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The New Yorker on Linus Torvalds (newyorker.com) 663

Linus Torvalds announced on Sunday that he was sorry for how he treated the community over the years. Torvalds, 48, said he planned to make some changes to how he conducted himself, and on that part, he said he would be taking some time off from Linux kernel development work. The New Yorker has published a story on Torvalds today in which it notes that it reached out to Torvalds days before he made the big announcement. From the story, which may be paywalled for some readers: Torvalds's decision to step aside came after The New Yorker asked him a series of questions about his conduct for a story on complaints about his abusive behavior discouraging women from working as Linux-kernel programmers. In a response to The New Yorker, Torvalds said, "I am very proud of the Linux code that I invented and the impact it has had on the world. I am not, however, always proud of my inability to communicate well with others -- this is a lifelong struggle for me. To anyone whose feelings I have hurt, I am deeply sorry."

Torvalds's response was conveyed by the Linux Foundation, which supports Linux and other open-source programming projects and paid Torvalds $1.6 million in annual compensation as of 2016. The foundation said that it supported his decision and has encouraged women to participate but that it has little control over how Torvalds runs the coding process. "We are able to have varying degrees of impact on these outcomes in newer projects," the statement said. "Older more established efforts like the Linux kernel are much more challenging to influence."

Linux's elite developers, who are overwhelmingly male, tend to share their leader's aggressive self-confidence. There are very few women among the most prolific contributors, though the foundation and researchers estimate that roughly ten per cent of all Linux coders are women. "Everyone in tech knows about it, but Linus gets a pass," Megan Squire, a computer-science professor at Elon University, told me, referring to Torvalds's abusive behavior. "He's built up this cult of personality, this cult of importance."

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The New Yorker on Linus Torvalds

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  • Shoes and Gravity (Score:5, Insightful)

    by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:35AM (#57347480) Homepage

    I've had a personal epiphany

    oh yeah and there may possibly also be a story about me and this subject coming out in a major publication in a few days too

  • Being anti-social and lacking empathy doesn't make you a better coder, it makes you an asshole. You can be both; a good coder and a good person. Being deficient in a healthy human emotion shouldn't be a badge of honor.

    I work in medicine, and while many fail at empathy, at least there is a focus on it.
    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:45AM (#57347562)

      Being arrogant makes you more likely to do something big.

      • I'm fairly arrogant at work. I'm not an asshole..Don't conflate the two.
        • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:50AM (#57347604)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by bobbied ( 2522392 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:33AM (#57347968)

            Don't conflate the two.

            Plenty of people out there see any sort of strong self-confidence as "jerk behavior." In fact the more insecure the individual, the more hopelessly assholeish your confidence will appear to them.

            You can please some of the people, all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you simply cannot please all the people all the time. Wise people don't waste effort trying.

            I understand folks may not like me, but I don't make a point to cultivate dislike, neither do I actively avoid offending others at the expense of the my morals, ethics. I'm more concerned about other's best interests than having them like what I do or say. So if they don't like me, that's their issue, not mine. Some consider me an AssHat, many don't. It's up to them, it matters not to me.

            • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

              by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:38AM (#57348016)
              Comment removed based on user account deletion
              • by goose-incarnated ( 1145029 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:36AM (#57348482) Journal

                You can please some of the people, all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you simply cannot please all the people all the time. Wise people don't waste effort trying.

                That was before the age of Codes of Conduct. Now the squeaky wheel not only gets the grease, but gets the presumption of wrongdoing on your part because they were ever squeaking in the first place.

                It's a lesson to everyone: bullying works.

                Expect the bullying to ramp up in the coming months.

            • by SharpFang ( 651121 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:42AM (#57348030) Homepage Journal

              Unfortunately, some people you don't please some of the time will step forward and demand your dismissal due to your "toxic attitude".

              Some people demand to be pleased all the time.

              • Unfortunately, some people you don't please some of the time will step forward and demand your dismissal due to your "toxic attitude".

                Some people demand to be pleased all the time.

