Le 09/05/2011 19:33, Greg KH a écrit :
It has happened numerous times at other open source conferences, so there's nothing to stop it from happening here unless we specifically let everyone know that it will not be tolerated at all.
Which this document is trying to do.
If you feel the above posting does not properly address this issue, how do you propose it be changed to do so in a manner in which you would feel acceptable?
seek what happened, looks like to know a lot about them (good!), and give some clue of what action could be done to prevent it. Who will say "stop", who will enforce it? stopping such thing needs autority and force. So the need is (may be) to say: XXX is responsible of the OSC conduct (sorry, I don't know the exact word). YYY and ZZZ can act to make the offending people out. and XXX will probably have to stay near the door and forgive entry for some people, scan the stands to verify the prints and so on. This is often/usually done, but it's expensive. a simple policy with no mean to act is nothing. and as of cloths, a good policy could be "anybody inside should wear an openSUSE tee shirt" (this could make simple many things, many T-shirts prints are incredibly sexists). if the problem is simply a male/female one, choosing very carefully the organisation commity and the room directors to have a better ratio could be more effective than a policy (than nobody care to read) jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://www.youtube.com/user/jdddodinorg http://jdd.blip.tv/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org