Recent initiative that has recently been
getting more and more important.
And we're not just talking about inclusion
due to gender, we want to talk about
sexual identity, gender identity,
invisible illness, disabilities, race,
creed, colour, whatever kind of colour you
might wear in your underpants - whatever.
So, I don’t want to run this as a lecture,
I want this to be a workshop.
I'm only here as a facilitator; I want you
people to get involved
that's why all the ambient microphones
here in the lecture theatre are on
but only for this session.
That means I don’t have to keep
passing the microphone around.
As most of you are probably aware -
I’m going to kick off with myself
and why it's so important for me -
as you’re well aware I’m a trans woman,
which is something the recent Trump
election has made me very very
scared about. I’m also bisexual.
I also have two invisible illnesses:
I’m a manic depressive and I suffer
from gout and arthritis.
So I tick many of the boxes that diversity
and inclusion are all about.
So this is why it’s important to me,
and I want you guys - anyone else want
to kick off and say what diversity and
inclusion means to them and what can
we as Debian do more to raise its
visibility, how to catch when it's
contravened, maybe possibly review our
diversity statement (though I think it's
pretty good as it is at the moment).
So does anyone else want to say anything
after I’ve finished my wurbling?
Go ahead guys it’s up to you - this is for
everyone to be involved.
Well it’s interesting because Debian
as a whole if you look across the last
20 odd years is one of the most diverse
entities I can think of at this scale
and, you know, we have people of all
beliefs and none,
we have mostly men and too few women
we have very few physically disabled folk
we have very few visually impaired folk
relative to the numbers of Debian
Developers and Debian Maintainers.
But actually we are a good diverse community
even if sometimes we don't sound like it.
We're a lot better than some of the
mainstream.
Oh I completely agree with you. Last year
was my first year at the Mini-DebConf
since I transitioned full time, and
I was just amazed at how accepting
everybody was - it was just fantastic and
it just was a non-issue, and I blogged
about this on Planet Debian later.
But yes, I agree we are more diverse
than the average, but I still think
there's more we can do and
possibly I’d like to see more
pro-activism about it rather than
just passive acceptance if you
see what I mean.
Anybody else?
So a lot of people here will know me and
this is going to sound a bit odd
but I think Debian is doing very
badly at being inclusive to
people who don't like fighting
[audience laughter]
[audience] Thank you Ian
[audience] That's a fair point
And I'm very conscious of this
and I try very hard
to encourage and help those people.
And because I'm rather thick- skinned
and being a bit older I don't care
so much what people think
I'm more able to fight than other people
are. But I'm still having to fight too much
I'm having to fight too much
not so much for myself
but for other people that I think
are getting a raw deal.
And I don't really know what
to do about that.
You're entirely right,
there is an adversarial approach.
Understanding your corner is how you
argue something forwards,
and that same approach is what,
as you quite rightly say,
puts a lot of people off as they don't
want to fight because you may not have
enough confidence to your own
ability to stand your corner.
But the reason people are doing this
is purely because if you don't shout
if you don't push your own agenda
nothing will happen.
And we end up with the status quo.
So, how do we get other people involved?
How do we take the adversarial
approach out of this?
And I think this is covering the whole
diversity bit Lucy is talking about
is unless people are brave enough to
stand up and say 'this is an issue for me'
nobody is going to pay any attention.
And part of the problem is you've got to
stand up and say 'this is an issue for me'.
Where do we go?
So, I'm speaking from a position
of privilege.
So please tell me if what I'm about
to say you think is wrong.
You said that it would be a
good thing to take the
adversarial approach out of Debian.
There’s a degree to which I’m not sure
that’s necessarily the best approach.
The scientific method, the Socratic
method, the sort of actually
having debate to discuss what
the best solutions are, and
I think there is virtue in that.
I think there's an element to which
you need to be able to argue your corner.
But at the same time what you're saying
is that you're having to fight too much.
