This statement is a collaborative effort for people working in the space to voice their concerns on integrity. Both contributors and community need to work towards healthier discussion practices and protect each other from threats and violence.
Entities around open source decentralized projects, hackerspaces, and associations are born every day to promote development and to grow awareness by educating people about the value of software that is transparent, protective of freedom and aids peer-to-peer coordination. In order to succeed, these communities depend upon the invaluable work of their contributors, wider enthusiasts and stakeholders.
Unfortunately, time and time again we have witnessed ecosystem members engage in toxic behavior that discourages open discussion such as doxxing, violent threats, or brigading against people they disagree with. In an instance just last week, one of our longest standing contributors, and the catalyzer of the Görli Testnet, Afri, received a wave of verbal violence from some Redditors, forced into the center of a storm on r/ethtrader which, triggered by a couple of tweets issued by him, turned menacing, dark and deeply toxic. Under stress from this backlash and to protect himself and his family from threats coming from unknown internet users, he made the decision to leave his position as a core Ethereum developer.
While we acknowledge that the intention of Afri’s tweets was to be provocative, these were opinions made in a personal capacity. And while complaints were valid and many of those were made respectfully, others within the wider Ethereum community resorted to impugning Afri’s reputation by asserting his involvement in wild conspiracies, demanding his immediate resignation, and most disturbing of all, issuing personal threats.
It is hugely upsetting and chills free speech when any contributor, whether a developer, community builder or otherwise, is attacked, intimidated and is deliberately made to feel unsafe.
This is far from the first time similar acts have been perpetrated. To give a few examples, Lane Rettig’s thoughtful post on increasing diversity in the space sparked unnecessary ad hominem comments.Taylor Monahan, who has been an utterly invaluable contributor to the space, tirelessly spearheading initiatives to raising awareness about security and usability, was also targeted following the birth of MyCrypto and then again, for expressing positive remarks about non-Ethereum technologies.
Of course, Ethereum is not the only online crypto community being damaged by such behaviour. Jameson Lopp’s very real world ordeal caused by an anonymous person deliberately mis-identifying Jameson as an active shooter thereby drawing armed police to his home is yet another awful example of the intimidation that can be wrought in the midst of very heated debates. As Jameson wrote, “had a few variables been different that day, I could easily be dead.”
We reiterate that the community aims to welcome constructive feedback on all decisions as best we can, given the global, digital environment of our project. Many ecosystem members have voiced valid concerns regarding influential players’ perceived or potential conflicts of interest, a more formalized recognition of how backlash can form when someone speaks provocatively in a widely used social media platform, and information for strong contributors who might be vulnerable to burnout. We also believe these concerns are valid, though designing a solution that the community can rally around will take time and lots of input. We call on the Fellowship of Ethereum Magicians to continue discussing these (and other) valid concerns in their forums and at the Paris meeting in March. Nonetheless, we cannot tolerate destructive behavior even if there are areas we can improve as a community.
We, the undersigned, contributors and workers behind scores of projects, and those seeking to build better systems, feel that these actions have gone far beyond acceptable standards of debate: whatever the circumstance, threats against a person’s well-being can never be justified and we categorically reject such toxicity in digital communities.
We also believe the Ethereum community values freedom, free speech, and privacy, but above all, it values basic respect for all human beings and seeks to promote and build systems which in turn promote and incentivize those very values.
It should also be said that the Ethereum network is built, maintained and scaled by HUMANS. Though we are a global community, no single individual can be expected to be on call 24/7. Although many contributors represent projects funded by a vast array of people around the world, those contributors are entitled to express personal opinions through any medium they choose.
We must preserve the mental and emotional health of those humans -- especially as they labor through their nights, weekends, often without pay in order to manifest the mission and vision of Ethereum. So we support Afri in this respect and will stand by and protect any others that are being intimidated, at any given time.
Finally, Ethereum governance as a whole is a very pressing issue, which we as a community have yet to resolve. Those issues include how to hold the decisions and actions of core devs/contributors to wider scrutiny, and also ensuring that our community’s current power structures don’t sideline stakeholders with legitimate concerns.
Ethereum is far from perfect. Like any other chain, we are experimenting with technologies never seen before. Navigating the frontier of discovery throws up the greatest turbulence. So as we build stronger systems for all of us to benefit, let’s also work together to ensure that we build better protocols for expressing community concerns and governing ourselves. To this end please join the conversation this March in Paris.
