Apache Software Foundation Ousts TinkerPop Creator (theregister.com) 278
Frosty P writes: The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) has removed Marko Rodriguez from the TinkerPop project he co-founded because his provocative Twitter posts were said to have violated the ASF Code of Conduct. "I was removed from the project I started 11 years ago for 'publishing offensive humor that borders on hate speech,'" Rodriguez explained in an email to The Register. "However, now that Big Tech has secured the ASF board, it is a way to 'shut me up' about the monopolistic practices of Big Tech." Rodriguez argues that "woke culture" is a creation of "Big Tech," and that it serves to protect the industry's economic monopoly "by monopolizing the ideology of the people." Asked whether he sees the problem in light of the content-moderation challenge faced by social media services, which police speech without clear, consistent rules or due process, he said not at all. "I like to tweet, so I tweet. If Apache likes to police tweets, then may they police tweets," Rodriguez replied. "The question becomes: do they really like to police tweets? Are they finding as much joy in policing tweets as I find in tweeting tweets? If so, then we are both happy and the world rejoices. If not, then how can we help Apache find joy ... For joyless people ultimately impede those that do find joy in what they do." In a subsequent message he noted he has received death threats demanding he apologize for his thoughts, and that those people always assume he's a Trump supporter. "I've never voted," he said. "I simply don't care."
other people don't agree with my fringe views (Score:2, Insightful)
Help help I'm being oppressed!
No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppressed (Score:4, Insightful)
Help help I'm being oppressed!
Hey moron, this wasn't some small whiner, but a co-founder and critical figure in the TinkerPop management team.
But thank God ASF corporate got involved, overrode the Apache Project Management Committee and fired him over some dank memes.
FFS, you worthless assholes who've never accomplished anything in your miserable lives must live for moments like this where you can take real visionaries like Marko and treat them like the crap you are.
Now everyone using TinkerPop is going to have to start asking hard questions since one of the most important figures just got banned from leading the project by a bunch of political apparatchiks.
Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:4, Insightful)
This shit highlights why "ethical" companies are evil.
Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:5, Insightful)
Tinkerbell WTF is Tinkerpop?
Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:5, Informative)
He didn't do any of this on company time or in any official capacity. His twitter feed barely even has any followers. This is a ridiculous level of PC bullshit.
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Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:5, Informative)
He is currently the only source of information about why he was removed. He has plenty of reason to be dishonest about what happened. Why don't you wait for more information?
If you read TFA, an ASF board member resigned over it, seeming to corroborate his account.
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.
There's still a lack of information, but that's another point of data from someone directly involved.
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Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:4, Insightful)
He is currently the only source of information about why he was removed. He has plenty of reason to be dishonest about what happened. Why don't you wait for more information?
If you read TFA, an ASF board member resigned over it, seeming to corroborate his account.
Well, that can mean that they share opinions.
There is some irony in that he's up in arms about Woke culture and PC'ism. People who get fired from Google often claim of the opposite, because they are fired because they are "woke" - like the recent firing of Margaret Mitchell and Timnit Gebru.
These folks have played a very active part in their dismissal. And pretty impressive that they blame the opposite things.
If you are a leader, you are expected to act like one.
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He is currently the only source of information about why he was removed. He has plenty of reason to be dishonest about what happened. Why don't you wait for more information?
This is a little like the Ethics manager at Google being canned for performing unethical practices.
Gather round kids, and take some telling. As an olde farte, I've seen my share of people being fired. To a person, they have a litany of excuses as to why, and I've never heard one exclaim that it was their fault.
When in fact, they all had an integral part in their dismissal.
Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:5, Insightful)
His twitter feed barely even has any followers.
No. His new Twitter feed barely even has any followers. His old Twitter feed was banned for breaching Twitter's ToS.
If you're a no-name in a company you can generally get away with your personal time not affecting the company image. If you're a big shot somebody you should realise that public relations and image is a part of your job. He fucked that part up and lost his job as a result.