Certainly conflicts can become personal,
and they can become deeply adversarial
which is not necessarily good.
I think the ideal is one where you can
continue to engage in the Socratic
and the scientific method but
may do so in a place where
it is safe to be wrong.
Lars you wanted to say something?
Yes, I was going to basically say what he
said but stressing the fact that there is
a difference between a debate
and a flame war.
Yes, and recognising that is the point
where it is becoming personal
is the point we've got to all stop.
In fact recognising it's about to become
personal is the point we've got to stop.
I'm just going to throw out an idea here
that may be completely bonkers
or not really that acceptable,
but is it possibly an idea to have
some kind of Debian-appointed
official personality moderators?
So basically if something seems to be
going out of line they will take to
personal messaging someone saying
can you cool it down a bit.
[audience] A speaker of the house or
referee?
More someone that people who don’t
feel they can for themselves
can go to, or if they see in a discussion
that something’s going out of order
they can take the people aside and
say look calm down guys.
I mean it’s just an idea and those
people are publicised in some way
on the wiki or whatever.
Sorry Andy?
So hire some psychologist to monitor
our mailing list? [audience laughter]
It's interesting in fact because I've
spent 20 years plus on mailing lists.
I've seen flame wars in Debian like you
wouldn't believe. [audience laughter]
But I think we're getting better.
And surprisingly, I think we're
getting better because we're getting
used to operating at a distance
via the impersonal medium of
messaging and messages.
I think it's a thing you have to get used
to, but yes - when it becomes personal
then it becomes very difficult.
I suppose the only thing I would like
people to think, and try and remember
is that respect goes upwards,
downwards, sideways.
And that sort of of respect across the
project works better.
I don't think we're doing well on diversity at all.
[audience agreement]
I think Debian is extremely straight white
male working men's club community.
And if I look at my employers as well,
in my team we're all white male.
And that's a team of 15 people, so
that's not diverse.
Yes, and unfortunately it's
a problem across the entire industry.
One of the reasons I've been pushing
this recently is that I've been getting
involved in our own internal
ARM diversity and inclusion.
In fact I was in a video they did
recently for Ada Lovelace day.
It's the fact that we're
not retaining women,
the fact that a lot of people who feel safe
to be out in some other way is limited,
and we're trying to improve on this
and I'm just seeing this as an extension
of this. Personally, if I'm doing it
in one part of my life I want to
do it in other parts of my life.
That's why I wanted to launch this session.
But yes, I agree - I don't believe we are
representative.
We tend to be more accepting - our
inclusion is pretty good but our diversity
is pretty poor.
People agree with that?
[audience agreement]
Steve.
We keep on saying we have
a diversity statement, and we want
to support diverse people -
well, absolutely.
we're better than we used to be,
but we're still crap.
I mean I remember 15 years ago
having discussions like this
when we had 3 whole
female developers.
I don't know how many we have now.
[audience]: more than that.
If it's more than 20 or 30 I'd be amazed.
[ It's certainly not many, but in New
Members at least, we don't track it.
Precisely because it shouldn't matter. ]
On a related note:
when 2 Debian Developers have children
do they become DDs automatically?
[audience laughter]
So actually related to that, just looking
round the room, one of the metrics
where we're not being very inclusive
is getting young people in.
Particularly if it's an adversarial
relationship and you have to be
able to argue your case.
If you're 16 years old then that might
be an unattractive place to be.
Something to help support people and
get up to speed would be wonderful.
Well I have experience trying to get
someone of that age to a technical
related conference.
At that age people are so self-conscious
that even if you are extremely supportive
they won't go.
So I don't think that's
necessarily a fixable problem.
I'm trying to solve that problem.
My daughter has come to a couple
of DebConfs: she's not at that age yet
and will be later.
The approach is bring her earlier.
She'll be here tomorrow.
One problem I see is that I don't think
we should be openly pro-active about it
like making a big deal out of it.
