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What can we improve from now on? #6078
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I have suggestion: let close all our opensource projects (sorry in advance) |
You don't have to be sorry for helping us think. Nobody should feel this way. There are too much reaction to the very discussion, so we get distracted and point fingers. And that hurts the community.
You have a point, actually. But that way helps the large companies, because it'll lead at worst to development of better disassembler and more closed source future. Or only one community that tends to ignore evidence. |
I understand. That's my initiative and there is no alternatives for now. But that's something alive right now. |
Yes, you decide.
Well, we have lots of good people with us. I think there are many things we can do. |
The mission of this repo is completed. Bumping the number up is no longer impactful. The purpose is not to "fight over number" or "fighting between two parties". It's meaningless.
No, there are shit ton of communication already. Besides, the message already spread to the whole community. Further things don't have to initiate from this repo. Just wait for the next move of FSF. Instead, we should stop accepting new signs as the open letter, so that we can do something else. |
Huh, you have an interesting point. And you already told me something along the lines before.
Makes sense.
Honestly, it feels like a good idea to me, too. |
Yes, I was thinking of closing the letter tomorrow, after merging the last batch of signatures from codeberg etc. |
Unlike our opponents, as we close the letter, we should make a brief statement about our achievement. It would be good to end this action with an encouragement and unifying message. |
Once signatures are no longer accepted, adding a closing statement above the letter that suggests other ways to provide support (e.g. making FSF donations or membership) could be constructive. |
I thought about another idea: relicense on our projects under a license that explicitly disallow or create trouble for MegaCorps. I think to do that, we just need such a clause: "You're free to use, reproduce or modify the software by any means, but any such usage is illegal" or so. It will be easy for anonymous hackers to develop and use such projects, but almost completely impossible for MegaCorps. I don't know enough law to work out the full details. Any thoughts? |
While RMS was causing enough trouble for the corporations, I am not sure how much luck was involved. At this point, many of us had a wakeup call: seeing how many people or bots prevent important information from spreading was weird. Seeing how biased platforms are is weird, as well. There are several routes we can take. One I would propose is to educate people. Not on RMS (who is very important), but more generally, how to start actually looking at evidence, how to treat evidence (critical thinking), gather enough of it, how to make theories from it (which is a tedious process people often replace with borrowed views called scientific method). If people knew even a part of it, none of what happened would happen. I hope. And I hope we'll remain as a community to write code and react on weird stuff, too. |
In theory, we can get world peace by doing that :) |
It's called GPLv3 and AGPLv3. |
I know it won't help immediately. But it'll help gradually. A tiny bit. Ish. We don't have a "fixus everythingus" spell, sadly. |
nukeop: I think we should keep the petition going. Why settle for a lesser win? Let's keep winning, forever. Keep the petition going! |
I don't want to play this game if you think that "we win". It's not a war and we have lost already, and it's not a game. This letter was helping, hope giving, supporting and it's good thing. I agree with idea that it will be reasonable now to stop collecting signs/numbers because it was made visible already, corporations doesn't care (unless in bad way), community have seen that they are not alone and it will be smart to stop playing numbers. Personally if there will be other movements against cancelling people for their views, gender, skin color (or whatever) - I'd be happy to join those (most likely) but it's not related to this repository. imho. |
How about we keep it open until the end of Debian's vote? https://www.debian.org/vote/2021/vote_002 The proposal E is signing us and F is go against the open letter.
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Wouldn't be too worried. They didn't care enough about you to give you a second chance and jumped to the conclusion that you're transphobic, and agreed to everything else said about RMS, without doing their own research.
The split was already there before the open letter. People thought that way. People jumped to conclusions. You may have lost some friends in the process, but I'd argue you'd lose them over something else later on. Better now than later. The FSF isn't any worse than it was just before the open letter, it just revealed certain things. |
I think there isn't much to be gained by letting it drag on. We have demonstrated what we came here to do. Soon it will be the time to switch targets. |
nukeop, then how about leave it open until the end of the Debian vote? Some other people have suggested that aswell. I think it's a reasonable end time. Ending the petition now would be too early, I think. EDIT: to be clear, on the Debian vote it seems that there is a proposition where Debian project endorses our pro-RMS petition. That's why I and a few people think it should be left open for now; wait and see what Debian does. Debian is an important project. |
@nukeop, I urge you wait a little till the end of the Debian vote. There is a little chance, that the project will sign our letter, yet it is. Moreover, some DD's privately told me that they are ready to leave the project, like me, and join to your letter in case something like the "choice 1" will win. Don't close the door! |
We had a discussion with the team and we're ok with leaving it open until then. We're not expecting more than ~6-6.5k signatures in any event (which is already a huge success). |
On Tue, Apr 06, 2021 at 04:04:50AM -0700, nukeop wrote:
We're not expecting more than ~6-6.5k signatures in any event (which
is already a huge success).
