Re: Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Jonathan Carter

Hi Charles

On 2022/03/16 14:28, Charles Plessy wrote:

thank you for running !

I have a question for you (and only you).


Yay, thanks for the question!


What do you think of the reform of the Technical Committee that
introduced a limit to the time people can serve in, and would you
consider applying a similar policy to other positions of power in
Debian?
For the Technical Committee, this seems to have worked well so far. 
Currently all the Officers in Debian (not sure if that would fit your 
definition of people in power) do have expiring terms, DPL and and 
Secretary are both annual, and CTTE as per your example (Officers are 
listed out on https://www.debian.org/intro/organization)


I also think that when we re-structure DAM and CT (or whatever form that 
will take), that they should also be brought into the officers section. 
Should we vote for the members that fill the role that DAM/CT fills now? 
I can't give you a concrete answer there, but at least if we as a 
community don't approve about how well someone performs on there, then 
we're not stuck with them forever. For DAM/CT I think we'll have more 
answers once we've spent a lot more time on this topic.


For some teams with lots of power, having a strict term limit might also 
be a bad idea, since you sometimes really want the skills of the people 
who have been around for a while. For this, I really like the FTP 
Masters do, they seem to be the only delegation who have different tiers 
of members, ie. FTP Masters, FTP Assistants and FTP Wizards. The FTP 
Wizards seem like a good way to keep some valuable people around for 
their historical knowledge.


So to answer your question on whether I would consider applying a 
similar policy to these other positions, yes, certainly! I think expiry 
is one of the available tools we can use to make teams/delegations 
better. Voting is another, and tiered memberships yet another. There's 
probably a lot that we can explore, but I don't think this is best 
driven by the DPL, it needs to come from the teams and from the project 
members. Unfortunately, after two terms, I think any prospective DPL who 
thinks that they'll have time to actively drive all of this by 
themselves is in for some disappointment.


So to further answer your question, I think we need some cultural shift 
to spend some dedicated (ideally in-person) time on project structure 
and procedures, so that DDs who care about various topics can come up 
with suggestions and then either the DPL rubber stamps it or we have a 
GR where necessary. To some degree I think this is happening, we're just 
in our second GR in recent months to make changes to our voting process, 
and we have a somewhat understandably (considering how much is happening 
right now) stalled discussion on the future of DAM/CT too, which I'm 
sure will pick up again, for those teams, I think that's the right time 
and place to figure out something that would work as best possible for 
everyone.


I'm sorry for being a bit long-winded here, if it doesn't answer your 
question, then please shout :)


-Jonathan



Re: Question to all candidates: Monthly "Bits from the DPL"

2022-03-16 Thread Jonathan Carter

Hi Louis-Philippe

On 2022/03/16 20:12, Louis-Philippe Véronneau wrote:

I would like to know what is the stance of the 3 candidates on producing
monthly "Bits from the DPL" reports on their activities.

I like them very much and I think they are a great way to keep us all
informed of what the DPL has been doing.

They do take time to produce though and some DPLs have preferred to
write less frequently.


I like them a lot too, and especially enjoyed the concise and punchy 
reports that zack and lamby wrote.


And I guess this question might also be aimed at my total lack of 
releasing those. That's not a lack from wanting to, and in my last 
campaign I even committed to try harder on that front. The reality is 
that this is really difficult for me, I'm myself constantly information 
overloaded and the amount of incoming stuff just doesn't end.


For smaller items this isn't so hard. Issueing a DD certificate here and 
there, approving some expense requests, updating a delegation, welcoming 
new DDs, attending meetings for various teams (like treasurer, DAM, CT, 
etc) or for external meetings, outreach administration, etc isn't too 
hard, but often not all that exciting on it's own (I have split out the 
welcoming of new DDs to mails to -project, at least).


Also, things like approving sprints and upcoming DPL talks has just 
really been stunted by the pandemic. These used to make up quite a bit 
of the bits from the DPL, but... urgh.