                LOL.. Yes, the real asshats do make such demands. I was raised by a stepfather who was EXACTLY like this, narcissist all the way, so I know how to deal with such folks. I don't let them bother me or if I cannot do that, I just walk away and let them bury themselves and/or work around them as best I can. If management sees my "live and let live" credo as a "toxic attitude" then I really don't want to be working for said company so I'll just get another job.

                However, I've only had one instance where I've h

                • by SharpFang ( 651121 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @12:09PM (#57349196) Homepage Journal

                  Too bad you sometimes can't even refuse to play the game.

                  Take Ninja, a Twitch gaming streamer. Popular, absolutely apolitical, flawless reputation. Recently, he was approached by some female streamers, who have strongly political streams, "bold statements" like painting breasts blue on live stream etc. They requested making joint streams with him. He politely refused.

                  Currently, Anita Sarkeesian calls him 'mysogynitst'.

          • by Megol ( 3135005 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:52AM (#57348134)

            On the other hand many people think behaving as an asshole is showing confidence. As KixWooder wrote: don't conflate the two.

          • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

            by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:04AM (#57348230)
            Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            This has been the curse of my life. People assume that I'm an asshole because I'm simply right about most things. An I'm that way not because I have some genus level intelligence, I mean I am above average but I assume that all /. posters are above average. I'm usually right about things because I take the time to think things through and do the math and research.

            I think I would be more of an asshole if I bitched when people corrected me when I'm wrong. I actually don't mind being corrected.

            • This has been the curse of my life. People assume that I'm an asshole because I'm simply right about most things.

              Being correct does not preclude you from being an asshole. If people are always thinking you're an asshole, maybe that says something about your communication style?

              From the Dude himself: "You're not wrong, you're just an asshole." [youtube.com]

          • In my personal experience, I actually find that the biggest, most toxic assholes are the ones who have the LEAST self-confidence. It can often by hard to see through the bluster, but a lot of that shouting down and putting on a strong display are covers for insecurity.

            If you are *actually* self-confident, you don't need bluster and you don't need to put others down to feel good about yourself.

        • They're not the same, but they are correlated. A lot of arrogant people just don't care enough to learn social grace

        • by Zero__Kelvin ( 151819 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:06AM (#57348248) Homepage
          So you are only an asshole on Slashdot then, because only an asshole would argue that Linus has been out of line. Anyone who has actually invested the necessary time to have a clue would have seen his talks and interviews. He isn't an asshole; he is in fact quite humble for a guy who literally improved the state of computing by an order of magnitude beyond the pathetic state it was in when "great guy and philanthropist" Gates was fucking everyone over. E-mail is simply a piss poor communication method when you don't know the person with whom you are communicating. I can say "You incompetent baffoon" in a way that is ascerbic, or in a way that is not. And frankly, when Linus rants he is generally justified in doing so. This is a sad set of events, and the kernel code *will* suffer down the road as a result. Go back Linus ... You have been bamboozled by incompetents who know their code is sub-par and want to put on their resume that they "participated."
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Immerman ( 2627577 )

            He is very often a humble, gently-spoken guy. It's *also* not uncommon for him to act the raging asshole on the mailing lists when he believes someone is badly out of line. The two are not mutually exclusive, and as he stated, on reflection he's realized years later that at least some of his outbursts didn't serve anyone's interests (due to his misunderstandings, or otherwise)

            • by Zero__Kelvin ( 151819 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:44AM (#57348550) Homepage
              Again, Linus is a humble guy and when he lets go it is deserved. Because Linus now says what you say doesn't make it true. It has always served a very important purpose, to wit, making sure dumbfucks don't come to the party. Being more inviting to dumbfucks will NOT work out for the better for anyone but the dumbfucks.
              • “Great spirits have always encountered opposition from mediocre minds. The mediocre mind is incapable of understanding the man who refuses to bow blindly to conventional prejudices and chooses instead to express his opinions courageously and honestly.”

                  Albert Einstein

        • I'm fairly arrogant at work. I'm not an asshole..Don't conflate the two.

          Arrogance is counterproductive at work.
          You *might* be a superstar, but there aren't too many of them.
          And, even if you are, you'll gain a better following if you're pleasant to be around.

