On 14/03/12 02:24, Nicholas Nethercote wrote:
>> Seriously: given that Mozilla is a worldwide project, how do you assert this
>> point?
>
> As you and Daniel have discussed, the US has very "strong" free speech
> laws. In my experience when people (esp. programmers) use the term
> "free speech" they usually are referring to that kind of "strong" free
> speech.
Well, OK, but we still need to bear in mind the variety of opinions on
the topic. However, reading the rest of your message, I think we are in
agreement here.
>> Therefore, I think an argument along the lines of "Mozilla has no
>> requirement to consider freedom of speech as it's not a government" is far
>> from a no-brainer.
>
> I think the key difference is that Mozilla can't imprison you.
Not physically, no. But I still think that, if one of the penalties
available under a code of conduct were removal from a community, that is
a very strong sanction - well above e.g. being banned from one of my
local gyms for saying something they didn't like, to take one example of
a private organisation. Therefore we need to be careful about the
breadth of the conditions under which it could be imposed.
Valerie contrasts government speech with "forcing a private entity to
publish speech it finds objectionable". I don't think the latter is a
reasonable summary of what it means to speak as part of one's
interactions with the Mozilla community. Mozilla, with respect to its
community, is somewhere in between a 'government' and a 'single private
entity among many'. This is what makes this a hard question IMO.
> Now, I totally agree with the notion that we don't want a Code of
> Conduct that reaches too far and prevents reasonable discussion. The
> reason I mentioned the above things about the US free speech laws is
> that discussions about free speech can be painful when people have
> different definitions and understandings of "free speech". So my aim
> was to introduce some clarity early on. In that sense your discussion
> with Daniel was useful, so thanks for that.
No problem. My aim in commenting on Valerie's summary via your post was
to make exactly the same point - there are different definitions of
"free speech".
Gerv