On 03-04-2022 19:26, Liliana Marie Prikler wrote: > Am Sonntag, dem 03.04.2022 um 15:09 +0200 schrieb Maxime Devos: >> Hi guix, >> >> fortune-mod currently propagates (in the non-technical sense) various >> non-nice things like objectification, misoginy, religious >> intolerance, anti-mathematician-ism (?) and date rape.  That is not >> an exhaustive list, these are just the first few things I encountered >> with "fortune off". > Well, the purpose of "fortune off" is to provide offensive "jokes". As > such, if you're offended by them, you're kinda getting what you've > asked for. If removing them falls under what our CoC states, though, > then so be it, I have no horse in this race. My point wasn't that some individual could accidentally install a package that offends them.  My point was that: > fortune-mod currently propagates (in the non-technical sense) various > non-nice things like objectification, misogeny, religious intolerance, > anti-mathematician-ism (?) and date rape. That is not an exhaustive > list, these are just the first few things I encountered with "fortune > off". More concretely, consider the target audience for such "jokes" instead of some random individual. By including such jokes: * we implicitly validate that such views are reasonable (people holding those views get validation, unknowing people are nudged into considering such views and people rejecting these views are invalidated) * As such, we contribute to keeping those vile -isms intact and making them more common. I do not believe this to be a good course of action. Something can be said about the individuals too, w.r.t. internalised $BAD-isms, negative impact on mental health, possibly some other things too?). I don't believe inflicting those to be a good idea either. Csepp > [quoted stuff] > Honestly this is dumb, it's not even practically useful software. We > have no obligation to package something that jokes about date rape and > contributes nothing of practical value. > This is very different to the reasoning behind the lack of moral clauses > in the GPL. And again, just because something is free software, we don't have to > package it. > It's a ticking PR timebomb and nothing of value would be lost if we got > rid of that file. If some snowflake gets triggered because we removed > their favorite date rape joke, they self identified as someone whose > opinion we should ignore. :P Exactly, though myself I prefer to reason in terms of "what is / what changes / consequences / ..." instead of "how are our actions perceived". (/me catches up on other responses, haven't read them all yet) Greetings, Maxime.