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Code of Conduct for HSG related chats and groups (and possibly space) #2
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Who is this person and are they a member? This will need to be dealt with / mediated. I agree that any forms of harassment has no place in HSG. However, the conversation happened between you and the said person in a separate chat / private email, I am unsure of the correlation of this matter to the need of HSG needing a CoC. Anyone could create a Telegram account or email address, have one account to monitor the public chat/mailing list and another account to privately harass the list of Telegram accounts or email addresses. The best action henceforth, would be to block / ignore said account. My 2 cents: a CoC would imply that members are incapable of judgement and choice of speech, which also means that there is a fundamental issue with onboarding or filtering of potential members. I would understand the need of this if it was a completely open community physical space where there are no filtering or mechanism in place to gate participation, ie: meetups. A lot of CoC also gives a false sense of social security. Blizzard Activision, Riot (League of Legends) and many companies has a CoC, often for publicity purposes. They are the same companies that are the worst offenders of harassment at workplace. Social security should come from members monitoring other members and taking necessary actions; not just an arbitrary set of rules. If our members cannot take actions, a CoC would not evolve the culture of a place to suddenly start taking action. Problems with rules, as said by Plato, is that rules are not needed by the good people and the bad people will always try to find ways around it. Even with a CoC, harassment can still take place and members can still be complicit and not take action. However, if it is determined by members that we do need a CoC, we could potentially explore Interfaces during plenums. |
It does not seems like they are a member. I do not know the actual identity of said person, although I have forwarded @valentine details of said chat and specifics. |
Are there any updates on this? Thanks! |
Closing this since there wasn't any response. Please re-open if needed. |
Some members have sent me private feedback that some recent behaviour by a fellow member might border on unacceptable to how they believe the space's norms to be, so it might be prudent that we adopt and enforce a Code of Conduct soon. What we're looking for is not a generic anti-harassment policy, but some best practices for behaviour and interaction between members while in the space. Noisebridge's Community Standards entry might be a good place to start. |
Copying over relevant messages from Telegram: J21, [27/6/22 1:40 PM]
Joyce Ng (@geekyjoyce72), [27/6/22 2:32 PM]
Gordon, [27/6/22 2:43 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 2:44 PM]
Gordon, [27/6/22 2:45 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 2:45 PM]
Huiren Woo (@GIANTCRAB), [27/6/22 2:46 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 2:48 PM]
Gordon, [27/6/22 2:53 PM]
Jash, [27/6/22 2:54 PM]
Chinmay Pendharkar (@notthetup), [27/6/22 2:54 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 2:55 PM]
Jash, [27/6/22 2:56 PM]
Gordon, [27/6/22 2:56 PM]
Marco Cecconi, [27/6/22 2:57 PM]
yf, [27/6/22 2:58 PM]
Gordon, [27/6/22 2:59 PM]
Marco Cecconi, [27/6/22 2:59 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 4:59 PM]
icedwater (he/him) (@icedwater), [27/6/22 5:35 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 5:38 PM]
Rhizomatic Thoughts, [27/6/22 5:50 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 5:58 PM]
Joyce Ng, [27/6/22 6:33 PM]
|
I've drafted a Code of Conduct. Please feel free to bikeshed here:
(p.s. note that this should be read in conjunction with our House Rules (which also needs an update)) |
The line on enforcement only applies to illegal activities. We should extend the enforcement to other disruptive behaviour, explaining in detail (ban, stop participation...) instead of just saying "unable to accommodate" |
@serverwentdown Agreed, but how would that get implemented? Thinking aloud : Someone can be banned from a virtual channel/group, but they can always create a new handle and join back in. It's might end up being cat/mouse game forever. This just means more load on administrators. (P.S. not a made-up scenario, AFAIK this happened in one of the cases) Also, how does one ban someone from a physical location? That would have to involve law enforcement? |
Importantly, the CoC should mention consequences for disruptive behaviour. Implementation wise, there's many options for the various contexts. Here's one for Telegram:
And yes, physical banning would be hard. I guess putting up a photo of them on the inner side of the door could be a way to ensure repeated attempts of entry would be blocked. But we shouldn't have to resort to this usually. Such procedures should be documented in a Grievance Procedure |
I mentioned this at yesterday's plenum: the biggest difference between events (meetups, conferences) and community/co-working spaces like HackerspaceSG is that in a community space, it's very likely that grievances don't stem from one or two large incidents, but little annoyances that build up over time (possibly some of the disruptive behaviour that @serverwentdown is bringing up). In those cases, it seems like the best way forward is to make sure that the acceptable norms for space usage are somewhat codified and known among everyone (e.g. saying that the front room should be like a library), and to ask that the parties go through mediation.
Sounds about right. |
Also, we should have separate CoCs (or separate CoC sections) for online and physical to make things clear. |
I cleaned up and edited a CoC which I wrote for another community. This is non-specific to online or offline situations and can be adapted easily: HackerspaceSG is Singapore's very own Hackerspace, where people with common interests in computers, technology, science, digital and electronic art, come together to meet, socialise and collaborate. We do not believe in creating strict rules governing the community, as people can and will find means to skirt around the language of the rules. As such, there are no formalized rules in place for the community, but there are guidelines that members should follow, and are listed below: Guidelines:
If you're not going to put in the effort to properly describe what's going on, and what's up with a circuit, a system, etc, give information about the devices at hand, then why should anyone spend the time and effort to answer your question?
We are committed towards providing a safe, harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of sex, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, religion, housing status, or language. We do not tolerate harassment of members or participants in any form. Harassers or abusive persons can be expelled from the space or removed from any online forums or means of communication.
Moderation and Enforcement: Admins have the right to break up any conversation or topic that goes against the spirit of these guidelines, even if something is not explicitly covered in these guidelines. They also reserve the right to silence, kick and permanently ban any member that is not being conducive to the community. If an admin tells you to cease talking about something or doing an action; please respect their authority and stop. If you have any questions or concerns that you wish to bring up, talk to an admin. Members and participants are also encouraged to call out inappropriate or abusive behaviors. With these guidelines - we hope that you have a pleasant time on this community, and happy hacking! 🙂 Any comment or thoughts in regards to this? |
@geekyjoyce72 Lack of enforcement guidelines aside, what specifically are you not satisfied with from the CoC that I drafted? |
I actually don't have any specific things that I am not satisfied in regards to your draft - I was just talking to some other folks and thought I could put in one so that other people can get ideas and add their own comments too |
Do we have a Code of Conduct for HackerspaceSG related chats, groups and perhaps even the space itself?
I was messaged by someone, who claims to have been in the space before and was asked for really sensitive information (such as age, sex, etc), for which sole purpose seems to me to be to find someone to talk about sensitive topics such as sex (said person needed a few pointers to know that I wouldn't, nor most other folk would be comfortable talking about this topic to strangers)
According to @valentine the Telegram group chats are public and anyone can see the member lists without joining the group directly. As such I am asking:
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