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GNU is Not Unix

Richard Stallman Announces GNU Kind Communication Guidelines (gnu.org) 448

AmiMoJo writes: Richard Stallman has announced the GNU Kind Communication Guidelines, an effort "to start guiding people towards kinder communication." The Guidelines differ from a Code of Conduct in that it's trying to be proactive about kindness around free software development over being rules with possible actions when breaking them.

These new GNU communication guidelines can be found at GNU.org along with Stallman's commentary.
From the guidelines: A code of conduct states rules, with punishments for anyone that violates them. It is the heavy-handed way of teaching people to behave differently, and since it only comes into action when people do something against the rules, it doesn't try to teach people to do better than what the rules require. To be sure, the appointed maintainer(s) of a GNU package can, if necessary, tell a contributor to go away; but we do not want to need to have recourse to that. The idea of the GNU Kind Communication Guidelines is to start guiding people towards kinder communication at a point well before one would even think of saying, "You are breaking the rules." The way we do this, rather than ordering people to be kind or else, is try to help people learn to make their communication more kind. I hope that kind communication guidelines will provide a kinder and less strict way of leading a project's discussions to be calmer, more welcoming to all participants of good will, and more effective.
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Richard Stallman Announces GNU Kind Communication Guidelines

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  • Wait . . . (Score:4, Insightful)

    by UsuallyReasonable ( 2715457 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @09:57AM (#57523589)
    . . . This ISN'T The Onion?
  • by alternative_right ( 4678499 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:02AM (#57523613) Homepage Journal

    Most codes of conduct now are being used in the same way political correctness is: to prohibit certain types of thinking, forcing everyone to think in the ways that are left, which conveniently benefit one group attempting to take over what's left of Western Civilization.

    Having a positive goal like this, and basing it on civility and not political alignment, is intelligent. It nurtures rather than censors.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:03AM (#57523623)

    2. I disagree with making "diversity" a goal. If the developers in a
    specific free software project do not include demographic D, I don't
    think that the lack of them as a problem that requires action; there
    is no need to scramble desperately to recruit some Ds. Rather, the
    problem is that if we make demographic D feel unwelcome, we lose out
    on possible contributors. And very likely also others that are not in
    demographic D.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:21AM (#57523741) Homepage Journal

      RMS manages to explain the goals of people concerned about things like diversity really well. His footnote about genderless pronouns is really good too, taking it as written that a person's gender identity is their identity but also showing how what matters is respecting that, not the exact words or conforming to some arbitrary standard.

      I'm always impressed by his ability to think and write clearly, getting to the heart of the matter in a concise way.

      • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @11:19AM (#57524207) Journal

        There is just no reason for anyone contributing to an online collaboration needs to make their gender public. The normal English pronouns for a person whose gender is unimportant or unknown work fine: "he, him, his".

        Fun fact, English used to have a distinct word for male adult: "were". It survives only in werewolf and wereguild. The gender-indeterminate "man" has replaced "were", because men are unimportant. We have words to highlight when a person is important or valuable, like "king" or "woman", but there was just no need for a word for "male adult" distinct from "adult".

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by jareth-0205 ( 525594 )

      2. I disagree with making "diversity" a goal. If the developers in a
      specific free software project do not include demographic D, I don't
      think that the lack of them as a problem that requires action; there
      is no need to scramble desperately to recruit some Ds. Rather, the
      problem is that if we make demographic D feel unwelcome, we lose out
      on possible contributors. And very likely also others that are not in
      demographic D.

      Except you automatically lose out just by having a limited perspective... we all have that, it's just part of life. eg Text and UI controls requiring young levels of eyesight and motor control because nobody making the UI is old or disabled, Camera film being not very good at capturing black skin because it was calibrated by white people for white people, etc

      Diversity is a net gain because it gives us perspectives that we can't hold ourselves, and we'll be able to build for everyone not just people who are

      • by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @11:01AM (#57524069)

        eg Text and UI controls requiring young levels of eyesight and motor control because nobody making the UI is old or disabled

        This is not an issue of lack of diversity of your developers, but lack of feedback from a representative group of your users.

