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I did read your post, but I did misunderstand you. I don't frequent mailing list archives, so I navigated with the 'previous message' 'next message' buttons, rather than the 'in reply to' button. So I went in both directions several times and I couldn't find anyone using statistics. You said: "Have you tried to read just two posts before that when someone was using statistics to prove their point?" and since you didn't mention who 'someone' was or the point they were making I could only conclude that you were talking about T'so 'previous' message where he used statistics. That's my mistake, but I'd appreciate if you could use names, links, or quotes in future. That said I still stand by most of post, but now at least now I understand why he used the '1 in 6' '1 in 4' numbers.
T'so's post is also confusingly vague in relation to what he's replying to. He never mentions Jacinta Richardson and never quotes her words in that post. He never mentions the conference or the %6. Richardson's argument is that it's extremely likely that multiple sexual assault survivors attended the conference who could be made uncomfortably by the sexual imagery used. And you're misrepresenting her %6 figure:
And T'so never directly addresses this. Instead he makes a straw man fallacy depicting rapists in a strangely specific way, initially to tear down the ideas he assumes are being presented by the statistics, but evidence of this is no where to be found. He also seems to use it as of separating violent rape from less violent rape (as sexual assault is always an act of violence), but I don't understand why it matters when victims could be traumatized regardless.
(can be read here
Again what does this have to do with the conference, harassment policy, or Richardson's post? At the same time he fixates on dismissing sexual coercion via alcohol; despite the fact that it's a much more likely scenario than his back-alley stranger and is still sexual assault. And if this isn't victim blaming, I don't know what is:
He's trying to make a point by switching the genders, but it falls flat. Repeatedly badgering someone for sex is a use of force. And regardless of how intoxicated a person is, it's never okay to take advantage of someone when they've already repeatedly propositioned them without success. So no, Bob wouldn't be responsible if he was raped; the person who chose to keep pursuing him, chose to take advantage of his intoxication, chose to rape him, bears the responsibility. People don't choose to get raped, no more than people choose to get murdered.
Of course, Richardson never said anything about sexual coercion or alcohol, so even in the proper context that I missed he's still off base. His point seems to be that Richardson is fear mongering because not that many adult women are getting violently raped; and if so I don't see what that specific subset has to do with anything? Especially since it's estimated that %30 of sexual assault cases aren't reported. Richardson's argument was not that women are going to get violently raped at the conference (or in a park, apparently?), but that there's likely sexual assault victims at the conference as well as perpetrators who don't understand what constitutes sexual assault; and I'd say T'so proves her point (though I want to clarify that I'm in no way accusing T'so of sexual assault, just that he doesn't understand it). He also misconstrues the 1 in 4 figure, as Richardson specifically said sexual assault and not just penetrative rape.
So yeah, I did miss the post you were referencing, but even after reading it I'm still left scratching my head as to why he thought this was an appropriate response. I also strongly reject the idea that my last post was a 'straw man', because that implies I made false arguments on T'so's behalf only to tear them down. I've been pretty thorough in showing where my assertions come from. I've been arguing in good faith based on what I read. I missed some context but it doesn't really change much about my argument: He made a poor, ill informed argument that had little to do with what was being discussed.
And if you're going to make assumptions about T'so's argument or my argument please include the specific parts of the posts that support that. I won't be satisfied with just "it feels" and "It seems".
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That's true. But we are all just humans. We all do this from time to time. The most important part is knowing when you did this and maybe consider not going that route in the future.
Some times, one might not realize that one is insulting because one might feel to be "on the right side". But that happens. Everybody has different views, and that's fine.
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These are different things. It is very rare to have a formal debate on a mailing list certainly not the the degree you appear to expect. Discussions DO get heated (how you judge this simply from words I wouldn't begin to fathom considering you also state above you don't read mailing lists often). Linux and OSS have largely existed based on upfront, honest communication with less emphasis on poltical discourse. Believe it or not people are quite fine with that.
Just a bit harsh if not slanderious no? Most people would say it's his opinion.
....
I lied, there is another quote:
Sexual Assault is not defacto rape. Sorry to break it to you. Much of your quotes above carry the same line of fallacies.
Edits: formatting
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This would be terrible almost regardless of who those "some" are, now it *seems* to be a powerplay in order to have the new Code of Conduct reworked so that it has less of room for being exploited to randomly evict people and keep the meritocracy in place.
Some notes;
- They can indeed revoke permission, under GPL v2 each contributer keeps copyright of their work. Moving to GPL v3 requires each contributer to sign over their copyright individually.
- It's unclear how many core developers are involved as being seen publicly speaking against the new code will have people give you fun label such as "rape apologist", people aren't exactly lining up to put their name to it.
- This is my take / interpretation of the current turmoil, read it as such :P
I personally hope they manage to balance merits & inclusiveness without fracturing the codebase - on the surface it does seem like it should be fairly easy to have a "don't be a jerk to other contributers or users" policy and leave it at that - because honestly does it really matter what kind of asshat a person is outside of the project? If it turned out that large portions of the kernel were written by people whose worldview you find abhorrent, would you stop using it(and there by Linux)?
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No developer can revoke the code published under GPLv2. That's what the GPL was designed for. The GPL enforces future freedom of code.
I'm really not sure if you need to "balance" that. In my view, they are not really connected in any way. If you're good at coding, your code will get included because it's good.
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ESR disagrees with your assessment, and I'd take his word over yours tbh.
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/1809.2/06864.html
Given that the author is also responsible for this https://postmeritocracy.org/ and that beeing "good at coding" is a merit, do you still hold this opinion? at least I hope you can see where the concern stems from
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I know his stance, but I'm really not sure why he thinks that. Stallman (author of GPL) says otherwise: https://www.itwire.com/open-source/84683-linux-code-contributions-cannot-be-rescinded-stallman.html
I'm not sure how that would work? Can you only revoke the exact code you submitted? Or any line of code you submitted any kind of patch for? How would that even work? Everything can be changed by others in time. If any part of Linux you submitted is changed by multiple others after that and only 40% or your original code is there anymore. What then?
I don't see it. There is of course something called "institutional racism/sexism". But that's just how society works. Just give it some time and it will work itself out. It's on a very good way if you ask me. By insisting on even more groups and categories for human beings, one does only achieve the opposite of the desired effect.
It should absolutely be only about the code. No one needs to know any of your social status or anything else when you submitted some code. However, in human communication such things are important. That's true. But for the code quality, it just doesn't matter.
"Make good code and be excellent to each other" is completely sufficient.
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At the heart of it I think we agree, how ever the fear is still there that it could very well be that who gets to submit code or set the future direction of Linux could be chosen not on Technical merit but on filling some social quota.
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That is indeed needed to change the license. That still doesn't mean that any code published under GPLv2 before that change of licence is somehow revoked. The GPL says that this code is free no matter what. That is the point of it.
I think there is a misunderstanding. I also think that code shouldn't be some kind of social quota filling. Every kind of special treatment for any group is not a good thing in my book, be it small groups or big groups.
As you can see in the commit message Dedale linked to, it apparently wasn't. That's what the old Code of Conflict said, but it had no real effect. Something more explicit was needed, and I think the current CoC is a step in the right direction. It isn't perfect, but I don't see how that could ever be the case, and why that matters so much.