This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and manifesto. We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost every other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
How do we handle this?
First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla" mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are enormous.
Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal is truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across many other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our other views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission. This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued success.
What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related work. This view means getting to know the full personality of Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those who want to do so.
We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means we'll spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend each other.
I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all sorts of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA and ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows Mozillians to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves apart and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I believe we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused on what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission forward.
Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as well as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused on the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
I agree that the Mozilla Mission should be the anchor to what planet is.
OTH, I don't think that it should be the *consensus* around the Mozilla Mission that constitutes planet.
As an example I'd take your key note at MozCamp in Berlin, which was challenging that very consensus, and opening up the mission to places that are uncomfortable and new.
That belongs on planet, and any community member should feel free to challenge our perception of the mission and where we can apply it.
On Mar 8, 4:30 pm, Mitchell Baker <mitch...@mozilla.com> wrote:
> Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar
> planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of
> remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla
> activities.
In my opinion, the name "mozillians" is too close to Mozilla and
implies endorsement by Mozilla. We as Mozilla contributors may
understand that such a forum would represent the sum of the
individuals involved in it -- not the Mozilla community -- but the
rest of the world doesn't necessarily appreciate such fine
distinctions. I think that Mozilla's reputation is too important to
give a single individual the power to damage it the way that has
happened over the past couple of days.
I'm sure there are creative people in the project who are good at
thinking up interesting names, and could choose a name that does not
sound like "Mozilla".
More broadly, I must say I'm disappointed that this post does not
acknowledge that what happened was an attack on a marginalized group
by a member of a privileged group, in which Mozilla resources were
used to tell a subset of Mozilla contributors that we are unwelcome.
It is more than a mere "difference of opinion". It is a false
equivalence to say that expressing bigoted views and being called out
on the bigoted nature of those views is just as terrible an experience
as being told in your own workplace that legislation should be passed
to make you a second-class citizen. Pragmatically, though, I think
that making planet.mozilla.org focused on Mozilla-related content is
the right answer, and sets clear expectations for everyone.
I agree entirely that we don't want to try and have everyone conform
to the same thinking, however I think that we should look at this
slightly differently.
The first problem seems to be that people don't want so much noise on
Planet, however I find that problem is fairly unique to *our* planet
and not to others such as Planet GNOME. Planet has problems of
readability due to its theme, the poor formatting of the automated
meeting notes, etc. Planet GNOME seems pretty easy to read and easy to
skip over things that I'm not interested in and seems to have a
similar # of updates to our Planet. I believe there is huge value in
being able to see the whole of the community and things that aren't
just "Project X did Y today" updates. A better theme and removal of
some of the automated note posts (or making them more readable) seems
like it would address a large number of the problems people have
today. That said, enough people have said they want a filtered feed of
"project specific" updates that I don't see why we wouldn't also
provide that.
The second problem is that people don't like people posting about a
narrow set of certain very controversial topics. I don't have a
problem with people posting interesting things they're doing that
aren't necessarily related to Mozilla (how do you want to define
Mozilla? The projects, the people...?). I enjoy knowing what is going
on with people and the other things they might be doing (side
projects, photography, travel). Really, I'm pretty OK with people
posting just about anything they want to their blogs. However, people
need to realize they are responsible for what they write and say. They
need to understand certain things they say can and will destroy
relationships and their own credibility. Things you say can hurt the
community and divide people in completely unproductive ways. People
should self-censor. If your beliefs and your need to express them to
such a wide audience outweigh the consequences, then I don't think we
should stand in the way.
stuart
On Mar 8, 4:30 pm, Mitchell Baker <mitch...@mozilla.com> wrote:
> This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials
> syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
> Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and manifesto.
> We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost every
> other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with
> otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
> How do we handle this?
> First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about
> supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla"
> mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my
> general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will
> fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the
> Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are
> enormous.
> Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal is
> truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and
> control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across many
> other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our other
> views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission.
> This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued success.
> What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
> We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related
> work. This view means getting to know the full personality of
> Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those who
> want to do so.
> We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of
> Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This
> view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means we'll
> spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend each
> other.
> I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the
> promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the
> path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all sorts
> of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA and
> ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows Mozillians
> to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves apart
> and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
> In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I believe
> we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused on
> what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission
> forward.
> Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar
> planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of
> remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla
> activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as well
> as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular
> solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused on
> the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
Mozilla is more than a company, and more than a software project. It is a rich and diverse community with a shared mission, focused on choice and freedom on the Internet. We have many challenges and many competitors, and it has only been through trusting each other and working incredibly hard that we've reached the point where we are today. Without both that trust and that passion, Mozilla cannot continue to scale, and cannot continue making a difference. I believe that as a community, we must focus on that which unites us, and leave aside all that could and will divide us.
While it has always been a venue for controversy, the events of this week have clearly highlighted Planet as a potential source of damage and division within the community. I believe that the amount of anger and hurt I have read and heard this week is far beyond anything I have seen in nearly nine years working on the project. I personally feel that we must learn from this and ensure that this type of incident cannot be repeated.
