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From: Josh Berkus <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: Joshua D. Drake <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Contributor listing policy
Date: Sun, 9 Mar 2008 12:11:57 -0700
Message-ID: <[email protected]> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
	<[email protected]>

Josh,

> This particular change was discussed and debated publicly and the patch
> submitted by me and approved, months ago. It is also why the
> contributor list is not under developers anymore. It's under community.

Actually, looking at the archives, there wasn't much discussion when you 
submitted the patch; I doubt that most people realized the changes it made.  
I know that I wasn't clear on it, noticing only the change in sort order, and 
certainly the rest of the core team (or hackers) didn't discuss it.

Contributor listings are not a matter of *only* WWW team's discretion.  In 
fact, traditionally, contents of the developer listings have been determined 
by the core team; if we're going to change that and give sole authority to 
WWW maintainers, then I think we ought to have an *explicit* discussion about 
that.

> > This is a compromise between previous practice (not listing non-code
> > contributors at all) and what some people would like to see ("Major
> > Contributors" with non-code contributors); I figure we'll revisit
> > this policy in a year or so.
>
> The idea that a line of code is more important than the organization of
> an army (users) is incorrect. Without one the other is pointless.

I'm hardly one to argue that non-code contributors aren't important.  However, 
I also don't see a reason to dramatically change the listings all at once; 
why not do it in stages, with non-code contributors listed in the 
"contributors" section this year, and under "major" maybe next year?  Given 
that non-code contributors currently aren't listed *at all* despite the 
change in headings, I still see it moving in the right direction.

Futher, I don't feel that I -- as the core team member current preparing the 
names for the contributor listings -- have a good handle on the difference 
between a "major" and "minor" non-code contributor.  *I* would like a year to 
feel out some good practices.

The core team felt this was a reasonable compromise; Magnus felt it was a 
reasonable compromise.  So far, you're the only one to think it's not a 
reasonable way to go, so I'd like to hear from some other people as well as 
you.

-- 
Josh Berkus
PostgreSQL @ Sun
San Francisco



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