- From: Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) Nevile <charles.nevile@consensys.net>
- Date: Tue, 17 Dec 2019 16:19:08 +0100
- To: "public-pwe@w3.org" <public-pwe@w3.org>, "Siegman, Tzviya" <tsiegman@wiley.com>
On Tue, 17 Dec 2019 15:20:28 +0100, Siegman, Tzviya <tsiegman@wiley.com> wrote: > We are working with Jory to prepare chairs' training that gives more > hands-on information to chairs. Yay! > I am quite hesitant to offer chairs (or anyone for that matter) what > looks like unilateral authority to make a decision that has potentially > long-term effects. In my experience, chairs need such authority. It is not entirely clear what authority they have at the moment, yet they do such things in practice. (In a private conversation with a chair in the 24 hours since my email, I found that they had needed to do something of this nature - and that they had learned it from other chairs doing so). > I think that the role of chairs and how they manage specific scenarios > is extremely nuanced. Indeed. > Editing and redacted archived content is something that (whether good or > bad) is viewed as quite alarmist in the W3C in my experience. Because it > is just one approach of many, and it may be perceived as extremely > harsh, I do not wish to include it in this iteration of CEPC. Hmm. I think it is important to establish the principle that we should not leave harmful accusations and comments in archives longer than is necessary. Unfortunately my experience has been that the overall tendency is to do just that. While I don't advocate removing anything that might upset anyone, I think it is reasonable to explicitly provide the authority (subject to review by an ombudsperson as you note below) and make it clear that we expect chairs to act thoughtfully, rather than believing that the archive of written comments is more important than the people those comments may be about. The basic principle should be that we record discussions of issues so we can see what technical points led to a decision when looking back. In general a comment that is "out of line" will be somewhat personal, so is not part of what we are trying to record anyway. > I am envisioning a scenario where Person A does something in Github > perceived as offensive by Person B who contacts their chair. Chair > agrees and edits the GitHub comment to reflect that. A is offended by > the edit and contacts and ombuds because they feel that the edit is > itself a violation of the CEPC, showing a lack of respect. This ability to request review of a chair's decision is important to keep. > Further, Ada and I discussed as we were working through the edits > yesterday that (in keeping with the section called "If you've done > something improper" [1], the more appropriate action for the Chair or > other leader is to ask Person A (potential violator of CEPC to apologize > and make the edit themselves. Absolutely agree. > Ada and I spent several hours working on a revision to this section > yesterday [2]. I think this MUST go hand in hand with actual training > sessions for people in a leadership position. Since we have people in such positions already, and since they have to deal with these issues now whether or not we are ready, I don't think we should be gating anything (except our expectations) on having the training prepared and rolled out. But as noted I agree that it is really important. cheers Chaals > I am very much looking forward to Jory's Deescelation training, which we > hope to roll out in the next few months. > > Tzviya > > [1] https://w3c.github.io/PWETF/#mistake > [2] https://github.com/w3c/PWETF/pull/75 > > Tzviya Siegman > Information Standards Lead > Wiley > 201-748-6884 > tsiegman@wiley.com > > -----Original Message----- > From: Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) Nevile <charles.nevile@consensys.net> > Sent: Monday, December 16, 2019 4:51 PM > To: public-pwe@w3.org > Subject: Re: PWE minutes > > In the minutes, the people who were at the meeting felt it was unlikely > chairs would unliaterally redact harmful comments or block someone on a > mailing list. In my experience I have both done, and seen other chairs > do that - fortunately not frequently, but more than once. I think it is > worth anticipating the possibility, and being clear that we invest > chairs with the authority to do so in cases where it is necessary. > > Note that behaviour of chairs is subject to claims that it contravenes > the code, so this is not "carte blanche" for chairs to become to become > petty dictators, and such authority should be exercised with > thoughtfulness and restraint. > > FWIW We should be far more proactive in talking to chairs about this. I > never learned to do this in chair training, but I have often been backed > up by other chairs and group members (including people in this CG), and > unsurprisingly have also backed off and apologised for overstepping the > boundaries of reasonable and proportional. I have likewise found myself > in the position of feeling that a co-chair has overstepped, and imposed > an unduly harsh restriction. With no apparent guidance resolving these > situations is one of the most challenging aspects of chairing, and one > where I really felt more help from W3C is important. > > cheers > > -- > Charles "chaals" Nevile > PegaSys Standards Architect, ConsenSys > -- Charles "chaals" Nevile PegaSys Standards Architect, ConsenSys
Received on Tuesday, 17 December 2019 15:19:15 UTC