It brings me no joy or happiness to say this, but at this point I believe that the current Planet Mozilla cannot continue to exist, at least as a Mozilla-supported or Mozilla-branded site. Mozilla is not about religion, or politics, or morality, and as currently constituted we are providing a platform (in the form of orders of magnitude more readers) for any or all of these issues, in a way that is inevitably associated with both our brand and our community. I simply do not believe this is in the best interests of the project, or of the community, to continue to provide this platform, with a module policy defending the use of this platform to advance goals separate from those of Mozilla.
I don’t expect anyone to be happy about this, on either side. No situation like this will ever be happy. But I believe that we, as a community, must collectively decide to move on from this and find a new way forward.
> This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
> Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and manifesto. We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost every other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
> How do we handle this?
> First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla" mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are enormous.
> Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal is truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across many other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our other views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission. This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued success.
> What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
> We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related work. This view means getting to know the full personality of Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those who want to do so.
> We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means we'll spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend each other.
> I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all sorts of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA and ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows Mozillians to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves apart and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
> In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I believe we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused on what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission forward.
> Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as well as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused on the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
> Mozilla is more than a company, and more than a software project. It is a rich and diverse community with a shared mission, focused on choice and freedom on the Internet. We have many challenges and many competitors, and it has only been through trusting each other and working incredibly hard that we've reached the point where we are today. Without both that trust and that passion, Mozilla cannot continue to scale, and cannot continue making a difference. I believe that as a community, we must focus on that which unites us, and leave aside all that could and will divide us.
> While it has always been a venue for controversy, the events of this week have clearly highlighted Planet as a potential source of damage and division within the community. I believe that the amount of anger and hurt I have read and heard this week is far beyond anything I have seen in nearly nine years working on the project. I personally feel that we must learn from this and ensure that this type of incident cannot be repeated.
> It brings me no joy or happiness to say this, but at this point I believe that the current Planet Mozilla cannot continue to exist, at least as a Mozilla-supported or Mozilla-branded site. Mozilla is not about religion, or politics, or morality, and as currently constituted we are providing a platform (in the form of orders of magnitude more readers) for any or all of these issues, in a way that is inevitably associated with both our brand and our community. I simply do not believe this is in the best interests of the project, or of the community, to continue to provide this platform, with a module policy defending the use of this platform to advance goals separate from those of Mozilla.
> I don’t expect anyone to be happy about this, on either side. No situation like this will ever be happy. But I believe that we, as a community, must collectively decide to move on from this and find a new way forward.
> -- Mike
> On 2012-03-08, at 7:30 PM, Mitchell Baker wrote:
> > This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
> > Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and manifesto. We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost every other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
> > How do we handle this?
> > First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla" mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are enormous.
> > Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal is truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across many other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our other views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission. This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued success.
> > What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
> > We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related work. This view means getting to know the full personality of Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those who want to do so.
> > We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means we'll spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend each other.
> > I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all sorts of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA and ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows Mozillians to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves apart and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
> > In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I believe we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused on what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission forward.
> > Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as well as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused on the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
I've actually been thinking about planet lately, and I'm sorry to see
it came up in this manner. However, I think if we address planet's
shortcomings as they already existed, we also solve the specific
problem we've hit here. Back when it was last decided that planet
should contain a person's personal posts, Mozilla and planet were much
smaller than they are now. Also twitter has taken over much of the
"getting to know you" work that planet used to do. I don't think we're
losing out at this point in time the way we would have in the past, by
making planet project only.
Many teams are having their own planets now, interns had one, mozilla
reps has one, womoz etc. I propose that we make this standard
practice. Team planets aggregate blog posts from their community
members (on topic only) and planet itself aggregates from that. I
think at this point if people want to know more about a specific
person they should use planet to find the person's full feed and
subscribe to each individually.
I was already going to propose this simply to make it easier to
follow Mozilla itself and for community members to find tasks that
they want to get involved in. It also makes it much easier for people
who only want to follow specific teams, they can follow the team
planet rather than trying to make sure they get everyone by hand.
> I agree that the Mozilla Mission should be the anchor to what planet is.
> OTH, I don't think that it should be the *consensus* around the Mozilla
> Mission that constitutes planet.
> As an example I'd take your key note at MozCamp in Berlin, which was
> challenging that very consensus, and opening up the mission to places
> that are uncomfortable and new.
> That belongs on planet, and any community member should feel free to
> challenge our perception of the mission and where we can apply it.
> Axel
Axel
Yes, i agree. I was trying to use "consensus" to mean the thing that we agree is Mozilla -- the mission, etc. Perhaps it is too tricky a word. I do think we have an expression of our mission -- open, participatory, individaul-focused, choice, innovation, opportunity in online life. that's big but there are a lot of thing it doesn't cove. so probably we're talking about how we fulfill the mozilla mission, but that's getting further than we need for this discussion.
On 3/8/12 6:02 PM, Majken "Lucy" Connor wrote:
Lucy
this is an interesting idea, various planets aggregating up so one could follow a part of planet. thanks for raising it
> Many teams are having their own planets now, interns had one, mozilla
> reps has one, womoz etc. I propose that we make this standard
> practice. Team planets aggregate blog posts from their community
> members (on topic only) and planet itself aggregates from that. I
> think at this point if people want to know more about a specific
> person they should use planet to find the person's full feed and
> subscribe to each individually.
