* [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] [not found] <20080508233328.GA8896@comet> @ 2008-05-15 20:49 ` Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh ` (5 more replies) 0 siblings, 6 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Donnie Berkholz @ 2008-05-15 20:49 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-council; +Cc: gentoo-project On 16:33 Thu 08 May , Donnie Berkholz wrote: > Enforced retirement: After 2.5 hours on the previous topics, people had > to go to sleep and jokey's computer broke. Instead of waiting till the > next regular meeting, because of its urgency, we scheduled a special > session next week at the same time. The appeals will *not* be decided > then -- it's about figuring out the validity and the process. 2 of us have shown up -- amne and me. That's really pathetic, guys. What happened? Did the rest of you miss the announcement in the summary? I was looking at the IRC log from last week, and here's what I saw (relevant parts only): < FlameBook+> I'm fine with the reschedule, as I'm probably going away soon, too < dberkholz@> amne, Betelgeuse, FlameBook, solar -- rescheduling to a special session work? < dberkholz@> ah, FlameBook already said yes <Betelgeuse@> o <Betelgeuse@> k < dberkholz@> looks like amne went to bed < dberkholz@> enough of us agree on that, so let's do it lu_zero said on IRC last night that he was going to be traveling today, but nobody's shown up to proxy for him: < lu_zero@> dberkholz today we'll the extended council meeting, isn't it? < dberkholz@> i optimistically hope it's not "extended" in the "taking a long time" sense < dberkholz@> but the postponed topics from last week, yes < lu_zero@> dberkholz again I'll be travelling < dberkholz@> lu_zero: oh, did it just come up? < lu_zero@> dberkholz pretty much =_= < lu_zero@> lately my time-space position is quite random < lu_zero@> _Hopefully_ I'll be there < lu_zero@> but 4 hours of travel can be extended =_= That means that it's conceivable that if solar (vapier's proxy), vapier and jokey didn't check IRC again or read the council summary, they could've missed the announcement. I guess I can see how people who are at the meeting might not read the summary, because they sat through it. I blame myself for not sending a standalone announcement outside of the summary. tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one year' is then reset from that point. musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular meetings or also irregular ones like this. Open up the floodgates, folks. What do you think, what should we do? I look forward to hearing your advice. Thanks, Donnie -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz @ 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:52 ` Petteri Räty 2008-05-15 21:27 ` Roy Bamford ` (4 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:05 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1033 bytes --] On Thu, 15 May 2008 13:49:14 -0700 Donnie Berkholz <dberkholz@gentoo.org> wrote: > tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: > > If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a > new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one > year' is then reset from that point. > > musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular > meetings or also irregular ones like this. Since I'm the one to blame for those bits of GLEP 39... The wording's fairly explicit -- *any* meeting. The GLEP doesn't say that the council has monthly meetings. It merely requires *at least* one meeting per month: > The council must hold an open meeting at least once per month. The Council is free to decide when it has meetings so long as it meets that requirement. In this case, the Council decided to hold two meetings this month. Looks like you don't have much choice but to do what the GLEP says and schedule an election... -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:52 ` Petteri Räty 2008-05-16 16:46 ` Donnie Berkholz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Petteri Räty @ 2008-05-15 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1379 bytes --] Ciaran McCreesh kirjoitti: > On Thu, 15 May 2008 13:49:14 -0700 > Donnie Berkholz <dberkholz@gentoo.org> wrote: >> tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: >> >> If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a >> new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one >> year' is then reset from that point. >> >> musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular >> meetings or also irregular ones like this. > > Since I'm the one to blame for those bits of GLEP 39... > > The wording's fairly explicit -- *any* meeting. The GLEP doesn't say > that the council has monthly meetings. It merely requires *at least* > one meeting per month: > >> The council must hold an open meeting at least once per month. > > The Council is free to decide when it has meetings so long as it meets > that requirement. In this case, the Council decided to hold two > meetings this month. > > Looks like you don't have much choice but to do what the GLEP says > and schedule an election... > Keeping an election is really not that much trouble so I would just do it. As for why I didn't attend it's because my server hasn't really been able to keep itself up lately and with no access to my regular irssi screen I forgot to get myself online via other means. Regards, Petteri [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 260 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:52 ` Petteri Räty @ 2008-05-16 16:46 ` Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-16 20:45 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Donnie Berkholz @ 2008-05-16 16:46 UTC (permalink / raw To: Petteri Räty; +Cc: gentoo-project On 00:52 Fri 16 May , Petteri Räty wrote: > Keeping an election is really not that much trouble so I would just do it. > As for why I didn't attend it's because my server hasn't really been able > to keep itself up lately and with no access to my regular irssi screen I > forgot to get myself online via other means. We could hold a 2-week vote that is simply something like this: "Do you want to elect new council members? A 'yes' vote means that you want an election. A 'no' vote means that you want to retain the existing council." That might preempt the time required (wasted?) for an all-out nomination+election. Thanks, Donnie -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 16:46 ` Donnie Berkholz @ 2008-05-16 20:45 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 21:34 ` Ferris McCormick 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 20:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: Donnie Berkholz; +Cc: Petteri Räty, gentoo-project Donnie Berkholz wrote: > On 00:52 Fri 16 May , Petteri Räty wrote: >> Keeping an election is really not that much trouble so I would just do it. >> As for why I didn't attend it's because my server hasn't really been able >> to keep itself up lately and with no access to my regular irssi screen I >> forgot to get myself online via other means. > > We could hold a 2-week vote that is simply something like this: > > "Do you want to elect new council members? A 'yes' vote means that you > want an election. A 'no' vote means that you want to retain the existing > council." > > That might preempt the time required (wasted?) for an all-out > nomination+election. > This isn't a bad idea. However, I do think this is much ado about nothing. The purpose of policy is to make Gentoo work better. The purpose of Gentoo isn't to make policies work better. If a policy doesn't make sense it should be changed. If it didn't make sense a week ago then it should be changed retroactively. This isn't a criminal proceeding - we're looking to advance a distro, not be a testing lab for concepts in jurisprudence. I suspect that 90% of devs are not eager to have an election right now. It seems kind of silly to hold one over this issue. If the goal is to prevent slacking why not make the rule "three meetings with <50% and any slackers at 2 of those 3 immediately lose their posts" or something like that. We have to try to remember that Gentoo is a volunteer effort - not a full time job. I'd rather have good council members who have both technical strength and good people-skills / common-sense / etc, than have a council full of people who merely have nothing better to do at 4PM EST on a Thursday afternoon (or whatever time it is locally for you). We want to promote open processes/etc, but it isn't good for the distro to go through a re-election ever three months due to some technicality. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 20:45 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 21:34 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 23:11 ` Denis Dupeyron 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-16 21:34 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Fri, 16 May 2008 16:45:53 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > Donnie Berkholz wrote: > > On 00:52 Fri 16 May , Petteri Räty wrote: > >> Keeping an election is really not that much trouble so I would just do it. > >> As for why I didn't attend it's because my server hasn't really been able > >> to keep itself up lately and with no access to my regular irssi screen I > >> forgot to get myself online via other means. > > > > We could hold a 2-week vote that is simply something like this: > > > > "Do you want to elect new council members? A 'yes' vote means that you > > want an election. A 'no' vote means that you want to retain the existing > > council." > > > > That might preempt the time required (wasted?) for an all-out > > nomination+election. > > > > This isn't a bad idea. > > However, I do think this is much ado about nothing. The purpose of > policy is to make Gentoo work better. The purpose of Gentoo isn't to > make policies work better. If a policy doesn't make sense it should be > changed. If it didn't make sense a week ago then it should be changed > retroactively. This isn't a criminal proceeding - we're looking to > advance a distro, not be a testing lab for concepts in jurisprudence. > I rather doubt that if you'd asked anyone a week ago if GLEP 39 made sense, that people would have told you no. And I will point out that one of the items for discussion at the non-meeting was whether or not GLEP 39 should be clarified (in another area). Thus, it seems to me that Council would have read GLEP 39 before yesterday and have been aware of the 50% attendance requirement. And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves are part of the approval process. Changing policy is a fairly lengthy procedure, but right now Council is on a one month clock to hold an election unless something changes. It still seems to me that Petteri has it right, and that it's better just to do it rather than talk about it. > I suspect that 90% of devs are not eager to have an election right now. > It seems kind of silly to hold one over this issue. If the goal is to > prevent slacking why not make the rule "three meetings with <50% and any > slackers at 2 of those 3 immediately lose their posts" or something like > that. > Actually, the rule for individual slackers is stronger. It's all spelled out in the GLEP. > We have to try to remember that Gentoo is a volunteer effort - not a > full time job. I'd rather have good council members who have both > technical strength and good people-skills / common-sense / etc, than > have a council full of people who merely have nothing better to do at > 4PM EST on a Thursday afternoon (or whatever time it is locally for you). > I agree. That's one reason they can send proxies of they can't be there. > We want to promote open processes/etc, but it isn't good for the distro > to go through a re-election ever three months due to some technicality. Do you really view this as a possibility? Then the GLEP should be amended, I suppose. > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > Regards, Ferris - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgt/gUACgkQQa6M3+I///cHMgCfS/mB5CbH2Vm8VXWurOGPboXD xMAAnipznWXn4bpRkicw9zsmZUDEmfz2 =EQef -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 21:34 ` Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 22:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-16 23:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 23:11 ` Denis Dupeyron 1 sibling, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 22:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: Ferris McCormick; +Cc: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2287 bytes --] Ferris McCormick wrote: > And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we > can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then > applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves are > part of the approval process. Nothing too tricky - council votes that the GLEP is to be modified retroactively. A few folks complain. Life goes on. > Changing policy is a fairly lengthy > procedure, but right now Council is on a one month clock to hold an > election unless something changes. It still seems to me that Petteri > has it right, and that it's better just to do it rather than talk about > it. > What happens if we just do nothing and pretend it didn't happen? Most likely, not much. Don't get me wrong - I'm not into dictatorships and I'm a big proponent of democracy. If most devs really want another election, then let's get it going. However, all of about 4-6 people (and not all devs) have chimed in on this discussion, which suggests that most don't care. If most devs don't care for a new election, wouldn't it just be a major distraction to call for an election now? You'll have three months of a lame-duck council and all kinds of decisions may get put off. A few posters in this thread have suggested that they'll probably vote for the exact same council, but it is just important that we follow the process. Hopefully none of these posters are among those accusing Gentoo of being bureaucratic - having an election just for the sake of having an election when most folks don't want a change just seems like an exercise in procedure. I'm just trying to be pragmatic - the council was democratically elected, and a new council will be elected in a few months. If the council just went and disappeared I could see the need for an emergency election to keep things going. However, at this point an election will just delay stuff getting done. I think that an election now would be a mistake. However, if we really want to survey the devs it wouldn't be a bad thing, although if anybody other than the few of us cared strongly they could just post here. If there really are a lot of devs who would like us to follow the letter of the current GLEP 39 then I'd be all for an election. [-- Attachment #2: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature --] [-- Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature, Size: 3657 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 22:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-17 0:14 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-16 23:38 ` Ferris McCormick 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-16 22:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 709 bytes --] On Fri, 16 May 2008 18:39:03 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich@thefreemanclan.net> wrote: > Ferris McCormick wrote: > > And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we > > can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then > > applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves > > are part of the approval process. > > Nothing too tricky - council votes that the GLEP is to be modified > retroactively. A few folks complain. Life goes on. They don't have that authority. GLEP 39 wasn't approved as a GLEP. It was approved by global vote, and retroactively written up as a GLEP to make it easy to reference and find. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 22:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-17 0:14 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-17 0:14 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1196 bytes --] On Fri, 2008-05-16 at 23:44 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Fri, 16 May 2008 18:39:03 -0400 > Richard Freeman <rich@thefreemanclan.net> wrote: > > Ferris McCormick wrote: > > > And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we > > > can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then > > > applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves > > > are part of the approval process. > > > > Nothing too tricky - council votes that the GLEP is to be modified > > retroactively. A few folks complain. Life goes on. > > They don't have that authority. GLEP 39 wasn't approved as a GLEP. It > was approved by global vote, and retroactively written up as a GLEP > to make it easy to reference and find. Interesting that the word global keeps being used. I noticed the rule/policy we are discussion is under B. Global issues will be decided by an elected Gentoo council. Also where does it state the council does not have the power to change GLEP 39? Or that changes to it must be done by a global vote of developers, and not council members? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 22:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-16 23:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-17 9:15 ` Ferris McCormick 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-16 23:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Fri, 16 May 2008 18:39:03 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich@thefreemanclan.net> wrote: > Ferris McCormick wrote: > > And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we > > can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then > > applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves are > > part of the approval process. > > Nothing too tricky - council votes that the GLEP is to be modified > retroactively. A few folks complain. Life goes on. > > > Changing policy is a fairly lengthy > > procedure, but right now Council is on a one month clock to hold an > > election unless something changes. It still seems to me that Petteri > > has it right, and that it's better just to do it rather than talk about > > it. > > > > What happens if we just do nothing and pretend it didn't happen? Most > likely, not much. > We send the message to the community that policies don't much matter. In this case, someone did bring up policy, so I don't see how we can pretend it didn't happen. > Don't get me wrong - I'm not into dictatorships and I'm a big proponent > of democracy. If most devs really want another election, then let's get > it going. However, all of about 4-6 people (and not all devs) have > chimed in on this discussion, which suggests that most don't care. If > most devs don't care for a new election, wouldn't it just be a major > distraction to call for an election now? You'll have three months of a > lame-duck council and all kinds of decisions may get put off. > Not really, because the clock resets. So the election is for 12 months. That's pretty clear in the GLEP, I think. > A few posters in this thread have suggested that they'll probably vote > for the exact same council, but it is just important that we follow the > process. Hopefully none of these posters are among those accusing > Gentoo of being bureaucratic - having an election just for the sake of > having an election when most folks don't want a change just seems like > an exercise in procedure. > > I'm just trying to be pragmatic - the council was democratically > elected, and a new council will be elected in a few months. If the > council just went and disappeared I could see the need for an emergency > election to keep things going. However, at this point an election will > just delay stuff getting done. > > I think that an election now would be a mistake. However, if we really > want to survey the devs it wouldn't be a bad thing, although if anybody > other than the few of us cared strongly they could just post here. If > there really are a lot of devs who would like us to follow the letter of > the current GLEP 39 then I'd be all for an election. Regards, Ferris - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkguGwkACgkQQa6M3+I///ciggCgkCqB/WFMB5v1z1H1SWrK8O1X 8rEAn1BqjKgYyMJFxCiUIBoeUAJkU/l1 =ydab -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:38 ` Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-17 9:15 ` Ferris McCormick 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-17 9:15 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I am sometimes accused of "playing lawyer" when I get into discussions like this. Curiously, I almost never play lawyer, and I pretty much ignore such comments. So, warning: In this response, I am going to play lawyer, look at the "B. Global issues ..." bit of GLEP 39, and float an interpretation based on how I understand the intent. It might provide a way to proceed, but it will also require Council to open its sealed logs to some third party. Further comments in the proper spot of the reply. And as I repeat below, if ciaranm indicates that my reading is incorrect, then I withdraw the argument which follows. On Fri, 16 May 2008 23:38:42 +0000 Ferris McCormick <fmccor@gentoo.org> wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Fri, 16 May 2008 18:39:03 -0400 > Richard Freeman <rich@thefreemanclan.net> wrote: > > > Ferris McCormick wrote: > > > And as I've said before, if we think a policy doesn't make sense, we > > > can change it. But changing a policy that affects Council and then > > > applying it retroactively gets tricky, because Council themselves are > > > part of the approval process. > > > > Nothing too tricky - council votes that the GLEP is to be modified > > retroactively. A few folks complain. Life goes on. > > > > > Changing policy is a fairly lengthy > > > procedure, but right now Council is on a one month clock to hold an > > > election unless something changes. It still seems to me that Petteri > > > has it right, and that it's better just to do it rather than talk about > > > it. > > > > > > > What happens if we just do nothing and pretend it didn't happen? Most > > likely, not much. > > > > We send the message to the community that policies don't much matter. > In this case, someone did bring up policy, so I don't see how we can > pretend it didn't happen. > <Lawyer Alert> Let's look at "B. Global issues ..." and ciaranm's clarification of the intent to see how we can interpret GLEP 39 in such a way as to satisfy its intent without potentially forcing frequest Council elections and without having to start tinkering with a pretty good policy statement. I'm going to follow the international style and number my arguments, and this is one of the few times you will see me play a lawyer. :) For clarity, I letter my conclusions. 1. It is clear that if Council ever calls a meeting, anyone who does not show up is marked absent and potentially a slacker; 2. Thus, no matter how anything else turns out, 3 or 4 Council members might get slacker marks for missing the meeting called for 15.v.08. 3. The Council did schedule a meeting for 15.v.08 but never actually did anything because it could not form a quorum. 4. On its face this looks like a violation of the 50% rule; 5. But the purpose of the 50% rule is to prevent some subset of the Council from meeting and taking any sort of action (that is, if Council ever do anything, they must have a quorum). 6. So we might argue that while it was pretty bad form for Council to gather together a meeting on the 15th and then mostly not show up, they didn't actually do anything so the intent of the 50% rule was not violated. - ---> I pass this on to ciaranm for a correct interpretation because he knows the intent <--- 7. If we read GLEP 39 like that, then this is not the end of the story, because: 8. In the events leading up to the non-meeting of the 15th, it is pretty clear that some number of Council members (a) did meet with devrel lead one or more times, (b) in secret session(s), and (c) *something* must have happened because as a result devrel lead took action on complaint(s?) made directly to Council. 9. If at ANY of those sessions fewer that 50% of the Council were present, then GLEP 39 most certainly was violated under the interpretation in PPS 5, 6 (the ones which can get Council off the hook for the 15th if we buy them). 10. Logs of those sessions are closed, however. 11. Thus, under one arguable reading of GLEP 39, we can have the following: A) For the 15.v.08 non-event, we have lots of absent members and as a result might or might be forced to replace some Council members under the slacker parts of GLEP 39. B) Since the non-meeting of 15.v.08 didn't take any action except for never starting, we can say that the 50% rule technically was not violated; C) But if we use that reading, then some number of "secret sessions" of the Council most certainly did happen (if for no other reason, we know this because devrel lead clarified policy and took action on complaints which went directly to Council.) D) If at *any* of these sessions fewer that 4 Council members were present, GLEP 39 50% rule was violated in fact and in spirit. E) Under this reading of GLEP 39, we must open all those logs to some trusted members of the community (developers or not) who have no connection to either devrel or Council for review. F) If Council never met with fewer than 4 in attendance at these closed sessions, we can probably finesse the open non-event of the 15th where Council did nothing but annoy a lot of people. G) If Council members did ever meet in private without a quorum, then GLEP 39 is most certainly violated and we must replace Council; H) If for some reason Council cannot or will not open those logs as in E) then this entire argument must fail and we must replace Council for the 15th. (Council do not get any White House executive privilege or "missing emails" sort of pass. With this reading, "no records" == "violation and forced election.") F) In other words, we can call the 15th a non-meeting for purposes of GLEP 39 because nothing happened. But then all the closed sessions leading up to the 15th must be treated as actual meetings because as a result something did happen, and for them the quorum rule most certainly does apply. </end Lawyer Alert> That's how I'd argue it so save Council from themselves for the 15th. I could probably rearrange it and tighten it up, but that's me playing lawyer. But it's all or none. You can't pick the parts you like and ignore the rest. Also, if ciaranm says my interpretation is incorrect, I defer to him as the author of this policy and withdraw it. For the record: I've never seen the logs. I have talked to some of - --- --- ------- the players involved, but I have no idea at all if this approach would force a Council election. And it could influence the discussion when the non-meeting finally happens, because there will be non-players around who will know all about events leading up to it. > > Don't get me wrong - I'm not into dictatorships and I'm a big proponent > > of democracy. If most devs really want another election, then let's get > > it going. However, all of about 4-6 people (and not all devs) have > > chimed in on this discussion, which suggests that most don't care. If > > most devs don't care for a new election, wouldn't it just be a major > > distraction to call for an election now? You'll have three months of a > > lame-duck council and all kinds of decisions may get put off. > > > > Not really, because the clock resets. So the election is for 12 > months. That's pretty clear in the GLEP, I think. > > > A few posters in this thread have suggested that they'll probably vote > > for the exact same council, but it is just important that we follow the > > process. Hopefully none of these posters are among those accusing > > Gentoo of being bureaucratic - having an election just for the sake of > > having an election when most folks don't want a change just seems like > > an exercise in procedure. > > > > I'm just trying to be pragmatic - the council was democratically > > elected, and a new council will be elected in a few months. If the > > council just went and disappeared I could see the need for an emergency > > election to keep things going. However, at this point an election will > > just delay stuff getting done. > > > > I think that an election now would be a mistake. However, if we really > > want to survey the devs it wouldn't be a bad thing, although if anybody > > other than the few of us cared strongly they could just post here. If > > there really are a lot of devs who would like us to follow the letter of > > the current GLEP 39 then I'd be all for an election. > > Regards, > Ferris > - -- > Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> > Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) > > iEYEARECAAYFAkguGwkACgkQQa6M3+I///ciggCgkCqB/WFMB5v1z1H1SWrK8O1X > 8rEAn1BqjKgYyMJFxCiUIBoeUAJkU/l1 > =ydab > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > [Error decoding BASE64] Regards, Ferris - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkguoiEACgkQQa6M3+I///eeewCfc5npsCr+oc6hsbh5dksbMpso CmQAoN27fEC4IjeBq7Z5uxLPUSt+GtSM =dRBW -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 21:34 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 23:11 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-16 23:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-16 23:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 11:34 PM, Ferris McCormick <fmccor@gentoo.org> wrote: > Changing policy is a fairly lengthy procedure Making such a minor change to a GLEP (i.e. deleting a line) and having the council vote on it can technically be done in a day. Practically, it can easily be done in a week or even less if you include the mandatory discussion. By the way, the discussion is mandatory but there is no requirement on its duration, and it isn't mandatory for anybody to agree on anything prior to submitting the GLEP and the council voting on it. I'm not saying we should change GLEP 39. I just wanted to point out that in case we need it it can be done easily and quick enough, and without bending any rule. On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:44 AM, Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > They don't have that authority. GLEP 39 wasn't approved as a GLEP. It > was approved by global vote, and retroactively written up as a GLEP > to make it easy to reference and find. Does the council have any authority at all ? Will Ciaran eventually reveal the eleventh commandment ? Are we locked into GLEP 39 forever ? And who is this Ciaran anyway ? Dear readers, you'll find the answers to these questions and many more in the next episode. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:11 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-16 23:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-16 23:50 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 10:56 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Wernfried Haas 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-16 23:18 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1021 bytes --] On Sat, 17 May 2008 01:11:54 +0200 "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:44 AM, Ciaran McCreesh > <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > > They don't have that authority. GLEP 39 wasn't approved as a GLEP. > > It was approved by global vote, and retroactively written up as a > > GLEP to make it easy to reference and find. > > Does the council have any authority at all ? Will Ciaran eventually > reveal the eleventh commandment ? Are we locked into GLEP 39 forever ? > And who is this Ciaran anyway ? Dear readers, you'll find the answers > to these questions and many more in the next episode. I realise you might not known any of this if you weren't around when Gentoo's management structure was set up, but there's no need to be such a twat when discussing it. So the answer to the question you could have asked politely: you're locked into what's now known as GLEP 39 until there's a global vote to replace it with something else. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-16 23:50 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-16 23:53 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 10:56 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Wernfried Haas 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-16 23:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 1:18 AM, Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > I realise you might not known any of this if you weren't around when > Gentoo's management structure was set up, but there's no need to be > such a twat when discussing it. So the answer to the question you could > have asked politely: you're locked into what's now known as GLEP 39 > until there's a global vote to replace it with something else. I realize you might not have known that I knew and that I totally disagreed. You're the one that's locked in a past that doesn't exist anymore. Gentoo is free to change and evolve and doesn't need your authorization. Nor mine. Gentoo will become whatever the council decides it should become until the next elections. At which point there will be another council. You're free to stay behind, that's your choice. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:50 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-16 23:53 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-17 1:12 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-16 23:53 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1164 bytes --] On Sat, 17 May 2008 01:50:04 +0200 "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 1:18 AM, Ciaran McCreesh > <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > > I realise you might not known any of this if you weren't around when > > Gentoo's management structure was set up, but there's no need to be > > such a twat when discussing it. So the answer to the question you > > could have asked politely: you're locked into what's now known as > > GLEP 39 until there's a global vote to replace it with something > > else. > > I realize you might not have known that I knew and that I totally > disagreed. You're the one that's locked in a past that doesn't exist > anymore. Gentoo is free to change and evolve and doesn't need your > authorization. Nor mine. Gentoo will become whatever the council > decides it should become until the next elections. At which point > there will be another council. You're free to stay behind, that's your > choice. So you're saying the Council is free to entirely ignore the rules under which it was elected, and instead say "We are now supreme dictators for life"? -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:53 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-17 1:12 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-17 18:47 ` Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-17 1:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: Ciaran McCreesh; +Cc: gentoo-project Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > So you're saying the Council is free to entirely ignore the rules under > which it was elected, and instead say "We are now supreme dictators for > life"? > I think that there is a balance somewhere between supreme dictators for life and needing to have new elections because a few people didn't notice that the very-rare non-regular council meeting got scheduled. If Gentoo were a corporation it would have bylaws governing these sorts of issues and they'd be far more detailed than GLEP 39. Legally the council doesn't have any meaning as it doesn't control any tangible assets - so such matters really don't need to apply. The principle is one of openness and representative democracy. I don't think we sacrifice that by letting the current council finish its term. The council governs with the consent of the developers - nobody is disputing this. If the council loses the support of the developers it would be appropriate to choose a new council - which is a better option than pulling an XFree86 and watching all the devs just form their own new distro. However, I don't really see any evidence that anybody at all is unhappy with the council (even those calling for the new elections aren't expressing any dissatisfaction with the current council). To me this is like running a stop sign in the middle of nowhere with a wide open view and no cars in sight. I probably wouldn't do it, and I can see why it is technically wrong, but I don't think I could really say that anybody who runs the sign is doing harm to society by doing so. Policies should serve the distro and the developers - not the other way around. Maybe we just won't see eye to eye on this - that's OK I suppose. If lots of people really want new elections then let's have them. However, to me it just seems like a waste and I don't think we're obligated to hold them just because 3-4 people have called for them. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 1:12 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-17 18:47 ` Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto 2008-05-17 19:50 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto @ 2008-05-17 18:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Richard Freeman wrote: | Ciaran McCreesh wrote: |> So you're saying the Council is free to entirely ignore the rules under |> which it was elected, and instead say "We are now supreme dictators for |> life"? |> | | I think that there is a balance somewhere between supreme dictators for | life and needing to have new elections because a few people didn't | notice that the very-rare non-regular council meeting got scheduled. | Richard, an important way to achieve a balance is to have rules and to have everyone respect them - in particular our governing body. | | Maybe we just won't see eye to eye on this - that's OK I suppose. If | lots of people really want new elections then let's have them. However, | to me it just seems like a waste and I don't think we're obligated to | hold them just because 3-4 people have called for them. The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, I don't want to vote for the council now. The problem is that we have a policy (which clearly needs some clearing as not everyone agrees on it) and that pretending it doesn't exist or to change it and apply it retroactively is a bad precedent. - -- Regards, Jorge Vicetto (jmbsvicetto) - jmbsvicetto at gentoo dot org Gentoo- forums / Userrel / SPARC / KDE -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAkgvKCYACgkQcAWygvVEyAJQjQCffetvVCYlF2h6+PIPf7P+EIpX 6oIAoIUDbCjLzInq2P4uCuhrtUaIBHKA =MOp7 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 18:47 ` Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto @ 2008-05-17 19:50 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-17 21:12 ` Alec Warner 2008-05-17 22:55 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting Josh Sled 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-17 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto; +Cc: gentoo-project Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto wrote: > The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, > I don't want to vote for the council now. Then don't! Isn't the whole point of a democracy to allow the will of those who are represented to triumph? If that will is to not hold an election, wouldn't it be undemocratic to ignore it? > The problem is that we have a > policy (which clearly needs some clearing as not everyone agrees on it) > and that pretending it doesn't exist or to change it and apply it > retroactively is a bad precedent. > I think the worst precedent to set would be one of following policies at any cost. I'd say that one of the key differences between people and machines is that the latter merely follow a pre-designed set of rules, while the former are free to do whatever is best in a given situation. Why should we ignore common sense in favor of "if p then q ; p==true ; therefore q"? Policies are important. It is important that they be well thought out. It is also important that when a policy is dumb that people not blindly follow it. I hope that when infrastructure is maintaining systems in accordance with some standard procedure that when they see an error in the procedure that will cause major disruption they don't just say "well, the council or whoever approved this procedure - they must want me to hose the cvs server." If the council does decide to hold new elections, could they at least make a point to nuke this bullet item in GLEP 39? I think the whole slacker policy is a bit harsh in general - maybe it could be adjusted somewhat. At the very least, there should be some policy regarding notice for meetings - if somebody is on vacation for two weeks it would be a bummer for them to be marked a slacker because they didn't hear about a meeting... -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 19:50 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-17 21:12 ` Alec Warner 2008-05-18 5:30 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-17 22:55 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting Josh Sled 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Alec Warner @ 2008-05-17 21:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: Richard Freeman; +Cc: Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto, gentoo-project On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:50 PM, Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto wrote: >> >> The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, >> I don't want to vote for the council now. > > Then don't! Isn't the whole point of a democracy to allow the will of those > who are represented to triumph? If that will is to not hold an election, > wouldn't it be undemocratic to ignore it? So minimally we would require a vote to determine 'the will of the represented'. Note that this thread is insufficient to determine that (there are plenty of devs not participating in this thread). > >> The problem is that we have a >> >> policy (which clearly needs some clearing as not everyone agrees on it) >> and that pretending it doesn't exist or to change it and apply it >> retroactively is a bad precedent. >> > > I think the worst precedent to set would be one of following policies at any > cost. I'd say that one of the key differences between people and machines > is that the latter merely follow a pre-designed set of rules, while the > former are free to do whatever is best in a given situation. Why should we > ignore common sense in favor of "if p then q ; p==true ; therefore q"? > > Policies are important. It is important that they be well thought out. It > is also important that when a policy is dumb that people not blindly follow > it. I hope that when infrastructure is maintaining systems in accordance > with some standard procedure that when they see an error in the procedure > that will cause major disruption they don't just say "well, the council or > whoever approved this procedure - they must want me to hose the cvs server." So the important thing to realize is that it is not trivial to determine when policy is 'dumb.' I personally think the policy is very clear and effective; it makes the council accountable and it essentially prevents what happened (the council slacked off during an important meeting). How else should we punish them? Is there any punishment that does not involve an election? I would entertain alternative punishments. I would not entertain 'changing policy and doing nothing' as that kind of implies council members can basically miss any meetings without repercussions and that is untrue in my reckoning. > > If the council does decide to hold new elections, could they at least make a > point to nuke this bullet item in GLEP 39? I think the whole slacker policy > is a bit harsh in general - maybe it could be adjusted somewhat. At the > very least, there should be some policy regarding notice for meetings - if > somebody is on vacation for two weeks it would be a bummer for them to be > marked a slacker because they didn't hear about a meeting... > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > > -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 21:12 ` Alec Warner @ 2008-05-18 5:30 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-19 1:16 ` Alec Warner 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 5:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1198 bytes --] On Sat, 2008-05-17 at 14:12 -0700, Alec Warner wrote: > On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:50 PM, Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > > Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto wrote: > >> > >> The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, > >> I don't want to vote for the council now. > > > > Then don't! Isn't the whole point of a democracy to allow the will of those > > who are represented to triumph? If that will is to not hold an election, > > wouldn't it be undemocratic to ignore it? > > So minimally we would require a vote to determine 'the will of the > represented'. Note that this thread is insufficient to determine that > (there are plenty of devs not participating in this thread). What percentage of the developer base, and/or community is required to call about a global vote for Gentoo? Also where is there any policy requiring anything to be voted on? In this case, the vote to decide if we should or should not elect a new council. Enforce GLEP 39 clause/rule/policy or not. A vote would be more out of respect, and democracy. Than out of policy or requirement. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 5:30 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-19 1:16 ` Alec Warner 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Alec Warner @ 2008-05-19 1:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: William L. Thomson Jr.; +Cc: gentoo-project On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 10:30 PM, William L. Thomson Jr. <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sat, 2008-05-17 at 14:12 -0700, Alec Warner wrote: >> On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:50 PM, Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: >> > Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto wrote: >> >> >> >> The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, >> >> I don't want to vote for the council now. >> > >> > Then don't! Isn't the whole point of a democracy to allow the will of those >> > who are represented to triumph? If that will is to not hold an election, >> > wouldn't it be undemocratic to ignore it? >> >> So minimally we would require a vote to determine 'the will of the >> represented'. Note that this thread is insufficient to determine that >> (there are plenty of devs not participating in this thread). > > What percentage of the developer base, and/or community is required to > call about a global vote for Gentoo? This is not documented anywhere as far as I can tell. The 'glep' just says we have to hold an election. I have already spoken to a few of the previous officials to see if they are interested in running a council election. It has been argued that the Council controls Gentoo; and for the majority of cases I believe this is true. The question benig do we adhere to the existing policy or do we do something else. The problem is basically that besides the council there is no other body that has power (according to stated policy). Befroe the council Gentoo had 'the developers' and before 'the developers' Gentoo had TLP Managers. I would prefer that 'the developers' in this case take initiative to hold a new election. In the old republic sense 'the developers' essentially realize that they will not agree on everything and thus delegate their power and authority to a smaller group of people (council) until such time as 'the developers' deem such a body unfit to rule. Bonus for us, there is a clause in the policy that states a specific even where this is the case (said 50% attendance clause). It is my understanding that the council continues to be the council while 'the developers' hold an election for council positions. The only alternative to a whole election is unseating the members that did not attend; this is explicitly forbidden by the 50% attendance clause. > > Also where is there any policy requiring anything to be voted on? In > this case, the vote to decide if we should or should not elect a new > council. Enforce GLEP 39 clause/rule/policy or not. A vote would be more > out of respect, and democracy. Than out of policy or requirement. There isn't one; I didn't mean to imply that we should vote on whether we should hold an election or not. My comment was meant to imply that the number of folks involved in this thread is a meaningless statistic regarding what developers actually think regarding this issue. > > -- > William L. Thomson Jr. > amd64/Java/Trustees > Gentoo Foundation > > I've begun poking the relevant election officials to see if they are willing to participate in an election in the upcoming weeks. -Alec -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-17 19:50 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-17 21:12 ` Alec Warner @ 2008-05-17 22:55 ` Josh Sled 2008-05-17 23:46 ` Simon Cooper 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Josh Sled @ 2008-05-17 22:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: Richard Freeman; +Cc: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1304 bytes --] Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> writes: > Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto wrote: >> The problem here is not if anyone wants an election or not. Personally, >> I don't want to vote for the council now. > > Then don't! Isn't the whole point of a democracy to allow the will of those > who are represented to triumph? If that will is to not hold an election, > wouldn't it be undemocratic to ignore it? GLEP 39 doesn't state "if $slacker_meeting, vote to see if people want to hold an election." > Policies are important. It is important that they be well thought out. It is > also important that when a policy is dumb that people not blindly follow it. When it's the case that a policy dumb, then people should raise that fact and work to change the policy. In some circumstances, the effects of the dumb policy might be so dumb as for people to feel the need to arrange for compensating action. But just ignoring the rules is not a very good option. > point to nuke this bullet item in GLEP 39? I think the whole slacker policy > is a bit harsh in general - maybe it could be adjusted somewhat. At the very I agree the single-slacker-meeting-forces-election rule is too harsh. -- ...jsled http://asynchronous.org/ - a=jsled; b=asynchronous.org; echo ${a}@${b} [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 196 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-17 22:55 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting Josh Sled @ 2008-05-17 23:46 ` Simon Cooper 2008-05-18 1:07 ` Ferris McCormick ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Simon Cooper @ 2008-05-17 23:46 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project As a random user, could I just make a couple of points? I think it is agreed that the GLEP says there should be a re-election; the current discussion is to whether the GLEP should be followed. May I ask what the point of the GLEP was if parts of it are going to be ignored on a whim? Yes, it is harsh, but that is what the rules say. Not obeying your /own/ rules when they are inconvenient sets a very bad precedent. If, at some point in the future, gentoo does get a slacker council, then when faced with being replaced they could say something like 'but you ignored the GLEP at this instance, and this is the same situation because of yadda yadda yadda...'. Even if what's being said is complete rubbish it will significantly slow down the process of getting a new council simply because there has been this one exception made. Furthermore, the reason given (there wasn't enough advertising about the meeting given out) is quite nebulous - 'enough advertising' can mean /anything/. Making this one exception also makes it easier for greater exceptions in the future (the whole 'slipperly slope' argument). If people don't like the clause, then the new council can vote to remove it. No one would disagree with that. But you _cannot_ simply ignore parts of GLEPs that turn out to be inconvenient. Doing so sets a bad precedent that could be a lot more damaging to gentoo in the future than the small inconvenience of having a council election a couple of months early, and indeed undermines the GLEP itself as something that is seen as optional. It will also ensure all council meetings are properly advertised in the future, which can only be a good thing. Simon Cooper -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-17 23:46 ` Simon Cooper @ 2008-05-18 1:07 ` Ferris McCormick [not found] ` <3c32f69c0805171845o7fa80063r3580d4873ba167e@mail.gmail.com> 2008-05-18 5:02 ` Mark Loeser 2 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-18 1:07 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Sun, 18 May 2008 00:46:37 +0100 Simon Cooper <thecoop@runbox.com> wrote: > As a random user, could I just make a couple of points? > I'm replying just to say I think you've summed it up pretty well. > I think it is agreed that the GLEP says there should be a re-election; > the current discussion is to whether the GLEP should be followed. May I > ask what the point of the GLEP was if parts of it are going to be > ignored on a whim? > > Yes, it is harsh, but that is what the rules say. Not obeying your /own/ > rules when they are inconvenient sets a very bad precedent. If, at some > point in the future, gentoo does get a slacker council, then when faced > with being replaced they could say something like 'but you ignored the > GLEP at this instance, and this is the same situation because of yadda > yadda yadda...'. Even if what's being said is complete rubbish it will > significantly slow down the process of getting a new council simply > because there has been this one exception made. Furthermore, the reason > given (there wasn't enough advertising about the meeting given out) is > quite nebulous - 'enough advertising' can mean /anything/. Making this > one exception also makes it easier for greater exceptions in the future > (the whole 'slipperly slope' argument). > > If people don't like the clause, then the new council can vote to remove > it. No one would disagree with that. But you _cannot_ simply ignore > parts of GLEPs that turn out to be inconvenient. Doing so sets a bad > precedent that could be a lot more damaging to gentoo in the future than > the small inconvenience of having a council election a couple of months > early, and indeed undermines the GLEP itself as something that is seen > as optional. It will also ensure all council meetings are properly > advertised in the future, which can only be a good thing. > > Simon Cooper > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > Regards, Ferris - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgvgXUACgkQQa6M3+I///fpIwCfeEbzs/wkWrniUELagS7pVvay QuIAoMt37RpSkEPCKbb4XjbDLvLzbBQA =PGvG -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
