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140 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
140 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
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# Bytecode Alliance Organizational Code of Conduct (OCoC)
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*Note*: this Code of Conduct pertains to organizations' behavior. Please also see the [Individual Code of Conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
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## Preamble
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The Bytecode Alliance (BA) welcomes involvement from organizations,
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including commercial organizations. This document is an
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*organizational* code of conduct, intended particularly to provide
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guidance to commercial organizations. It is distinct from the
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[Individual Code of Conduct (ICoC)](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md), and does not
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replace the ICoC. This OCoC applies to any group of people acting in
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concert as a BA member or as a participant in BA activities, whether
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or not that group is formally incorporated in some jurisdiction.
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The code of conduct described below is not a set of rigid rules, and
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we did not write it to encompass every conceivable scenario that might
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arise. For example, it is theoretically possible there would be times
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when asserting patents is in the best interest of the BA community as
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a whole. In such instances, consult with the BA, strive for
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consensus, and interpret these rules with an intent that is generous
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to the community the BA serves.
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While we may revise these guidelines from time to time based on
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real-world experience, overall they are based on a simple principle:
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*Bytecode Alliance members should observe the distinction between
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public community functions and private functions — especially
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commercial ones — and should ensure that the latter support, or at
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least do not harm, the former.*
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## Guidelines
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* **Do not cause confusion about Wasm standards or interoperability.**
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Having an interoperable WebAssembly core is a high priority for
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the BA, and members should strive to preserve that core. It is fine
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to develop additional non-standard features or APIs, but they
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should always be clearly distinguished from the core interoperable
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Wasm.
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Treat the WebAssembly name and any BA-associated names with
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respect, and follow BA trademark and branding guidelines. If you
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distribute a customized version of software originally produced by
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the BA, or if you build a product or service using BA-derived
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software, use names that clearly distinguish your work from the
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original. (You should still provide proper attribution to the
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original, of course, wherever such attribution would normally be
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given.)
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Further, do not use the WebAssembly name or BA-associated names in
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other public namespaces in ways that could cause confusion, e.g.,
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in company names, names of commercial service offerings, domain
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names, publicly-visible social media accounts or online service
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accounts, etc. It may sometimes be reasonable, however, to
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register such a name in a new namespace and then immediately donate
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control of that account to the BA, because that would help the project
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maintain its identity.
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* **Do not restrict contributors.** If your company requires
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employees or contractors to sign non-compete agreements, those
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agreements must not prevent people from participating in the BA or
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contributing to related projects.
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This does not mean that all non-compete agreements are incompatible
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with this code of conduct. For example, a company may restrict an
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employee's ability to solicit the company's customers. However, an
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agreement must not block any form of technical or social
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participation in BA activities, including but not limited to the
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implementation of particular features.
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The accumulation of experience and expertise in individual persons,
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who are ultimately free to direct their energy and attention as
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they decide, is one of the most important drivers of progress in
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open source projects. A company that limits this freedom may hinder
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the success of the BA's efforts.
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* **Do not use patents as offensive weapons.** If any BA participant
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prevents the adoption or development of BA technologies by
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asserting its patents, that undermines the purpose of the
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coalition. The collaboration fostered by the BA cannot include
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members who act to undermine its work.
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* **Practice responsible disclosure** for security vulnerabilities.
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Use designated, non-public reporting channels to disclose technical
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vulnerabilities, and give the project a reasonable period to
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respond, remediate, and patch.
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Vulnerability reporters may patch their company's own offerings, as
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long as that patching does not significantly delay the reporting of
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the vulnerability. Vulnerability information should never be used
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for unilateral commercial advantage. Vendors may legitimately
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compete on the speed and reliability with which they deploy
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security fixes, but withholding vulnerability information damages
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everyone in the long run by risking harm to the BA project's
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reputation and to the security of all users.
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* **Respect the letter and spirit of open source practice.** While
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there is not space to list here all possible aspects of standard
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open source practice, some examples will help show what we mean:
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* Abide by all applicable open source license terms. Do not engage
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in copyright violation or misattribution of any kind.
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* Do not claim others' ideas or designs as your own.
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* When others engage in publicly visible work (e.g., an upcoming
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demo that is coordinated in a public issue tracker), do not
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unilaterally announce early releases or early demonstrations of
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that work ahead of their schedule in order to secure private
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advantage (such as marketplace advantage) for yourself.
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The BA reserves the right to determine what constitutes good open
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source practices and to take action as it deems appropriate to
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encourage, and if necessary enforce, such practices.
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## Enforcement
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Instances of organizational behavior in violation of the OCoC may
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be reported by contacting the Bytecode Alliance CoC team at
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[report@bytecodealliance.org](mailto:report@bytecodealliance.org). The
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CoC team will review and investigate all complaints, and will respond
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in a way that it deems appropriate to the circumstances. The CoC team
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is obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of
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an incident. Further details of specific enforcement policies may be
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posted separately.
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When the BA deems an organization in violation of this OCoC, the BA
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will, at its sole discretion, determine what action to take. The BA
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will decide what type, degree, and duration of corrective action is
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needed, if any, before a violating organization can be considered for
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membership (if it was not already a member) or can have its membership
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reinstated (if it was a member and the BA canceled its membership due
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to the violation).
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In practice, the BA's first approach will be to start a conversation,
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with punitive enforcement used only as a last resort. Violations
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often turn out to be unintentional and swiftly correctable with all
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parties acting in good faith.
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