Look on github at pycon code of conduct. See adria Richards in the logs?
Look up the blog post where they pulled the pycon code of conduct from geekfeminism wiki.
Lives have been ruined, in part because the integrity of these projects are being lost to outside pressures distracting us from accomplishing technical goals.
Python community is and has been open and diverse. We even let non-programmers into them and real programmers have been fired.
If you do support codes of conduct, know that its not needed. Civility is and has always been apart of hacker culture.
We don't care what you look like. We care if you code. We help each other.
All I see that is even remotely related to the dongle incident are the commits like this one, asking attendees to bring issues to the conference staff:
Look on github at pycon code of conduct. See adria Richards in the logs?
Look up the blog post where they pulled the pycon code of conduct from geekfeminism wiki.
Lives have been ruined, in part because the integrity of these projects are being lost to outside pressures distracting us from accomplishing technical goals.
Python community is and has been open and diverse. We even let non-programmers into them and real programmers have been fired.
If you do support codes of conduct, know that its not needed. Civility is and has always been apart of hacker culture.
We don't care what you look like. We care if you code. We help each other.