          Without exception, the arrogant folks I have worked with, were "legends in their own minds". When I had to work on their designs, I found they were no better than anyone else's. But when I went to them with questions about why they did something in a particular way, instead of taking the time to explain, they were dismissi

        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          If you're fairly arrogant, you're most likely an asshole. If you don't think so, you're probably a bigger one than you think.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @11:12AM (#57348768)

        Being confident, when you're also competent, makes you more likely to do something big.

        Being arrogant makes you more likely to walk straight into a catastrophe because you're too much of a dick to question yourself.

        Yes, a lot of people confuse them.

    • Psychology (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:57AM (#57347654)

      Do you think that, maybe, people with anti-social psychological makeups are drawn to a field where they don't really need to talk to anyone to accomplish something?

      Most people would consider me to be a nice guy. Maybe a little off in one way or another, but I'm affable. That doesn't mean that I *like* to talk to people. I'm working from home today. I'm going to write code for nine hours straight without talking to another human being (besides occasionally looking at /. ) I'm perfectly fine with this.

      I work with marketing, services and support people who can't stand not talking. They constantly come around and talk to other people about stuff, not necessarily work related. I don't mind it, but I'd rather not.

      I work with people who come off as jerks if you would meet them in passing, but I understand their mindset. They don't like talking to people. It's not that they hate you, they would rather not interact with you.

      This is the central disconnect, I think. People who are - I guess you can call them introverts - would simply rather not talk to other people. It's not that they don't like women, or minorities, or any other specific category of people. They don't like talking to *people* All inclusive. That doesn't make it OK. That doesn't make them not jerks. But understanding their mindset is important in dealing with them.

      • Re:Psychology (Score:5, Interesting)

        by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:07AM (#57347730)

        I work with people who come off as jerks if you would meet them in passing, but I understand their mindset. They don't like talking to people. It's not that they hate you, they would rather not interact with you.

        That is not an excuse, to be honest. I mean, you don't like talking to other people yet most people would consider you to be a nice guy. Same here, generally speaking. There is no need to be a dick in order not to talk to other people.

        • There is no need to be a dick in order not to talk to other people.

          Absolutely! Which is why at the end of my post I said:

          That doesn't make them not jerks. But understanding their mindset is important in dealing with them.

        • Re:Psychology (Score:5, Interesting)

          by humankind ( 704050 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:37AM (#57348486) Journal

          >There is no need to be a dick in order not to talk to other people.

          The problem here is, "being a dick" is highly subjective and ambiguous.

          We have plenty of other, proper words to describe activities where a person more specifically, materially infringes upon another in unambiguous ways (assault, threats, libel, etc.)

          So what is being an "asshole" or "dick" actually? It's almost exclusively a judgement made by 50% of those in the specific scenario. One person feels another person had emotionally disappointed them. How easy is it to go through life accomplishing greatness in any area, and at the same time making sure every single person you come in contact with, has their particular personal sensibilities pandered to?

          I would also submit that a key component of "being an asshole" involves not following other peopes' desires. But if anything, this is a definition of what a pioneer is. Someone who does their own thing. If you have an associate that you want to behave a certain way, and he behaves differently, it's easy for you to paint him as an "asshole", but maybe his different way yields something that is much more valuable to the community than your acceptances of his demeanor?

          • Re:Psychology (Score:4, Insightful)

            by painandgreed ( 692585 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @12:54PM (#57349572)

            So what is being an "asshole" or "dick" actually? It's almost exclusively a judgement made by 50% of those in the specific scenario. One person feels another person had emotionally disappointed them. How easy is it to go through life accomplishing greatness in any area, and at the same time making sure every single person you come in contact with, has their particular personal sensibilities pandered to?

            Reminds me of something a comedian said: "Comedians are often told they have crossed a line. By the nature of the business, this happens. If you're a comedian and have never been told you have gone too far, you probably aren't going far enough. If you are always being told you have gone too far, you're probably just an asshole."

            Every now and then you will offend somebody. When that happens you just apologize and go on. If you are always offending people and refuse to do anything but justify your position, especially if you feel you are having to pander to people, you're most like assured to be an asshole.

