Hi,
looking at what was going on last night on openSUSE's Twitter account [1] I'd like to know, who has access to the social media accounts of this community. Indeed there is a list on the wiki but it does not look complete as @openSUSE is managed via Grouptweet. [2]
The tweets from last night were nothing severe, imho. Yet there was a slightly irritation about them. That and as conjunction with the recently bad mouthing on CentOS [3] we need to talk about quality standards of community representation somehow.
Cheers, vinz.
[1] https://twitter.com/openSUSE/with_replies [2] https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Social_media_contacts#Twitter [3] https://twitter.com/TheTechScribe/status/1339927973613416449
Vinzenz,
Hey, I can help monitory if that helps? Right now, I mainly helping with the Facebook group/page.
Pup
On Fri, Jan 1, 2021 at 9:23 AM Vinzenz Vietzke vinz@vinzv.de wrote:
Hi,
looking at what was going on last night on openSUSE's Twitter account [1] I'd like to know, who has access to the social media accounts of this community. Indeed there is a list on the wiki but it does not look complete as @openSUSE is managed via Grouptweet. [2]
The tweets from last night were nothing severe, imho. Yet there was a slightly irritation about them. That and as conjunction with the recently bad mouthing on CentOS [3] we need to talk about quality standards of community representation somehow.
Cheers, vinz.
[1] https://twitter.com/openSUSE/with_replies [2] https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Social_media_contacts#Twitter [3] https://twitter.com/TheTechScribe/status/1339927973613416449
On 1/1/21 3:23 PM, Vinzenz Vietzke wrote:
Hi,
looking at what was going on last night on openSUSE's Twitter account [1] I'd like to know, who has access to the social media accounts of this community. Indeed there is a list on the wiki but it does not look complete as @openSUSE is managed via Grouptweet. [2]
I've been on holiday, so I don't have any background of what you're referring to above. The wiki doesn't really reflect the true access to the group account I'm sure. It's probably not a good idea to consolidate access since the group can delete, correct or provide support. The end of the year survey had question related to user support. Almost 200 responses stated that their contribution was user support, which would be forums, emails, facebook, twitter, linkedin, etc.
The tweets from last night were nothing severe, imho. Yet there was a slightly irritation about them. That and as conjunction with the recently bad mouthing on CentOS [3] we need to talk about quality standards of community representation somehow.
We could come up with some standards. But maybe just reminding everyone to try relating answers or content with the guiding principles rather than forming a set of new standards would be the best option. Perhaps?
v/r Doug
Am 04.01.21 um 17:08 schrieb ddemaio:
looking at what was going on last night on openSUSE's Twitter account [1] I'd like to know, who has access to the social media accounts of this community. Indeed there is a list on the wiki but it does not look complete as @openSUSE is managed via Grouptweet. [2]
I've been on holiday, so I don't have any background of what you're referring to above.
See my initial email:
[1] https://twitter.com/openSUSE/with_replies [3] https://twitter.com/TheTechScribe/status/1339927973613416449
Or are we talking past each other?
The wiki doesn't really reflect the true access to the group account I'm sure. It's probably not a good idea to consolidate access since the group can delete, correct or provide support. The end of the year survey had question related to user support. Almost 200 responses stated that their contribution was user support, which would be forums, emails, facebook, twitter, linkedin, etc.
I don't want to consolidate access rights but know who has them.
The tweets from last night were nothing severe, imho. Yet there was a slightly irritation about them. That and as conjunction with the recently bad mouthing on CentOS [3] we need to talk about quality standards of community representation somehow.
We could come up with some standards. But maybe just reminding everyone to try relating answers or content with the guiding principles rather than forming a set of new standards would be the best option. Perhaps?
Right, which is mostly what I intended. There is no need for new standards as the existing ones pretty much cover everything.
Still we need to know who has access to @openSUSE so we know whom to remind of what's good to post and what should not be published.
vinz.
Hey,
On 1/4/21 8:11 PM, Vinzenz Vietzke wrote:
Still we need to know who has access to @openSUSE so we know whom to remind of what's good to post and what should not be published.
There is no way to know. Everyone who knows the password. It did not change in a long time.
We can change the password and start from scratch :-)
Henne
On 1/5/21 9:11 AM, Henne Vogelsang wrote:
Hey,
On 1/4/21 8:11 PM, Vinzenz Vietzke wrote:
Still we need to know who has access to @openSUSE so we know whom to remind of what's good to post and what should not be published.
There is no way to know. Everyone who knows the password. It did not change in a long time.
We can change the password and start from scratch :-)
I think that is probably a decent place to start. The account has always and probably should continue to walk the fine line between "Have alot of fun" and professionalism. This is hard to document but being able to say post X probably missed the mark is useful.
Id probably agree with Vinz that a couple of posts on new years eve probably missed the mark just a little (nothing major).
Am 04.01.21 um 23:41 schrieb Henne Vogelsang:
There is no way to know. Everyone who knows the password. It did not change in a long time.
We can change the password and start from scratch :-)
Uh, that's a bit risky... :-|
If we start from scratch we should probably use something like Tweetdeck where an owner can set up admins and contributors: https://help.twitter.com/en/using-twitter/tweetdeck-teams
vinz.
On 1/8/21 12:58 PM, Vinzenz Vietzke wrote:
Am 04.01.21 um 23:41 schrieb Henne Vogelsang:
There is no way to know. Everyone who knows the password. It did not change in a long time.
We can change the password and start from scratch :-)
Uh, that's a bit risky... :-|
If we start from scratch we should probably use something like Tweetdeck where an owner can set up admins and contributors: https://help.twitter.com/en/using-twitter/tweetdeck-teams
vinz.
It looks like tweetdeck was setup a while back, but just never used. v/r Doug