What I see is that when
something bad happens
like a woman is followed or
stalked by a man
or someone has a problem
with your sexuality
then as a bystander what can I do
to make this better?
Because if I see something, I don't know
what I should do to diffuse the
situation to make the one that is
stalking or making bad comments
[audience]: you should use your male white
privilege to call out bigotry
Yes.
[audience]: And stand up for other people
[audience]: should there be an
escalation process when that doesn't work?
No, it's de-escalation process.
You're not accusing people.
[audience]: But the point is when
it doesn't work.
When it doesn't work, right, ok.
When it continues, potentially the
same offender in one case or many cases,
Is there a way that this is able to be
taken further by a group in Debian
that can deal with that
individual or group?
[moderator:] Lars?
So I see again a duality here: people who
need to be taught or need to learn
to not be jerks.
[audience laughter]
But most people are happy to not
be jerks if they're shown how not to.
But there is a small group of people
who need to be kicked out.
Yesterday evening - late in the evening -
on the Debian Women channel
[well-known Internet troll]
MikeeUSA came back.
[audience dismay]
He was very happy with the US
presidential election result.
But like, I don't know, personally I
block people on Facebook.
I have 35 people blocked on Facebook.
Because I just don't want to.
And then my life became happier online.
[audience]: That works on a personal
level, but having an irc channel
frequented by someone with views of
hate and making death threats
needs to be corrected on a project level.
One thing that's been suggested before
but never really actually happened:
a lot of Debian's discussions
take place on mailing lists
that are not only publicly viewable
they are totally un-moderated.
And this is good in one sense: it helps
keep the wider community involved
but it also means that there are people
who get involved on those lists
who I do not believe are in any
reasonable sense part
of the Debian project
and are not communicating with it.
And who come along pretty much - I
think - purely to stir up arguments.
I mean, how much of the 'systemd' flame war
was people who were actively involved
in the project? Do we need
somewhere the project can discuss things
which can't just be posted to
by any random troll on the Internet?
Well, in Ubuntu, the
ubuntu-devel list was split
into ubuntu-devel for members only,
and its limited access rights,
and then ubuntu-discuss for general public.
The net result was that yes,
the flame wars disappeared,
however the community
contracted a lot as well.
And that turned away a whole bunch of people
such that the traffic just became dead.
[audience]: It may also result in just
all flame wars just moving from one
mailing list to a different mailing list,
and just -
Right, initially that's what happened.
But then loads of people unsubscribed
And then people disappeared,
over a longer time.
Can I ask a question
about this experiment in Ubuntu?
What was the situation if you were a
non-Ubuntu developer/person and you
mailed that mailing list?
Would somebody moderate it?
It goes to moderation queue and
then Colin Watson, every other fortnight,
He would approve a whole bunch
of messages if they were fine.
[audience]: And would you get
white-listed eventually.
Yes, if you post enough
you get white-listed by Colin.
But it all falls back to Colin
or something like that.
[audience:] That's a lot of overhead
for a team that already can't
keep up in our case.
[audience:] It also slows down the
discussion a lot.
[moderator]: And to be honest these are
all reactive containing measures.
[audience:] Yes, we shouldn't have
this problem in the first place.
But the problem is that the world has
crappy people in it
and if we set up a thing that is attractive
to those crappy people
where they can do their crappy things
then they will come and do it.
And you can say well that's bad, but you
know if you have a solution for dealing
with that for the whole world then...
[audience]: You can't fight social
problems with technical measures.
[audience]: They can help
That's completely false, for example
the Debian bug tracker should stop
unsubscribing me because I use Gmail.
But that's unrelated to the topic.
I was thinking about one thing to have a
discussion in a more natural environment:
I think more of them via wikis as you
don't have the personality that's put
forward so much. You can edit if there
is anything too offensive. You still have
the history so it's not lost the thing
that's displayed there if it hasn't been
edited for let's say a day it's probably
the (?? 17:58)
this is not bad and if you edit you
explicitly, it's visible to everybody
that it was considered (??18:04) not bad and then
after when you have the discussion
you can have section about argument
and people they answer just below
And then you don't keep repeating
yourself about what you said.