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* [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [not found] ` <3c32f69c0805171845o7fa80063r3580d4873ba167e@mail.gmail.com> @ 2008-05-18 1:47 ` Łukasz Damentko 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Łukasz Damentko @ 2008-05-18 1:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project 2008/5/18 Simon Cooper <thecoop@runbox.com>: > I think it is agreed that the GLEP says there should be a re-election > that is what the rules say > Making this one exception also makes it easier for greater exceptions in the future > If people don't like the clause, then the new council can vote to remove it. > you _cannot_ simply ignore parts of GLEPs that turn out to be inconvenient. Exactly my thoughts. Guys, please, let's just start gathering nominations. The faster we're done with that, the better for the project. Also, if you like the current council line up (like I do), you can just vote on them again (should they decide to run) and elect the same team once again. -- Łukasz Damentko ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-17 23:46 ` Simon Cooper 2008-05-18 1:07 ` Ferris McCormick [not found] ` <3c32f69c0805171845o7fa80063r3580d4873ba167e@mail.gmail.com> @ 2008-05-18 5:02 ` Mark Loeser 2008-05-18 5:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Mark Loeser @ 2008-05-18 5:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1957 bytes --] Simon Cooper <thecoop@runbox.com> said: > Yes, it is harsh, but that is what the rules say. Not obeying your /own/ > rules when they are inconvenient sets a very bad precedent. If, at some > point in the future, gentoo does get a slacker council, then when faced > with being replaced they could say something like 'but you ignored the GLEP > at this instance, and this is the same situation because of yadda yadda > yadda...'. Even if what's being said is complete rubbish it will > significantly slow down the process of getting a new council simply because > there has been this one exception made. Furthermore, the reason given > (there wasn't enough advertising about the meeting given out) is quite > nebulous - 'enough advertising' can mean /anything/. Making this one > exception also makes it easier for greater exceptions in the future (the > whole 'slipperly slope' argument). > > If people don't like the clause, then the new council can vote to remove > it. No one would disagree with that. But you _cannot_ simply ignore parts > of GLEPs that turn out to be inconvenient. Doing so sets a bad precedent > that could be a lot more damaging to gentoo in the future than the small > inconvenience of having a council election a couple of months early, and > indeed undermines the GLEP itself as something that is seen as optional. It > will also ensure all council meetings are properly advertised in the > future, which can only be a good thing. I also just wanted to say that you pretty much summed up what I was going to send. As one of the people that voted on this GLEP, I like exactly how it is written, and we voted it in based on how it was written. Lets follow our own rules and stop debating on this so we can move on please. Thanks, -- Mark Loeser email - halcy0n AT gentoo DOT org email - mark AT halcy0n DOT com web - http://www.halcy0n.com [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 5:02 ` Mark Loeser @ 2008-05-18 5:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 10:10 ` Peter Volkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 5:24 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1538 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 01:02 -0400, Mark Loeser wrote: > As one of the people that voted on this GLEP, I like > exactly how it is written, and we voted it in based on how it was > written. Lets follow our own rules and stop debating on this so we can > move on please. Part of the GLEP voted on, states that the policy/rule in question is a global one. Of which all global matters of that nature fall under the Council's rule. Per section B. Clearly stated. Thus the current council, could technically do what they felt was best, and it could be retroactive. There is nothing in the GLEP stating the council does not have that power. Or that the current council, can't amend that GLEP or act on global issues. Even when facing possible replacement/punishment. There are no restrictions, only punishment. With them as the supreme power deciding upon global issues. Who is to enforce any punishment? When are they stripped of global power? So a partial, incomplete GLEP with some harsh punishments was approved. Yet at the same time, not including any provision to strip the council of their recently granted global powers. Like during times of punishment/replacement. All of which was also approved by a past global vote. There is no requirement that any decision effecting global issues be taken to the developer base for a vote. So exactly what policy are we following here? Or not? If the current council elects to modify GLEP 39. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 5:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 10:10 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-18 11:20 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-18 10:10 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project В Вск, 18/05/2008 в 01:24 -0400, William L. Thomson Jr. пишет: > Part of the GLEP voted on, states that the policy/rule in question is > a global one. Of which all global matters of that nature fall under > the Council's rule. Per section B. Clearly stated. Thus the current > council, could technically do what they felt was best, and it could be > retroactive. Although GLEP 39 does not states this explicitly common sense suggests that there is zero sense in having policy for council if they can change it retroactively. So I'd say that while not written this is implied. -- Peter. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 10:10 ` Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-18 11:20 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 11:20 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 12:10 PM, Peter Volkov <pva@gentoo.org> wrote: > Although GLEP 39 does not states this explicitly common sense suggests > that there is zero sense in having policy for council if they can change > it retroactively. So I'd say that while not written this is implied. That's one point of view. Another is that some policies have been written in different times for different reasons, and may need to be clarified or even updated to suit better the present situation. That's the problem with time, it doesn't stand still and things happen leading to situations changing. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 10:10 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-18 11:20 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 17:05 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-20 12:06 ` Jim Ramsay 1 sibling, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1257 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 14:10 +0400, Peter Volkov wrote: > В Вск, 18/05/2008 в 01:24 -0400, William L. Thomson Jr. пишет: > > Part of the GLEP voted on, states that the policy/rule in question is > > a global one. Of which all global matters of that nature fall under > > the Council's rule. Per section B. Clearly stated. Thus the current > > council, could technically do what they felt was best, and it could be > > retroactive. > > Although GLEP 39 does not states this explicitly common sense suggests > that there is zero sense in having policy for council if they can change > it retroactively. So I'd say that while not written this is implied. Ok, so are we following common sense or policy? If it's common sense, why would it have been so hard to clearly state and document the above? Policies are stated, not assumed. We have way to many undocumented, word of mouth, common sense policies. If we are going to run around enforcing things. It must be documented, not assumed. FYI, IMHO common sense says we give them a chance to make up for the meeting. Before rush to punishment. So who's common sense is correct per policy? Mine or yours? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 17:05 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-20 12:06 ` Jim Ramsay 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-18 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project В Вск, 18/05/2008 в 13:20 +0200, Denis Dupeyron пишет: > That's one point of view. Another is that some policies have been > written in different times for different reasons, and may need to be > clarified or even updated to suit better the present situation. That's > the problem with time, it doesn't stand still and things happen > leading to situations changing. I agree that policies should be updated. But not retroactively. В Вск, 18/05/2008 в 11:16 -0400, William L. Thomson Jr. пишет: > Ok, so are we following common sense or policy? Policy whatever that states and common sense in other cases... > If it's common sense, why would it have been so hard to clearly state > and document the above? As I understand Ciaran for historical reasons. But what we should do in case less then 50% of council attend the meeting is there. > Policies are stated, not assumed. We have way to many undocumented, > word of mouth, common sense policies. If we are going to run around > enforcing things. It must be documented, not assumed. Sure. And I think that somebody should suggest council something concrete on how to update the policy. But this does not change the fact that what happened was at times we had different policy. > FYI, IMHO common sense says we give them a chance to make up for the > meeting. Before rush to punishment. So who's common sense is correct per > policy? Mine or yours? No, this's not punishment. That's just procedural act we should take to be sure that policies we thought about work. Well, too many mails here so I think now I should decrease the noise here and shut up and wait for council actions. -- Peter. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 17:05 ` Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-20 12:06 ` Jim Ramsay 2008-05-20 14:36 ` Ferris McCormick 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Jim Ramsay @ 2008-05-20 12:06 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 278 bytes --] "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > Ok, so are we following common sense or policy? If there's a difference between the two, I would think that the policy should be updated to reflect common sense. -- Jim Ramsay Gentoo/Linux Developer (rox,gkrellm) [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting 2008-05-20 12:06 ` Jim Ramsay @ 2008-05-20 14:36 ` Ferris McCormick 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-20 14:36 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 497 bytes --] On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 08:06 -0400, Jim Ramsay wrote: > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > Ok, so are we following common sense or policy? > > If there's a difference between the two, I would think that the policy > should be updated to reflect common sense. Who's common sense? You and I might differ on what is common sense. :) Regards, Ferris -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Devrel, Sparc, Userrel, Trustees) [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-16 23:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-16 23:50 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 10:56 ` Wernfried Haas 2008-05-18 15:01 ` Ciaran McCreesh 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Wernfried Haas @ 2008-05-18 10:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 577 bytes --] On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:18:49AM +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > [..] you're locked into what's now known as GLEP 39 > until there's a global vote to replace it with something else. Source? I don't see anything in glep 39 that says so. So as far i understand it glep 39 is just another glep and can be modified like any other glep. Please be so kind to clarify the basis of your statement. cheers, Wernfried -- Wernfried Haas (amne) - amne (at) gentoo.org Gentoo Forums - http://forums.gentoo.org forum-mods (at) gentoo.org #gentoo-forums (freenode) [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 10:56 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Wernfried Haas @ 2008-05-18 15:01 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:26 ` William L. Thomson Jr. [not found] ` <7c612fc60805180829w6b36d17bla6d527f76017dbbd@mail.gmail.com> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:01 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 880 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:56:49 +0200 Wernfried Haas <amne@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:18:49AM +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > [..] you're locked into what's now known as GLEP 39 > > until there's a global vote to replace it with something else. > > Source? I don't see anything in glep 39 that says so. So as far i > understand it glep 39 is just another glep and can be modified like > any other glep. For the zillionth time... GLEP 39 was not a GLEP. It was one of a collection of proposals (that were not GLEPs) that were voted upon by a global vote. It was then *later* made available in GLEP form by Grant for convenience, but it wasn't accepted as a GLEP. Unfortunately, it seems that people are misinterpreting this -- it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's Constitution' or somesuch... -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:01 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:26 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:31 ` Ciaran McCreesh [not found] ` <7c612fc60805180829w6b36d17bla6d527f76017dbbd@mail.gmail.com> 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:26 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2429 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:01 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:56:49 +0200 > Wernfried Haas <amne@gentoo.org> wrote: > > On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:18:49AM +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > > [..] you're locked into what's now known as GLEP 39 > > > until there's a global vote to replace it with something else. > > > > Source? I don't see anything in glep 39 that says so. So as far i > > understand it glep 39 is just another glep and can be modified like > > any other glep. > > For the zillionth time... GLEP 39 was not a GLEP. It was one of a > collection of proposals (that were not GLEPs) that were voted upon by a > global vote. It was then *later* made available in GLEP form by Grant > for convenience, but it wasn't accepted as a GLEP. Ok, but where is it stated that changes, or amendments can only be done/approved by a global vote? As it stands now, it clearly states global issues are to be decided by the council. With no conditions or stipulations. It's understood how it came about, although I was not around at the time. However once it's been approved. It's not clear who has the authority to enforce it. Or if/when the council is stripped of power, in situations where they are being punished and/or replaced. Much less which global matters, like amending a GLEP ( or what ever you want to clal it ), can they directly vote and act upon. Or which ones must be brought to the developer base for a vote. Also correct me if I am wrong, but this was voted in before there was a council. Thus developers had no other way, other than a meeting of TLP managers to decide upon global issues. So IMHO once voted upon and a council was created to decided upon global matters. Individual power has been given up, and passed on from developers and TLP managers, to council members. Just as we pass on power in govt to our elected representatives. > Unfortunately, it seems that people are misinterpreting this -- it > might have been better to document it as 'The Council's Constitution' > or somesuch... That would have been better. Also if the GLEP went into more detail, and had other provisions. Like stripping the council of their power in a situation like this one. Presently till replaced, if replaced, they still have full power to decide upon global issues. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:26 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:31 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:31 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1297 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:26:00 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > For the zillionth time... GLEP 39 was not a GLEP. It was one of a > > collection of proposals (that were not GLEPs) that were voted upon > > by a global vote. It was then *later* made available in GLEP form > > by Grant for convenience, but it wasn't accepted as a GLEP. > > Ok, but where is it stated that changes, or amendments can only be > done/approved by a global vote? As it stands now, it clearly states > global issues are to be decided by the council. With no conditions or > stipulations. Look back to when it was voted in. You'll probably need -core archives for this. > > Unfortunately, it seems that people are misinterpreting this -- it > > might have been better to document it as 'The Council's > > Constitution' or somesuch... > > That would have been better. Also if the GLEP went into more detail, > and had other provisions. Like stripping the council of their power > in a situation like this one. Presently till replaced, if replaced, > they still have full power to decide upon global issues. The problem is, none of this was written under the assumption that the Council would try to misbehave and avoid following the rules... -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:31 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:40 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:49 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1340 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:31 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > Look back to when it was voted in. You'll probably need -core archives > for this. Ok, will take some time. > The problem is, none of this was written under the assumption that the > Council would try to misbehave and avoid following the rules... Isn't the entire harsh nature to address issues within the council? Meetings being held in private, those in power slacking, etc. Things you previously stated here. So if the document is written with punishments, that's almost expecting the council to misbehave. Or there would be no reason for such provisions. Then it also should have clarified in times when they council is to be replaced, or punished. That they are stripped of their power. That despite having ability to decide upon global matters. They can't decide their own fate. Which the document does not cover at all. Which is a bigger area to address, than any punishment. Who is to enforce any punishment, if they decide on global matters? When is their global power stripped? When can they or can't they act retroactively on global matters? What's the difference between a global matter that effects Gentoo, and a global matter that effects only the council? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:40 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:49 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:02 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:49 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1028 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:40:35 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > The problem is, none of this was written under the assumption that > > the Council would try to misbehave and avoid following the rules... > > Isn't the entire harsh nature to address issues within the council? > Meetings being held in private, those in power slacking, etc. Things > you previously stated here. So if the document is written with > punishments, that's almost expecting the council to misbehave. Or > there would be no reason for such provisions. It was written under the expectation that at least some Council members wouldn't do their jobs properly some of the time. It was not written under the expectation that the Council as a whole would try to find loopholes to avoid facing the consequences of them screwing up. You'll note that Council members are always free to stand for reelection, so the punishment is decided by the developer base as a whole, and not by policy. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:49 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:02 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:12 ` Ciaran McCreesh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2739 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:49 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:40:35 -0400 > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > The problem is, none of this was written under the assumption that > > > the Council would try to misbehave and avoid following the rules... > > > > Isn't the entire harsh nature to address issues within the council? > > Meetings being held in private, those in power slacking, etc. Things > > you previously stated here. So if the document is written with > > punishments, that's almost expecting the council to misbehave. Or > > there would be no reason for such provisions. > > It was written under the expectation that at least some Council members > wouldn't do their jobs properly some of the time. It was not written > under the expectation that the Council as a whole would try to find > loopholes to avoid facing the consequences of them screwing up. This clause punishes all for mistakes of 50%. So that is punishing the council as a whole. It's not a matter of loop holes. That would imply that stated policy creates gaps. This is a problem where an unstated policy has left a gap. Very different. > You'll note that Council members are always free to stand for > reelection, so the punishment is decided by the developer base as a > whole, and not by policy. That is a stupid formality then and just goes to show/prove how half ass this entire thing is. What is the point of having an election if the same people end up running? Who's to say they don't do that again? What benefit does Gentoo get by interrupting a council, holding elections, just for the same people to run again. Which would just extend their term. Not to mention screw up our time lines for elections. That is just totally stupid and futile IMHO. Allot of work doing an election over 2+ months for what purpose? If we are punishing those on the council. They should not have a chance to re-run. Or at least those in the 50% not attending. Should not be allowed to run again. Those that were there, doing their job. Shouldn't be punished. So at best it should be a partial election to replace some. Not all. But again this document didn't spend any time going into detail. But did spend time talking about things really not relevant to policy. But the past, etc. If we allow the same ones to run again. Then what's the difference between that, and allowing them a chance to make up for the missed meeting? Which a 15 day clause requiring any meeting be made up for, before punishment. Would have made much more sense, been more balanced, less harsh, and fair all around. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:02 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:12 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:32 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3788 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:02:22 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > It was written under the expectation that at least some Council > > members wouldn't do their jobs properly some of the time. It was > > not written under the expectation that the Council as a whole would > > try to find loopholes to avoid facing the consequences of them > > screwing up. > > This clause punishes all for mistakes of 50%. So that is punishing the > council as a whole. It's not a matter of loop holes. That would imply > that stated policy creates gaps. This is a problem where an unstated > policy has left a gap. Very different. The clause doesn't punish anyone. The clause ensures that Gentoo developers get the effective management to which they are entitled. Any punishment is done by the developers as a whole, when they decide who to reelect and who to reject. > > You'll note that Council members are always free to stand for > > reelection, so the punishment is decided by the developer base as a > > whole, and not by policy. > > That is a stupid formality then and just goes to show/prove how half > ass this entire thing is. What is the point of having an election if > the same people end up running? Who's to say they don't do that again? It'll only be the same people running if every developer thinks that no-one on the Council has screwed up in any way. If that's the case, we get the same Council for another year -- no harm done. But if some Council members are held in general to be 'bad', they will be replaced. When the required election takes place, I expect there'll be two or three changes, the same as there were for most other elections. > What benefit does Gentoo get by interrupting a council, holding > elections, just for the same people to run again. Which would just > extend their term. Not to mention screw up our time lines for > elections. That is just totally stupid and futile IMHO. Allot of work > doing an election over 2+ months for what purpose? Other people will presumably run too. I know at least a couple of developers who have said that they'll be seriously considering running against the current Council because of their dissatisfaction with the way things are. You might as well say "what's the point in holding yearly elections if the same people end up standing?". > If we are punishing those on the council. They should not have a > chance to re-run. Or at least those in the 50% not attending. Should > not be allowed to run again. Those that were there, doing their job. > Shouldn't be punished. Having to hold an election isn't being punished. Not being reelected is being punished. > So at best it should be a partial election to replace some. Not all. > But again this document didn't spend any time going into detail. But > did spend time talking about things really not relevant to policy. > But the past, etc. Those things were relevant to the voting for the proposal. > If we allow the same ones to run again. Then what's the difference > between that, and allowing them a chance to make up for the missed > meeting? Which a 15 day clause requiring any meeting be made up for, > before punishment. Would have made much more sense, been more > balanced, less harsh, and fair all around. They can run. But anyone who's deemed to have screwed up too badly won't be reelected. One thing you should know -- developers had the choice of voting for Grant's proposal with or without my slacker additions. They could also have requested ballot options of "only the individual slacker rules, not the 50% one too" had they wanted, but no-one did. The vote was very heavily in favour of adding the slacker rules. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:12 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:32 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3212 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 17:12 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > The clause doesn't punish anyone. The clause ensures that Gentoo > developers get the effective management to which they are entitled. Any > punishment is done by the developers as a whole, when they decide who > to reelect and who to reject. Ok so what happens in the 2+ months it takes to elect a new council. Of which their first meeting is not likely to make much progress. But more establish bearings. Who is the council in the intern? What power do they wield? > It'll only be the same people running if every developer thinks that > no-one on the Council has screwed up in any way. If that's the case, we > get the same Council for another year -- no harm done. But if some > Council members are held in general to be 'bad', they will be replaced. > > When the required election takes place, I expect there'll be two or > three changes, the same as there were for most other elections. What happens if this discourages past/present council members from running or others? As we have seen with the trustees. Do we want to kill off the council. Being as how we have never gone down this path before. The outcome is unknown. > Other people will presumably run too. I know at least a couple of > developers who have said that they'll be seriously considering running > against the current Council because of their dissatisfaction with the > way things are. Which concerns me. Given the abilities, level of contributions, etc of some of those on our current council. I can't think of any others with more knowledge or that would be better suited. Will != skill. With the council being the top of our technical lead. I think that is 100% skill, and 0 will. > You might as well say "what's the point in holding yearly elections if > the same people end up standing?". That is completely different. That would be more of a sign of showing approval and reward of their actions. When we are punishing them due to failure to make a meeting, etc. That is not approval of their actions. Which should not be rewarded. > They can run. But anyone who's deemed to have screwed up too badly > won't be reelected. Only in theory. > One thing you should know -- developers had the choice of voting for > Grant's proposal with or without my slacker additions. They could also > have requested ballot options of "only the individual slacker rules, > not the 50% one too" had they wanted, but no-one did. The vote was very > heavily in favour of adding the slacker rules. Yes, and it was narrow cited. Likely high approval due to circumstances at the time. How many years ago? How many have retired and come on board since? Are the people, times, things still the same? I don't think people cared enough then or since. To considering the full implications of the clause the voted in. Thus it being partial and incomplete. Yet still approved, but never been enacted upon till now. Which at that time, reveals how half baked it was. Yet all still approved it. Not sure what that says, but doesn't seem good to me :) -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:31 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:34 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 1 sibling, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-18 16:13 UTC (permalink / raw To: Ciaran McCreesh; +Cc: gentoo-project Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:26:00 -0400 > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: >>> Unfortunately, it seems that people are misinterpreting this -- it >>> might have been better to document it as 'The Council's >>> Constitution' or somesuch... >> That would have been better. Also if the GLEP went into more detail, >> and had other provisions. Like stripping the council of their power >> in a situation like this one. Presently till replaced, if replaced, >> they still have full power to decide upon global issues. > > The problem is, none of this was written under the assumption that the > Council would try to misbehave and avoid following the rules... > Uh - perhaps we should save our zealotry for constitutions for some time when the Council is actually misbehaving? This really seems like a tempest in a teapot. If the council decided to start holding meetings in private, denied any forum for dissent, began booting people merely for disagreeing, and began taking the distro in a direction most devs don't like then I'd be all for having a gentoo insurrection. It seems like the general consensus on this discussion is that the worst offense committed by the council was to miss a meeting time, and that as a result we have to go through a new election process immediately. I can probably think of a half-dozen issues that would be of benefit to Gentoo if the council showed strong leadership, and punishing itself for missing a meeting really doesn't end up on that list. Honestly - I think that Gentoo is about as strong as I've seen it in recent days of late. The trustees are steadily cleaning house, the mailing lists have been almost entirely flame-free (even this discussion is managing to stay relatively cordial), and very contentious issues like PMS or alternate package managers have actually been discussed fairly enthusiastically on -dev of late. I haven't seen too many people roasted on bugzilla for making mistakes lately either. Are we just so used to having some kind of major clash in Gentoo that we feel the need to invent one since it has been dull for a few months? Gentoo is a community of moderate size. If we had thousands of devs I'd be concerned about having a constitution of sorts so that a small minority doesn't get trampled by a majority. At its present size, however, just about any dev is free to do all kinds of stuff with the distro as long as they don't risk major breakage. Gosh - we have one of the two major desktop environment herds running in an overlay that uses an EAPI that I assume isn't even supported by portage. I think we're starting to see signs of new innovation and that is a good thing for Gentoo - we've always tended to be a fairly conceptually cutting-edge distro that still manages to "just work". I think that what has led to these recent developments is a realization that technical achievement can only exist when we foster an environment where people can contribute while still having fun and not getting skewered. I think that a little bit of leniency and practical common sense has to go with that. If we go back to bashing people over the head with policies just because we have something to point to demonstrating that we're right and somebody else is wrong, then I think we'll be giving up some of what we've gained in the last 9 months or so. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:58 ` Nirbheek Chauhan 2008-05-18 16:34 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 1 sibling, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:18 UTC (permalink / raw To: Richard Freeman; +Cc: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 854 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:13:45 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > Uh - perhaps we should save our zealotry for constitutions for some > time when the Council is actually misbehaving? This really seems > like a tempest in a teapot. > > If the council decided to start holding meetings in private, denied > any forum for dissent, began booting people merely for disagreeing, > and began taking the distro in a direction most devs don't like then > I'd be all for having a gentoo insurrection. Oh, I do hope that was said with irony. Funnily enough, the Council holding meetings in private (ask them about their secret channel on oftc and their meetings with musikc), denying dissent and booting people arbitrarily is exactly what lead to them holding the second meeting that started this discussion. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 17:12 ` David Leverton 2008-05-18 16:58 ` Nirbheek Chauhan 1 sibling, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1786 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 17:18 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:13:45 -0400 > Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > > Uh - perhaps we should save our zealotry for constitutions for some > > time when the Council is actually misbehaving? This really seems > > like a tempest in a teapot. > > > > If the council decided to start holding meetings in private, denied > > any forum for dissent, began booting people merely for disagreeing, > > and began taking the distro in a direction most devs don't like then > > I'd be all for having a gentoo insurrection. > > Oh, I do hope that was said with irony. Funnily enough, the Council > holding meetings in private (ask them about their secret channel on > oftc and their meetings with musikc), denying dissent and booting people > arbitrarily is exactly what lead to them holding the second meeting > that started this discussion. Another very good point. IMHO the CoC falls under the GSC which the trustees/foundation enforces not the council. So they topic at hand for the current council is not of technical nature and thus should not be on their plate. Which the subsequent meeting of a topic/subject that should not fall to them. It's no wonder a technical council, did not show up to a meeting to discuss social issues. Duh ;) Part of the reason I dislike punishment for this so much. This was not a technical meeting, where a major technical decision lie on the table going unresolved. Has this missed meeting effected Gentoo's technical progress in any way shape or form. Other than all of us wasting allot of time discussing BS stuff rather than writing code and/or improving Gentoo technically. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 17:12 ` David Leverton 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 913 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:38:14 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > It's no wonder a technical council, did not show up to a meeting to > discuss social issues. Duh ;) Part of the reason I dislike punishment > for this so much. This was not a technical meeting, where a major > technical decision lie on the table going unresolved. The Council holding secret meetings and collaborating with the devrel lead behind the rest of devrel's backs is certainly a major issue... As for technical... The Council got itself involved in non-technical things by kicking this whole mess off in the first place. You'll note that Diego has said that he thinks it's the most important thing the Council has ever done (although the Council has also said that it wasn't them that did it -- one of the things that they were supposed to be clarifying at the meeting...). -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2582 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 17:44 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:38:14 -0400 > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > It's no wonder a technical council, did not show up to a meeting to > > discuss social issues. Duh ;) Part of the reason I dislike punishment > > for this so much. This was not a technical meeting, where a major > > technical decision lie on the table going unresolved. > > The Council holding secret meetings and collaborating with the devrel > lead behind the rest of devrel's backs is certainly a major issue... Then that should be grounds for removal. Not using that behind another clause of them missing a meeting to enforce what you want. For example, when I got a ticket for wreckless driving. When the police officer was accusing me of speeding, unsafe lane changes, and failure to use my signal. When I took it to court, even the judge stated. They could not use wreckless driving to encompass and enforce other infractions I might have committed. Thus it seems the real issue at hand is aspects of how the council has conducted itself. With this missed meeting, as just an excuse to forcibly bring about change there. Which only a small fraction seem to want or have issue with. Some of which aren't devs, so that fraction is even smaller. > As > for technical... The Council got itself involved in non-technical > things by kicking this whole mess off in the first place. Which council? Did this council create the CoC or make the matter fall under the council? > You'll note that Diego has said that he thinks it's the most important > thing the Council has ever done Is that an individual statement, or one coming from the entire council? Was he stating that representing the council or himself? > (although the Council has also said > that it wasn't them that did it -- one of the things that they were > supposed to be clarifying at the meeting...). Well I think this is where the trustees should step in a bit. We likely need to meet with the council and see why they feel the CoC should fall under them, rather than the GSC and under the trustees/foundation. I have disliked such matters falling under them since before I was even a trustee or considered such. It's just not technical stuff. I think the reason the CoC fell under the council, was because of a MIA board of trustees in past years. Also could be because the council is seen has having power, and the trustees? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 17:12 ` David Leverton 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: David Leverton @ 2008-05-18 17:12 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sunday 18 May 2008 16:26:00 William L. Thomson Jr. wrote: > On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:01 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > For the zillionth time... GLEP 39 was not a GLEP. It was one of a > > collection of proposals (that were not GLEPs) that were voted upon by a > > global vote. It was then *later* made available in GLEP form by Grant > > for convenience, but it wasn't accepted as a GLEP. > > Ok, but where is it stated that changes, or amendments can only be > done/approved by a global vote? As it stands now, it clearly states > global issues are to be decided by the council. With no conditions or > stipulations. On Sunday 18 May 2008 17:38:14 William L. Thomson Jr. wrote: > Another very good point. IMHO the CoC falls under the GSC which the > trustees/foundation enforces not the council. So they topic at hand for > the current council is not of technical nature and thus should not be on > their plate. Which the subsequent meeting of a topic/subject that should > not fall to them. So is GLEP 39 within the Council's domain or not? It seems pretty non-technical to me, global issue or not. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:58 ` Nirbheek Chauhan 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Nirbheek Chauhan @ 2008-05-18 16:58 UTC (permalink / raw To: Ciaran McCreesh; +Cc: Richard Freeman, gentoo-project On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 9:48 PM, Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 12:13:45 -0400 > Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: >> If the council decided to start holding meetings in private, denied >> any forum for dissent, began booting people merely for disagreeing, >> and began taking the distro in a direction most devs don't like then >> I'd be all for having a gentoo insurrection. > > Oh, I do hope that was said with irony. Funnily enough, the Council > holding meetings in private (ask them about their secret channel on > oftc and their meetings with musikc), I remember people getting confused and talking about how the council wants to "Moving all gentoo channels to oftc" however, that was clarified. "having a secret channel for meetings on oftc" seems to be similar in confusion. Allow me to clarify this as well: Your statement mixes two meanings of the word "meeting" which causes confusion: a) Council meetings b) A (random?) group of people The former needs to be announced, and happen in public. The latter can happen anywhere. Surely we can't say gentoo council members are holding a "meeting" if they happen to meet at a FOSS conference somewhere? ;) Besides, as I understand it: 1) The channel was a public channel on oftc where (some of?) the gentoo council members idled because one of the council members could not come onto FreeNode due to personal reasons. 2) Council Meetings were held on #gentoo-council @ FreeNode, with a proxy for said council member who could not connect to FreeNode. 3) Then the issue of "meetings with musikc" -- my vote goes for *not* counting /query as a "meeting" ;) > denying dissent and booting people > arbitrarily is exactly what lead to them holding the second meeting > that started this discussion. I thought the reason for the meeting was an appeal for retirement done by devrel? Sort of like going to a higher court for an appeal? -- ~Nirbheek Chauhan -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:34 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:34 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 577 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 12:13 -0400, Richard Freeman wrote: > > It seems like the general consensus on this discussion is that the worst > offense committed by the council was to miss a meeting time, and that as > a result we have to go through a new election process immediately. I > can probably think of a half-dozen issues that would be of benefit to > Gentoo if the council showed strong leadership, and punishing itself for > missing a meeting really doesn't end up on that list. +1 -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
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* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] [not found] ` <7c612fc60805180829w6b36d17bla6d527f76017dbbd@mail.gmail.com> @ 2008-05-18 15:30 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 5:01 PM, Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > Unfortunately, it seems that people are misinterpreting this I think you're underestimating the people who are participating to this list. They're not all twats like me. Some of us maybe didn't know about the history behind GLEP 39, but thanks to you kindly reminding them they now know. Have you at one point wondered if by any chance they would simply all disagree with you ? > it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's Constitution' > or somesuch... True. On the other hand it was written as a GLEP. And whatever the history behind it, there is no provision anywhere for a special treatment of GLEP 39. Unless you can tell us where to find this particular policy that I referred to as the eleventh commandment. Now let me sum up. You want the council to have a strict application of a policy that was written in a different time for a different issue than the present one. On the other hand, you don't consider the council has enough power to modify a GLEP based on your personal interpretation of the history behind the GLEP in question. We've certainly seen you more consistent than this before. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:30 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:34 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 357 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 17:30:26 +0200 "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > > it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's > > Constitution' or somesuch... > > True. On the other hand it was written as a GLEP. No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, please stay out of it. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:42 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:11 ` Ferris McCormick 2 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:40 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 5:34 PM, Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, > please stay out of it. You know perfectly well what I meant. And I would suggest you moderate your tone a bit. This in not the first incident from your part in this thread, make sure it's the last one. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:44 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 788 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 17:40:55 +0200 "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 5:34 PM, Ciaran McCreesh > <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > > No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, > > please stay out of it. > > You know perfectly well what I meant. And I would suggest you moderate > your tone a bit. This in not the first incident from your part in this > thread, make sure it's the last one. You are deliberately posting information that you know is untrue and deliberately using that information to form bad conclusions. You are the one who is misbehaving here, and I hope you will have the decency to retract all your claims that are based upon deliberately invalid premises. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-18 15:42 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:45 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:11 ` Ferris McCormick 2 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 557 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:34 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 17:30:26 +0200 > "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's > > > Constitution' or somesuch... > > > > True. On the other hand it was written as a GLEP. > > No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, > please stay out of it. If it's not a GLEP then what is it then? What are we following or not? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:42 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:45 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 716 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:42:08 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:34 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > On Sun, 18 May 2008 17:30:26 +0200 > > "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > > it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's > > > > Constitution' or somesuch... > > > > > > True. On the other hand it was written as a GLEP. > > > > No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, > > please stay out of it. > > If it's not a GLEP then what is it then? What are we following or not? That's already been answered in this thread far too many times. Please read before posting. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:45 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 15:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 15:55 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1593 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:45 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:42:08 -0400 > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > > If it's not a GLEP then what is it then? What are we following or not? > > That's already been answered in this thread far too many times. Please > read before posting. I have read and re-read. It's only until recent postings/comments are we starting to say this is not a GLEP. It's not part of the Bylaws. So what is it? How official is it? Who enforces it? Re-reading, just brings me across more reference to it being a GLEP. Which again, in later threads, it's being mentioned it's not a GLEP. What else do we have document and policy wise? Also if it's a constitution, or such for the council. Why is like ~70% of the document, talking about the past. Personal point of view from those writing the document. Things other than what section B is, and declares. If more time was spent on clarifying section B, and less on talking about the past, problems, personal input/opinion. Things that would make this a much more official document, what ever it is. Then this mess would not exist, and we would have set policies and procedures to follow. Instead we have a partial punishment, that doesn't mention at all how to go about enforcing it. As in council is stripped of power. Does the current council, still hold/wield any power from now until they are replaced? What is the extent/limitations of that power in the intern? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:56 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:05 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2428 bytes --] On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:55:46 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:45 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > On Sun, 18 May 2008 11:42:08 -0400 > > "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > > > > If it's not a GLEP then what is it then? What are we following or > > > not? > > > > That's already been answered in this thread far too many times. > > Please read before posting. > > I have read and re-read. It's only until recent postings/comments are > we starting to say this is not a GLEP. It's not part of the Bylaws. > So what is it? How official is it? Who enforces it? It's effectively in a class of its own. So far as I know, it's the only policy document that's been accepted based upon a global vote. > Re-reading, just brings me across more reference to it being a GLEP. It's referred to as 'GLEP 39' because that's where you find it. This is unfortunate. > Also if it's a constitution, or such for the council. Why is like ~70% > of the document, talking about the past. Personal point of view from > those writing the document. Things other than what section B is, and > declares. What's now called 'GLEP 39' was originally an emailed proposal written by Grant as one of the things upon which developers could vote, with a second email from me proposing the slacker clauses merged in. The actual proposal voted in by developers was a text file in my ~ on dev.g.o, which was just Grant's email with my additions. > If more time was spent on clarifying section B, and less on talking > about the past, problems, personal input/opinion. Things that would > make this a much more official document, what ever it is. Then this > mess would not exist, and we would have set policies and procedures to > follow. But that wasn't what was voted in. > Instead we have a partial punishment, that doesn't mention at all > how to go about enforcing it. As in council is stripped of power. It says exactly how to go about enforcing it. An election has to be held within a month of the meeting, in the same way that otherwise the council has to hold an election once a year. > Does the current council, still hold/wield any power from now until > they are replaced? What is the extent/limitations of that power in the > intern? There's nothing about that in the accepted proposal. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-18 16:56 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:56 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2441 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 17:05 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > It's effectively in a class of its own. So far as I know, it's the only > policy document that's been accepted based upon a global vote. Ok, a global vote, that empowered and created the council. Which seems to pass on that global authority under this document to the council. What global matters can the council decide upon? And which ones require all developers to vote? When and where is the line drawn there? > What's now called 'GLEP 39' was originally an emailed proposal written > by Grant as one of the things upon which developers could vote, with a > second email from me proposing the slacker clauses merged in. > > The actual proposal voted in by developers was a text file in my ~ on > dev.g.o, which was just Grant's email with my additions. Ok, but once it was voted in. Who has global power then? Developers or the council? Who decides upon global decisions? > But that wasn't what was voted in. Correct, and what was, to my understanding and re-reading the document more times than I care to. Says the council has 100% power over all global matters. Past, present, and future, period. No ifs ands or buts. > It says exactly how to go about enforcing it. Are they stripped of power? Do the trustees then call for an election? Who decides on global matters in the intern? Simply stating they are to be replaced, and calling for an election is not enforcement. That's partial at best. > An election has to be > held within a month of the meeting, in the same way that otherwise the > council has to hold an election once a year. That would imply that from day one after missed meeting. We have nominations, etc so that an election can start and proceed within a month. Holding an election, is not starting an election. So if stated an election must be held within a month. That's not a practical time line, since we have a 2+ month election process. So what happens over the next 2 months? No council meetings? No council? Do those that are to be replaced still hold office/power? > There's nothing about that in the accepted proposal. Exactly, so there is nothing saying they do or do not have the power do change that document/policy/glep. Or any other global matter. Even when facing possible punishment and replacement. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:42 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:11 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-18 16:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-18 16:11 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Sun, 18 May 2008 16:34:24 +0100 Ciaran McCreesh <ciaran.mccreesh@googlemail.com> wrote: > On Sun, 18 May 2008 17:30:26 +0200 > "Denis Dupeyron" <calchan@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > it might have been better to document it as 'The Council's > > > Constitution' or somesuch... > > > > True. On the other hand it was written as a GLEP. > > No it wasn't. If all you have to offer is deliberate lies like this, > please stay out of it. > > -- > Ciaran McCreesh Let me try to express this slightly differently. And I was around when we voted on the various proposals for the rules for Council, and I did vote for the one which later became GLEP 39. We did not vote on it as a GLEP to accept or reject. We had an "election" following normal voting procedures on dev.gentoo.org, and this was the winner from among several. I don't recall how the policy chosen by the community was transformed into the form of a GLEP, and I don't know that it matters much. If you are curious, both Grant and Ciaran can answer (and doubtless a few others, both developers and interested bystanders). Thus, what is now GLEP 39 represents the developers' views of the appropriate rules for Council to follow at the time of the vote (which was some time in 2005, I believe). Since then, it's been sitting there for all to read, and no one has ever felt the need to propose changes. So, either people don't care about policies for Council (which does not seem to be the case) or no one has ever seen any problems in the policy requiring changes. This makes it a bit puzzling why it's a big deal when something comes up which activates a clause in the policy (when the requirement affects Council itself. After all, this entire policy tells us the rules for how Council works. That's what it's about.) - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgwVTwACgkQQa6M3+I///cAVQCg1PxpOCSXbDNE0IQJv3mlWv4+ ijwAn29SKLcwacijA+R7hHmtQ5GxuXOb =Kv+4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-18 16:11 ` Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-18 16:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. [not found] ` <20080518181704.GA3560@spoc.mpa.com> 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 16:24 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1187 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:11 +0000, Ferris McCormick wrote: > > So, either people don't care about policies for Council (which does not > seem to be the case) Not sure about that. There are currently how many Gentoo Developers? What percentage is commenting here? I never read the GLEP till this came up. I suspect most others are in the same boat. It's not like part of our recruitment process requires people to read all GLEPs. So it should not be assumed people read or care about them :) > or no one has ever seen any problems in the policy > requiring changes. This makes it a bit puzzling why it's a big deal > when something comes up which activates a clause in the policy (when > the requirement affects Council itself. After all, this entire policy > tells us the rules for how Council works. That's what it's about.) That's the nature of open source. No one cares till you do. Things are ignored till one cares about it. Then everyone else has opinions. Thus this never came up before, so no one cared. Now that it has, a very small fraction cares. A vast majority is.... -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