        Camera film being not very good at capturing black skin because it was calibrated by white people for white people, etc

        Camera film today being bad at capturing black skin because calibrated "by white people for white people" in general? That smells like bullshit.
        Do you have recently taken pictures in side-by-fashion on a modern film properly exposed and developed without touch-up work as proof of this?

        Cameras and camera film are designed for capturing arbitrary images --- MANY MANY, perhaps most being pictures of inanimate objects/scenes from nature, so the ability for film to accurately take a very high depth of color across the spectrum is necessary...

        Unless you have some really really oddball special film... cameras are are meant to capture a scene with high detail containing any color; not just people, let-alone people with a particular skin tone.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by jareth-0205 ( 525594 )

          The camera example is from the past and not really valid any more, but well documented, and the reasons are still valid.

          In an ideal world having good feedback from users would fix this, but we never have that in real life. How many times have we heard that innovation is made by people scratching their own itch? Developers have a massive influence on the product because of all the tiny decisions that they make to make their own lives better, improvements that don't go through the bureaucracy of making a chan

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          This is not an issue of lack of diversity of your developers, but lack of feedback from a representative group of your users.

          For an open source project if someone comes to you with a bug that can only be reproduced by being black, and you aren't black... More over it really helps to think about this stuff earlier in the development of features, rather than someone come along when it's all done and point out that your UI is difficult for colourblind people or the fact that you can't change the font size is a major issue for them.

          Honestly the best thing to happen to computers in the last decade has been the ability to properly scal

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Not true. Good photographers use different film for different situations. Fuji Velvia is beloved by landscape photographers, but it makes people in portraits look weird. Portrait photographers will often use film that is balanced to warm the colours up a bit because it tends to make people (of all colours) look better.

          If I remember correctly, the supposedly racist film is actually early black and white film that would preserve detail in white faces but make people with very dark skin just look black. That

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        To quote a google email on the Damore memo "we don't want diversity of ideas".

        Diversity of ideas is great. That's the last thing anyone pushing for "diversity" actually wants - they want lockstep orthodoxy of belief.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          To quote a google email on the Damore memo "we don't want diversity of ideas".

          I searched and this doesn't seem to be a quote. Do you have a link perhaps?

          The nearest I could find was:

          Part of building an open, inclusive environment means fostering a culture in which those with alternative views, including different political views, feel safe sharing their opinions.

          http://fortune.com/2017/08/07/... [fortune.com]

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      He is only asking. He can have his diversity goals, and you can have your colorblind focus on results. When it's only asking, you can agree to disagree. Everyone can get along.

      When someone is only asking, it can be a discussion instead of a fight.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:03AM (#57523627)

    It's interesting that a bunch of ideas seem to be floating around the same time now about improving communities - that article yesterday on the monastic code of conduct for SQLLite, this ideal from GNU, and also an article I read recently on Weaponized Empathy [codinghorror.com] - the kinds of behaviors you want to lock out of communities as soon as you see them to keep them healthy.

    It seems like between the three ideas you could build up pretty solid community and moderation guidelines that would really make for a lasting peace and a great place to hang out on the internet.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:12AM (#57523689) Homepage Journal

      It's a great document. Slashdot could benefit from a lot of these ideas:

      "Please assume other participants are posting in good faith, even if you disagree with what they say."
      "Please do not criticize people for wrongs that you only speculate they may have done; stick to what they actually say and actually do."

      "Go out of your way to show that you are criticizing a statement, not a person."

      "Please recognize that criticism of your statements is not a personal attack on you."

      "Please avoid statements about the presumed typical desires, capabilities or actions of some demographic group."

      "Please respond to what people actually said, not to exaggerations of their views."

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 )

      Only if the SJWs call off their social justice war. Or if the 80% of the rest of us who oppose political correctness [theatlantic.com] decide to stick up for ourselves and stop being pushed around by toxic bullies.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by jareth-0205 ( 525594 )

        Only if the SJWs call off their social justice war. Or if the 80% of the rest of us who oppose political correctness [theatlantic.com] decide to stick up for ourselves and stop being pushed around by toxic bullies.