Notice how I post with the username thegarbz, rather than my actual full name? I have a feeling if I go on some Naazi rampage my employer won't want to associate with me either.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppres (Score:3, Funny)
You must be new to 2021
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But as soon as he starts sharing his racism and sexism for the world to see, any person or project which doesn't take a stand against his views are, by association, condoning is views.
Does that mean that if you share your own views publicly on your own time and your boss finds them objectionable, he has a moral right to fire your ass? Or are you one of those who believe that the definitions of what's 'racist' and 'sexist' are entirely objective and not susceptible to (mis)interpretation?
Re:No, all of us using TinkerPop are being oppress (Score:4, Insightful)
He's not trolling though, he's posting in solidarity with others who want to use force to get what they want, which is full censorship of opposing ideas. And being opposed to this doesn't make you a snowflake. "Snowflake" is someone who gets offended at anything that offends a reasonably fragile worldview. So being upset about serious acts of political censorship or violence never qualified.
We are definitely witnessing a serious and sustained event of removing everyone that stands in opposition to their politics, starting with whomever they view as most able to convince everyone of being universally disagreeable, and then working their way to anyone else from there.
You can joke about it if you like, but it's pretty fucking disgusting.
Re:other people don't agree with my fringe views (Score:5, Informative)
TFA mentions he has two Twitter feeds. One already banned, the other you can make up your own mind about: https://twitter.com/thecoopste... [twitter.com]
looks nutty (Score:2)
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"I find joy in Twitter."
"Twitter makes me happy."
"O, joyous Twitter!"
"How can we help Apache be as joyful on Twitter as I am?"
"I'm not a Trump supporter... I don't care, I don't even vote!"
I have a hard time reckoning these heavy vibes of self-delusion, and your characterization of his Twitter feed, with him just now being pushed there. It honestly looks like a deficiency of character, and that's almost always a lifelong thing, people don't turn that way in an instant.
Still no idea... (Score:4, Insightful)
I scanned the first couple of dozen tweets (that's more tweets than I usually read in a week already), but still clueless of what that twitter account is about. I do find it offensive personally - I am offended that he seems to think he is funny and insightful when, to me, he is neither.
But I wouldn't of course ban him from anything because of that.
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TFA mentions he has two Twitter feeds. One already banned, the other you can make up your own mind about: https://twitter.com/thecoopste... [twitter.com]
Sheesh, that's lame. As you Brits say "The only thing worse than being witty is not being witty."
I can enjoy humor be it left or right, but as we say on this side of the pond, "He's about as funny as a chapped ass."
The ladd probably shouldn't take up comedy as a new carreer
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Thanks for the link. A little bit of it is offensive, and a lot of it is funny as hell. He seems to tear down more shibboleths than he supports, and he seems to be an equal-opportunity racist, genderist, culturist, or whatever. If this is what justifies giving its author the boot, somebody needs to call a waaambulance and get those butt-hurt folks some treatment. In general I'm in favour of some 'wokeness', but this makes me understand why some people are so pissed off at woke culture.
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I think it can be oppression. As with a lot of tricky questions, the answer is "it depends."
Employers, and foundations that support projects like this, do have a legitimate interesting in protecting their reputation. So if someone becomes notorious, and it's a distraction from getting stuff done, then they have some justification in parting ways. But this feels more like *making* someone notorious so you can part ways. This is an obscure guy working on an relatively obscure project. Nobody would have h
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Oh, but they do face consequences, in that I and many others refuse them jobs if they need one, or refuse to use any service or good they provide if they provide a service or good.
This is not exciting clickbait however, so such things rarely get posted in some flashy font by some hack blogger posing as a journalist at the New York Times.
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It does appear to be rather one sided though, where those running around calling people N@zis and attributing everything to white supremacy face little to no consequences for their accusations in this regard.
