On 7/10/23 17:18, Günter Dachs wrote:
I didn't send you any private emails. All the emails I'm sending about this discussion where public. But my mail client adds the senders address to the 'to:' field.
So it might be that you get emails twice: one to your private email and one time via the list. To frame this as if I would send you private emails is quite odd.
And if you did as you suggest, then you failed to follow proper protocol for this list
https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Mailing_list_netiquette#Personal_and_mail_l...
Thank you for the information.
Gertjan apparently didn’t mail you directly but you replied to him as such
This would be considered rude as per our above documentation
Please try and do a better job of conforming to our community standards. You’re clearly new here and so far have demonstrated a significant lack of understanding of what we do here, how we do it, and what we stand for.
While I appreciate the information about how to use the mailing list correctly I find it weird that not knowing about this norm is considered "rude". It feels like you are just claiming this because you don't like the topic that I'm trying to talk about.
As a matter of fact I have received several emails on this list twice myself. Because other users used the "reply to all" as well and thus messaged me directly.
I made no fuzz about it.
So I would appreciate if we could return to the topic at hand:
Who is deciding which banner to use? If anybody can contribute why is my contribution of just setting the default/white banner not accepted?
How can we improve our community by listening to what the community actually wants? Can we create a voting system?
As a project we have a voting system that can be used to anonymously ask all members their opinion on a topic, but in the past we have tended to only do so if there is a demand for such from a large group of people and likely the conflict has already been elevated to the board and the board decides they would rather seek community consultation rather then making a decision themselves. At the end of the day if enough people disagree with how the board handles a decision they can choose to become members and run at the next board election (usually in December). Cheers -- Simon Lees (Simotek) http://simotek.net Emergency Update Team keybase.io/simotek SUSE Linux Adelaide Australia, UTC+10:30 GPG Fingerprint: 5B87 DB9D 88DC F606 E489 CEC5 0922 C246 02F0 014B