        Or you could start acting as the bigger person instead of reverting to threats and childish three-letter-acronyms to belittle people who have opinions you don't like.

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Kohath ( 38547 )

          Or you could start acting as the bigger person instead of reverting to threats and childish three-letter-acronyms to belittle people who have opinions you don't like.

          Yeah, adults never use 3 letter acronyms. This is an awesome point. Everyone and everything that was ever referred to by an acronym is a victim. Like the people of the U.K., the USA, and the EU.

          On behalf of everyone ever, please accept my apologies for every time anyone in the world ever used an acronym for anything.

          Also sorry for the "threats" you seem to be imagining. So incredibly sorry.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by jareth-0205 ( 525594 )

            You know as well as I do that "SJW" is a term made up specifically to group people you don't like and dismiss them en masse. But sure, deliberately pretend I mean the number of letters if it makes you feel better.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            From the Code of Kindness:

            "Please assume other participants are posting in good faith, even if you disagree with what they say."

            Presumably you don't think that the GP really meant that the problem was three letter acronyms, but correct me if I'm wrong.

            • by Kohath ( 38547 )

              Presumably you don't think that the GP really meant that the problem was three letter acronyms, but correct me if I'm wrong.

              Complaining about words is a tactic to censor unfavorable messages. If they call off the war, they can be social justice supporters.

              Is it a war? If not, why be so defensive?

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Only if the SJWs call off their social justice war.

        The typical SJW behavior is the kind of thing that doesn't mesh well with a set if kindness guidelines, because it relies a lot of exaggeration and othering.

        That's why I think it's such a great pairing with the article I linked to, which is the other side of the equation - how to decide who to remove if they cannot or will not abide by notions of kindness? It lays out what I think is an excellent structure to be able to dismiss the very worst sort of peopl

      • The SJWs are doing nothing against you. They never have. Stop assuming that a lack of victims on a side that never existed is tantamount to you being attacked.

      • I like how you claimed to agree with the concept in the post, and then immediately disregarded the concept in the post.

    • this has been studied for many decades, not related to software libre at all. the book i recommend is named "invisible dynamics": https://www.amazon.co.uk/Invis... [amazon.co.uk]

      it outlines six systemic laws - and they are laws (not "guidelnes") - which, when you examine them closely, you will find that any software libre project (or any business) that violates one of those laws is a project that *will* be in trouble, in some form. as the book has to be paid for, i extracted the systemic laws and outlined them here: htt [libre-riscv.org]

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:05AM (#57523633)

    Asking people to be kind is the right answer.

    Zealots and totalitarians won't be happy though.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      He suggests respecting people's gender identity and chosen name, giving people respect by default, not using language that might discourage participation by certain groups etc. All the standard problems people here have with a Code of Conduct...

      Which makes me wonder, why the mostly positive response? Is it the lack of any kind of enforcement, in which case what do you do about some toxic asshat causing trouble? Or is it just that people have respect for RMS and can't find some old tweets or blog posts sugge

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Which makes me wonder, why the mostly positive response?

        He suggests. He is asking.

        Do you really not understand the difference between asking versus demanding and threatening?

        Or is it just that people have respect for RMS and can't find some old tweets or blog posts suggesting he is a social justice warrior?

        A warrior who isn't waging a war is just a person.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          He suggests. He is asking.

          Okay, so the question then is what if someone decides to ignore his polite suggestion and causes problems. I don't think he means to imply that there should be no way of dealing with such a person.

          • by Kohath ( 38547 )

            Okay, so the question then is what if someone decides to ignore his polite suggestion and causes problems. I don't think he means to imply that there should be no way of dealing with such a person.

            Stop making up stories about that. Why would a non-totalitarian want to make up stories where he could justify using power against people?

            A warrior who is building weapons and cataloguing the weakness of those around him is a threat.

    • USENET tried that with the Netiquette FAQ.

