Dear TF members,
Apologies for the delay - here are the minutes from our last
call. Corrections welcome.
Happy new year :)
Cheers
Ant
Draft Minutes - Code of Conduct TF: Sixth Call
17 December 2020, 16:30-17:30 (UTC+1)
Present:
Denesh Bhabuta, Athina Fragkouli, Antony Gollan, Brian Nisbet, Leo
Vegoda, Salam Yamout.
Summary: The TF reviewed its draft RIPE Code of Conduct document and
made changes. At the end of the call, it decided that it was not
quite ready to publish, and would postpone this until the new year.
1. Minutes
Leo proposed one change to the summary in the previous minutes
(fifth call), which read: “The group discussed feedback from the
RIPE Chair Team on the role of a future CoC Team within RIPE NCC
Executive Board Elections. This is not an absolute requirement and
it might be that another group performs this role.”
Leo said that the text from the actual minutes stated that this
would be a separate implementation, which was much clearer. He asked
that the summary be updated to include this phrasing. The group
agreed.
2. Agenda
There were no changes to the agenda.
3. Review of actions
- RIPE NCC to request more detail from the Trusted Contacts on
workload.
Antony said he had not gotten to this yet. The group agreed to carry
this over to the next call.
- Athina to provide some examples of corner cases.
Athina said she had reviewed the Google document and found that most
cases were covered. She had added four more:
1. The RIPE NCC General Meeting
2. Encounters during the RIPE Meeting week outside of official
social events (e.g. in a bar)
3. Social media interactions about RIPE or RIPE NCC issues that are
not necessarily on a RIPE NCC-platform
4. Other non-RIPE events organised by the RIPE NCC (such as RIPE NCC
Days).
Leo said it would be good for TF members to give Athina’s questions
some thought. He thought they might hold a planning call in early
2021 to look at how they would approach the next documents, and they
could discuss these questions then.
- TF members to review CoC Document and propose changes.
- Leo to draft an update for the community.
Leo said he would cover these actions later in the agenda.
4. Publication – Decide on publication of Document 1
Leo suggested they review the document and look at what changes or
comments they wanted to implement. They could then decide if they
were ready to publish.
Significant Changes from v3.0
The TF agreed to remove this section from the actual Code of Conduct
document and instead publish it as separate/accompanying information
along with the updated draft.
Terminology
Athina said she thought the sentence noting that neutral terms had
been chosen deliberately was not needed – this was clear from the
terms themselves.
Leo said this was more of a working comment, as some of the terms
used in the previous draft had been less neutral.
Denesh said it might be worth making this point somewhere in the
document – so it was clear that people would not be pre-judged.
Salam asked why they were defining WG Chairs in this section. She
also wasn’t sure about terms like Investigator – as this would be
determined by their work on the later documents.
Leo noted that none of those terms appeared in document one. The
only terminology in Document 1 was that Code of Conduct was
abbreviated to CoC. So, they could get rid of the whole section, and
just include “Code of Conduct abbreviated to CoC”, perhaps in the
introduction [it was later noted that “CoC Team” also appeared in
the first document].
Rationale
In his comment on the document, Denesh had asked if they needed to
define “unpleasant behaviours”. Leo had responded that this could be
renamed to “unacceptable behaviours”, which was the title of the
section below.
The group agreed with this approach.
Denesh noted that the next sentence referenced “if people have an
unpleasant experience” and asked whether this needed to be
rewritten.
Antony said it might be preferable that this not change. It avoided
repetition and the context was slightly different.
Athina said unpleasant was quite broad.
Antony said it was subjective, which was fine in this context.
Denesh said they might want to think a little more about this
sentence.
Salam referenced the line: “Some participants may have had poor
experiences in other communities.” She asked whether they should
care.
Brian said they wanted to make it clear that RIPE aimed to be better
than those communities.
Denesh said they should care, as they wanted people to be part of
the community. And in that sense, it didn’t matter what they had
experienced elsewhere. As a community, they cared about people and
invited them to participate. He thought this was important to keep.
Salam asked if they should merge the second and fourth
bullet-points, which both seemed to be dealing with the same thing
(building trust/having a transparent framework).
Leo said if they used “trust”, they needed to define it carefully.
If they didn’t, they would need to explain what they were trying to
achieve here.
Brian said there were three main points here: making people feel
safe; ensuring everyone was aware; and having an open/transparent
process. They could remove the point on trust with this in mind, as
that the goal there was to have an open and transparent framework
for report handling.
Leo reordered the list and merged the vocabulary of “building
trust/having a transparent framework” items. He also removed mention
of the CoC Team, as this would be covered by the later documents.
Leo noted that the text said reports would be followed-up, even if
they concerned someone in power. He asked why they said “even if”
instead of “including.”
Brian said he preferred this to remain, as it made it explicit that
everyone was covered by the CoC.
The group agreed with Brian.
Scope
Salam said she didn’t think they should say criminal activities were
not in scope, as it was almost a tautology (hot water is hot, etc.).
Brian said he disagreed, he thought it was worth making this plain
for readers.
