| I’m sorry… but who are you? As Bert Hubert wrote in: > First, I just consider it rude. You come at me hiding who you are but still expect me to do free work for you. Try doing that in real life. What were you thinking? Not introducing yourself AND using a fake identity? > Second, I have found that this anonymity also means respondents feel free to simply walk away with no damage to their reputation. You report a complicated bug, I spend some time investigating, ask about details, and I get no response. Some weeks later a very similar question comes in from a fresh email address, likely the same person, still not wanting to do the work to get help. > Third, my software and other products can be used for good or evil. If I don’t know who you are, am I enabling you to build the new Turkish censorship infrastructure, or helping you implement the Роскомнадзор block list more efficiently? These are two examples that actually happened by the way. This is just an excerpt, you should read the whole thing to understand what’s wrong. More over - if you want community help for *free* you should show that you’ve tried, and you’ve tried hard - show that you’ve read the documentation, show us the work (code) that you wrote and didn’t work. Using free software means that you have to participate, not that you get stuff for free. Ondrej -- Ondřej Surý (He/Him) On 22. 9. 2024, at 20:19, Rm Beer <[email protected]> wrote:
|
_______________________________________________ Gnutls-help mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnutls-help