To be certain, a number of fired people at Google, blame the patriarchy and racism for their dismissal https://www.msn.com/en-us/news... [msn.com]
https://www.theguardian.com/te... [theguardian.com]
So what do you think of that - I think most people who get fired, deserve it.
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To be fair, the other side has hosted a few rather notable witch hunts too.
Re:other people don't agree with my fringe views (Score:4, Interesting)
You will find this link informative: I Was the Mob Until the Mob Came for Me [quillette.com].
"I once had a well paid job in what might be described as the social justice industry. Then I upset the wrong person, and within a short window of time, I was considered too toxic for my employerâ(TM)s taste. I was publicly shamed, mobbed, and reduced to a symbol of male privilege. I was cast out of my career and my professional community."
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You will find this link informative: I Was the Mob Until the Mob Came for Me [quillette.com].
"I once had a well paid job in what might be described as the social justice industry. Then I upset the wrong person, and within a short window of time, I was considered too toxic for my employerâ(TM)s taste. I was publicly shamed, mobbed, and reduced to a symbol of male privilege. I was cast out of my career and my professional community."
The far left and the far right are remarkably similar. That is what led me to believe that left and right isn't quite accurate, but is more of a circle. And eventually, the furthest in either direction become indistinguishable except for the rhetoric.
Re:other people don't agree with my fringe views (Score:4, Insightful)
Guy is a dick and then is on the receiving end?
Guy is a dick and then is on the receiving end, then recognizes that he was a dick and feels genuine remorse. That last part is important, because we are all dicks from time to time and many of us never realize it and never try to make amends.
Also regarding your sig: the reason people won't "debate" you is because you are impervious to logic reason and facts, thereby making debating you a pointless waste of time. Just sayin.
You might want to visit the "I Was the Mob" link and read the whole piece instead of limiting yourself to DNS-and-BIND's excerpt. I think you'll find that your assumptions about him, (or should that be 'them'?), is in error.
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This thought is all over the place on the Left and I am astonished that you are not familiar with it.
No matter how often you are wrong with your assumptions about me, "the left" and the hivemind, you never seem to change your opinion. All you ever do is performatively express astonishment about how wrong you are. Viz:
Claiming "logic reason and facts" is pure racist rhetoric. And you must know that, how else could you be on the far left otherwise?
The only person claiming I'm on the far left is you. It's fun
cool story bro (Score:5, Insightful)
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Mod up please.
It's open source (Score:5, Insightful)
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I wish the story actually contained any information about wh
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It's open source. He can't take it with him any more than anyone else can take it away from him
That's immaterial in many jurisdictions where if you create something, you have special rights to your creation that random people don't.
Re: It's open source (Score:2)
It's like you never even heard of the GPL... :)
(I am from a country with such special "rights". [They are privileges by the way. Monopolies are never a right, and usuall a crime anyway.])
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I was banned from Ars Technica (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I was banned from Ars Technica (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I was banned from Ars Technica (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: I was banned from Ars Technica (Score:2)
Uum, I'm not hating you, but, mate, from my experience, people like would call Reagan "socialist". Literally, if yo described his views and policies...
"You" are' so far right, *everything* looks extemist left to you.
At least that is the stereotype/experience one assumes with people who say what you said.
And on that matter: Yes, -isms are always bad, because they are by definition the blind ideology version of an idea, but ... did you even stop and think that maybe, being social to other people was a good th
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Which has become basically the Daily Kos of tech (although I still really like Eric Berger and John Gitlin's articles - they're basically the only non-political writers on the site). I called a Biden policy "socialist" and they banned my account, after 14 years.
This does not surprise me in the least. When the comments stray to the political, any disagreement with the groupthink is quickly and massively modded down. I had noticed that diversity of opinions had dropped off but didn't realize that how bad it was until I posted a comment that disagreed with the author's opinion in a technical article. Since I knew I would be a target I wrote very carefully and gave copious reasoning but I was quickly downmodded. In 24 hours my comment was completely missing from t
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I called a Biden policy "socialist" and they banned my account, after 14 years.
