Provided by: libdancer2-perl_1.1.0+dfsg-1_all
NAME
Dancer2::Policy - Dancer core and community policy and standards of conduct
VERSION
version 1.1.0
DESCRIPTION
This document describes various policies (most notably, the standards of conduct) for the Dancer core developers and broad community. This is what we expect from our community and ourselves and these are the standards of behavior we set forth in order to make sure the community remains a safe space for all of its members, without exception.
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT
These standards apply anywhere the community comes together as a group. This includes, but is not limited to, the Dancer IRC channel, the Dancer mailing list, Dancer hackathons, and Dancer conferences. • Always be civil. • Heed the moderators. • Abuse is not tolerated. Civility is simple: stick to the facts while avoiding demeaning remarks and sarcasm. It is not enough to be factual. You must also be civil. Responding in kind to incivility is not acceptable. If the list moderators tell you that you are not being civil, carefully consider how your words have appeared before responding in any way. You may protest, but repeated protest in the face of a repeatedly reaffirmed decision is not acceptable. Unacceptable behavior will result in a public and clearly identified warning. Repeated unacceptable behavior will result in removal from the mailing list and revocation of any commit bit. The first removal is for one month. Subsequent removals will double in length. After six months with no warning, a user's ban length is reset. Removals, like warnings, are public. The list of moderators consists of all active core developers. This includes, in alphabetical order, Alberto Simões, David Precious, Jason Crome, Mickey Nasriachi, Peter Mottram, Russell Jenkins, Sawyer X, Stefan Hornburg (Racke), and Yanick Champoux. This list might additionally grow to active members of the community who have stepped up to help handle abusive behavior. If this should happen, this document would be updated to include their names. Additionally, it's important to understand the self-regulating nature we foster at the Dancer community. This means anyone and everyone in the community - in the channel, on the list, at an event - has the ability to call out unacceptable behavior and incivility to others in the community. Moderators are responsible for issuing warnings and take disciplinary actions, but anyone may - and is encouraged - to publicly make note of unacceptable treatment of others. As a core principle, abuse is never tolerated. One cannot berate, insult, debase, deride, put down, or vilify anyone, or act towards anyone in a way intending to hurt them. The community specifically considers as abuse any attempts to otherize anyone by any individual characteristic, including, but not limited to, their technical skill, knowledge or by their age, colour, disability, gender, language, national or social origin, political or other opinion, race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation. The community aims to maintain a safe space for everyone, in any forum it has. If you ever feel this core principle has been compromised, you are strongly urged to contact a moderator. We are always here. Remember, this is your community, as much as it is anyone else's.
CREDITS
This policy has been adopted and adapted from the policy available for the Perl language development, provided by p5p (the Perl 5 Porters). The original inspiration policy document can be read at perlpolicy.
AUTHOR
Dancer Core Developers
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2023 by Alexis Sukrieh. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.