        • Re:Psychology (Score:4, Interesting)

          by h4ck7h3p14n37 ( 926070 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @11:10AM (#57348740) Homepage

          There is no need to be a dick in order not to talk to other people.

          Ideally no, but sometimes people just can't take a hint.

          I work in an open plan office. It is probably the worst environment for the type of work I do (devops). I have a queue of tickets that I'm working and it's technical stuff so I need to focus.

          Since it's an open plan, my "office" has no door and no walls. The noise is out of control, averaging about 70 decibels and peaking at 80 to 85. I wear headphones so I can tune it out and concentrate on my tasks.

          Even though we have a chat system, I still have people walking up to my desk and standing next to me while I'm wearing headphones and clearly busy on another task. The interruption not only derails what I'm currently doing, but it takes additional time to switch contexts and get back into the flow. They could send me a chat message about their problem, or wait until I'm visibly not busy, but no they stand next to me and interrupt.

          Years ago I had someone walk up to my desk, disable the "do not disturb" setting I had enabled on my phone (since I was busy), transfer a call to my desk, take the receiver off hook and hand it to me. I was livid.

          Many times people are simply not respectful when it comes to interrupting someone else. I try to be nice about it, but it's extremely frustrating and if I'm already irritated by the problem I'm working on, I just might yell at the person when they interrupt me for some non-essential item that could have waited until later.

      • Re:Psychology (Score:5, Insightful)

        by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:44AM (#57348552) Journal

        Do you think that, maybe, people with anti-social psychological makeups are drawn to a field where they don't really need to talk to anyone to accomplish something?

        Sure, but it should be made clear to everyone that software engineering is not such a field. You can (and must) accomplish small things without talking to people, but to do anything of real significance communication is an essential skill. You can kind of paper over your anti-social makeup by working only with other people of a similar type, but that creates a closed culture that limits the pool of people you can draw on which creates problems for scaling, for problem solving (limiting the diversity of viewpoints) and for understanding the needs of your customer population, who are almost certainly not the same type of person.

        People who are - I guess you can call them introverts - would simply rather not talk to other people.

        That's not what an introvert is. Most introverts do like talking to other people, we just perceive it as an activity that takes effort and leaves us feeling drained and desiring some alone time to "recharge". A good conversation is enjoyable and worth the effort, but it does take effort. Extroverts feel energized by talking to people. They find doing things alone draining and they need to spend time with other people to "recharge".

        Extroverts tend to be better communicators simply because they get more practice, but introverts can also be excellent communicators if they put the effort into it, through both study and practice. Similarly, extroverts tend to be better at understanding other people because they spend more time at it, but introverts are fully capable.

        • Re:Psychology (Score:5, Insightful)

          by humankind ( 704050 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @12:34PM (#57349378) Journal

          >it should be made clear to everyone that software engineering is not such a field. You can (and must) accomplish small things without talking to people, but to do anything of real significance communication is an essential skill.

          Software engineering is indeed, such a field. You can't offend a computer. Debugging requires zero politesse.

          What you're talking about, requiring significant communication skills is an entirely different discipline: marketing.

          • >it should be made clear to everyone that software engineering is not such a field. You can (and must) accomplish small things without talking to people, but to do anything of real significance communication is an essential skill.

            Software engineering is indeed, such a field.

            You're dead wrong. Programming can be done without communicating much with other humans, but only as long as the program is small enough to be created by a single person. Software engineering is programming at scale, creating large systems that no one person could produce, or fully understand, and it cannot be done solo.

            You can't offend a computer. Debugging requires zero politesse.

            Sure, but you can offend any of the other five members of your team, or any member of the dozen or so other teams with which you collaborate.

            What you're talking about, requiring significant communication skills is an entirely different discipline: marketing.

            You not only don't know what software engineeri

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by gosand ( 234100 )

      I have always maintained that software development requires technical skill, but unless you do it alone it's really hard to work on a team if you are an asshole. Many times people put up with the assholes because they are good technically. But if you can be technically good AND get along with people... you and everyone else will be much better off.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:09AM (#57347758) Homepage Journal

      You can be both; a good coder and a good person. Being deficient in a healthy human emotion shouldn't be a badge of honor.