> I was already going to propose this simply to make it easier to
> follow Mozilla itself and for community members to find tasks that
> they want to get involved in. It also makes it much easier for people
> who only want to follow specific teams, they can follow the team
> planet rather than trying to make sure they get everyone by hand.
I am the original Planet Mozilla Module Owner and currently support the Module as a Peer. These are my thoughts alone; I expect other Planet leaders will share here when they finish their day jobs. (The Module Owner and other two Peers are project volunteers.) That being said, I am confident that these views are in mostly line with those of the rest of the team and well represent the mission and purpose of the Planet Mozilla Module.
I think it's very important that people in this discussion get the opportunity to understand what the Planet Module has been trying to accomplish for the last half a decade before we all dive into "how to change it" discussion.
Mozilla is a large and growing community of people spread out all over the world. We don't all share offices and a neighborhood pub. We don't all have the opportunity for hallway conversations and grabbing a beer after work. As a widely distributed group, we face challenges getting to know each other, being able to build the camaraderie and trust that direct social interaction facilitates for traditional (not open-source) companies.
A big part of the Mission of the Planet Module is to aid in that challenge, to facilitate communication among a community of human beings -- people who share more than just a work product.
Mozilla is more than just some lines of code. It's more than a few websites. Mozilla is all about *people*. Our Mission and Manifesto are about *people*. Our work is in support of *people*.
We create change in the world by organizing *people* and our forums for discussion and interaction, from IRC to Planet, all carve out space for *people* to relate to each other as human beings -- rather than simply a bunch of automatons in a factory cranking out products Foxconn style.
And we are not alone in this. Many of the most successful open source projects have set up Planets for this very same purpose. They realized as we have, that a healthy open source community is about people more than it is about code or products or anything else. Take a look at the excellent Gnome Planet for what this looks like when it works. It's inviting, and inspiring.
I realize that the recent events at Planet have caused many people a great deal of strife and wasted time. I empathize with those who feel wounded by some of the content that's made it into the Planet feed.
Some have said that we're just too big, that our community is of a size that requires giving up the rich and empowering diversity that we share across our various communications channels.
Others have said that they're simply not interested in the non-work lives of our global community. They are only interested in reading about what code others are writing or status updates on projects Mozilla is sponsoring.
I appreciate all of those views and concerns, and I would like Planet to address them. I believe that the Planet Module should address them. I have confidence that we can address them.
But I reject the idea that our community has somehow outgrown its ability to share as a group of human beings. I reject the idea that Planet requires an editorial regime to filter and censor or that participation in Planet should demand self-filtering and self-censoring of content. I reject the idea that our primary communications must be limited to only the technical and work related.
The Planet team has been working to make Planet more usable. We have pulled the robot-powered status updates and the project blogs into their own feed. http://planet.mozilla.org/projects/ We are also beginning work to create a sub-feed at Planet that will be exclusive to content about our mission and related work.
Planet has served us well over the 5 years since the formation of the Planet Module and it will continue to serve our amazing community going forward. To do that it will grow and evolve. But Planet should not devolve into sterile reports of only the lowest common denominator content.
Mozilla is more than just “a job” and I hope that Planet will continue to make that more obvious, not less.
> Mozilla is more than a company, and more than a software project. It is a rich and diverse community with a shared mission, focused on choice and freedom on the Internet. We have many challenges and many competitors, and it has only been through trusting each other and working incredibly hard that we've reached the point where we are today. Without both that trust and that passion, Mozilla cannot continue to scale, and cannot continue making a difference. I believe that as a community, we must focus on that which unites us, and leave aside all that could and will divide us.
> While it has always been a venue for controversy, the events of this week have clearly highlighted Planet as a potential source of damage and division within the community. I believe that the amount of anger and hurt I have read and heard this week is far beyond anything I have seen in nearly nine years working on the project. I personally feel that we must learn from this and ensure that this type of incident cannot be repeated.
> It brings me no joy or happiness to say this, but at this point I believe that the current Planet Mozilla cannot continue to exist, at least as a Mozilla-supported or Mozilla-branded site. Mozilla is not about religion, or politics, or morality, and as currently constituted we are providing a platform (in the form of orders of magnitude more readers) for any or all of these issues, in a way that is inevitably associated with both our brand and our community. I simply do not believe this is in the best interests of the project, or of the community, to continue to provide this platform, with a module policy defending the use of this platform to advance goals separate from those of Mozilla.
> I don’t expect anyone to be happy about this, on either side. No situation like this will ever be happy. But I believe that we, as a community, must collectively decide to move on from this and find a new way forward.
I just wanted to say that I agree 100% with this. So I'm not sure if I can contribute anything to this conversation; the below turns out to be a mere paraphrasing of what Mitchell already said, feel free to skip.
I understand the counterargument about diversity, but it seems to me that precisely, diversity is better served by restricting the scope of Planet Mozilla. The Mozilla mission unites us, but other beliefs that we have can easily divide us. Therefore, a narrow focus on the Mozilla mission allows us, a very diverse group of people, to work with each other.