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* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] [not found] ` <20080518181704.GA3560@spoc.mpa.com> @ 2008-05-18 19:10 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-18 19:10 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1066 bytes --] On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 14:17 -0400, Thomas Anderson wrote: > On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 12:24:18PM -0400, William L. Thomson Jr. wrote: > > On Sun, 2008-05-18 at 16:11 +0000, Ferris McCormick wrote: > > > > > > So, either people don't care about policies for Council (which does not > > > seem to be the case) > > > > Not sure about that. There are currently how many Gentoo Developers? > > What percentage is commenting here? > You might be forgetting that it isn't a requirement for devs to be > subscribed to -project. All they need to subscribe to is -core and > (maybe?) -dev-announce. Happen to notice the subject? It started on -dev ml. I am pretty sure others are aware. But just don't care. Again unless it's technical most of our developer base won't care. Even then unless the technical aspects have effect on them, they still might not care. Granted we could post to -core and -dev-announce just to see if anyone else wants to chime in. If not then? -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:27 ` Roy Bamford 2008-05-15 21:30 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman ` (3 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Roy Bamford @ 2008-05-15 21:27 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-council, gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 2008.05.15 21:49, Donnie Berkholz wrote: [snip] > > tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: > > If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a > new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one > year' is then reset from that point. > > musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular > meetings or also irregular ones like this. > > Open up the floodgates, folks. What do you think, what should we do? > I look forward to hearing your advice. > > Thanks, > Donnie > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > Donnie, The council have met monthly as required by the GLEP. This meeting is single topic about policy, it neither requires to be in public, nor does it require anyone other than -council. A closed session or emails or teleconference would be quite in order for determining and agreeing policy. Forcing an election over this issue, is in effect, a vote of no confidence in our council Delaying the policy setting for three months, until a new council is elected (1 month nominations, 1 month elections, a few weeks for admin) is not in the best interests of Gentoo, nor those whose appeals will be delayed. While the present council would remain in office until replaced, they could hardly make a ruling on the very issue that forced the vote of no confidence. An election now, over this, is just silly. - -- Regards, Roy Bamford (NeddySeagoon) a member of gentoo-ops forum-mods treecleaners trustees For the avoidance of doubt, I'm writing as an individual developer, not on behalf of any office or team I am a part of. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgsqt8ACgkQTE4/y7nJvasTCwCbBmfHQhQaKS+yh4EXtl5Z/FMw 2NYAoJ5pGK5DD6SjX36sZXE0czXJzdpG =kC4P -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:27 ` Roy Bamford @ 2008-05-15 21:30 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:45 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:30 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 347 bytes --] On Thu, 15 May 2008 22:27:53 +0100 Roy Bamford <neddyseagoon@gentoo.org> wrote: > The council have met monthly as required by the GLEP. Nope. The GLEP requires that there's at least one open meeting per month. It also, as a separate requirement, forces a reelection whenever a meeting has less than 50% attendance. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:30 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:45 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-15 22:02 ` Ciaran McCreesh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-15 21:45 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 991 bytes --] On Thu, 2008-05-15 at 22:30 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > On Thu, 15 May 2008 22:27:53 +0100 > Roy Bamford <neddyseagoon@gentoo.org> wrote: > > The council have met monthly as required by the GLEP. > > Nope. The GLEP requires that there's at least one open meeting per > month. It also, as a separate requirement, forces a reelection whenever > a meeting has less than 50% attendance. I think the GLEP is a little harsh there. It likely should be amended or revised. To allow them the opportunity to re-schedule the meeting. Make up for their mistake. Rather than rush straight to punishment. We all make mistakes, and I think so far they have done a good job and earned a little leeway. But I am in no way shape or form, advocating we not follow our own policies. But at the same time, we must use common sense. I think the GLEP is a good start, with some revisions it can be even better :) -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:45 ` William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-15 22:02 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 22:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 22:02 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1689 bytes --] On Thu, 15 May 2008 17:45:35 -0400 "William L. Thomson Jr." <wltjr@gentoo.org> wrote: > I think the GLEP is a little harsh there. It likely should be amended > or revised. To allow them the opportunity to re-schedule the meeting. > Make up for their mistake. Rather than rush straight to punishment. The GLEP was deliberately harsh, and was voted in based upon that harshness. Developers also had the option of voting for the GLEP but without the slacker clauses, but they chose (by a substantial margin) not to. > We all make mistakes, and I think so far they have done a good job and > earned a little leeway. But I am in no way shape or form, advocating > we not follow our own policies. But at the same time, we must use > common sense. > > I think the GLEP is a good start, with some revisions it can be even > better :) Revisions to the GLEP pretty much require a global vote anyway, since that was how the original GLEP was selected. For those not aware, the "how the Council is run" stuff was decided by global vote, not by approval of previous or current management. It wasn't written or approved as a GLEP, but it's listed as a GLEP for historical purposes and to make it easy to find. Also for those not aware... The reason for the slacker clauses was that prior to that, Gentoo was managed by a rather bizarrely selected group of individuals (effectively, hardened and infra had representatives, the tree didn't, for example) who mostly communicated via a closed mailing list and who were quite happy disappearing for months on end and only showing up when one of their pet irrelevant causes was under discussion. -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 22:02 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 22:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-15 22:08 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1009 bytes --] On Thu, 2008-05-15 at 23:02 +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote: > > Also for those not aware... The reason for the slacker clauses was that > prior to that, Gentoo was managed by a rather bizarrely selected group > of individuals (effectively, hardened and infra had representatives, the > tree didn't, for example) who mostly communicated via a closed mailing > list and who were quite happy disappearing for months on end and only > showing up when one of their pet irrelevant causes was under discussion. Do those reason still stand? Or has there been enough history of other behavior and more diverse councils operating in the public since then? Almost seems like we might need to revisit this. I am not saying I mind harshness, when due. But seems there is to little room for mistakes. First mistake, and all are gone. If we need to take it to a global vote, then so be it. Seems like a vote is coming either way :) -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:27 ` Roy Bamford @ 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-15 21:35 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 2:22 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-council] " Luca Barbato ` (2 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 2 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-15 21:29 UTC (permalink / raw To: Donnie Berkholz; +Cc: gentoo-council, gentoo-project Donnie Berkholz wrote: > tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: > > If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a > new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one > year' is then reset from that point. > > musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular > meetings or also irregular ones like this. > > Open up the floodgates, folks. What do you think, what should we do? I > look forward to hearing your advice. > Did this meeting have sufficient notice to be considered an official meeting? Normally bylaws that govern matters like these also stipulate that meetings have a certain notice process to ensure that everybody knows about them. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-15 21:35 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:38 ` Ferris McCormick 1 sibling, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 803 bytes --] On Thu, 15 May 2008 17:29:56 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > Did this meeting have sufficient notice to be considered an official > meeting? Normally bylaws that govern matters like these also > stipulate that meetings have a certain notice process to ensure that > everybody knows about them. The bylaws that govern this matter are GLEP 39. GLEP 39 lets the Council decide when they hold meetings and how they go about it (so long as they at least have one open meeting per month). The Council decided at the end of their previous meeting to hold a second meeting, so it clearly counts -- it wasn't like it was one person saying "we're having a meeting in five minutes because I say so, and if people don't show up they get slacker marks!"... -- Ciaran McCreesh [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-15 21:35 ` Ciaran McCreesh @ 2008-05-15 21:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-15 22:51 ` Richard Freeman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-15 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, 15 May 2008 17:29:56 -0400 Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: > Donnie Berkholz wrote: > > tove brought up an interesting point from GLEP 39: > > > > If any meeting has less than 50% attendance by council members, a > > new election for all places must be held within a month. The 'one > > year' is then reset from that point. > > > > musikc questioned whether that was only intended for the regular > > meetings or also irregular ones like this. > > > > Open up the floodgates, folks. What do you think, what should we do? I > > look forward to hearing your advice. > > > > Did this meeting have sufficient notice to be considered an official > meeting? Normally bylaws that govern matters like these also stipulate > that meetings have a certain notice process to ensure that everybody > knows about them. It was announced at the last meeting, so it had one week notice. As for intent, you'd have to ask g2boojum and ciaranm because they wrote it. But the wording in the GLEP could hardly be clearer. Regards, Ferris > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > - -- Ferris McCormick (P44646, MI) <fmccor@gentoo.org> Developer, Gentoo Linux (Sparc, Devrel, Userrel, Trustees) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgsrVIACgkQQa6M3+I///dLfACeLzlLaP3a1+MCFI7/BElz1HbB LjIAoKmcwlfkvamQjWAZ9J1geonZ0mUY =Q1B7 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 21:38 ` Ferris McCormick @ 2008-05-15 22:51 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-15 22:51 UTC (permalink / raw To: Ferris McCormick; +Cc: gentoo-project Ferris McCormick wrote: > On Thu, 15 May 2008 17:29:56 -0400 > Richard Freeman <rich0@gentoo.org> wrote: >>> >> Did this meeting have sufficient notice to be considered an official >> meeting? Normally bylaws that govern matters like these also stipulate >> that meetings have a certain notice process to ensure that everybody >> knows about them. > > It was announced at the last meeting, so it had one week notice. Yes, but was everybody there? If not the only effective notice was in the summary. I'm not sure that everybody would have necessarily read that. In any case - if in doubt what value is there in holding another council election? It would seem that the purpose of this clause is to keep an inactive council from holding up gentoo as a whole. I don't think that is really the situation here. In any case, the council could just revise the GLEP to ammend this clause if necessary. Or whatever. It isn't like the council is a legal body in any sense - it is important that they have the respect of the development community, but I don't think that most devs are eager for new elections. The only body in gentoo that needs to strictly follow legal requirements would be the trustees. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-council] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-16 2:22 ` Luca Barbato 2008-05-17 16:07 ` [gentoo-project] " Peter Volkov 2008-05-17 22:19 ` Roy Bamford 5 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Luca Barbato @ 2008-05-16 2:22 UTC (permalink / raw To: Donnie Berkholz; +Cc: gentoo-council, gentoo-project Donnie Berkholz wrote: > lu_zero said on IRC last night that he was going to be traveling today, > but nobody's shown up to proxy for him: I'm just back, the travel took quite a lot of time for the return trip... lu -- Luca Barbato Gentoo Council Member Gentoo/linux Gentoo/PPC http://dev.gentoo.org/~lu_zero -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2008-05-16 2:22 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-council] " Luca Barbato @ 2008-05-17 16:07 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-17 22:19 ` Roy Bamford 5 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-17 16:07 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 323 bytes --] If we avoid our policies now this creates a case so IMO this is the reason just to follow our policies and start a new elections as fast as possible. In other cases there will be valid question why do we need any policy for council at all? This is just the procedural action I think we have to perform. -- Peter. [-- Attachment #2: Эта часть сообщения подписана цифровой подписью --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2008-05-17 16:07 ` [gentoo-project] " Peter Volkov @ 2008-05-17 22:19 ` Roy Bamford 2008-05-17 23:43 ` Denis Dupeyron 5 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Roy Bamford @ 2008-05-17 22:19 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 2008.05.15 21:49, Donnie Berkholz wrote: [snip] > Open up the floodgates, folks. What do you think, what should we do? > I look forward to hearing your advice. > > Thanks, > Donnie > -- > gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list > All, There seems to be almost total apathy to this thread. I expected at least as much interest as the thread that announced the three expulsions. Right now, it is important that Council makes up its collective mind and does something. Like many management decisions, what is decided is far less important than that we have a speedy decision so the rest of Gentoo can get on with the implementation. Delay is the only option we don't have. - -- Regards, Roy Bamford (NeddySeagoon) a member of gentoo-ops forum-mods treecleaners trustees Written as my personal view, not on behalf of any team I am a member of -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAkgvWd0ACgkQTE4/y7nJvatCQgCfZ2aP5fQ8ssYmBncw2m3LIX+t 0vcAn1i7I1y2EnN2wth5wTLuxKlSW45c =tTWR -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 22:19 ` Roy Bamford @ 2008-05-17 23:43 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-19 5:21 ` Alistair Bush 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-17 23:43 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 12:19 AM, Roy Bamford <neddyseagoon@gentoo.org> wrote: > There seems to be almost total apathy to this thread. I expected at > least as much interest as the thread that announced the three > expulsions. I'm actually pleasantly surprised to see so little interest in this thread. I think it's good news that our developers have other things to do than being bothered with this. One reason is I consider this a minor incident. But the main reason is that it's up to the council to get themselves out of a situation they've put themselves in. You can't be one day the body that rules Gentoo, and go back to those who elected you the next day just because it's convenient. There's an issue with consistency and credibility here. I trust they'll make the right decision, assuming there is a need for a decision. And if they don't that's no big deal. We'll either vote for a new council soon or sometime this summer. Denis. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-17 23:43 ` Denis Dupeyron @ 2008-05-19 5:21 ` Alistair Bush 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Alistair Bush @ 2008-05-19 5:21 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project Denis Dupeyron wrote: > One reason is I consider this a minor incident. But the main reason is > that it's up to the council to get themselves out of a situation > they've put themselves in. You can't be one day the body that rules > Gentoo, and go back to those who elected you the next day just because > it's convenient. There's an issue with consistency and credibility > here. > > Denis. It really isn't the Councils decision and the only thing they can do to get themselves out of this situation is to hold an election. Firstly, even tho this is absolutely minor , GLEP 39 has been "breached" and it details what the solution is for that breach. Therefore that solution, a new council via an election, _must_ be performed. If it isn't then we will no longer have a functioning Council with a mandate from the ppl!!! ( maybe a little over dramatic ). There would be no requirement for anything they say to be enacted upon and the "shit would hit the fan". ( or would we just elect a new council and let them pretend to be the one true Council ). Could any developer challenge the validity of the Council. Who would be responsible for judging that, Foundation members? In fact, whose duty is it too call the election? Decide when any election is to take place? -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-19 5:21 ` Alistair Bush @ 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-19 15:07 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-19 14:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: Alistair Bush; +Cc: gentoo-project Alistair Bush wrote: > It really isn't the Councils decision and the only thing they can do to > get themselves out of this situation is to hold an election. Firstly, > even tho this is absolutely minor , GLEP 39 has been "breached" and it > details what the solution is for that breach. Therefore that solution, > a new council via an election, _must_ be performed. > Uh - the word "must" is a bit strong. Why "must" an election be performed? GLEP 39 is a document several years old, that probably pre-dates half of the devs here, and most likely most of the ones that were around weren't really envisioning that it be used in this way today. > If it isn't then we will no longer have a functioning Council with a > mandate from the ppl!!! ( maybe a little over dramatic ). There would > be no requirement for anything they say to be enacted upon and the "shit > would hit the fan". ( or would we just elect a new council and let them > pretend to be the one true Council ). First - I suspect that most devs don't really care a great deal about this issue - I doubt that the hundred-or-so required devs to fork a new distro are going to leave because a few people missed a scheduled meeting. If the council announced that there would be a re-do of the meeting and a new discussion of GLEP 39 I doubt that people would start ignoring the resolutions of the council - particular those in key roles in the project (ie those with administrative access to project resources, the trustees, etc). If the council announced new elections then everybody would start working towards new elections. The council was elected because they already had the respect of most gentoo devs. That isn't going to change simply because a few people missed a meeting. Organizations aren't run by job titles unless those job titles come with the ability to sign paychecks. They're run by people - and leadership is respected regardless of policies written on paper. > > Could any developer challenge the validity of the Council. Who would be > responsible for judging that, Foundation members? Anybody can do anything they want - most of us live in free countries. Who would judge that? Well, that would be our peers. When we say stupid things people start ignoring us. When we say smart things people listen to us. I can post a poll on some forum somewhere and call it a gentoo election, but nobody is going to pay attention to the results because most people wouldn't recognize me as a gentoo leader. If a bunch of well-respected devs did the same thing then there is a good chance everybody else would go along with it (or there would be a fork). However, I don't think all that many well-respected devs are eager to mount a coup over a single missed meeting. > > In fact, whose duty is it too call the election? Decide when any > election is to take place? Hmm - I suspect that would again be the council - since everybody already looks to them for leadership. Why don't we see what their perspective is? If you feel strongly about new elections try contacting one of them directly and talking about it. Most council members have gotten where they are because folks think they have a good head on their shoulders - they're likely to listen to you. If they hear lots of people calling for a new election I suspect that they'd go ahead and hold one. I think that those who are concerned about this issue would get further in this way than by kicking up a storm on a mailing list (not that open discussion is a bad thing). Don't be surprised if they don't take action on the basis of one communication, but if they hear from lots of devs they'd probably take it seriously. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman @ 2008-05-19 15:07 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen 2008-05-19 19:50 ` Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen 2008-05-20 4:57 ` Alistair Bush 2 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Bo Ørsted Andresen @ 2008-05-19 15:07 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 443 bytes --] On Monday 19 May 2008 16:39:02 Richard Freeman wrote: > First - I suspect that most devs don't really care a great deal about > this issue - Well, I for one do care although I've mostly given up on it. > I doubt that the hundred-or-so required devs to fork a new distro are going to leave because a few people missed a scheduled meeting. What makes you think that needs a hundred or so devs? -- Bo Andresen Gentoo KDE Dev [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-19 15:07 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen @ 2008-05-19 19:50 ` Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen 2008-05-20 4:57 ` Alistair Bush 2 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen @ 2008-05-19 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project On Monday 19 May 2008 16:39:02 Richard Freeman wrote: > Alistair Bush wrote: > > It really isn't the Councils decision and the only thing they can do to > > get themselves out of this situation is to hold an election. Firstly, > > even tho this is absolutely minor , GLEP 39 has been "breached" and it > > details what the solution is for that breach. Therefore that solution, > > a new council via an election, _must_ be performed. > > Uh - the word "must" is a bit strong. Why "must" an election be > performed? GLEP 39 is a document several years old, that probably > pre-dates half of the devs here, and most likely most of the ones that > were around weren't really envisioning that it be used in this way today. Because that was the wording we voted on. I'd say hold the election as GLEP 39 specifies and be done with the issue. -- Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen Gentoo Linux Security Team -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-19 15:07 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen 2008-05-19 19:50 ` Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen @ 2008-05-20 4:57 ` Alistair Bush 2008-05-20 5:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2 siblings, 1 reply; 81+ messages in thread From: Alistair Bush @ 2008-05-20 4:57 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project Richard Freeman wrote: > Uh - the word "must" is a bit strong. Why "must" an election be > performed? GLEP 39 is a document several years old, that probably > pre-dates half of the devs here, and most likely most of the ones that > were around weren't really envisioning that it be used in this way today. To quote jaervosz "Because that was the wording we voted on. I'd say hold the election as GLEP 39 specifies and be done with the issue." > >> If it isn't then we will no longer have a functioning Council with a >> mandate from the ppl!!! ( maybe a little over dramatic ). There would >> be no requirement for anything they say to be enacted upon and the >> "shit would hit the fan". ( or would we just elect a new council and >> let them pretend to be the one true Council ). > > First - I suspect that most devs don't really care a great deal about > this issue - I doubt that the hundred-or-so required devs to fork a new > distro are going to leave because a few people missed a scheduled > meeting. If the council announced that there would be a re-do of the > meeting and a new discussion of GLEP 39 I doubt that people would start > ignoring the resolutions of the council - particular those in key roles > in the project (ie those with administrative access to project > resources, the trustees, etc). If the council announced new elections > then everybody would start working towards new elections. It doesn't matter whether a hundred or so dev's care. It matters whether ~some~ dev's care. Yes this is a situation where the minority does matter. Why? well what were to happen if the infra team where to decide the decisions of the council ( retirements, bans, etc, etc ) were not enforceable. I realise this is being dramatic but it is that exact drama I am attempting to avoid. At the moment it is pretty clear that at least some dev's are questioning the mandate that the council would have to continue. When it comes down to it, the law is the law and even when the situation is silly, the law must be followed. > > The council was elected because they already had the respect of most > gentoo devs. That isn't going to change simply because a few people > missed a meeting. Organizations aren't run by job titles unless those > job titles come with the ability to sign paychecks. They're run by > people - and leadership is respected regardless of policies written on > paper. > No it isn't, and hopefully they get voted back in quick smart. >> >> Could any developer challenge the validity of the Council. Who would >> be responsible for judging that, Foundation members? > > Anybody can do anything they want - most of us live in free countries. > Who would judge that? Well, that would be our peers. When we say > stupid things people start ignoring us. When we say smart things people > listen to us. I can post a poll on some forum somewhere and call it a > gentoo election, but nobody is going to pay attention to the results > because most people wouldn't recognize me as a gentoo leader. If a > bunch of well-respected devs did the same thing then there is a good > chance everybody else would go along with it (or there would be a fork). > However, I don't think all that many well-respected devs are eager to > mount a coup over a single missed meeting. > My problem with this is that there is required to be a fork. My prefered solution would be that Foundation Members call for elections of the Council and can vote no confidence in the council and the Council can vote no confidence in the Foundation. Basically similar to a Constitutional Monachy. but I want to talk more about this is Gentoo Leadership Thread. Under this model there are certain checks and balances and it is simple. >> >> In fact, whose duty is it too call the election? Decide when any >> election is to take place? > > Hmm - I suspect that would again be the council - since everybody > already looks to them for leadership. Why don't we see what their > perspective is? If you feel strongly about new elections try contacting > one of them directly and talking about it. Betelgeuse, the dev I respect the most on the council ( due to our java association ), has already stated we should get the election out of the way. -- gentoo-project@lists.gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] 2008-05-20 4:57 ` Alistair Bush @ 2008-05-20 5:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 0 siblings, 0 replies; 81+ messages in thread From: William L. Thomson Jr. @ 2008-05-20 5:08 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-project [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 271 bytes --] On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 16:57 +1200, Alistair Bush wrote: > No it isn't, and hopefully they get voted back in quick smart. Hopefully they run again to even have the chance to be voted back in. -- William L. Thomson Jr. amd64/Java/Trustees Gentoo Foundation [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 197 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 81+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-05-20 14:36 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 81+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <20080508233328.GA8896@comet> 2008-05-15 20:49 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-15 21:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:52 ` Petteri Räty 2008-05-16 16:46 ` Donnie Berkholz 2008-05-16 20:45 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 21:34 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 22:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 22:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-17 0:14 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-16 23:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-17 9:15 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-16 23:11 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-16 23:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-16 23:50 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-16 23:53 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-17 1:12 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-17 18:47 ` Jorge Manuel B. S. Vicetto 2008-05-17 19:50 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-17 21:12 ` Alec Warner 2008-05-18 5:30 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-19 1:16 ` Alec Warner 2008-05-17 22:55 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting Josh Sled 2008-05-17 23:46 ` Simon Cooper 2008-05-18 1:07 ` Ferris McCormick [not found] ` <3c32f69c0805171845o7fa80063r3580d4873ba167e@mail.gmail.com> 2008-05-18 1:47 ` Łukasz Damentko 2008-05-18 5:02 ` Mark Loeser 2008-05-18 5:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 10:10 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-18 11:20 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:16 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 17:05 ` Peter Volkov 2008-05-20 12:06 ` Jim Ramsay 2008-05-20 14:36 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-18 10:56 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-dev] Special meeting [WAS: Council meeting summary for 8 May 2008] Wernfried Haas 2008-05-18 15:01 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:26 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:31 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:49 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:02 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:12 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:32 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:13 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-18 16:18 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:38 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 17:12 ` David Leverton 2008-05-18 16:58 ` Nirbheek Chauhan 2008-05-18 16:34 ` William L. Thomson Jr. [not found] ` <7c612fc60805180829w6b36d17bla6d527f76017dbbd@mail.gmail.com> 2008-05-18 15:30 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:34 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:40 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-18 15:44 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:42 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 15:45 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 15:55 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:05 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-18 16:56 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-18 16:11 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-18 16:24 ` William L. Thomson Jr. [not found] ` <20080518181704.GA3560@spoc.mpa.com> 2008-05-18 19:10 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-15 21:27 ` Roy Bamford 2008-05-15 21:30 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:45 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-15 22:02 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 22:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr. 2008-05-15 21:29 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-15 21:35 ` Ciaran McCreesh 2008-05-15 21:38 ` Ferris McCormick 2008-05-15 22:51 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-16 2:22 ` [gentoo-project] Re: [gentoo-council] " Luca Barbato 2008-05-17 16:07 ` [gentoo-project] " Peter Volkov 2008-05-17 22:19 ` Roy Bamford 2008-05-17 23:43 ` Denis Dupeyron 2008-05-19 5:21 ` Alistair Bush 2008-05-19 14:39 ` Richard Freeman 2008-05-19 15:07 ` Bo Ørsted Andresen 2008-05-19 19:50 ` Sune Kloppenborg Jeppesen 2008-05-20 4:57 ` Alistair Bush 2008-05-20 5:08 ` William L. Thomson Jr.
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