Given you posting history here and your frankly absurd position on many of the political topics that come up on Slashdot, I guarantee you didn't get banned for just calling a policy "socialist".
Re:I was banned from Ars Technica (Score:5, Insightful)
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Such support was very far from universal on Slashdot.
Confusion of Terms (Score:2, Insightful)
predominantly factual centrist technical rag is basically equivalent to far-left political media and then expect us to think it strange that you got banned for throwing around a far-right trigger term
You yourself are claiming they are far right, by saying "socialist" is a far-right trigger term, since they were triggered...
In reality of course, socialist is a pretty mild term to describe an ideology that has killed hundreds of millions; only the most unhinged become triggered because of use of the term.
I be
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You yourself are claiming they are far right, by saying "socialist" is a far-right trigger term, since they were triggered...
Except he didn't actually use the word so it doesn't apply anyway.
socialist is a pretty mild term to describe an ideology that has killed hundreds of millions
You mean the Biden policy in question criticized by GGP already killed hundreds of millions? How come?
Perhaps you would care to tell us all what term should be used in place of "socialism"?
For what? You use the word "socialism" for things which are socialism, which is collective ownership of means of production. I sure hope you're not using the word "socialism" for things aren't socialism, and for those you're already using other words.
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Irrelevant since the current centrist president is not in any way socialist. But say we called Trump a fascist, suddenly the horde would start shouting at us to shut up and deal with it. Now the owners of a forum may or may not agree, but they have the right to remove posts that they feel are derailing the topics or devaluing their brand. Similarly, Parler hs been banning others who they feel devalue their brand.
The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:5, Insightful)
Rodriguez was a co-founder and is an OG in the modern graph computing/database space. This is precisely what so many of us warned about codes of conduct being used to cripple FOSS projects by political actors.
I mean look Coraline Ehmke's personal posts. Ehmke is an absolutely toxic garbage example of humanity on social media. The very living embodiment of the unhinged, angry at everyone, vitriolic tranny.
And that's the person whose code of conduct everyone adopted. Just let that sink in.
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Do you have an actual criticism of the CoC, or just that ad hominem attack?
Re:The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:5, Informative)
The criticism is that it's a "Rules for thee, but not for me" situation where it's arbitrarily applied. It isn't so much a criticism of that particular code of conduct, but the fact that any exists at all. I think that's fairly easy to understand from applying a small bit of reading comprehension. I don't know if singling out one particular individual is useful (or even truthful since no links to examples of toxic behavior were provided) but if that one particular individual is the author of the CoC and is not following it themselves, it does serve to highlight the hypocrisy.
Re:The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:4, Insightful)
He stated the problem quite explicitly.
These CoCs can be used to silence and undermine those who don't align with the woke orthodoxy du jour.
Simply because you find the guy offensive and thus don't give a shit doesn't mean that the methodology on display here isn't bad and evil.
Re:The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:4, Interesting)
But is that what happened here? No, it wasn't.
That depends on whether this CoC is meant to apply to personal Twitter accounts or not. ASF's CoC [apache.org] says
This code of conduct applies to all spaces managed by the Apache Software Foundation, including IRC, all public and private mailing lists, issue trackers, wikis, blogs, Twitter, and any other communication channel used by our communities.
Maybe I'm being too generous but it seems like the qualifier "all spaces managed by the Apache Software Foundation, including..." means they aren't claiming authority over the content of personal Twitter accounts. In TFA it says the ASF claimed he posted to an internal mailing list, but the source in the article disputes that.
You seem so sure of all this, can you just spell it out for us? Was there some project-related conduct that violated the code?
The first law of censorship (Score:2)
Is that you censor what you do not like.
That way, nobody gets to disagree with you.
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This is precisely what so many of us warned about codes of conduct being used to cripple FOSS projects by political actors.