In fact, even from the sole point of view of sharing more of our personalities with each other, this is still beneficial, because we share more in the course of working with each other, than we otherwise would.
Therefore, I don't see any downside to restricting the focus of Planet Mozilla to the Mozilla mission.
----- Original Message -----
> This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials
> syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
> Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and
> manifesto.
> We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost
> every
> other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with
> otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
> How do we handle this?
> First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about
> supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla"
> mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my
> general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will
> fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the
> Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are
> enormous.
> Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal
> is
> truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and
> control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across
> many
> other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our
> other
> views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission.
> This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued
> success.
> What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
> We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related
> work. This view means getting to know the full personality of
> Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those
> who
> want to do so.
> We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of
> Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This
> view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means
> we'll
> spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend
> each
> other.
> I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the
> promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the
> path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all
> sorts
> of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA
> and
> ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows
> Mozillians
> to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves
> apart
> and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
> In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I
> believe
> we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused
> on
> what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission
> forward.
> Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar
> planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of
> remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla
> activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as
> well
> as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular
> solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused
> on
> the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
I don't think any of us are talking about throwing out any of those goals.
Certainly I'm not. The way people use planet, and the size, and the
constitution of the community means that how to achieve those goals
changes. I have stopped following planet, it's too much for my routine. So
how does that meet your goal of enabling me to be better connected to
people?
Do you know what mconnor and I talk about when we see each other to
exchange the kids? Mozilla. People in this community are passionate about
it and when they talk about Mozilla you *are* seeing them. If you want to
know their thoughts and dreams, and how their ears are doing (still hasn't
popped btw, getting an xray for my sinuses and a referral to an ENT not
being able to hear properly for a month sucks!!), then you can follow the
planet link to their full blog.
There is nothing wrong with getting to know the rest of the Mozilla
community through their involvement and passions with Mozilla. For instance
I <3 sunbird, and talking about sunbird involves talking about my personal
life, my kids, my ex, our travel. Including everything on planet has a cost
of making planet unusable, and making people unsure of what to post or not.
I certainly wouldn't post rants about my ex to my blog and I don't even
have the full feed streamed to planet. It's a big part of my life and it
would definitely help people get to know me but is this actually a good
idea to have on planet?
On Thursday, March 8, 2012 4:37:15 PM UTC-8, Tim Chevalier wrote:
> Pragmatically, though, I think
> that making planet.mozilla.org focused on Mozilla-related content is
> the right answer, and sets clear expectations for everyone.
That's a common viewpoint, it seems. It's not quite clear to me what it means.
Imagine that today we all agree that Planet should be for Mozilla-related content only. What happens if I violate that? How is the rule enforced?
What happens if I post something horrible but Mozilla-related, e.g. if I say something discriminatory about several Mozilla contributors. I won't have violated the new rule, but damage will be done, just as it was done earlier this week.
If our goal is to prevent this week's actions happening again, it seems to me that the policy should not be "no non-Mozilla content on Planet" but rather "no horrible (discriminatory, etc) content on Planet". And without some kind of pre-moderation of posts (which seems impractical) it's always possible that someone will violate that policy. So there need to be clear rules on how violations are dealt with -- who decides whether a post represents a violation, and what the follow-up action is.
On Thursday, March 8, 2012 4:37:15 PM UTC-8, Tim Chevalier wrote:
> Pragmatically, though, I think
> that making planet.mozilla.org focused on Mozilla-related content is
> the right answer, and sets clear expectations for everyone.
That's a common viewpoint, it seems. It's not quite clear to me what it means.
Imagine that today we all agree that Planet should be for Mozilla-related content only. What happens if I violate that? How is the rule enforced?
What happens if I post something horrible but Mozilla-related, e.g. if I say something discriminatory about several Mozilla contributors. I won't have violated the new rule, but damage will be done, just as it was done earlier this week.
If our goal is to prevent this week's actions happening again, it seems to me that the policy should not be "no non-Mozilla content on Planet" but rather "no horrible (discriminatory, etc) content on Planet". And without some kind of pre-moderation of posts (which seems impractical) it's always possible that someone will violate that policy. So there need to be clear rules on how violations are dealt with -- who decides whether a post represents a violation, and what the follow-up action is.
On Fri, Mar 9, 2012 at 12:58 AM, <n.netherc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thursday, March 8, 2012 4:37:15 PM UTC-8, Tim Chevalier wrote:
> > Pragmatically, though, I think
> > that making planet.mozilla.org focused on Mozilla-related content is
> > the right answer, and sets clear expectations for everyone.
> That's a common viewpoint, it seems. It's not quite clear to me what it
> means.
> Imagine that today we all agree that Planet should be for Mozilla-related
> content only. What happens if I violate that? How is the rule enforced?
> What happens if I post something horrible but Mozilla-related, e.g. if I
> say something discriminatory about several Mozilla contributors. I won't
> have violated the new rule, but damage will be done, just as it was done
> earlier this week.