You answer some question and somebody
asks again the same thing you have
everything there. If it's not there you
add it. I don't think you can do
everything this way but when you have an
idea in open discussion it's not going
to work. But when you have an idea you
try to reach consensus for something
maybe using a wiki could be quite useful.
Something which is not conversation based
but you know just shared
[audience]: content based
[audience]: In Wikipedia they have
long discussions about things
and quite often this doesn't help
to create consensus.
Even the same arguments are
repeated over and over again.
So it doesn't really help, in my opinion.
[facilitator]: Andy?
It strikes me we're all in agreement
that we shouldn't be tolerating anything
we should be and we're saying
who's going to moderate it.
The simple answer is every single
person has to moderate it.
There and then, at the point you see
something you've got to call it out.
We've got to stop being rocks
and being passive ourselves.
And until that happens we're not
going to create an environment
where people feel safe to state their
opinion and beliefs and their identities
because of fear that their going to be
called out in some way.
And so we've got to, you now - if I'm out
of order, stop me now - don't wait a week
and bitch that Andy's being a bit of a
dick out there and have a moan.
At the point I start to be a dick stop me.
[audience laughter]
And that should apply to
every single person.
[Facilitator]: Again we're talking
about being reactive.
What can we do to be more proactive
and get more people involved?
I just wanted to say that I've ended up
in a couple of debian-devel discussions
and on the front page of
Hacker News and Slashdot
and when the debian-devel
discussion was going on
there were lots of personal attacks and
it was Ian Jackson who stepped in
and a couple of other developers
stepped in and they defended me.
And it was because I'd seen that there
were people that were going
"no what are you doing, this
is wrong don't do this"
I knew that that wasn't the
overall view of the community.
And just seeing something happening
made everything a lot better.
This is going back to the concept about
the personality moderators.
And as I say, sometimes you
may be wanting to say something
but you don't feel you can.
And because it's a silent thing
people aren't going to know that you
did want to say something
which is why you need people you can
approach and say "this is what I say,
this is why I don't feel I can say it".
So, how can I try to be proactive with
diversity? I think that's one of...
I mean we're all in agreement that
we should be more diverse,
what can we do to fix that?
In Debian we have an outreach team
which runs - well, participates -
in internship programmes:
Google Summer of Code, Outreachy...
They are programmes that try to involve
new people in our community.
We are struggling with finding good
projects and good mentors
to guide those interns in the project.
We're also trying to do diversity
bursaries for DebConf
so bringing new people
into those conferences.
We need, I guess, help to do that.
[audience]: Where do we sign up?
Where do we sign up to help?
[audience laughter]
So, there is a Debian outreach mailing
list where we send
announcements about programmes.
We can talk and add more people
to the outreach ideas I guess.
And if you have ideas about what we can,
what we should do, then you can speak up.
What's the first port of call
for any new person for the Debian Project?
[audience] There is a welcome
team, I'm not part of it -
No, I mean when someone says here's
Debian I want to find out about it.
Where's the first place they go?
[audience]: Front page.
Yes. We need something linked
off the front page.
There's nothing on or linked from the
front page that indicates our diversity
because I had difficulty finding our
diversity page a couple of days ago
in preparation for this discussion.
[audience agreement]
Some of the information is there
but it's not immediately visible.
It's silent and that's where we need to
increase our visibility and say
"look, we are inclusive of these things
- come and join us".
[audience]: I don't know, I always view
Debian as a social project
rather than a technical one.
[audience]: How is that relevant?
Because our front page is all about
how to download the ISO (?? 23:45)
[audience]: So debian.org, in your
opinion, is directly technical
rather than social? Yes.