The point was: you didn't announce the deadline. That's why debian
people include this letter in the vote, for example.
I think, given we know when voting period ends - now it's a good time
to provide some deadline. Say "end of vote + 1 week".
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nukeop, so I suggest leaving the letter open for 5 additional days after the debian vote is announced. I have a feeling that they might be supportive of us. It's worth waiting. |
Hello community, Personally, I think to exclude Stallman from FSF is like to exclude Trotski from Communist party and we all know how the Soviet Union ended. Its pretty clear that corporation lackeys are producing this fracture, its not just about software, its far deeper. Thank you very much for this place, make you feel that community is alive and the sense of solidarity still burns. |
No it is absolutely not completed. You need at least 10k signatures to beat this forever. If you close the repo before reaching 10k signatures your adversaries will suppress and mitigate the existence of this in the public narrative, and effectively waste all of your effort. They are trained PR professionals and there will be subsequent efforts. Crush 'em with this. |
I think that the profound success of the support letter being able to scale submissions compared to the open letter who have collapsed from an impractical project management structure says everything that needs to be said. This project here is a well oiled machine and the open letter seems to have ceased operation for the most part. It's also quite regrettable that so many prominent project leads opposed the community will at large, it really shows how either blatantly out of touch they are with their demographics or how pervasive the corporate influence is. |
Yes, there's a very high possibility the letter will stay open. :-)
Bryan Lunduke intends to communicate with open letter people. Not as a signer, but on his own behalf. Maybe future is brighter: he's well-known. Let's watch how it happens and support him in comments while he's telling about the progress. |
I am of the strong opinion that the initiative should be closed.
Note that:
Note: I am aware that Stallman prefers keeping the letter open and I am openly disagreing with him |
What we want to do in the future is to support the FSF by donating and asking others to donate and to support Free Software. But the battle between this two letters should not continue. We won: it's now a useless race against a dead body. |
@Aspie96 Strategically this doesn't make as much sense as it may seem to at first glance. There is some wisdom in avoiding a reactionary model in an adversarial situation. By tying the actions for our initiatives so tightly to the actions of the exclusionist camp, we inadvertantly put ourselves in the position of being controlled by an external actor; that is a situation easily exploitable by an adversary that allows new light (and shadows) to be painted on any movement made.
We should treat the existence of the other letter as a separate issue entirely.
Sure, but, bear in mind the exclusionist camp has paid PR teams and is a learning, adaptive organization and has a high level of (misguided) motivation. Even while we've been focused on this they have been trying to subvert its existence in the press so that they can recover enough from the blowback of a failed campaign to go for round 2. This was the easiest to counter of all of their efforts because it was their first action. The only solution is a comprehensive strategy of which this is one part, so, we need this to stay alive in perpetuity. These actions on their part here were just the trumpets of war. From it, we learned their modes of operation, who was backing them, and what their end goal is. This is only just beginning for them. |
This is a good point. However, you have to consider this letter is simply a response to theirs. So our actions will be tied to theirs. And, more importantly, they are tied to this controversy, not any future one It's true we have to think about our decisions, but I think after considering all factors we should close this letter soon. It would not have been wise to close it when they closed theirs beause they were already not receiving signaturse whyile we were still receiving many.
I disagree. I think this letter is clearly a response to the other letter, or at least by the movement which is represnted by it
I do not think at all keeping it open is the best strategy. Indeed, I think this is precisely a good reason to close the letter for two reasons:
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Reminder: this exists. Voting stops in less than an hour. There's a high chance Debian will stay neutral and some devs will join this letter.