> If our goal is to prevent this week's actions happening again, it seems to
> me that the policy should not be "no non-Mozilla content on Planet" but
> rather "no horrible (discriminatory, etc) content on Planet". And without
> some kind of pre-moderation of posts (which seems impractical) it's always
> possible that someone will violate that policy. So there need to be clear
> rules on how violations are dealt with -- who decides whether a post
> represents a violation, and what the follow-up action is.
If it's about the contributors and not their work then I think it's very
easy to define that as personal and not mozilla related. The problem here
is that if there is a policy people can be politely told that they violated
it and then have the content pulled. Mistakes happen, people get upset, I
don't think anyone has been intentionally malicious. In this case, gerv's
post didn't violate the current policy so rather than being able to just
take it down and remind him of the policy there has to be a huge
discussion. If someone does something overt to upset or offend another
member of the community then it is also very easy to pull their feed.
On Fri, Mar 9, 2012 at 1:03 AM, Majken Connor <maj...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 9, 2012 at 12:58 AM, <n.netherc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Thursday, March 8, 2012 4:37:15 PM UTC-8, Tim Chevalier wrote:
>> > Pragmatically, though, I think
>> > that making planet.mozilla.org focused on Mozilla-related content is
>> > the right answer, and sets clear expectations for everyone.
>> That's a common viewpoint, it seems. It's not quite clear to me what it
>> means.
>> Imagine that today we all agree that Planet should be for Mozilla-related
>> content only. What happens if I violate that? How is the rule enforced?
>> What happens if I post something horrible but Mozilla-related, e.g. if I
>> say something discriminatory about several Mozilla contributors. I won't
>> have violated the new rule, but damage will be done, just as it was done
>> earlier this week.
>> If our goal is to prevent this week's actions happening again, it seems
>> to me that the policy should not be "no non-Mozilla content on Planet" but
>> rather "no horrible (discriminatory, etc) content on Planet". And without
>> some kind of pre-moderation of posts (which seems impractical) it's always
>> possible that someone will violate that policy. So there need to be clear
>> rules on how violations are dealt with -- who decides whether a post
>> represents a violation, and what the follow-up action is.
> If it's about the contributors and not their work then I think it's very
> easy to define that as personal and not mozilla related. The problem here
> is that if there is a policy people can be politely told that they violated
> it and then have the content pulled. Mistakes happen, people get upset, I
> don't think anyone has been intentionally malicious. In this case, gerv's
> post didn't violate the current policy so rather than being able to just
> take it down and remind him of the policy there has to be a huge
> discussion. If someone does something overt to upset or offend another
> member of the community then it is also very easy to pull their feed.
Which is to say you raise some valid points that I agree with!!
think I'd better give up for the night, my reading comprehension is slowing
down.
On Thu, Mar 08, 2012 at 04:30:59PM -0800, Mitchell Baker wrote:
> We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related
> work. This view means getting to know the full personality of
> Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those
> who want to do so.
Even defined like this, what content may or may not go to Planet Mozilla
is ambiguous. What is "related work"? Would posts about e.g. MemShrink
fit the bill? MemShrink is not really about Mozilla's mission, and not
really a related work. It's merely a technical detail of Firefox.
Anyways, I agree with Nick, that neither your proposals are adressing
what actually started this attempt at an overhaul. I'll go further,
though. I think the whole debate that has been going on for three days
now is misplaced, out of line, and pointless.
Yes, there was *one* problematic blog post on Planet Mozilla. According
to my RSS reader, there's an average of 140 posts a week. That's twenty
a day. More than 7000 a year. Now let's put this in perspective. How
often do we have problematic content? Do we really need to disrupt
what Planet Mozilla is because of that?
And more importantly, do we really need to comment so much about it?
IMHO, the real problem this week was not so much about the content of
that blog post, but about the publicity that was made of it. The
problematic blog post is not on the planet web page already. However,
there are still 5 posts talking about it 3 days later.
Finally, we better ourselves by trial and error. Someone made a mistake
this week, and I think the response made it pretty clear that it was a
mistake. I'm convinced that someone won't repeat the same mistake in the
future. How about we just cut him and everybody else some slack, and...
do nothing more?
On Mar 8, 11:11 pm, Mike Hommey <m...@glandium.org> wrote:
> Finally, we better ourselves by trial and error. Someone made a mistake
> this week, and I think the response made it pretty clear that it was a
> mistake. I'm convinced that someone won't repeat the same mistake in the
> future. How about we just cut him and everybody else some slack, and...
> do nothing more?
Attacking a vulnerable group in the name of Mozilla is not just
"making a mistake". Gerv should have known better. No adult should
need to be told that it's not okay to use your employer's resources to
undermine other employees.
We can't just "do nothing more" because "doing nothing more" doesn't
repair the damage that has been done to Mozilla's reputation and to
the morale of a significant percentage of Mozilla contributors, who
have been told -- though the organizational and institutional
responses to the incident -- that our contributions just aren't valued
as much as those of heterosexual people.
Asa Dotzler <a...@mozilla.org> wrote:
> I am the original Planet Mozilla Module Owner and currently support the
> Module as a Peer. These are my thoughts alone; I expect other Planet
> leaders will share here when they finish their day jobs. (The Module
> Owner and other two Peers are project volunteers.) That being said, I am
> confident that these views are in mostly line with those of the rest of
> the team and well represent the mission and purpose of the Planet Mozilla Module.