[audience]: And it should be both
[audience]: So we need to fix that
[audience]: That's quite a sweeping
assessment. [laughter]
I'm exaggerating. [audience]: There is
some people stuff on there as well
but it's smaller than all the rest.
There should be something there.
There is, the text is like this big
[very small].
There's a number of bugs open on
www.debian.org and the problems
that I think we have and we talked
about in Vienna if you wanted to
get started with packaging you have
no hope. [laughter] You have literally
no hope. We tried to organise the wiki
pages and there was no easy way to
get started. So I think we are closed to
new people unless you already know
someone who can help you get started.
The downloading of ISOs (?? 24:49) is entirely
done badly and Steve has a bug on that.
And the blends (?? 24:55) pages were all listed
under the developers section even though
that was user documentation.
So I moved those out. But there is a lot
of work to be done on the website and
I think the first step for that is filing
bugs with ideas of how to reorganise
this and there really does need to be a
project for that.
[audience]: does anybody here even look at
the front page or use it for anything?
Because I go to tracker.debian.org,
that's the only URL I go to
[audience]: I can never remember the
categorisation of the URL so I have to
not URL hack, because I always end
up at some 404. So I have to go via
the front page and its maddening.
[Laughter]
Speaking of packaging I remember (?? 25.38)
back in the days when I didn't know
basically I needed help with how the dev
packages were made up, what's inside it,
but I didn't know how to create the ones
except create Debian capital directory
and package into it. [audience laughter]
I remember that I learned how to do that
not through debian.org but I knew
someone who knew how to create
Debian packages using dev helper and they
gave me, like, a long Debian roll script
100 lines of something and I started
hacking on that and just trying things out
but these days it's slightly better but I
still don't know what page to point
people at. Probably something on the
wiki but no idea actually.
[audience]: is it slightly better or are
you just more familiar with what needs
to be done?
When I try to find a specification
of multiarch it's on the wiki.
[audience]: That's the Canonical location.
I tried to learn how to use dev triggers
last week. I later learned that I don't
actually need triggers for that package
I can do it differently, I didn't use
triggers in the end. But, I actually went
to an internal Collabora wiki/resource
an internal source that used triggers.
[audience]: Can I interrupt you here a
moment and say we seem to be
getting derailed into a discussion of
of our technical deficiencies with our
technical documentation and I'm
sure that all of us are aware of
deficiencies in our technical
documentation. And I'm not sure that
as part of an outreach effort is quite
the right framing for that.
[audience]: it's one of many things
we need to improve but the very very
first thing people see, as Lucy said, is
way below par.
[audience]: But this, I think, actually
quite a good point because we are getting
lost ourselves and getting sidetracked
of the issue of how do we pro-actively
encourage diversity. And we seem as a
group to be spiraling down the technocracy
again. We seem to be fixated on the
technical and how do we break that
fixation.
[audience]: Well we're technical people
[laughter]
[audience]: so how do we get people who
are not technical.
[audience]: I'm going to say something
very controversial here and so be aware
there's somebody at the back of the room
you can throw things at. [Laughter]
I'm physically disabled I'm also what you
might call neuro-diverse. If I'm feeling
bloody minded I just say I'm brain
damaged. There are a lot of people
around me in Debian and also elsewhere
who are on the autistic spectrum somewhere
who are technical types. We all tend to be
focused, technical, dealing with technical
stuff is sometimes a lot easier than
dealing with people.
We are the wrong people to be trying
to pull people in and in fact
my other half was here last year, she sat
in the kitchen and she said "god imagine
if you went to central casting and
asked for geeks this is what you'd get"
I don't know that we are good at or going
to be able to get more diverse people in.
But what we are good at is other aspects
of diversity. We are good at allowing
people to be themselves in terms of
gender, sexuality, sexual expression
and that kind of stuff. Which other
parts of the world generally aren't
I mean it's not for nothing that we had a
presentation last year on BDSM and Debian
from Enrico.