      I think that some people get interested in tech because they haven't learned how to interact with people, for whatever reason. People are arguably more interesting than computers, but they are also more frustrating. I was raised by a single mother who avoided life. She didn't have a social life, so I didn't learn to interact with humans as a child. I had to figure that out on my own, and without the influence of the scruz geek scene I could easily have ended up as an incel white supremacist since I scarcely even saw a person of color until I was a teenager. I was even raised to be a homophobe, not so much by my parents, but by the kids around me at school to whom "gay" (&c) was an insult.

      I'm still not much of a programmer, although over the years I've picked up the basics, but I always had a keen interest in computers. Finally, a complex system to which I could learn to relate without help! All I needed was the documentation, and time. I got involved before the explosive growth of the internet, so I participated in BBSing. And the tone of messages in forums was adversarial and snarky, so I learned to be adversarial and snarky long before I learned to be caring, or forgiving. I learned to respect technical skills before I learned to respect personal skills. That led to work as a systems administrator, but it didn't lead to happy relationships.

      I work in medicine, and while many fail at empathy, at least there is a focus on it.

      What? Must not be in the US. Here, the focus is on profit, and on treating people like machines. Get them in and out of the office with as little actual human interaction as possible.

    • Being anti-social and lacking empathy [...] makes you an asshole

      No, that's a totally false statement. Neither of the traits — neither individually nor together — are a prerequisites to being an asshole, nor are sufficient to be one.

      There are empathic assholes — using their perception of your emotions to their own ends. There are also nice introverts — you just have to communicate with them explicitly, rather than expect them to understand you via unspoken clues.

      I work in medicine

      ...

    • by jwymanm ( 627857 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:12AM (#57347790) Homepage
      Why isn't everyone perfect?? I'm sure everyone at The New Yorker treats everyone fairly and this Linus Torvalds guy is a horrible monster outlier. Or maybe it could just be men that are focused and practiced enough to be kernel/device driver programmers didn't take time hanging around a bunch of people who share their feels on snapchats every 5 seconds. Maybe instead of going out with a group of friends to the bar last night he was in a dark room with glowing monitors until 3am ironing out a bug or 30 and responding to emails from other devs doing the same thing across the world. It takes sacrifices to be a certain type of person. Not everyone is meant to be social and friendly and courteous because that takes time and effort away from I dunno launching an entire Kernel project that represents your entire life's work.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by chill ( 34294 )

        No. Not being a jerk does not take extra effort, nor does it take time away from your work. Not being social or friendly and focusing intensely on something is not what Linus was talking about. You can be brief, to the point, and cut through all the bullshit without being abrasive and resorting to ad hominem attacks.

        "No thanks" is just as quick and to the point as "Fuck off, I'm busy".

        • by orlanz ( 882574 )

          To add to the other's voices. When you are passionate about something, it takes a LOT of work and causes a lot of internal stress to calmly tell someone that they are wrong or they need to do better. I write emails all the time where I am a total dick because of all the really stupid ideas (personal opinion of course) I heard on a design call. But then I go cool off, come back, and rewrite it in a "professional" manner before hitting send.

          This is the way I have learned to cope with it. And it takes effo

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      1) Not everyone you perceive to be an asshole is an asshole. Cultural differences play a big role here. Where I'm from, being blunt is appreciated and when we visit the US we perceive everyone as being 'fake'. (Which doesn't mean Americans are in fact fake, but it goes to show the significant difference.)

      2) Being empathetic does not make you a good person. Some people, and among coders perhaps more so, do not empathize. At best they can be taught emulate empathy.

      3) Your obliviousness to the above suggests y

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Being anti-social and lacking empathy doesn't make you a better coder, it makes you an asshole.

      I often wonder if those people crying foul acting all outraged and offended all the time ever even bother to listen to themselves while spewing their own hate filled intolerant gibberish.

      You are passing judgment and calling people assholes. What the fuck does that make you? A nice person? Are you god?

      You can be both; a good coder and a good person.

      Torvalds is a better person than you will ever be.

      Being deficient in a healthy human emotion shouldn't be a badge of honor.