> I think it's very important that people in this discussion get the
> opportunity to understand what the Planet Module has been trying to
> accomplish for the last half a decade before we all dive into "how to
> change it" discussion.
> Mozilla is a large and growing community of people spread out all over
> the world. We don't all share offices and a neighborhood pub. We don't
> all have the opportunity for hallway conversations and grabbing a beer
> after work. As a widely distributed group, we face challenges getting to
> know each other, being able to build the camaraderie and trust that
> direct social interaction facilitates for traditional (not open-source) companies.
> A big part of the Mission of the Planet Module is to aid in that
> challenge, to facilitate communication among a community of human beings
> -- people who share more than just a work product.
> Mozilla is more than just some lines of code. It's more than a few
> websites. Mozilla is all about *people*. Our Mission and Manifesto are
> about *people*. Our work is in support of *people*.
> We create change in the world by organizing *people* and our forums for
> discussion and interaction, from IRC to Planet, all carve out space for
> *people* to relate to each other as human beings -- rather than simply a
> bunch of automatons in a factory cranking out products Foxconn style.
> And we are not alone in this. Many of the most successful open source
> projects have set up Planets for this very same purpose. They realized as
> we have, that a healthy open source community is about people more than
> it is about code or products or anything else. Take a look at the
> excellent Gnome Planet for what this looks like when it works. It's
> inviting, and inspiring.
> I realize that the recent events at Planet have caused many people a
> great deal of strife and wasted time. I empathize with those who feel
> wounded by some of the content that's made it into the Planet feed.
> Some have said that we're just too big, that our community is of a size
> that requires giving up the rich and empowering diversity that we share
> across our various communications channels.
> Others have said that they're simply not interested in the non-work lives
> of our global community. They are only interested in reading about what
> code others are writing or status updates on projects Mozilla is sponsoring.
> I appreciate all of those views and concerns, and I would like Planet to
> address them. I believe that the Planet Module should address them. I
> have confidence that we can address them.
> But I reject the idea that our community has somehow outgrown its ability
> to share as a group of human beings. I reject the idea that Planet
> requires an editorial regime to filter and censor or that participation
> in Planet should demand self-filtering and self-censoring of content. I
> reject the idea that our primary communications must be limited to only
> the technical and work related.
> The Planet team has been working to make Planet more usable. We have
> pulled the robot-powered status updates and the project blogs into their
> own feed. http://planet.mozilla.org/projects/ We are also beginning work
> to create a sub-feed at Planet that will be exclusive to content about
> our mission and related work.
> Planet has served us well over the 5 years since the formation of the
> Planet Module and it will continue to serve our amazing community going
> forward. To do that it will grow and evolve. But Planet should not
> devolve into sterile reports of only the lowest common denominator content.
> Mozilla is more than just “a job” and I hope that Planet will continue to
> make that more obvious, not less.
> Imagine that today we all agree that Planet should be for Mozilla-related content only. What happens if I violate that? How is the rule enforced?
> What happens if I post something horrible but Mozilla-related, e.g. if I say something discriminatory about several Mozilla contributors. I won't have violated the new rule, but damage will be done, just as it was done earlier this week.
> If our goal is to prevent this week's actions happening again, it seems to me that the policy should not be "no non-Mozilla content on Planet" but rather "no horrible (discriminatory, etc) content on Planet". And without some kind of pre-moderation of posts (which seems impractical) it's always possible that someone will violate that policy. So there need to be clear rules on how violations are dealt with -- who decides whether a post represents a violation, and what the follow-up action is.
Yes, I also think we should have community standards. Communities
establish norms for good behavior. It worries me that I see (even in
this very thread) Mozilla community leaders insisting that norms are
harmful. When people don't come together to set norms, the right thing
doesn't magically happen -- what happens is that bullies use power and
violence to dominate discussions. I don't think we want the Mozilla
community to be driven by bullying.
I don't think that having a code of conduct (something that, I
understand, has been in progress for a while) is at all opposed to
having Planet be focused on work. If there had been an expectation and
an understanding that Planet is for work-related content and that
purely personal blog posts should remain on individuals' blogs, then
this week's events would never have happened. Certainly, it's possible
for somebody to tie violent or discriminatory speech in with Mozilla-
related content, like the person who suggested that someone should
have their fingers cut off for disagreeing about the Firefox
versioning policy. That is why we need a code of conduct as well.
On Friday, March 9, 2012 6:47:46 PM UTC+11, Tim Chevalier wrote:
> On Mar 8, 11:11 pm, Mike Hommey <m...@glandium.org> wrote:
> > Finally, we better ourselves by trial and error. Someone made a mistake
> > this week, and I think the response made it pretty clear that it was a
> > mistake. I'm convinced that someone won't repeat the same mistake in the
> > future. How about we just cut him and everybody else some slack, and...
> > do nothing more?
