On Tuesday 02 June 2015 14:16:33 Henne Vogelsang wrote:
So you want people who never have done anything "continued and substantial" to our project to join the body that elects our board? I'm pretty sure that this isn't a good idea :-)
I want people who want to contribute feel welcome, even if they haven't done anything yet. I'm pretty sure that is a good idea. I want the board to be elected by people who express that they want to be part of the community. I want it to be a representation of the people who feel part of the community. I'm pretty sure that is a good idea as well. I want to operate from a point of view that people mean well when they want to join openSUSE and optimize for getting new contributors on board, not for protecting against potential abuse. I'm pretty sure that this also is a good idea for an open community like openSUSE is.
Please don't confuse being part of the openSUSE project with being a "openSUSE Member".
There is confusion. As Richard said, too many people are applying as members
under wrong assumptions. The fact that we need rejection mails, membership
committees validating contributions, Wiki pages with red warnings, etc. shows
that there is an issue with becoming part of openSUSE.
The big problem is that we will never hear from those people who didn't even
try to become part because they were discouraged by how we handle this. We
lose these people without even knowing about them.
So to live up to our expectations as open community, to remove a barrier in
becoming a contributor, to encourage people to join us, we could get rid of
the validation and rejection step and just let everybody become a member who
wants to.
This way the board would be the representative of all self-proclaimed members
of the openSUSE community, which I think is exactly what it should be.
The work would still be done by those who are active. The decisions would
still be taken by those who do the work. We still would have protection
mechanisms like the veto power of the chairman of the board or the guiding
principles.
But we would have a more open, more welcoming, more inclusive community.
That's what I would really like to see.
--
Cornelius Schumacher