@wzqtparor While Richard Stallman certainly catalysed our action, it is not really about him. Independently of his bad leadership qualities, I think that the concept of a bdfl is not ethical and not suited for running a group of volunteers. If he wished to join the consensus based decision making process, why not? But you probably agree that this is a rather hypothetical question.

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@andreas

To be honest I really have no issue with a group of people that feel the need to fork a project over political concerns.

Really: so much that since years I add a POLITICS.txt to my projects to make my political goals clear and explicit an I welcome forks over that if people don't share them.

The BDFL is a perfectly ethical approach to lead volunteers as long as all of these volunteers can fork the project.

In fact the attitude torwads forks is a key discriminator between Free Software and projects, as the formers welcome and celebrate them, the latters fear and blame them because they erode their share and challenge the governance.

Now if you want to fork over governance for whatever reason (challenging ' leadership, included) you ARE welcome!

Really!

LibreOffice did so and it's totally fine.

But doing so this way, fooling users of the forked project or confusing them, is unfair proper of Open Source tactics.

Please rename your fork with something different.

@wzqtparor@mstdn.io

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