I thought so too... and then I actually read the twitter feed they are up in arms about. https://twitter.com/thecoopste... [twitter.com]
I think TFA summed it up nicely.
Its content is deliberately engineered to offend everyone, achingly so. We could tell you it is lazy and punches down, which are both kryptonite for good satire,
Or as former ASF board member Niclas Hedhman described it:
"The tweets in question were obvious satire, 'bad/dark humor' and trolling for the sake of making people upset," said Hedhman. "It was the essence of why I am not on Twitter and think it is the worst plague that has been inflicted on humans in recent years. I didn't like Marko's tactics, but I can understand his angle."
You can call it "cancel culture" but really what's happening is the foundation is protecting their image by disassociating themselves. It's literally a business decision because it has the potential to cause them reputational harm. Frankly, if you don't want to be part of that organization then it
Re:The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, that is exactly the core of cancel culture: People threaten to judge the whole ASF because of the clearly unrelated comments of one person related to a particular piece of software.
This is reminiscent of the worst of McCarthyism and the Red Scare during the 1950s in the US. Then the question was "Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the Communist party?", which was at least remotely defensible because CPUSA was a front for Russian attempts to undermine or overthrow the United States. Now, the question that gets you blacklisted is merely "Have you ever tweeted a mean joke? [But mean jokes about Republicans are perfectly fine.]"
Re:The Code of Conduct works exactly as we warned (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, that is exactly the core of cancel culture: People threaten to judge the whole ASF because of the clearly unrelated comments of one person
That's nothing new and the response has been around since PR was invented. The only thing that has changed is people's ability to communicate with a mind-boggling number of people. It used to be difficult but now with social media you just have to type it up and hit send.
If that's how you define "cancel culture" then it's been around for a century but it's only in the last decade or so that people have optimized a way to bring consequences upon themselves which frankly is their own doing.
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I mean look Coraline Ehmke's personal posts. Ehmke is an absolutely toxic garbage example of humanity on social media. The very living embodiment of the unhinged, angry at everyone, vitriolic tranny.
I looked at her twitter feed, scrolled through the first three screenfuls, and didn't find anything that seemed toxic. That was all the time I was prepared to spend on twitter to try make your point for you. If you have anything to backup your claims, I'd appreciate it.
What I dislike in your post, and the ASF case, and the Carano case, is that we're told a person's posts are problematic in some way but (1) we only see cherry-picked examples if that; never any context for us to know whether those cherry-pick
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And that's the person whose code of conduct everyone adopted. Just let that sink in.
Do as I say. Be kind to one another. But don't forget to go fuckyourself. Now just because I said that last part does it mean you should now not do the first part? I.e. is there something in the Code you specifically disagree with other than publisher of it being an arse so politically incorrect his entire Twitter account got banned?
This is precisely what so many of us warned about codes of conduct being used to cripple FOSS projects by political actors.
Hardly. More likely in the modern world where your private time is public people in high profile positions need to learn that their position depends on a certain degree of publi
Just don't tweet. (Score:2, Insightful)
If you have bigoted, sexist, homophobic and/or racist views, well fine there's nothing we can do about that.
As soon as you start tweeting them, instagramming them, facebooking them, parlering them or making sure people know you have these views, that we can do something about.
This is not a tech issue, btw. If I have a group of black friends and I walk up and start calling them the N word, they will unfriend me IRL and possibly kick my ass in the process.
We think we should have the ability to say anything we
Re: Just don't tweet. (Score:3)
EVERYONE "has" those views nowadays.
Because *no matter* what you say, bullies will *always* find a narrtive to "interpret" you that way. No matter what.
I've posted two short youtube comedy videos above that I won't repeat here, that parodize that kind of social cancer.
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You sound like a lot of fun at parties.
When I was young (Score:2)
Nobody wanted to hear what nerds had to say. They were socially inept clowns whose out loud mutterings were more a product of their utter lack of emotion intelligence and low levels of human contact. What came out of their mouths was alternately embarrassing and offensive.
