Yeah, I agree that with the values and purpose/intent it’s more important to be specific. 

Especially because I think the stated intent (based on sudoroom’s wiki: social change, community engagement, etc.) is actually quite a bit more ambitious relative to, say, Noisebridge, whose vision statement is (paraphrasing) “provide infrastructure and opportunities for people interested in <various art/technology topics>”. 

What does openness and “hack the planet” mean to you? Why are those things important as values? Are those things also our intent, or is there a separate mission/purpose? 

Eric 

On Apr 11, 2022, at 13:26, Andrew R Gross <arg5029@gmail.com> wrote:


These are great. Personally, I don’t feel the need to overthink things or reinvent the wheel, so I’d be pretty happy to adopt the community standards pretty much unchanged. I’m happy to help people edit it as they see fit, but I think it’s overall definitely good enough.

I think the statements of values are similarly pretty good, although I’d like to edit them to be a bit more specific. For instance, I think articulating what openness means, and what what it means to hack the planet, and why, and in the pursuit of what outcome. But again, I’d say they’re good enough that I’d support them as is if others wanted to take the path of least resistance.

On Sun, Apr 10, 2022 at 9:33 AM Eric O'Connor <eric@oco.nnor.org> wrote:
Here’s some resources from Sudoroom’s wiki and other hacker/maker space pages that could be useful reference material. 

I like how Noisebridge has a specific guidelines on community norms. 

How is sudoroom’s purpose different from these other communities? 
Part of it might just be a geographical niche, but there are probably intentional cultural differences as well? What are those? 

— 


From the Wiki :
  • We're into technology and where it intersects with social justicesustainabilityeducation and solidarity.
  • We strive to be an opentransparenthorizontal and welcoming community where all are supported and free to learncreategathercollaborateworkplay and more! .
  • We've got tons of tools for you to use from a 3D printer to public computer terminalsMath projects, a big huge library and all kinds of gadgets!
  • We are exclusively volunteer-run and supported through donations!! Learn more about membership.
  • Our slogan is: HACK THE PLANET!

Sudo-intro-comic.jpg

Eric 

On Apr 9, 2022, at 22:51, Andrew R Gross via sudo-discuss <sudo-discuss@sudoroom.org> wrote:


Should we establish a statement of purpose and a code of conduct?

I think Sudoroom should adopt a code of conduct, because currently our only behavioral rules are the Omni Commons Safer Space policy: https://omnicommons.org/wiki/Safer_Space_Policy

These rules are vital, but are limited to a broad set of wildy unacceptable behavior anywhere. They don't outline minor and hackerspace specific guidelines on ideal and discouraged behavior.

PB asked if we have any statement defining our most basic principle or goal, and while it sounds like there is a lot of diverse informal wisdom, there isn't a clear singular statement of intent. So I'd like to propose we agree on one of those as well.

I think a starting point for a code of conduct would be something like "Try to enhance the experience of others in Sudoroom and avoid impeding it", and then we could go into a few more specific examples like cleaning up, asking people if they'd like companionship or space when working in the space at the same time, etc.

I don't have any clear suggestions for what our statement of purpose would be, but I like the values of justice and openness.

Thoughts?

Andrew R Gross, (he/him)
412.657.5332    -   shrad.org
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Andrew R Gross, (he/him)
412.657.5332    -   shrad.org