      You still had trolls, abusers and the "pity me, I'm not allowed to kill anyone" brigade.

      Fewer of them, but you still had them.

      Such people won, which is why there are so many opposed to Netiquette or decency to others.

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:18AM (#57523721) Journal

    2. I disagree with making "diversity" a goal. If the developers in a specific free software project do not include demographic D, I don't think that the lack of them as a problem that requires action; there is no need to scramble desperately to recruit some Ds. Rather, the problem is that if we make demographic D feel unwelcome, we lose out on possible contributors. And very likely also others that are not in demographic D.

    There is a kind of diversity that would benefit many free software projects: diversity of users in regard to skill levels and kinds of usage. However, that is not what people usually mean by "diversity".

  • The problem in rhe geek community these days is that it has been infested with people who took advantage of our refusal to reject anyone, abusing the system to bully and bullshit whoever they wanted without fear of consequences. And like many victims of abuse, we meekly complied to keep the peace when we should have kicked them out.

    That needs to change. The incels and manchildren have had decades to prove that they won't change without enforcement, so it's time to bring in enforcement. There will be some in

  • I'll bet this comes from the heart

    Please do not criticize people for wrongs that you only speculate they may have done; stick to what they actually say and actually do.

    Stallman is routinely and extensively criticized for saying things he hasn't said.

  • by karlandtanya ( 601084 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @10:58AM (#57524051)

    It seems that parents are no longer teaching their children how to behave in public.
    Obviously this didn't start last week, because a lot of the offenders have been out of the house for a long time.
    Lately it seems that it's become so prevalent that we need some (more) remedial education.

    ESR's essay is instructive to people who want to participate in geek culture but don't yet know the social norms therein. It seems lately that the prerequisites for participating in any culture at all--starting with recognizing that dignity [wikipedia.org] in others and in ones self are missing.

    The grumpy old man in me suspects that society is crumbling and this is a doomed attempt to patch it.
    The hopeful old man in me knows we have been assholes to each other for a long time and enough of us are fed up that all of are starting to hear about it.

    This kind of self-discipline by communities is a messy process, but it really does seem like it's worth a try.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )

      It seems that parents are no longer teaching their children how to behave in public.

      You simply have no means to correct child's behavior in public if child is not cooperative. Leftist made "discipline" a dirty word and managed to conflate it with child abuse.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Over 11,000 words and more than 65k characters - my limited 16 bit brain overflowed.

      The TL;DR version is search first, then pick the right venue, then ask nicely.

  • by Kludge ( 13653 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @11:01AM (#57524071)

    From the Guidelines:

    By contrast, to suggest that others use nonfree software opposes the basic principles of GNU, so it is not allowed in GNU Project discussions.

    This is the kind of religious/political zealotry that turns people off CoCs!

    (Just kidding BTW. I personally avoid nonfree software to an extreme.)

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      From the Guidelines:

      By contrast, to suggest that others use nonfree software opposes the basic principles of GNU, so it is not allowed in GNU Project discussions.

      This is the kind of religious/political zealotry that turns people off CoCs!

      (Just kidding BTW. I personally avoid nonfree software to an extreme.)

      You say "just kidding", but there are some problem domains where there are no FOSS solutions nor will there ever be any FOSS solutions. Absolute statements like this from RMS fly in the face of this position which means either I am not welcome in GNU projects, or I have to pick and choose which parts of his CoC I accept and which I reject - which in both cases defeats the point of the COC in the first place.

  • What do we do about the person who takes even the mildest criticism as an insufferable personal insult?

    I've worked with people like that.

    What do we do about someone who simply doesn't like someone so decides that everything they they write is a thinly veiled insult?

    I've worked with people like that.

    What do we do in the case of the inevitable use of the CoC as a bludgeon?

    To think that this will not happen is naivety in the extreme.

    So here we have it. The Prime Directive is not the project any more. T

  • Because that is something these people have to be told.

    I really love teaching in contrast. There I can just fail the failures. No, no backlash, as here academic education does not serve to make a profit.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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