On Thu, 18 Jan 2018 20:00:35 +0000 Job Snijders <job@instituut.net> wrote:
Isn't everyone in RIPE a volunteer? It isn't just the chairs that do 'work' in a working group. Without working group participants, there is no working group. Every participant volunteers to contribute in some way or form, so I'd be careful to segregate chairs from the rest of the community.
Job makes an excellent point here. For the past decade I've been participating in events hosted by CCC in Germany where we had similar discussions every few years. As the event (34c3 last month) has grown to 15.000 participants by now we can look back and declare the model a success insofar as there wouldn't have been hundreds of volunteers this year, had we introduced any special treatment for any of the participating teams. From what I understand other organizations like IETF also follow this model of participation even though on a smaller scale. While it might look like a good idea to compensate the work of people who contribute considerable amounts of time and effort one would enter a very tricky territory rather soon. It starts with questions as easy and obvious as "Who should be compensated, who shouldn't?" or "How much compensation is fair?" and leads amongst many other things to the creation of unhealthy incentives for people who might become financially dependent on the "job" they are fulfilling in the community. While these are just a few examples, it is easy to extrapolate how the small inconvenience of having no compensation is dwarfed by the Pandora's box of trouble that the introduction of preferential treatment would open. To me working in such a framework always helped to maintain a feeling of mutual respect between all contributing people because every single action performed by those peers is rather based on the spirit of contribution than on fulfilling a paid job. Working in such an environment is an excellent balance to our daily work lives. Creating artificial trenches between individuals and groups by offering compensation or incentives in the end always drives communities apart. Just my 0.02 CHF, -mh