> We can't just "do nothing more" because "doing nothing more" doesn't
> repair the damage that has been done to Mozilla's reputation and to
> the morale of a significant percentage of Mozilla contributors, who
> have been told -- though the organizational and institutional
> responses to the incident -- that our contributions just aren't valued
> as much as those of heterosexual people.
I have a proposal that I think might satisfy both Mike and Tim.
First, let us note the two prime characteristics of Gerv's post:
(a) it was discriminatory;
(b) it was non-Mozilla-related.
Characteristic (a) was the one that caused all the problems. Nonetheless, many people are suggesting that we should ban posts with characteristic (b). Let's not tangle the two characteristics! It's simple: if we want to ban discriminatory posts, then let's ban discriminatory posts. Let's not instead ban non-Mozilla-related posts just because this week's discriminatory post happened to also be non-Mozilla-related.
In order to achieve this ban, I suggest we create a "Planet Mozilla Code of Conduct". It would read something like this.
- Planet Mozilla represents and belongs to the Mozilla community.
- Discriminatory posts will not be tolerated.
- If discriminatory posts are made, the Planet Mozilla module owners will take action as they see fit, such as removing said posts from Planet Mozilla and/or removing the blogs hosting those posts from Planet Mozilla.
This obviously needs some fleshing out, but you get the picture. A link to this code of conduct could be put somewhere prominent at the top of planet.mozilla.org.
And that's it. Good things about this proposal:
- It's extremely simple, and can be implemented very quickly.
- If discriminatory posts are made in the future, the actions that can and will be taken are clear, and the responsibility for who can take those actions is clear.
- It establishes what behaviours are not acceptable. And if a discriminatory post is removed from Planet Mozilla, this serves as an official Mozilla community renunciation of them. I hope these two characteristics will satisfy Tim.
- Although it ends Planet Mozilla's five years of "post anything" rules, in practice it will make no difference to how Planet operates 99.99% of the time. I hope this will satisfy Asa and Mike. (It's very common for new systems and communities to start with few or no rules and then to add rules later in response to bad events. I think it's a testimony to the civility of the Mozilla community that the "post anything" rule worked as long as it did.)
- There's no restriction of free speech. People can still say whatever they want on their own blog. But they cannot expect discriminatory content to be amplified and implicitly endorsed by the Mozilla community.
Now, this proposal does nothing to address the other criticisms of Planet Mozilla -- that non-Mozilla-proposal posts are uninteresting or irrelevant, that the signal-to-noise ratio is to low, that the formatting is bad, and so on. But those issues are *entirely orthogonal* to the issue of discriminatory content. They should be discussed and addressed separately, and in a less urgent manner.
On Friday, March 9, 2012 6:47:46 PM UTC+11, Tim Chevalier wrote:
> On Mar 8, 11:11 pm, Mike Hommey <m...@glandium.org> wrote:
> > Finally, we better ourselves by trial and error. Someone made a mistake
> > this week, and I think the response made it pretty clear that it was a
> > mistake. I'm convinced that someone won't repeat the same mistake in the
> > future. How about we just cut him and everybody else some slack, and...
> > do nothing more?
> We can't just "do nothing more" because "doing nothing more" doesn't
> repair the damage that has been done to Mozilla's reputation and to
> the morale of a significant percentage of Mozilla contributors, who
> have been told -- though the organizational and institutional
> responses to the incident -- that our contributions just aren't valued
> as much as those of heterosexual people.
I have a proposal that I think might satisfy both Mike and Tim.
First, let us note the two prime characteristics of Gerv's post:
(a) it was discriminatory;
(b) it was non-Mozilla-related.
Characteristic (a) was the one that caused all the problems. Nonetheless, many people are suggesting that we should ban posts with characteristic (b). Let's not tangle the two characteristics! It's simple: if we want to ban discriminatory posts, then let's ban discriminatory posts. Let's not instead ban non-Mozilla-related posts just because this week's discriminatory post happened to also be non-Mozilla-related.
In order to achieve this ban, I suggest we create a "Planet Mozilla Code of Conduct". It would read something like this.
- Planet Mozilla represents and belongs to the Mozilla community.
- Discriminatory posts will not be tolerated.
- If discriminatory posts are made, the Planet Mozilla module owners will take action as they see fit, such as removing said posts from Planet Mozilla and/or removing the blogs hosting those posts from Planet Mozilla.
This obviously needs some fleshing out, but you get the picture. A link to this code of conduct could be put somewhere prominent at the top of planet.mozilla.org.
And that's it. Good things about this proposal:
- It's extremely simple, and can be implemented very quickly.
- If discriminatory posts are made in the future, the actions that can and will be taken are clear, and the responsibility for who can take those actions is clear.
- It establishes what behaviours are not acceptable. And if a discriminatory post is removed from Planet Mozilla, this serves as an official Mozilla community renunciation of them. I hope these two characteristics will satisfy Tim.
- Although it ends Planet Mozilla's five years of "post anything" rules, in practice it will make no difference to how Planet operates 99.99% of the time. I hope this will satisfy Asa and Mike. (It's very common for new systems and communities to start with few or no rules and then to add rules later in response to bad events. I think it's a testimony to the civility of the Mozilla community that the "post anything" rule worked as long as it did.)