Sounds like it's still true.
Wait, what? Apologize for his *thoughts*? (Score:3)
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Posting thinly veiled racist humor on twitter is actually doing something. If you see what's left of what he posted on Twitter, the choices were to oust him or to wait until the consequences of his anti-woke stealth-racism affected the project in some way. It would've been a bigoted disaster waiting to happen.
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And to be clear, this would only count as stealth racism to an American using a barebones definition of racism; it's stealthy in the same sense that a windowless white van with "FREE CANDY" on the side is stealthy because it isn't labelled "PEDOPHILE RAPE VAN."
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True, thinking them was bad too, but he could've kept that to himself :-P
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Factual correctness would be one useful measurement for discerning good from bad thoughts, in which case all racist thoughts are extremely bad thoughts. Bad actions start with bad thoughts. All the memes he posted originated from bad thoughts and the choice to repost them also started with bad thoughts.
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Re: Wait, what? Apologize for his *thoughts*? (Score:3)
The hey thing is to NEVER play along.
As we former nerds kids all know: It more you give in to a bully, the more the bully will bully you.
Like a rapist wants his victim to scream in panic.
You wait until they look awayy use your element of surprise, remember that martial arts course mom sent you to, *and whack him like Hardcore Henry [youtube.com]*, one-hit-knockdown.
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if he didn't actually *do* anything wrong
We wouldn't be having this conversation if he didn't. And presumably his Twitter account wouldn't have been banned.
Is it a thought crime? Possibly. Do you want to associate with people who have those thoughts? That is the key question here. Like it or not if you have a high profile position then public relations becomes part of your job, even when you're not on the clock.
If you feel like going on on offensive rant I highly recommend the "Post Anonymously" button, or maybe not Tweet under your real verified
Free Speech (Score:4, Informative)
We have unfollow & block functions ?
Perhaps we need more robust option on them ?
Also could use the same on follow & retweet ?
But what we do NOT need is gate keepers to be censoring !!!
facts, lies, misrepresentations, opinions ? Tune your bullshit detector.
Do be a thin skinned snowflake. Reality isn't pretty, although the math will work.
Always want to be on the right side of history ? You won't be. Things change.
It takes all kinds to make a world, but you may wish there was fewer of some.
There is no such thing as a free lunch.
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He was in a position of responsibility at the organisation. One of those responsibilities was to act professionally and be welcoming to all contributors.
If he can't do that then Apache don't have to keep him on, they can find someone who can do the job.
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We have unfollow & block functions ?
Yes. That's how the project felt. They unfollowed and blocked someone they didn't want to associate with anymore. Given he was part of the project that meant firing him.
At a certain position your PR and public image becomes part of your job, even off the clock.
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.
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The claim is that he posted some of it on Apache mailing lists. He denies it.
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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.
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The account can't be characterized as private. it's quite public, anyone can see it. (The word you're looking for was probably "personal".) Your employer (or volunteer group, whatever) has always cared about your behavior in public. They don't want to be associated with an embarrassment. It shouldn't take a code of conduct for you to grasp that.
The reason they cited the code of conduct is because referencing a written policy is always better than the guy in charge issuing the statement from his own mouth. T
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Excessive or unnecessary profanity
Comment removed (Score:3)
yeah (Score:2)
Re: yeah (Score:2)
Right, so you promplty approve of being a massive douche to him too, you massive douche. Yadda yadda "punishment " yadda "social justice" "more equal" yadda.
Social media (Score:2)
Now many feel all their thoughts are deserving of public review. Now I haven't seen Mr. Rodriguez' comments and won't pass judgement... but if you can't deal with the consequences don't put yourself in a position to be judged.
