On Jan 24, 2016, at 2:34 PM, Joshua D. Drake <j...@commandprompt.com> wrote:

> O.k. now I am starting to see your point. For example:

o_O

> Pg person A is harassing person B in the Rails community.
> 
> How do we deal with that?
> 
> 1. If person B is not in the Pg community then it is up to the Rails 
> community to deal with it.
> 
> 2. If person B is in the Pg community they can request help.
> 
> I am open to wording on #2. I tried a couple of times but had trouble not 
> making it a larger declaration that I think it needs to be.

How do you define “in the Pg community”? Is it someone who has posted to a 
known forum at least once? Someone who has been to a conference? What if they 
have never participated in a community forum, but use PostgreSQL at work? Maybe 
they would eventually submit a bug report or ask a question. How do you gauge 
that?

Me, I don’t think you can. If someone reports abusive behavior by a member of 
the Pg community, it should not matter whether or not the person doing the 
reporting is a member of the community, only that the reported abuser is.

Best,

David

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