Would a Code of Conduct also apply to social media that are not controlled by OSM/OSMF? E.g. Twitter is currently used by a certain part of the community to ridicule and criticize people writing on the mailing lists.
regards m. On Wed, Jan 8, 2020 at 1:16 AM Clifford Snow <cliff...@snowandsnow.us> wrote: > > https://www.techrepublic.com/article/diversity-why-open-source-needs-to-work-on-it-in-2020/ > is an interesting read. The article talks about open source, but I don't see > any significant difference between an open data project or an open source > software project. > > What I took away from the article is > > We need to be more inclusive > Men (especially over 45) don't see diversity as an issue > Younger community members see things getting better > We need a clear and enforced Code of Conduct to create a welcoming community > Quotas are not the answer > > Just for the record, I'm a while male over (way over) 45. > > Happy New Year, > Clifford > > -- > @osm_washington > www.snowandsnow.us > OpenStreetMap: Maps with a human touch > _______________________________________________ > Diversity-talk mailing list > Code of Conduct: > https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Diversity/MailingList/CodeOfConduct > Contact the mods (private): diversity-talk-ow...@openstreetmap.org _______________________________________________ Diversity-talk mailing list Code of Conduct: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Diversity/MailingList/CodeOfConduct Contact the mods (private): diversity-talk-ow...@openstreetmap.org