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Code of Conduct

When Something Happens

If you see a Code of Conduct violation, follow these steps:

  1. Let the person know that what they did is not appropriate and ask them to stop and/or edit their message(s) or commits.
  2. That person should immediately stop the behavior and correct the issue.
  3. If this doesn’t happen, or if you're uncomfortable speaking up, contact the moderators.
  4. As soon as available, a moderator will look into the issue, and take further action (see below), starting with a warning, then temporary block, then long-term repo or organization ban.

When reporting, please include any relevant details, links, screenshots, context, or other information that may be used to better understand and resolve the situation.

The moderation team will prioritize the well-being and comfort of the recipients of the violation over the comfort of the violator. See some examples below. Note that the moderation team tracks basic details about moderation actions in the interest of transparency.

Our Pledge

In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as contributors and maintainers of this project pledge to making participation in our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body size, disability, ethnicity, gender identity and expression, level of experience, technical preferences, nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.

Our Standards

Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment include:

  • Using welcoming and inclusive language.
  • Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences.
  • Gracefully accepting constructive feedback.
  • Focusing on what is best for the community.
  • Showing empathy and kindness towards other community members.
  • Encouraging and raising up your peers in the project so you can all bask in hacks and glory.

Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:

  • The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or advances, including when simulated online. The only exception to sexual topics is channels/spaces specifically for topics of sexual identity.
  • Casual mention of slavery or indentured servitude and/or false comparisons of one's occupation or situation to slavery. Please consider using or asking about alternate terminology when referring to such metaphors in technology.
  • Making light of/making mocking comments about trigger warnings and content warnings.
  • Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks.
  • Public or private harassment, deliberate intimidation, or threats.
  • Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic address, without explicit permission. This includes any sort of "outing" of any aspect of someone's identity without their consent.
  • Publishing private screenshots or quotes of interactions in the context of this project without all quoted users' explicit consent.
  • Publishing of private communication that doesn't have to do with reporting harrassment.
  • Any of the above even when presented as "ironic" or "joking".
  • Any attempt to present "reverse-ism" versions of the above as violations. Examples of reverse-isms are "reverse racism", "reverse sexism", "heterophobia", and "cisphobia".
  • Unsolicited explanations under the assumption that someone doesn't already know it. Ask before you teach! Don't assume what people's knowledge gaps are.
  • Feigning or exaggerating surprise when someone admits to not knowing something.
  • "Well-actuallies"
  • Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional or community setting.

Scope

This Code of Conduct applies both within spaces involving this project and in other spaces involving community members. This includes the repository, its Pull Requests and Issue tracker, its Twitter community, private email communications in the context of the project, and any events where members of the project are participating, as well as adjacent communities and venues affecting the project's members.

Depending on the violation, the moderators may decide that violations of this code of conduct that have happened outside of the scope of the community may deem an individual unwelcome, and take appropriate action to maintain the comfort and safety of its members.

Other Community Standards

As a project on GitHub, this project is additionally covered by the GitHub Community Guidelines.

Enforcement of those guidelines after violations overlapping with the above are the responsibility of the entities, and moderation may happen in any or all of the services/communities.

Moderator Moderation Process

Once the moderators get involved, they will follow a documented series of steps and do their best to preserve the well-being of project members. This section covers actual concrete steps.

Contacting Moderators

Official moderation is done by the Ayo.js Moderation Team.

Messages regarding moderation issues will be treated with care and appropriate confidentiality.

Further Moderation

If you've already followed the initial moderation steps, these are the steps moderators will take for further moderation, as needed:

  1. Repeat the request to stop.
  2. If the person doubles down, they will have offending messages removed or edited by a moderator and be given an official warning. The PR or Issue may be locked.
  3. If the behavior continues or is repeated later, the person will be blocked from participating for 24 hours.
  4. If the behavior continues or is repeated after the temporary block, a long-term (6-12mo) ban will be used.

On top of this, moderators may remove any offending messages, images, contributions, etc, as they deem necessary. When editing messages, please put the original message behind a <details> tag, with an appropriate <summary> instead of simply editing in place. This will allow context to remain during conversations even when something has been moderated.

Moderators reserve full rights to skip any of these steps, at their discretion, if the violation is considered to be a serious and/or immediate threat to the health and well-being of members of the community. These include any threats, serious physical or verbal attacks, and other such behavior that would be completely unacceptable in any social setting that puts our members at risk.

Members expelled from events or venues with any sort of paid attendance will not be refunded.

Public Records of Moderation Actions

Any events or situations where moderators have taken action must be recorded in the Ayo.js public Moderation Log in accordance with the policies laid out in the Moderation Log RFC. Please refer to that RFC for details on log handling, including requesting changes to the public record.

Who Watches the Watchers?

Moderators and other leaders who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other members of the project's leadership. These may include anything from removal from the moderation team to a permanent ban from the community.

Additionally, as a project hosted on GitHub, its own Codes of Conduct may be applied against moderators of this project, externally of this project's procedures.

Moderation Examples

The Best Case

The vast majority of situations work out like this. This interaction is common, and generally positive.

Alex: "Yeah I used X and it was really crazy!"

Patt (not a moderator!): "Hey, could you not use that word? What about 'ridiculous' instead?"

Alex: "oh sorry, sure." -> edits old comment to say "it was really confusing!"

The Moderator Case

Sometimes, though, you need to get moderators involved. Moderators will do their best to resolve conflicts, but people who were harmed by something will take priority.

Patt: "Honestly, sometimes I just really hate using $library and anyone who uses it probably sucks at their job."

Alex: "Whoa there, could you dial it back a bit? There's a CoC thing about attacking folks' tech use like that."

Patt: "I'm not attacking anyone, what's your problem?"

Alex: "@ayojs/moderation hey uh. Can someone look at this issue? Patt is getting a bit aggro. I tried to nudge them about it, but nope."

TheModerator: (on issue) "Hey Patt, moderator here. Could you tone it down? This sort of attack is really not okay in this space."

Patt: "Leave me alone I haven't said anything bad wtf is wrong with you."

TheModerator: (deletes user's comment), "@patt I mean it. Please refer to the CoC over at (URL to this CoC) if you have questions, but you can consider this an actual warning. I'd appreciate it if you reworded your messages in this thread, since they made folks there uncomfortable. Let's try and be kind, yeah?"

Patt: "@themoderator Okay sorry. I'm just frustrated and I'm kinda burnt out and I guess I got carried away. I'll DM Alex a note apologizing and edit my messages. Sorry for the trouble."

TheModerator: "@patt Thanks for that. I hear you on the stress. Burnout sucks :/. Have a good one!"

The Nope Case

PepeTheFrog🐸: "Hi, I am a literal actual nazi and I think white supremacists are quite fashionable."

Patt: "NOOOOPE. OH NOPE NOPE."

Alex: "JFC NO. NOPE. @themoderator NOPE NOPE LOOK HERE"

TheModerator: "👀 Nope. NOPE NOPE NOPE. 🔥"

PepeTheFrog🐸 has been banned from all organization or user repositories belonging to TheModerator.

Attribution

This Code of Conduct was generated initially using WeAllJS Code of Conduct Generator, which is based on the WeAllJS Code of Conduct, which is itself based on Contributor Covenant, version 1.4, available at http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4, and the LGBTQ in Technology Slack Code of Conduct.