On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 12:49 PM, Dave Neary <dne...@gnome.org> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> Lionel Dricot wrote:
> > Do you think that many people were turned out of the GNOME community
> > because of an hostile experience? I don't think so.  (I might be wrong, I
> > just never met anybody that has a bad experience).
>
> Some names of good contributors who have drifted away from GNOME, at
> least partly because of the tone of discourse:
>
> Dave Camp
> Seth Nickell
> Alex Graveley
> Telsa Gwynne
> Jacob Berkmann
> Ross Golder
> Daniel Veillard
> Joe Shaw
> Jorge Castro
>
> Another bunch of people who are still around the free software world,
> but who no longer consider themselves GNOME community members - I can't
> speak to their motivations, of course:
>
> Nat Friedman
> Miguel de Icaza
> Glynn Foster
> Jeff Waugh
> Jody Goldberg
> Bill Hanneman
> Malcolm Tredinnick
> Mark McLoughlin
> George Lebl
>
> Some of these people are still members of the foundation, but none of
> them have been seen around for a long while.
>
> Acceptable collateral damage for having unfettered freedom of speech?
>
> Cheers,
> Dave.
> --
> Dave Neary
> GNOME Foundation member
> dne...@gnome.org
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We should look at what wikipedia is going through -
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10403467-93.html

I should also point out that we would have most likely lost just as many
members from them just drifting to other projects, and you don't count how
many we have gained from being an open project with a lack of rules.  Let's
be honest here, GNOME isn't a huge game changer, or at least in the last few
years hasn't been.  It is a success by many metrics but these days as we
have become more formal it just doesn't hold the wild west excitement it
once had.  The shedding of some of the top contributors I see as a natural
evolution of a project which allows new blood to rise without being
constrained by old ideas.

I think a bigger issue comes when having a larger community you get more
differing views and it gets tiring to defend design decisions amongst a
louder constituency of those who are not keen to your ideas.  Signal to
noise ratio isn't something you are going to solve with a code of conduct.
I agree that some people tend to use words like "idiotic", "crap" and other
personal attacks when going to the negative but I just choose to see their
views as invalid once they go there.  I feel this is the real issue that is
trying to be solved and I fear that it won't do anything positive, and may
actually lead to being a club to quiet decedent which is why I call for
narrow rules if we do feel it is necessary in the most egregious
circumstances.

--
John (J5) Palmieri
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