[audience laughter]
Facilitator: Well I wonder if we can
learn something from one of the other
major geek communities which is the
sci-fi / fantasy fandom which have a very
wide diversity and have no problems
attracting people. I mean the fact we're
geeks should preclude us from being
able to be social. [audience]: I agree
[audience]: I mean Debian does attract
weird people and I once said that by
definition to become a DD being weird
is a requirement. [audience laughter]
But why stop there. We can do more.
[audience]: What include normal people?
[audience laughter]
[audience]: Steady on. Lets not go there
[audience]: How do you define normal again?
[audience]:Standing up straight
[audience]: one thing, I've just been
clicking around on the Debian website
and basically there's only one image there
and that's the Debian logo
[audience]: That's on purpose
I don't say make it like Wouter's (?? 31:03) website
But there is some room I think for more,
it doesn't have to be stock photo.
[audience]: Well on the Ubuntu website
we have a lot of group photos from
conferences.
[audience]: Could we put a picture from
DebConf. We are people like Debian
[audience]: It's very impersonal though
and of course it's nice for big building
times.
Facilitator: What about a few selected
biographies with pictures and people
saying what Debian means to them
and getting as a wide a selection of
people as possible?
[audience]: How about 'We are Debian' and
literally small bits and pieces. You've
seen quite a lot of the advertising
campaigns the bios don't necessarily
need to put stuff behind but a photo,
random photo of every DD if they're
happy to have it on the front page.
Picked at random photo show the
diversity we've got so yes we're possibly
going to need to positively bias this.
But show the diversity and by showing
what little diversity we've got but
stressing it more frequently we're making
a safe, safe is the wrong word, a place
where people are comfortable to be
themselves. [audience]: welcoming?
Yes, welcoming.
And put that front and centre.
Ultimately I would hope that
most of us in this room would say
that we try to leave our prejudice
at the door. I think most of us are
happy to recognise that we have
prejudice and have it called out on us
when we cross a line.
And unless everybody else is prepared
to do the same to us then we can't be
welcoming to anybody else because
we're not creating an environment
where other people feel happy and
safe in the first place.
[Facilitator]: And of course a lot of bias
is unconscious.
[audience]: Very much unconscious and
that's what we've got to overcome
so we've got to actively overcome it.
Would anybody here genuinely be upset
if we put their photos on the front page?
[audience]: see also collabora.com
[audience]: well quite. Modulo (??33.39) scaring
people away with my ugly face [audience
laughter] but I've been doing that for
years and it doesn't seem to have
had a major problem.
[Facilitator]: David
Sorry I need to get my thoughts back
So you were saying something along
the lines of unconscious biases and
wanting to see that corrected. I have
certainly discovered that I've been
exhibiting this myself in the past and
people have told me that this was a
thing and I've gone 'oh my god I'm so
sorry'. Being able to do that in a public
forum and to be able to be able to
set a good example as to what good
behaviour looks like I think might also
have some value. I think there're lots
of people who are trying to do this
already. I don't know if there's
anything that could be
added there as well.
[audience]: meeting in real life really
does help.
[audience]: Massively
[audience]: Yes absolutely
[Facilitator]: Steve
So I've heard quite a number of good ideas
a lot of which are going to need some
technical work to make them happen.
There is a next obvious question:
Who want's to help?
[audience]: Lots of voices saying "Me"
[audience]: we should take a picture of
the DPL and put a face on the front page
with a quote, right, that's an action item
[audience]: It's a start
[audience]: and to say we are a social
project. Yes we have an operating system
but we have a social project as well.
[audience]: absolutely, we've already
suggested several improvements we
could make to our website and various
other things. A lot of the problems that
we have in those areas are not that
people don't agree with those ideas, it's
just finite effort. And we have a limited
number of people who've been able to
find the time to do what is already
necessary and what we
know is needed technically.
Again, we will need more help
to do this kind of thing.
[audience]: I would object to raising the
DPL as the one person to stick on the
front page. Please don't do that. Because
there are more people in Debian.
