On Thursday, 19 July 2018 10:50:20 AM AEST Ian Jackson wrote: > I think this naming, and the iconography, is all very unfortunate. > IMO it is not compatible with Debian's Diversity Statement (which as > ou know was ratified by an overwhelming majority of DDs). You are overreacting. Name of the package may be tasteless but still not bad enough to justify exclusion. I fear of misuse of diversity statement to justify morally distorted decisions against something mild like this particular case. Here is an example: I'm aware of legal human name that is offensive and inappropriate in another language. Nobody in the right mind would use diversity statement against people with such names. Even bringing such matter to attention of a person is awkward to say the least and may be even insulting on its own. Asking person to change his name because it is unpleasant to us would be beyond rude. Let's just leave the matter alone please. If contributors find it sufficiently repulsive to maintain the package then you will be able to remove (unmaintained) package soon enough. Otherwise we can say that usefulness of the package outweighs its bad naming. Another argument is that many things in older literature, fairy tales and religious texts may be considered offensive these days. Yet banning those things would be wrong and would cause far greater damage to freedoms. If we were operating a restaurant, would you suggest to remove all non- vegetarian meals from the menu because some of our customers are vegetarians? Surely they may consider meat to be offensive but normally it is enough to be respectful to people's rights not to use whatever they consider inappropriate to them. I'd much rather not waste any time to facilitate or justify useless renaming like "fsckeditor" to "ckeditor", etc. -- Regards, Dmitry Smirnov. --- The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently. -- Friedrich Nietzsche
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