Assuming that the obvious Code of Conduct [apache.org] is the one Apache is applying, they are way out of line. The very first sentence states that "This code of conduct applies to all spaces managed by the Apache Software Foundation". While it does mention Twitter, this is specifically as "communication channel used by our communities" - meaning any official Apache Twitter feed, or any official feed of an Apache community.
This cannot possibly apply to a private Twitter account.
The claim is that he posted some of it on Apache mailing lists. He denies it.
Go back to TFA. Niclas Hedhman, the ASF board member who resigned over the whole fiasco, also denies it.
The claim that Rodriguez published his tweets to the private@tinkerpop mailing list are untrue, insisted Hedhman, as he said is the claim that Rodriguez used the ASF resources to humiliate people.
The only way to learn a new programming language is by writing programs in it.
- Brian Kernighan
Interesting application of the CoC (Score:5, Informative)
Assuming that the obvious Code of Conduct [apache.org] is the one Apache is applying, they are way out of line. The very first sentence states that
"This code of conduct applies to all spaces managed by the Apache Software Foundation". While it does mention Twitter, this is specifically as "communication channel used by our communities" - meaning any official Apache Twitter feed, or any official feed of an Apache community.
This cannot possibly apply to a private Twitter account.
Re:Interesting application of the CoC (Score:2)
The claim is that he posted some of it on Apache mailing lists. He denies it.
Re: (Score:3)
The claim is that he posted some of it on Apache mailing lists. He denies it.
Go back to TFA. Niclas Hedhman, the ASF board member who resigned over the whole fiasco, also denies it.
The claim that Rodriguez published his tweets to the private@tinkerpop mailing list are untrue, insisted Hedhman, as he said is the claim that Rodriguez used the ASF resources to humiliate people.