't either, but a lot of people are willfully misinterpreting it that way. Just my personal impression though.
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Replying to @hugelgupf @kc8apf
That's not a fair assumption given there hasn't been a sincere, good faith effort to address those concerns in the total message. Even this tweet has a combative tone: "Go ahead. Report me". This is abjectly unprofessional.
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Empathy is king: "I'm sorry that some feel the code of conduct compromises the ultimate mission of the Linux Foundation. Let me make it clear: In no way will we begin accepting sub-quality code. While our standards remain high, our communication becomes respectful."
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