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7 votes
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We were wrong about the GPLs
32 votes -
Richard Stallman reveals he has cancer at the GNU 40 Hacker Meeting talk
31 votes -
The limited utility of the phrase “GNU/Linux”
6 votes -
Can we get a GNU section of ~tech?
I would like to share my rice and stuff like that, but I'm not sure if this is the right place to share. It would be nice to have a place here to chat about GNU news and such/
8 votes -
GNU LibreJS
11 votes -
Freedom Isn't Free
21 votes -
The Parrot Project needs your help
3 votes -
Bash-5.0 release available
17 votes -
On the GNU Kind Communication Guidelines
Link to the announcement -- Do read it, it's a short email. I'm posting this here because I think it generated some good discussion over on HN, which unfortunately got .. flamewary. (Is that...
Link to the announcement -- Do read it, it's a short email.
I'm posting this here because I think it generated some good discussion over on HN, which unfortunately got .. flamewary. (Is that irony?)
I've myself created and moderated several large-ish communities over the years and my views on codes of conduct are mixed. I'm always trying to make an envi. They themselves can range quite a bit, with 'opponents' to CoCs often picking the worst offenders in terms of overreach as examples. To me, it's always felt like the software engineering world is rediscovering... forum guidelines?
This is a politically-charged topic now, where almost all discussion on CoCs being centered on black&white "if you oppose them then you're basically alt-right". This makes the topic of CoCs an interesting example, IMO, of how we ("we" as in "the internet") give loudspeakers to the most extremist voices, silencing nuance.
Reminds me of a post by @deadaluspark here discussing the effect that this increasing divide has on us.
Well anyway, I brought up the announcement in question because Stallman (someone who tends to usually be pretty radical and have clear cut opinions) positively surprised me. This seemed to resonate with people, especially the parts about replacing sticks with carrots. It felt pretty good to see someone ignore (probably by virtue of being shielded from it) the politically-charged side of the topic and simply focus on trying to improve communication. Sounds cliché, but I feel that this approach has gotten very rare the past 4-5 years, and its higher frequency on Tildes is part of why I've been enjoying reading the comments here so much.
16 votes -
Nim: Deploying static binaries
8 votes -
Richard Stallman's Free Software, Free Society Essay Collection
7 votes