Hi everyone, I am sure everyone understands that the Twisted community would love more diversity. While it is hard to achieve, it should be easy to remove one of the obvious blockers -- making underrepresented groups feel more welcome. I think, and hope, that our IRC channel, our issue system and mailing list have been a friendly, pleasant place. This is an attempt to clarify what we mean by a "friendly, pleasant place". After some discussion on IRC, I volunteered to write up a Code of Conduct for Twisted. It is mostly an adaptation of Django's CoC -- I think Django has a nice track record of commitment to diversity, and, of course, we expect our communities to overlap. My current draft, including instructions on how to build it, is in https://github.com/moshez/twisted-coc . I have intentionally not made the built documents available, in an attempt to avoid someone picking them up before they're approved by us. Please respond if there are any concerns about the wording, anything that I missed and anything you think does not belong there. I hope we can achieve consensus, and have the Project Leadership Committee approve this (including approving the current committee -- I've volunteered to chair it, and Glyph and Amber (HawkOwl) have graciously agreed to be on it.) Thanks, Moshe Z. I've noticed several typos in the Reporting Guidelines section (reporting.rst) I hope this is the appropriate place to report them. * first sentence of the 4th paragraph of the "What Happens..." section. The last word is "response", should be "respond" * Last sentence of the same paragraph: "Finally, the Working Group will make a report on the situation to the DSF board. The board may choose to a public report of the incident." Should be TSF board, not DSF board, and needs a verb in the final clause, probably "make". Also, more substantively, the first possible response is "Nothing (if we determine no violation occurred)." Maybe I'm just too literal, but I think there should be a positive response to every report, even if that response is "We've decided not to do anything", so the reporter knows the report has been seen and thought about and hasn't just fallen through the cracks. Another note, someone earlier implied that since Twisted doesn't sponsor events, the event-related parts of the Django CoC were irrelevant. In the past, there have been several local bug-fixing sprints, one of which I almost actually attended. I would think these would qualify as events and the issues for a CoC when people meet in person may be somewhat different from when we meet online. Otherwise, I strongly support this and am happy the Twisted Project is taking a proactive stance on it. Great work, everyone, and thank you Moshe, Glyph and Amber! -- John Santos Evans Griffiths & Hart, Inc. 781-861-0670 ext 539