On 11/10/2010 07:00 AM, David Graham wrote:
On Wed, 10 Nov 2010, Adrian Bunk wrote:
You don't need a code of conduct for going to the police and report a
crime.

I come down firmly only the side of Adrian on this.

It is totally inappropriate for any event organisation to have to put
out a code of conduct that says "you must follow the law." That code of
conduct exists. In fact, it is called "the law."

I am mostly in agreement with you, David. But what the law says, and how well it is implemented, varies widely across the world. While in much of the west, we can count on police help, can the same be said of every country that might host, say, Debconf?

I'm still not sure that a "code of conduct" is really the right thing. I think that the more appropriate thing would be training for conference organizers on how to deal with various situations. This is obviously one that they should be prepared to deal with. There are others: medical emergencies, disruptive behavior, etc. How to deal with them is probably going to be different in different places.

I am in complete agreement that it should not be up to conference organizers to attempt to adjudicate allegations. They have the right to ask someone to leave, but ought to do so without leveling allegations at that person. There will obviously be judgment involved in such cases. But to attempt to declare someone's guilt or innocence opens one up to serious potential for lawsuits, at least in the USA (libel, slander, discrimination, etc.) Plus, it's not something that tech conference organizers are trained to do well.

-- John
_______________________________________________
Spi-general mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.spi-inc.org/listinfo/spi-general

Reply via email to