      Please let everyone know what emotions are healthy and which ones are not. We wouldn't want to be deemed to be deficient in anything by yourself... god forb

    • by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @10:08AM (#57348270) Homepage

      Being anti-social and lacking empathy doesn't make you a better coder, it makes you an asshole. You can be both; a good coder and a good person. Being deficient in a healthy human emotion shouldn't be a badge of honor.

      I work in medicine, and while many fail at empathy, at least there is a focus on it.

      Linus is many things, but he is not a "tech-bro" in the modern valley sense. This seems orthogonal to the original discussion, as startup/Silicon Valley/Web 3.0 Culture is toxic for far more reasons than simply the kernel maintainer chewing you out if you try to commit really bad design flaws into it.

  • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:40AM (#57347526)

    The name TorValds has possibly appropos meanings in Norwegian and German. In Norwegian it means "many threats" or "much daring" according to a raw text translation. (presumably it's more nuanced and related to Thor if you are Norwegian).

    In German it text translated to a "Array of building openings" or a "forest of Doors". Which I think sounds like a description of "Windows" on an office building.

    • A common Norwegian would likely interpret "Torvalds" as genitive of Torvald (a somewhat common male name). Only bad punsters could interpret "tor-valds" as the genitive of Tor's violence. If aforementioned punsters are into hunting they could even interpret "Tor-valds" as the genitive of Tor's hunting grounds.
    • by fisted ( 2295862 )

      In German it text translated to a "Array of building openings" or a "forest of Doors".

      What a load of nonsense. Your sig is oddly appropriate.

  • Hypothesis (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:40AM (#57347530)

    It seems more and more certain that Linus has indeed fallen to one of the "honeypots" and is being blackmailed.

    I hope nothing bad happens to Linus. Other lives have been ruined by the suspected group of people.

  • He's a douche (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:42AM (#57347540)

    I always though Linus was a bit of a douche bag, but really, a lot of intelligent people who achieve "fame" or success relatively young are. I think the same personality type that leads to the dedication needed to create something as important as Linux, also tends to create less than stellar human beings.

    • Re:He's a douche (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:57AM (#57347646)

      I always though Linus was a bit of a douche bag, but really, a lot of intelligent people who achieve "fame" or success relatively young are. I think the same personality type that leads to the dedication needed to create something as important as Linux, also tends to create less than stellar human beings.

      You need a lesson on douchebaggery. Coders like Poettering are douchebags. His code will fuck up everything that others do and he maintains that it is working as designed. Not a bug. Won't fix. EVERYONE ELSE has to work around his assholery. Linus puts up with none of that shit and will tell you to your face that you suck and your code sucks. That makes him abrasive but definitely not a douchebag. The fact that others have to retreat to their safe spaces after being called out for shit work does not constitute douchebaggery on Linus' part. Do your best work and you won't be called out. If you can't do acceptable work that won't get you called out, maybe you aren't kernel developer material.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:42AM (#57347542)

    So? Linux has likely become successful exactly because of the behaviour of the developers. There's no 'fluffing' anything, it's simply good enough to go in, or shit and shouldn't be in. Linux has succeeded, and is in great shape and this has been the way since it started and likely the 'behaviour' has contributed to that directly.

    If that's what it takes for this to keep succeeding, should it change? Probably not.

    • by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:29AM (#57347940) Homepage

      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that. — George Carlin

      In corporate America, so much of being part of a business involves learning to suffer fools. In some way I am envious that, for this little small corner, someone gets to run the experiment of what happens if you stop playing the participation trophy game and refuse to sugar coat things to idiots when they do something really wrong.

      But, it's one thing to tell people they're wrong and wasting your time bluntly. It's another to rip someone a new asshole, making sure they know you think they're being an idiot, which is very much Torvalds' style. I'm sure most people have met someone who rules by fear rather than leadership. These overly-emotional assholes are often fools themselves, but Linus is the rare form of asshole who happens to be smart and have solid logic behind the emotion. That makes me think twice about it, but doesn't exempt him from criticism for shitty leadership. I'm glad he's acknowledged the err of his ways -- there's a lot of room for him to improve while still offering blunt efficiency.