Generally I don't have a strong personal opinion about opening or closing. I wanted to close it some time ago and I was wrong then: some interesting people joined only recently. |
I am not suggesting closing it before Debian votes. Indeed, I think closing ought to be announced (and at minimum it should have been after Debian's vote even if we could announce it to the past). I am suggesting it should be closed in few days, defenitely not right now and surely not prior to Debian's vote. Indeed closing it can actually get us a wave of signature making sure lazy people sign too |
So on that I agree. Even as far out as 90 days, the announcement of the signature window closing would be great marketing pressure to bring in another spike of signatories. I was hoping to see this reach 10k signatures before closing. |
Look, regarding Debian, there are two entities at play here:
That spike can only be expected from (2), and some of those people might be bullied out of declaring their positions before they can be attracted -- something both the Debian community and Gnome Foundation have developed well-earned reputations for. |
I think considering my other points 90 days is probably too long. I don't think we should focus an arbitrary number based on our arbitrary base 10 system but, rather, a more high level result. Our closing time should balance a few factors which should include not waiting too long after they closed their letter and, also, the rate at which we are currently getting signatures. We should not be trying to maximize in number of signatures but, rather, in the strenght of the message sent. Obviously PRs themselves should remain open (or at least there should be a clear separate way for removing signatures) |
Nah, I care about more widespread reaction when Debian announces something. At all. Can we just watch what will happen for now? |
I think that by closing signatures the message will be much clearer expecially in a distant future: "there were 2 initiatives, one got A signatures, the other got B signatures, so B won", rather then "there were two initiatives, one got A signatures, the other is still collecting signatures". What is important now is to support the FSF and to create awareness but without focusing on this letter, which at this point is a distraction |
I yield my objection to this idea. |
It looks like their vote has concluded. They've unfortunately convoluted their election process so much that the results are unreadable without further research. |
Their decision is to be neutral |
Glad to hear that's what Debian the organization has voted on, but it doesn't detract from the fact that this was Neil McGovern's campaign. It really should be addressed. |
Indeed, Debian's vote is difficult to interpret. According the pool result, they choosed the option 7 which states that "Debian will not issue a public statement on this issue". However the full statement of proposal 7 was:
This last sentence does not honor the Debian signatories of the petition who led the offensive against the FSF before their internal consultation. |
I don't understand your point actually. |
@Aspie96 The smear campaign that this all revolves around was led by a guy named Neil McGovern, who works at Debian and the Gnome Foundation, and Elana Hashman who works at Debian and the Kubernetes project, and Molly de Blanc at Debian and Gnome foundation was in all likelihood set up as a patsy to point the public's anger at to allow Neil and Elana to continue doing things like this. The proposal that was on debian's docket here for joining in on attacking the FSF was also brought forth by Neil. He was also involved in the media arm of the effort where he went onto podcasts to try to suppress the support letter's results. He is like the Final Boss of identity politics trolls. |
These are two forms of disavowal against Molly de Blanc, Elana Hashman, Neil McGovern and Stefano Zacchiroli who have been proud to affiliate themselves to Debian in the smear letter. |
They are only signing in their individual capacity |
@Aspie96 They marked their affiliation to Debian, some use a Debian email address, some were part of the Debian vote. They did not wait for the Debian consulation in order to get into the action. This tells about the respect these persons have for the Debian community. |
@Aspie96 no they didn't just sign, they literally were the coordinators of this attack. |
Yes, but, again, in their individual capacity. Not representing Debian. |
If it's about Debian now, maybe it's time to use GitHub discussions? :-) I made this issue for improvement proposals. So some possible improvements are proposed here. |
@Aspie96 I'd like to make it clear. I am not passing judgement on Debian. I am pointing out the methods of manipulation used by jerks who seek to defame us. |
I reiterate what @6r1d said about this meriting a discussions thread, but I think this comment should set it off: All these people work for Debian and hover around the OSI. I do not believe it would be reasonable to conclude that this is a coincidence, but, regardless, the behavior of these 3 people should be addressed in a community sense. Literally anyone could be their next victim -- including people in their specific communities. |
Hello community, |
Indeed, the attack vector was one of the best surprises to me as well. But @basilean, I would say right now: it is not the last mob attack. More will happen. More leaders will be attacked and removed. Maybe just programmers, too. We all should stand against the mob tactic, against the idea someone can lose their life's work under false accusations and a lack of arguments. |
I fully agree. |
Things are calming down, but we have two communities from now on. One denounces RMS, other doesn't.
There's still little communication and there's a bit of conflict when somebody doesn't want to listen to you.
The fact many don't know the situation can potentially hurt RMS at a later date.
FSF is almost broken, and it's probably broken because it relied on sponsorship money.
The fact our letter only had appeared only in some news is strange, as well.
What can we do from now on to mend and improve things? Should we act at all? I propose an open discussion on that matter.
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