Salam said she agreed, but Brian’s point was that the CoC did not
supersede national laws; the current text did not reflect this. She
suggested they update the wording along the lines of “This CoC is
not a substitute for/in lieu of applicable sovereign laws.”
Brian the (unfortunate) other side of that was if they were in a
country with laws they didn’t support, they would nevertheless have
to be mindful of them.
Denesh said this was why he’d brought up cultural behaviours and
what/wasn’t acceptable. It was about defining what the RIPE
community thought was acceptable behaviour. If someone was beaten at
a RIPE Meeting in a country where this was legal, the CoC would take
precedence; he asked Athina to correct him if he was wrong.
Athina said if, in another country, it was perfectly legal to beat
someone, the CoC Team might not be able to call the police on them.
However, as this person would have agreed to abide by the CoC, they
would be able to ask them to leave due to violating the CoC.
Brian said it might be legal for him to get up on stage and yell
abuse at people, but he wouldn’t expect to be allowed to back to the
RIPE Meeting afterwards. That’s why it was better to say that the
CoC could not supersede national law (rather than saying criminal
activities were out of scope), because that could muddy things. They
wanted to avoid people claiming something was a criminal matter and
they first needed a ruling by a judge.
Athina said in an earlier discussion on this, Antony had said that
while this was obvious for lawyers, it might be helpful for others
to spell this out. They had also thought this could be moved to the
end of the scope section.
Brian said it might be enough just to say that the CoC did not
supersede the law of any country where a RIPE Meeting took place.
Salam suggested Athina come up with some text for this.
Action: Athina to come up with text for Criminal Activities not
in scope
Antony asked if this part on criminal activities should stay in the
same place in the scope; it seemed like more of a footnote.
The TF agreed to move this to the end of the scope.
Activities Covered
Athina said they talked about “activities covered” but then talked
about spaces and venues, so they should change the title of this
section (she proposed: “Spaces Covered”.
Antony suggested: “Where this CoC Applies”.
She also suggested they come up with a more definitive list of
venues and spaces. If they used the word “includes”, that meant it
was not an exclusive list. She thought it would provide more clarity
if they thought of all the spaces where it applied.
Leo said having this a little vague might avoid having to update the
CoC whenever new activities emerged.
Athina agreed. In that case, to avoid people over-applying the CoC,
she suggested they create another list of spaces where it did not
apply, such as events not organised by the RIPE NCC where RIPE
community members met, etc.
Salam asked if people at RIPE Meetings fell under the CoC rules
automatically, or if they had to opt-in. She asked the same about
mailing lists.
Athina said agreeing to the terms was part of registering for the
RIPE Meeting. Mailing lists were a little less straightforward, as
there were already a lot of subscribers. They could require active
agreement for new subscribers, but it might be difficult to manage
for those already on the list. However, the punishment was also not
that heavy – if you misbehaved, people might be blocked or put under
moderation. She therefore didn’t see a huge need to have everyone on
the lists to agree to the CoC. Where she saw the biggest risk was
with event participants, because they might seek damages for travel
and accommodation costs, and so on. In these cases, you did want
them to have agreed in advance to be bound by the CoC.
Salam asked if they needed a full list of applicable venues in the
actual CoC. She asked if they could instead keep this in the meeting
terms that people actually had to agree to and be covered legally
that way.
Athina said there might be other cases where this wouldn’t be
possible – such as on social media. But the CoC team would
nevertheless investigate any reports about behaviour in these
spaces.
Salam asked if they needed to cover every aspect of this. If someone
got into an argument on social media after the meeting one evening –
was this really an issue for the CoC Team?
Brian said they could spend ages on this if they wanted to. It might
be possible that a report was made along the lines of Salam’s
example. The extent that this fell within the bounds of the CoC
would likely depend on the context. They had non-exhaustive lists of
types of behaviour to offer guidance. The CoC had to be about the
“spirit of the law” rather than “the letter”, because otherwise
people could rules-lawyer it to death.
Salam asked if they should use wording stating that the CoC applied
whenever people came together under the “banner” of the RIPE
community or something similar. But she added that it wasn’t a “RIPE
activity” if Salam got onto Brian’s Facebook page and started
insulting him.
Athina suggested it might be better to specify where the CoC was not
applicable. Because they didn’t want to create an expectation that
the CoC was something people could use whenever they interacted with
another member of the RIPE community.
5. Communication
Leo said they were out of time on the call. As there were still a
lot of questions, it was clear they were not ready to publish
Document 1 (the RIPE CoC) in December. That being the case, he had
put together a draft announcement and asked that TF members review
this and provide feedback. He said they could handle this on the
mailing list.
Brian said they should get their email out to the community early
the following week, as people would soon be leaving on their
Christmas holidays.
6. Actions
Action: RIPE NCC to request more detail from the Trusted
Contacts on workload.
Action: Athina to come up with text for Criminal Activities
not in scope.
Action: TF members to make comments on the draft announcement
text by Monday, 21 December.
Action: TF members to continue discussion of Document 1.
Action: Leo to propose an updated meeting schedule.