Wheton rule #1 - Don't be a
Irony... (Score:3)
Ironically, the reason that people can generally be fired without any protection is that the same group of people complaining about getting fired being "cancel culture" is the right-wing that got "right to work" laws passed in most states, ensuring that employers can fire employees without cause or advanced warning. If you wanted to have job security, perhaps advocate for policies that protect workers from arbitrary termination? Of course, they spent many decades before that getting people fired or products boycotted for having opinions that they didn't like, though since they were the ones doing it they called it "moral" instead of "cancel culture" and apparently they loved the idea until people started using it against them.
Re:most offensive thing: how bad the jokes are (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if the joke isn't offensive, you should get cancelled just for failing this hard at humor.
No you shouldn't. Piss upon you and your kind, you tiny tyrant.
Re:most offensive thing: how bad the jokes are (Score:5, Funny)
sad sack of privileged white male
I mean standards were clearly slipping when we let the Irish and Italians into the club, but the Hispanics are in now too?
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White Hispanics are the worst, according to a bunch of people who hate George Zimmerman for the color of his skin. And who probably say "Latinx".
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I mean standards were clearly slipping when we let the Irish and Italians into the club, but the Hispanics are in now too?
Maybe he only identifies as Rodriguez.
Re: (Score:2)
I suspect that Nigerian immigrants will be next in line too,
https://www.baltimoresun.com/n... [baltimoresun.com]
black Harvard law professor Lani Guinier and Henry Louis Gates Jr., chairman of Harvard's African-American studies department, stirred up a black Harvard alumni reunion with questions about where the university's new black students were coming from.
About 8 percent, or about 530, of Harvard's undergraduates were black, Mr. Gates and Ms. Guinier said, but somewhere between one-half and two-thirds of the black students were "West Indian and African immigrants or their children, or to a lesser extent, children of biracial couples."
Re: most offensive thing: how bad the jokes are (Score:2)
This is literally you:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com]
Yes, even if one thinks somebody did something wrong. You do not "cancel" people. Ever. That is literally (figuratively) a lynch mob with pitchforks and zero clue or jurisdiction. Aka a crime. (Hopefully soon a actual crime in the UK and then elsewhere.)
Re: (Score:2)
Cancel culture is happening on the right as well. State Republican parties censuring (not censoring, different thing) politicians who didn't have their lips locked tight on the former president's ass, or the former president himself with his constant claim that he will help campaign against any Republican who doesn't worship him properly. As is common in politics, the true believers see as their greatest enemy those within their own ranks who do not pass ideological tests (the People's Party of Judea figh
Re: (Score:3)
Yes, but that's inter-party politics and only politicians on politicians. Who on the left gets canceled that's just an every day person with a job? I'm sure there have to be some examples, but by and large the normal people that get canceled most often are conservatives with unpopular opinions.
The left will also cancel itself, much like you are describing about the Republican party. AOC and her gang actively work to primary out democrats that aren't being woke enough. It's foolish because every district is
Re: Woke cancel culture ... Apache is partisan (Score:4, Funny)
I'm going to start the rumor that Elizabeth Warren has taken over the Apache foundation and is now the lead architect of the Cherokee browser.
but more seriously, should we tolerate Apache's cultural appropriation?
Re: Woke cancel culture ... Apache is partisan (Score:2)
Should we tolerate you being ... this?:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com] ... doing ... this:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com]
If you were serious: Stop bullying people, mah prejudiced negus! ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Some people find it entertaining, so by that measure it offers people a distraction from their life. Hobbies and entertainment don't have to be relevant or necessarily productive for humanity.
On the other hand, look how many jobs all our hobbies and entertainment support. I would say that's actually helping humanity.
Re: (Score:2)
There are a few different ideas that are getting conflated in the raging in TFA, that should be separated:
(1) Big Tech is censoring content on their social media platforms
Twitter didn't ban this guy's account. He's been using it for some time. He sings loudly about his experiencing "joy from tweeting tweets." He's using it now - to complain about Big Tech censoring him (that's rich). In all likelihood, he will continue using it indefinitely. The number of times Twitter removes anything is vanishingly small,