But the biggest problem by far is that the most time consuming stuff is 
the hardest to write about. Dealing with all the many inter-personal 
issues that occur takes a lot of patience and listening, and progress is 
really slow, and on top of that it's difficult to write about or 
summarize. I probably *could* just add a line every month "Deal with 
inter-personal issues" but it would be pretty boring. The same goes for 
the legal stuff we're working on. It's tedious and boring and lots of 
work but at the same time, not a lot I can really say publicly.


So, yes, I really like Bits from the DPL, I'd probably do better if 
someone could help or give me a regular poke to put together some 
updates for it, but after having a very real and sincere goal to improve 
this last round and failing, I really can't give a hard commitment for this.


Sadly though, I've often given long updates to people on IRC and thought 
"this would actually be great for a bits from a DPL post" and then 
quickly get distracted... so, if I do get elected for another term, feel 
free to remind me every now again and I will give it another shot.


-Jonathan



Re: Debian Project Leader Elections 2022: Candidates

2022-03-16 Thread Kurt Roeckx
On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 04:31:38PM +0100, Kurt Roeckx - Debian Project 
Secretary wrote:
> We're now into the campaigning period. We have 3 candidates this
> year:
> - Felix Lechner
> - Jonathan Carter
> - Hideki Yamane
> 
> I will make his platforms available when I have received them at:
> https://www.debian.org/vote/2022/platforms/

All platforms are now available.


Kurt



Re: Question to all candidates: Monthly "Bits from the DPL"

2022-03-16 Thread Felix Lechner
Hi Louis-Philippe,

On Wed, Mar 16, 2022 at 11:12 AM Louis-Philippe Véronneau
 wrote:
>
> I would like to know what is the stance of the 3 candidates on producing
> monthly "Bits from the DPL" reports on their activities.
>
> I like them very much and I think they are a great way to keep us all
> informed of what the DPL has been doing.

I totally agree with you. I also like reading them, monthly or however
often they come out.

> They do take time to produce though and some DPLs have preferred to
> write less frequently.

Speaking for myself, twelve letters a year are probably an acceptable
burden for your sole elected representative.

Feel free to ping my inbox starting on the fifth of each month if you
have not received anything. At the same time, talented writers are
encouraged to apply to help chronicle our progress as a project!

Kind regards,
Felix Lechner

P.S. Everyone, please join #meetfelix on OFTC. I hope to get to know you better!



Re: Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Felix Lechner
Hi Ansgar,

On Wed, Mar 16, 2022 at 10:12 AM Ansgar  wrote:
>
> You only mention delegates which have a formally easy way to get
> replaced: the project leader can just do so.

I limited my statement to delegates because my constitutional powers
end there. For other matters, I would be an advocate like you or
everyone else.

> Do you think that an Appointments Committee should also handle package
> maintainership and should we have term limits for how long people can
> maintain packages, in particular core packages like gcc, libc, dpkg,
> apt, ...?

While a project leader cannot charge the Appointments Committee to
look at maintainers, the committee is free to make such
recommendations. The statements would be political. They exert
pressure but have no effect otherwise.

Over time, you would witness a separation of powers in Debian.

Meetings of the Appointments Committee would be open to the public.
Anyone can comment on the proceedings. The committee would follow
California's open meeting laws. [1]

Personally, I am not sure a term limit for maintainers is appropriate.
The idea also falls entirely outside the leader's powers. Please make
your case with the Appointments Committee, or apply to become a member
thereof. Then you can use the political weight of your office to
initiate a referendum.

Thank you for the tough question!

Kind regards,
Felix Lechner

P.S. Everyone, please join #meetfelix on OFTC. I hope to get to know you better!

[1] 
https://www.calcities.org/detail-pages/resource/open-public-v-a-guide-to-the-ralph-m.-brown-act



Question to all candidates: Monthly "Bits from the DPL"

2022-03-16 Thread Louis-Philippe Véronneau
Hi,

I would like to know what is the stance of the 3 candidates on producing
monthly "Bits from the DPL" reports on their activities.

I like them very much and I think they are a great way to keep us all
informed of what the DPL has been doing.

They do take time to produce though and some DPLs have preferred to
write less frequently.