[audience]: And will never apply to be
DPL ever again. [audience]: yeah, yeah
[audience]: So if people want to help
with this and actually get involved
technically to do it, that doesn't mean
editing wml but it will mean writing
content. It will mean getting some
stuff done. We can go forward with that
we can make it happen. But it is
going to need some effort.
[audience]: I'll volunteer to write wml
if someone decides that needs writing
[audience]: Ditto, I will do that for
people if they need it.
[facilitator]: I'm happy to produce
content as you're probably well aware.
[audience]: There's nothing in the Social
Contract about diversity.
[Facilitator]: That's an interesting point
[audience]: There doesn't have to be.
[audience]: There isn't we did make, we
had a public vote, and we made a
diversity statement a few years ago.
We have made a very loud public statement
about the values of the project. In a
similar fashion to what we did with
the Social Contract. Do you think it
would help if there was something
about that in a modified Social Contract?
[audience]: Yes, because then it would be
obviously central.
[audience]: At least part of the
statement in the DFSG about not
discriminating in software against
anybody.
[audience]: Yeah, I'm not sure that that
would help given the rows there've been
over the Social Contract before.
In all seriousness we promote Debian
as the universal operating system.
We promote it as something for everybody.
Rather than putting it into our technical
documentation we're better to live it.
Put it on the website, explain it. Live
it in conferences like this.
I don't think we need to add it to every
piece of technical documentation
provided we can live the culture.
[audience]: Is the Social Contract a piece
of technical documentation? That's kind of
interesting.
[audience]: If you want to push that
you have my vote but I don't think
it's important.
[audience]: something that might help is
showing these things not modifying them
but showing them on the same page. The
DFSG is appended to the Social Contract.
Have the diversity statement there and
anything else that's relevant and
you can find them in one place.
[Facilitator]: Right we need to wrap
this up in the next few minutes.
So has anyone else got any points
they want to raise at this point?
[audience]: Please make sure that the
points that have been raised are in the
Gobby doc, we seem to have
run out of steam there.
[audience]: One last thing, sorry.
It comes into Social stuff
accessibility software, things like
Dasher, things like anything you need
to do when you're blind or you've only
got one arm or that kind of stuff
is at least as important in someways
as some of the other diversity stuff.
As otherwise we will be excluding groups.
[Facilitator]: yeah I think that's quite valid.
[audience] I think that needs to be
considered if we make any changes to
the website. Because at the moment it's
lovely for screen readers. And don't take
that away. If we make the website all
HTML5, JavaScript, CSS, Flash nonsense
we're going to screw screen readers.
[audience]: no we can improve the website
whilst retaining it's current
standard for accessibility.
Because the standard of accessibility
for the Debian website is better
better than everything else
out there. It's amazing.
So there are constraints on what
we can do, that's well known.
Is Debian a universal operating system
or is it a global social project?
An experiment?
[audience]: Yes, both.
[audience]: It does not state that.
[audience]: So the first thing people
look at is here's a load of technical
stuff about Debian. We have this many
packages, here's how to download.
There is nothing to say Debian is also
a big diverse project you could join in.
[audience]: It's a social project.
[audience]: Definitely
[Facilitator]: Any other different
opinions or things to raise before
we run out of time? I think
we've done this bit to death now.
[audience]: Maybe one question with
diversity. Do we want to reach or express
that we are diverse to our users or our
developers. Is there a priority between
the 2? I think it would go from user
to developer.
[Facilitator]: Well it's a bit blurred
anyway.
[audience]: If we're a social project
then everybody's included.
And that includes the users,
the developers because that's
the point of a social group.
It's a big huge social group.
It's a social network:
I run Debian [laugh].
[Facilitator]: Right I think
we can wrap it up there.
Thank you very very much
all of you for taking part.
[audience]: Thank you for
pushing this as well.
[Facilitator]: Thank you
[audience]: Applause.