在2024年10月24日十月 下午5:30,Peter Cai写道: > Hi James, > > Thanks for your clarification. This sort of non-provocative > clarifications of the regulations you need to comply to has always been > what the community wants to see. _This_ should have been the first > official statement when anyone raised the concern, instead of Greg's > attempt to "defuse" the situation over private correspondence, or Linus > Torvald's outright defamation and accusing anyone who dares to disagree > of being a "Russian troll". This is not even to mention the _complete > ignorance_ and arrogance shown by his statement on what sending a revert > patch means. > > With sanctions in place, there is no reasonable person who will demand > the LF or the Linux Kernel maintainers to do otherwise. However, as > someone who does rely on Linux for daily work, and as someone who has > contributed to the Linux project and its community, I think seeing the > following should be the minimum: > > 1. Linus Torvalds (+Cc) send an apology letter to **everyone** who he > accused of being a Russian troll; > 2. Linus Torvalds need to **unconditionally retract** his personal > attack on Kexy Biscuit, the person who sent the revert patch in protest > (+Cc), and acknowledge that people who work with AOSC.io aren't > "state-sponsored paid actors"; > 3. This type of statement should be included somewhere public as soon as > practically possible should sanction compliance affect kernel > development again in the future; > 4. No personal attacks should be allowed based on tinfoil-hat reasoning. I agree those actions and IMHO this should be addressed under Linux's Code of Conduct enforcement [1] framework. I also look forward to a formal investigation report on the entire event. It may eventually result in an overhaul of our governance model. [1]: https://docs.kernel.org/process/code-of-conduct.html Thanks > > Thanks, > Peter. [...] -- - Jiaxun