-- 
  ⢀⣴⠾⠻⢶⣦⠀
  ⣾⠁⢠⠒⠀⣿⡁  Louis-Philippe Véronneau
  ⢿⡄⠘⠷⠚⠋   po...@debian.org / veronneau.org
  ⠈⠳⣄


OpenPGP_signature
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Ansgar
Hi Felix,

On Wed, 2022-03-16 at 09:45 -0700, Felix Lechner wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 16, 2022 at 5:28 AM Charles Plessy 
> wrote:
> > 
> > What do you think of the reform of the Technical Committee that
> > introduced a limit to the time people can serve in, and would you
> > consider applying a similar policy to other positions of power in
> > Debian?
> 
> I am a big fan of term limits.
[...]
> When people remain in power for too long, they also become tone-deaf.
[...]
> I hope to find enough volunteers to help the project leader evaluate
> future delegations. An Appointments Committee—with at least five but
> no more than twelve members—would collect broad and public input. If
> enough folks are willing to serve, our number of delegates would
> swell
> and still leave us with extra candidates.
> 
> A future referendum could then introduce term limits for delegates,
> but first we need a deeper pool of replacements ready to serve.

You only mention delegates which have a formally easy way to get
replaced: the project leader can just do so.

But we have other positions of power: maintainership over packages as
an example. In case of disagreement, the bar to change maintainers is
higher than for changing delegates, but the Technical Committee can do
so.

Do you think that an Appointments Committee should also handle package
maintainership and should we have term limits for how long people can
maintain packages, in particular core packages like gcc, libc, dpkg,
apt, ...?

Ansgar



Re: Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Felix Lechner
Hi Charles,

On Wed, Mar 16, 2022 at 5:28 AM Charles Plessy  wrote:
>
> What do you think of the reform of the Technical Committee that
> introduced a limit to the time people can serve in, and would you
> consider applying a similar policy to other positions of power in
> Debian?

I am a big fan of term limits. In many Western societies, especially
in the US, some politicians will not retire. Their Baby Boomer
constituencies are strong, and the needs of younger generations are
not represented. Housing prices are an example.

When people remain in power for too long, they also become tone-deaf.
They forget those whom they serve. On a societal level, stagnation
follows. There are no new ideas, and the group loses its brilliance.
Often, the young move away.

The political consequences are grave. Younger candidates struggle to
compete with long track records of incumbents. Most disastrously for
the group, the pool of possible replacements dwindles.

It takes a village to fix it. Here is my plan:

I hope to find enough volunteers to help the project leader evaluate
future delegations. An Appointments Committee—with at least five but
no more than twelve members—would collect broad and public input. If
enough folks are willing to serve, our number of delegates would swell
and still leave us with extra candidates.

A future referendum could then introduce term limits for delegates,
but first we need a deeper pool of replacements ready to serve.

Thank you for asking that valuable question!

Kind regards,
Felix Lechner

P.S. Everyone, please join #meetfelix on OFTC. I hope to get to know you better!



Re: Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Ansgar
On Wed, 2022-03-16 at 21:28 +0900, Charles Plessy wrote:
> I have a question for you (and only you).

I'll ignore that ;-)

> What do you think of the reform of the Technical Committee that
> introduced a limit to the time people can serve in

This was already introduced years ago:
https://www.debian.org/vote/2014/vote_004

> and would you
> consider applying a similar policy to other positions of power in
> Debian?

But I won't answer this.

Ansgar



Question to all candidates: rotation on positions of power

2022-03-16 Thread Charles Plessy
Hi all candidates,

thank you for running !

I have a question for you (and only you).

What do you think of the reform of the Technical Committee that
introduced a limit to the time people can serve in, and would you
consider applying a similar policy to other positions of power in
Debian?

Have a nice day,

Charles

-- 
Charles Plessy Nagahama, Yomitan, Okinawa, Japan
Debian Med packaging team http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-med
Tooting from work,   https://mastodon.technology/@charles_plessy
Tooting from home, https://framapiaf.org/@charles_plessy