- There's no restriction of free speech. People can still say whatever they want on their own blog. But they cannot expect discriminatory content to be amplified and implicitly endorsed by the Mozilla community.
Now, this proposal does nothing to address the other criticisms of Planet Mozilla -- that non-Mozilla-proposal posts are uninteresting or irrelevant, that the signal-to-noise ratio is to low, that the formatting is bad, and so on. But those issues are *entirely orthogonal* to the issue of discriminatory content. They should be discussed and addressed separately, and in a less urgent manner.
Responses are roughly evenly split into two groups: people who actively
like "reading posts which tell [them] about the people of Mozilla" (i.e.
content which is not directly related to Mozilla or The Web) and people
who feel there is way too much off-topic chatter and they want a more
focused feed.
I think one feed cannot serve both purposes, and we should have at least
two: one roughly equivalent to what we have now (perhaps minus the
meeting notes, which IMHO should get their own dedicated feed) and one
which is specifically focused on content relevant to the project. I
think we can rely on everyone involved to tag things appropriately.
HOWEVER, I think we should also institute a ban on broadly-construed
political advocacy that is not directly relevant to Mozilla's mission,
on BOTH feeds. So, concretely, anti-ACTA advocacy would be acceptable, but anti-nuclear-energy activism would not -- both examples intentionally not things I can recall seeing go by on Planet.
I think this because I agree with Mitchell's statement
> we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about supporting
> the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla" mean
> "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my
> general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will
> fail.
and I think it is necessary to our collective ability to do that, that
we collectively do not rub each others' noses in our non-mission-related
political/social/etc views.
I would like to think that we can all be trusted to not rules-lawyer a policy stated in nonspecific terms, and that actual enforcement of this ban will not be required (but if it ever does come up, I would support sanctions up to and including permanent removal from Planet, depending on how egregious the violation is and how often it is repeated).
On Thursday, 8 March 2012 16:30:59 UTC-8, Mitchell Baker wrote:
> This week has seen heated discussion about the scope of materials > syndicated to Planet Mozilla. Here's my view.
> Mozilla is a community unified around the Mozilla mission and manifesto. > We agree on these things, but we are extremely diverse on almost every > other topic. In fact, Mozilla is remarkable in how many people with > otherwise differing views we gather around our mission.
> How do we handle this?
> First, we should be very clear that being a "Mozillian" is about > supporting the Mozilla mission. If we start to try to make "Mozilla" > mean "those people who share not only the Mozilla mission but also my > general political / social / religious / environmental view" we will > fail. If we focus Mozilla on our shared consensus regarding the > Mozilla mission and manifesto then the opportunities before us are > enormous.
> Mozilla's diversity is a success condition. Our mission and our goal is > truly global. Our mission taps into a shared desire for respect and > control and user sovereignty that runs across cultures and across many > other worldviews. We may even offend each other in some of our other > views. Despite this, we share a commitment to the Mozilla mission. > This is a remarkable achievement and important to our continued success.
> What does this mean for how we handle planet.mozilla.org?
> We could say that Planet Mozilla focuses on our mission and related > work. This view means getting to know the full personality of > Mozillians will take more work and happen in other areas for those who > want to do so.
> We could say that Planet Mozilla reflects the general worldview of > Mozillians, including areas outside of the Mozilla consensus. This > view expresses a larger slice of each Mozillian's life, but means we'll > spend more time reacting to areas where we disagree or even offend each > other.
> I believe the former is the best path. It's a path based on the > promise of the web, of inclusion, and of user sovereignty. It's the > path of the Mozilla Manifesto, and its adoption by people of all sorts > of different views. It allows us to focus on issues, such as SOPA and > ACTA, that are directly related to our mission. It allows Mozillians > to have divergent views on other topics without tearing ourselves apart > and damaging our ability to fulfill our unique mission.
> In the past we've chosen the latter for planet.mozilla.org. I believe > we need a core information flow and gathering space that is focused on > what we all came to Mozilla for -- how to move our particular mission > forward.
> Proposals have been made to change planet, or to start a similar > planet.mozillians.org. I'm personally learning towards the idea of > remaking planet to be the gathering place for updates about Mozilla > activities. I'll talk with the planet module owners and peers, as well > as monitor the discussion forums. I'm not sure of the particular > solution yet, but in my mind I'm clear that we need a forum focused on > the thing we all agree on -- Mozilla and our mission.
> Mitchell
Let me start by saying that I agree nearly 100% with everything that is being echoed in this thread.
I personally use Planet as aggregator of all the things which contribute to Mozilla's mission (ideas, projects, discussions, etc) from both paid and volunteer contributors. That said, I understand that this may not be the original intent of Planet.
I also understand that we are a far more diverse community now than when Planet was originally designed. One thing to consider is that our community as it exists today includes a much larger outside audience than it did before (press, friends, family, etc). A person without prior understanding of what "Mozilla" means could have a wildly different reaction to a personal/controversial post than an "outsider".
I'm not sure what the best solution is, what other communities have done to solve this problem, or even if this is a problem that needs solving.
I'm just happy to be part of such a coalesced yet so diverse community; and that we can have these kinds of discussions without fracture.