GNU Kind Communications Guidelines(gnu.org)
gnu.org
GNU Kind Communications Guidelines
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/kind-communication.html
19 comments
This page is in existence since 2018. To me it is unclear what changed. Is anybody aware of a changelog? ( does archive.org do diffs ? ).
I’m not sure anything has changed - people are just looking at RMS and his writing from every possible angle, since we’re all expected to be picking sides in the “RMS rejoins FSF” drama. Since this is “a thing RMS wrote”, then it’s an opportunity to discuss and agree with / attack him over it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Because the old and recent RMS attacks violate this. And could possibly lead to expulsion.
I feel like anyone other than Stallman should have written this.
Why? I had several communications with Stallman. Based on other people's opinions, I expected a total weirdo, whereas he was always kind, respectful and and always very reasonable. What struck me was that when faced with a problem, he was genuinely trying to find a solution.
What was shocking to me was that I expected he would shove his opinions up people's throats, but the opposite was true. During one conference one guy got heated up about licensing and cried "No, I don't agree with you!" Stallman looked at him calmly and said, "That's fine, you are you, I am me, we are different persons, there is no law that says we have to always agree on everything."
What was shocking to me was that I expected he would shove his opinions up people's throats, but the opposite was true. During one conference one guy got heated up about licensing and cried "No, I don't agree with you!" Stallman looked at him calmly and said, "That's fine, you are you, I am me, we are different persons, there is no law that says we have to always agree on everything."
I don't understand why the identity of the guidelines' author matters.
I would think their suitability is independent of that.
I would think their suitability is independent of that.
A common criticism I've seen of him is that he wrote these guidelines, doesn't follow them, and isn't held accountable. I don't follow much of what he says these days, so I wouldn't weigh in on the veracity of all that, but if it's true then the document doesn't carry much weight.
If this page was written in 2018, do you have examples from then until now of him not following these guidelines?
Regardless, these are good guidelines. We're all human and even if RMS doesn't always follow them, that doesn't mean they're not good guidelines anymore.
Regardless, these are good guidelines. We're all human and even if RMS doesn't always follow them, that doesn't mean they're not good guidelines anymore.
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The ideas can be good even if the author doesn't follow them perfectly.
When the rules apply differently to some members of the community and not others, it's toxic and the community suffers. I'm not saying anything about the quality of the document.
I hear you on that, you stated:
> ""and isn't held accountable""
But, isn't RMS currently in the process of being "cancelled" (as the awake kids say). Isn't that some accountability (even if it's not the specific type one would like to see)?
> ""and isn't held accountable""
But, isn't RMS currently in the process of being "cancelled" (as the awake kids say). Isn't that some accountability (even if it's not the specific type one would like to see)?
This is the behavior that the open letter is referring to. [0]
My personal opinion is that about 85% of this is overblown, and comes from people not only not assuming good faith when reading RMS' writings, but purposefully looking for anything to nitpick and deem "controversial". That said, his comments regarding Epstein are a bit concerning.
It's not that I like RMS or anything, but I find this crusade to oust him from his own board a bit ridiculous. Clearly, RMS is very very particular about words (more specifically, the names of things) to the point of being obtuse and or insensitive in some cases. This is the guy who argues that one shouldn't use terminology like "pirating" or "content creators" for various reasons.
[0]: https://rms-open-letter.github.io/appendix
My personal opinion is that about 85% of this is overblown, and comes from people not only not assuming good faith when reading RMS' writings, but purposefully looking for anything to nitpick and deem "controversial". That said, his comments regarding Epstein are a bit concerning.
It's not that I like RMS or anything, but I find this crusade to oust him from his own board a bit ridiculous. Clearly, RMS is very very particular about words (more specifically, the names of things) to the point of being obtuse and or insensitive in some cases. This is the guy who argues that one shouldn't use terminology like "pirating" or "content creators" for various reasons.
[0]: https://rms-open-letter.github.io/appendix
Did you see where I said that I'm not weighing in on those particulars? That's because I don't consider myself well-informed of the particulars, and I'm trying to address points of genuine curiosity without wading into the minefield. Sorry if that's unsatisfactory
We're good. RMS is a total hot button. I'm also not well informed and coming at it from curiosity, if a bit inarticulate and missing context.
He should just shut up for a while about ... what exactly? For how long?
I feel like this is your opportunity and look forward to reading your guidelines.