How can we have these discussions without them turning into mud wars every single time?
I would say this:
First, try to rember that to the other side of the screen there are actual people with an individual mind and feelings. So, try not to utterly destroy them if you don’t agree with them on something, especially if you’re passionate about it.
Secondly, remember why we are here in the first place and what brings us together.
We are people that like a technology (Nix, NixOS and everything else in the family), we value its use and would like to see it improved and becoming more accessible and widespread.
So, what’s more important? Winning the argument while possibly alienating contributors that disagree or setting the differences aside and collaborate to achieve our goals?
The discussion in question doesnt seem like collaborative community engagement to me; on the contrary, it’s hard not to see a recent trend of organized trolling on the forum. The forum has become less usable for me to find helpful information as it’s bombarded with all these “debates” and “innocent questions” that quickly become hostile and have the side effect of makimg marginalized members of this community feel less welcomed or to undermine critical discussions like of the sponsorship policy (where a handful of employees of the same company dominated the thread by volume of posts).
Every time there is something controversial happening here, and especially when it leaves the bubble of our community (e.g. Hacker News), I see an increased influx of new users and registrations. Outsiders to the community with loud opinions are definitely a known problem. Another problem that arises through this is that over time this attracts people who are mainly there for the debate and politics and less for the actual project.
Protecting the community from outside actors (including brigading etc.) without gatekeeping community members is really difficult.
The “you must be this tall to ride” sentence has come up over this more than once, and while I don’t want to discuss it right now, I have a larger discussion about this on my backlog.
The thing that sucks about this is I was deemed not tall enough to criticize the Anduril sponsorship, and I would never have grown tall enough if I had been gatekept back then.
I find it interesting to see what happens when you replace the word argument here with sponsorship:
So, what’s more important? Winning the sponsorship while possibly alienating contributors that disagree or setting the differences aside and collaborate to achieve our goals?
I encourage those that agreed with the argument variation but disagree on the sponsorship variation to reflect on why that may be.
Or more to the point, for those who were okay alienating contributors to obtain a controversial Anduril sponsorship but not general disagreement… why?
Personally I fear an environment where some are alienated by sponsor choices while being told not to alienate others by disagreeing. Especially if those messages come from the same person.
It think and hope the intent of the newly released sponsorship policy is to state something along these lines, but need to read it over a few more times.
I do want to point out that this problem is absolutely not limited to recently-joined users, but also frequently involves people who have been around (and behaving this way) for years. It is not merely a problem of influx.
Currently the best options are in Discourse or to reach out to the Board and stakeholders directly. I do not recommend Matrix as anything controversial is quickly mobbed with interest and heightened tensions, leading to more need for moderation. Even here in Discourse it has been helpful to slow the pace down.
There have also been round-table and “un-conference” discussions about this at various events (there are pros+cons: less accessible attendance, but people tend to be more polite in person).
This is one that gets me. I’ve not been consistently active, either as a contributor or as a poster, but I’ve been around a long time. And I have a lot of respect for familiar usernames, especially ones that I’ve seen in the Nixpkgs commit logs for a long time but also people who I’ve known to give a lot of their time helping others learn the ecosystem.
In discussions that are driven by new arrivals or outsiders, I often see people talk about longtime contributors like they don’t know who they are, or like they’re nobody, or like they’re disposable— it’s clear that for outsiders contributors are often seen solely through the lens of what ‘side’ they seem to be on in a given Discourse post or whether they signed a given letter. And it feels wrong to me every time I see it. It’s painful.
I just wanna say that I appreciate your sensitivity to this.
Thanks for the advice. I tried to start a discussion on Discourse (What Defines a Minority?), but it got shut down and I was labeled a “concern troll”. What could I have done differently? Should I reach out to the board directly? It’s frustrating because it seems we can’t openly discuss certain topics, especially policy-related ones.
I feel like the moderators might not be fully adhering to the code of conduct. Is there a process for officially challenging moderation actions?
Just so that you are aware and expectations are set: there is no specific policy nor oversight procedure for challenging moderation actions. Much of this is being worked out as we speak and is … contentious. Just as anywhere else in life, challenging this sort of thing is especially sensitive.
Frankly, I would not recommend it. Or, at least don’t expect an enthusiastic response nor should you demand an immediate outcome. Say your piece and then let that be enough. These things take time.
the moderation team can ban anyone “causing divide”
the definition of “causing divide” is subjective, and decided by the moderation team
the moderation team must only be asked for accountability in a very narrow forum that is also moderated by the moderation team
except even there, you can’t ask questions of the moderation team that the moderation team deems to cause division
and once again, the moderation team decides what causes more divide
Welp, here I am, causing more divide between the people that think the moderation team is way out of line, and the people that don’t. Strike me down, I’m ready to accept my fate.
GitHub can be a suitable platform for purely technical or policy-oriented discussions, but this assumes that users are not blocked from the GitHub organization. For example, RFC 175 cannot progress because the authors and the nominated shepherd are all banned.
The thing you’re missing or willfully ignoring is that the moderators need authority to act, this is one of the issues that has been brought up over and over again as a problem in the community.
Every community will have their particular guardrails, and if you can’t abide by them then there won’t be space for you in the community. This is not a difficult concept to understand.
You should also note that your flippant tone is not conducive to furthering the community, and by using such a tone you’re undermining your own point and reinforcing the actions that the moderators have been taking.
We have given all the reasoning and insight we are going to give, hence asking for more is not only unproductive, it is also unreasonable and bordering on concern trolling. I will therefore suggest dropping the matter.