Re: [PATCH] Documentation: Linux Contribution Maturity Model and the wider community

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On Mon, 19 Jun 2023, James Bottomley wrote:

> On Mon, Jun 19, 2023 at 07:41:57PM +1000, Finn Thain wrote:
> > The Linux Contribution Maturity Model methodology is notionally based 
> > on the Open source Maturity Model (OMM) which was in turn based on the 
> > Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI).
> > 
> > According to Petrinja et al., the goal of the OMM was to extend the 
> > CMMI so as to be useful both for companies and for communities [1][2].  
> > However, the Linux Contribution Maturity Model considers only 
> > companies and businesses.
> 
> That's not a correct characterization.  The model is designed to measure 
> and be useful to businesses, but it definitely considers the community 
> because it's progress is built around being more useful to and working 
> more effectively with the community.
> 

You're right, the characterization I gave does exaggerate the bias. I 
shall moderate that if I resubmit the patch.

> > This patch addresses this bias as it could hinder collaboration with 
> > not-for-profit organisations and individuals, which would be a loss to 
> > any stakeholder.
> 
> I don't really think changing 'Businesses' to 'Organizations' entirely 
> addresses what you claim is the bias because individuals would still be 
> excluded from the term 'Organizations'.  I also don't really think it 
> matters.  Part of the reason this whole thing doesn't matter is that 
> sometimes people do know who a contributor they work with works for, but 
> most of the time they don't.

This is not just about patches, it's also about incentives and influence.

> If you really want this to be inclusive, you could change it to 'other 
> contributors' but I'm still not sure it's worth it.
> 
> > 
> > Level 5 is amended to remove the invitation to exercise the same bias
> > i.e. employees rewarded indirectly by other companies.
> 
> I also wouldn't remove the bit about seeking upstream feedback on
> employees; I know from personal experience it happens a lot.
> 

If it happens a lot already, why compel employers to seek it?

It's worth noting that the model compels employers to seek "community 
member feedback" which is not the same as the "upstream feedback" that you 
describe.



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