Signatures (sorted alphabetically)
Adam Kolar (Solidified)
Adrian Manning (Sigma Prime - Lighthouse eth 2.0)
Aidan Hyman (ChainSafe Systems- Lodestar eth 2.0 )
Alex Boerger (ETHBerlin - DoD)
Alex Van de Sande (Ethereum Foundation)
Andreas Wallendahl (ConsenSyS, kauri)
Andrew (@cyber_hokie, AO.capital, EthHub Contributor)
Anthony Lusardi (ETC Cooperative)
Arjun Bhuptani (Connext)
Arlyn Culwick (the Blocknet)
Artem Kharlamov (@crypto_eli5)
Auryn Macmillan (Colony)
Ben Edgington (PegaSys)
Billy Rennekamp (Clovers.network, Cosmos, Gnosis, ENSNifty, Memelordz)
Boris Mann
Bryant Eisenbach (fubuloubu)
Caspar Schwa (DoD - ETHBerlin - brainbot)
Chelsea Palmer (Carpe Lunam Events)
Chris Fenos (ChainSafe Systems- Lodestar eth 2.0)
Chris Hutchinson (Status)
Coogan Brennan (ConsenSys Academy)
Corey Petty (Status, Hashing It Out, The Bitcoin Podcast Network)
Daud Zulfacar (license.rocks - Berlin Blockchain Week)
Dave Appleton (HelloGold, Akomba Labs)
David Ansermino (ChainSafe)
Dean Eigenmann (ENS & ZK Labs)
Devon Krantz (Linum Labs)
Diederik Loerakker (Eth 2.0 contrib.)
Dustin Brickwood (ChainSafe - Lodestar eth 2.0)
E.G. Galano (@egalano Infura)
Elias Haase (B9lab - DoD)
Elissa Shevinsky (ETH Secure group, Soho Token Labs)
Elizabeth Binks (ChainSafe)
exiledsurfer (DoD)
Fábio Hildebrand (Solidified)
Fanny Lakoubay (Snark.art)
Fauve Altman (State of the DApps - BerChain)
Franziska Heintel (Brainbot - DoD)
Gary Bernstein (CoTrader.com)
Gonçalo Sá (@GNSPS)
Gregory Markou (ChainSafe)
Guto Martino (Dezentral - DoD)
Helena Flack (Quantstamp - ETHBerlin- DoD)
Harry Denley
Holger Drewes (EthereumJS)
Hudson Jameson (Ethereum Foundation)
Igor Mandrigin (Status)
Jacek Sieka (Status)
Jack Gane (Authio)
James Beck (ConsenSys)
James Hancock (a Nobody in Berlin)
James Moreau (@jrmoreau)
James Quinn (Independent Ethereum Developer)
Jamie Pitts (Eth. Foundation, Eth. Magicians, Eth. Financial Tools)
Jason Civalleri (UNH Law Adjunct Professor)
Jérôme de Tychey (Asseth - ConsenSys)
John Light (Aragon One)
Josef Jelacic (Ethereum Foundation, Institute of Cryptoanarchy)
Joshua Mir (Parity Tech)
Josh Stark (L4, ETHGlobal)
Kirill Pimenov (Parity Tech)
Kris Jones (Canada - just a social researcher that wants to see blockchain succeed and maintain healthy feedback mechanisms)
Laura Giron (ConsenSys Design @lauragirons)
Leo Arias (Zeppelin)
Levi Morris (Lambdeth)
ligi (EF - WallETH - DoD)
Lili Feyerabend (radi.cards - DoD)
Luke Anderson (Sigma Prime - Lighthouse eth 2.0)
Maciej Hirsz (Parity Tech)
MarÃa Paula Fernández (Golem- ETHBerlin - DoD)
Martin Holst Swende (EF)
Martin Lundfall (Dapphub)
Martin Quensel (Centrifuge)
Matej Nemcek (Progressbar, @yangwao, independent Ethereum developer)
Matt Condon (XLNT)
Maurelian (ConsenSys Diligence)
Mick Ayzenberg (Security Innovation)
Michael Yankelev (Linum Labs)
Simona Pop (Bounties Network)
Maya Byskov (Centrifuge - Berlin Blockchain Week)
Mehdi Zerouali (Sigma Prime - Lighthouse eth 2.0)
Mudit Gupta (Polymath)
Nathalia Scherer (DAOstack)
Nick Johnson (Ethereum Name Service)
Nick Munoz-McDonald (Melon Technical Council)
Nicolas Liochon (ConsenSys - PegaSys)
Niran Babalola (Panvala)
Oliver Nordbjerg (@ONordbjerg)
Paul Hauner (Sigma Prime)
Paul Vienhage - (Authio)
Pet3rpan (MetaCartel)
Philip Stehlik (Centrifuge - DoD)
Piper Merriam (Snake Charmer)
Preston Van Loon (Prysmatic Labs - Prysm eth 2.0)
Priom Chowdhury (ChainSafe - Lodestar eth 2.0)
Raul Romanutti (Parity Tech - DoD)
Rex Hygate (SecurEth)
Rhys Lindmark (MIT DCI, Grey Mirror)
Robert Bent (Ethereum Foundation)
Robert Habermeier (Parity Tech)
Ryan Noble (Linum Labs)
Scott Lewis (Concourse Open Community)
Scott Moore (Gitcoin)
Simona Pop (Bounties Network)
Shiv Malik (Streamr)
Stina Gustafsson (DoD)
Stu Peters (Chainsafe)
Terence Tsao (Prysmatic Labs - Prysm eth 2.0)
Tim Beiko - (PegaSys)
Tim Daubenschütz (Independent Ethereum Developer)
Tomasz Kolinko (Eveem)
Will Villanueva (R&D)
Yalda Mousavinia (Autark - Space Decentral)
Yaniv Fe
Ziggy Zeidan (POA Network)