Project Jupyter Code of Conduct#

Project Jupyter is an engaged and respectful community made up of people from all over the world. Your involvement helps us to further our mission and to create an open platform that serves a broad range of communities, from research and education, to journalism, industry and beyond.

Naturally, this implies diversity of ideas and perspectives on often complex problems. Disagreement and healthy discussion of conflicting viewpoints is welcome: the best solutions to hard problems rarely come from a single angle. But disagreement is not an excuse for aggression: humans tend to take disagreement personally and easily drift into behavior that ultimately degrades a community. This is particularly acute with online communication across language and cultural gaps, where many cues of human behavior are unavailable. We are outlining here a set of principles and processes to support a healthy community in the face of these challenges.

Fundamentally, we are committed to fostering a productive, harassment-free environment for everyone. Rather than considering this code an exhaustive list of things that you can’t do, take it in the spirit it is intended - a guide to make it easier to enrich all of us and the communities in which we participate.

Importantly: as a member of our community, you are also a steward of these values. Not all problems need to be resolved via formal processes, and often a quick, friendly but clear word on an online forum or in person can help resolve a misunderstanding and de-escalate things.

However, sometimes these informal processes may be inadequate: they fail to work, there is urgency or risk to someone, nobody is intervening publicly and you don’t feel comfortable speaking in public, etc. For these or other reasons, structured follow-up may be necessary and here we provide the means for that as described in the Reporting section.

This code applies equally to founders, developers, mentors and new community members, in all spaces managed by Project Jupyter (including IPython). This includes the mailing lists, our GitHub organizations, our chat rooms, in-person events, the Discourse community forum, and any other forums created by the project team. In addition, violations of this code outside these spaces may affect a person’s ability to participate within them.

Expected behavior#

By embracing the following principles, guidelines and actions to follow or avoid, you will help us make Jupyter a welcoming and productive community. Feel free to contact the Code of Conduct Committee at conduct@jupyter.org with any questions.

  1. Be friendly and patient.

  2. Be welcoming. We strive to be a community that welcomes and supports people of all backgrounds and identities. This includes, but is not limited to, members of any race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, color, immigration status, social and economic class, educational level, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, age, physical appearance, family status, technological or professional choices, academic discipline, religion, mental ability, and physical ability.

  3. Be considerate. Your work will be used by other people, and you in turn will depend on the work of others. Any decision you take will affect users and colleagues, and you should take those consequences into account when making decisions. Remember that we’re a world-wide community. You may be communicating with someone with a different primary language or cultural background.

  4. Be respectful. Not all of us will agree all the time, but disagreement is no excuse for poor behavior or poor manners. We might all experience some frustration now and then, but we cannot allow that frustration to turn into a personal attack. It’s important to remember that a community where people feel uncomfortable or threatened is not a productive one.

  5. Be careful in the words that you choose. Be kind to others. Do not insult or put down other community members. Harassment and other exclusionary behavior are not acceptable. This includes, but is not limited to:

    • Violent threats or violent language directed against another person

    • Discriminatory jokes and language

    • Posting sexually explicit or violent material

    • Posting (or threatening to post) other people’s personally identifying information (“doxing”)

    • Personal insults, especially those using racist or sexist terms

    • Unwelcome sexual attention

    • Advocating for, or encouraging, any of the above behavior

    • Repeated harassment of others. In general, if someone asks you to stop, then stop

  6. Moderate your expectations. Please respect that community members choose how they spend their time in the project. A thoughtful question about your expectations is preferable to demands for another person’s time.

  7. When we disagree, try to understand why. Disagreements, both social and technical, happen all the time and Jupyter is no exception. Try to understand where others are coming from, as seeing a question from their viewpoint may help find a new path forward. And don’t forget that it is human to err: blaming each other doesn’t get us anywhere, while we can learn from mistakes to find better solutions.

  8. A simple apology can go a long way. It can often de-escalate a situation, and telling someone that you are sorry is an act of empathy that doesn’t automatically imply an admission of guilt.

Responding to inappropriate behavior#

In some cases, individuals may violate the CoC in online or in-person situations. If any community member deems the action to be harmful to the community, they may act immediately to defuse the situation. This includes actions directed at the situation, rather than at an individual, such as locking a thread, temporarily suspending a user’s account in the community forum, calling a meeting break, or generally acting to de-escalate the situation. Follow-up your actions by reporting the incident to the CoC committee.

If the incident involves physical danger, or involves a threat to anyone’s safety (such as threats of violence), any member of the community may – and should – act unilaterally to protect the safety of any community member. This can include contacting law enforcement, other members of the Jupyter community, or other local personnel that are present.

In situations where an individual community member acts unilaterally, they must inform the Code of Conduct committee as soon as possible, by e-mailing conduct@jupyter.org within 24 hours.

Reporting#

If you believe someone is violating the code of conduct, please report this in a timely manner. Code of conduct violations reduce the value of the community for everyone and we take them seriously.

You can file a report by emailing conduct@jupyter.org or by filling out this form. For more details or information on reporting in-person at an event, please see our Reporting Guidelines (for online and in-person contexts).

The online form gives you the option to keep your report anonymous or request that we follow up with you directly. While we cannot follow up on an anonymous report, we will take appropriate action.

Enforcement#

For information on enforcement, please view the Enforcement Manual.

Original text courtesy of the Speak Up! and Django Projects, modified by Project Jupyter. We are grateful to those projects for contributing these materials under open licensing terms for us to easily reuse.

All content on this page is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license.