      • You'd have a point about "ripping people a new one" if Linux kernel development had a more conventional development structure. However the way Linux kernel development works is by having responsibility go up the chain in such a way that lead maintainers are personally responsible for catching clear bugs regardless if they were the ones who caused them. The system is set up very specifically in a way where junior developers are expected to make mistakes and their seniors expected to catch them all the way to
  • Cult? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:45AM (#57347566) Homepage

    referring to Torvalds's abusive behavior. "He's built up this cult of personality, this cult of importance"

    I'd like to see at least a couple of proofs of this egregiously dubious statement.

    • At face value it just sounds like someone who's butthurt.

    • Re:Cult? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:11AM (#57347786) Journal

      referring to Torvalds's abusive behavior. "He's built up this cult of personality, this cult of importance"

      I'd like to see at least a couple of proofs of this egregiously dubious statement.

      Yeah, for one thing it's not a "cult" if you actually deliver the miracles, lol Which Linus did.

      If folks disagree, they can show everyone how easy it is to make (and manage) a Unix workalike. Maybe they could get a head start by using Hurd ...

    • What people use to paint an overly negative picture of his rants is chopped up sentences from that one genuinely bad rant from 2003 (IIRC) made to look like multiple rants over the years. However since then he's not really gone beyond calling people "morons", "retarded" or "idiots" in rants that explain why he thinks that way.
  • by Rambo Tribble ( 1273454 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:46AM (#57347576) Homepage
    ... I have to ask, does this mean you can suggest women are more influenced by abusive behavior, and that's not sexist?
    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:16AM (#57347838)

      Apparently you can suggest women are generally weak, sensitive and easily insulted without being sexist. Personally, I find such suggestions hugely misogynistic.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:52AM (#57347626)

    Summary is confusing. It's talking about Linus's straight-forward or aggressive behavior and is then talks about women being discouraged from working on the kernel, as if those are related. But is there actually sexism that has been demonstrated within the kernel dev community, or is it just implied that women are less capable of working in high-stress or tense situations and that men need to act more fluffy?

    That implication sounds more sexist than how the kernel dev community has operated.

    Of course it's somehow unthinkable to draw the conclusions that fewer women work on the kernel because fewer women want to work on the kernel.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:58AM (#57347660)

    "He's built up this cult of personality, this cult of importance."

    1) He created the Linux kernel, which is one of the most essential pieces of software in computing today. Everything else sits on an operating system, which is the thing which interfaces with the hardware.

    2) He created a wholly new management method and workflow, for this open source, distributed development process.

    Casually brushing these two points aside, like he's some unremarkable CEO, doesn't do the man's achievements justice.

    Once things are created, people take them for granted, like a kernel or a country.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 20, 2018 @08:58AM (#57347662)

    Of course it's women

    It's hilarious that hardly anyone cares thst he was mean to men, it's the WOMEN that must be coddled.

    This is obviously a patronizing move, but "progressive" ppl are stupid, so they can't see that

  • Ah (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:03AM (#57347708) Journal

    Linux's elite developers, who are overwhelmingly male, tend to share their leader's aggressive self-confidence. There are very few women among the most prolific contributors, though the foundation and researchers estimate that roughly ten per cent of all Linux coders are women.

    So women are the same as men, and if you don't think so, you are a knuckle dragging sexist.

    On the other hand, women are so different from men that they bring magical special goodness to a project. So we need to do whatever we can to bring them in.

    • Apologies for the wrong-think, but it's almost as if you just pointed out why the western notion of diversity is total nonsense.

  • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:07AM (#57347738)

    Linus didn't "build up this cult of personality, this cult of importance", he actually built one of the most important pieces of software on the planet. People respect and accept his behavior because he delivers. Nobody ever forced anybody to work with Linus.

    If you don't like someone, don't work with them. If you don't like a company, don't buy their products. If you don't like who an open source project is run, fork the project and do better. Stop intruding into other people's business.

    It's a choice I exercise frequently.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:08AM (#57347750)

    And by all available, reasonably hard facts, it is because women in general want to become engineers significantly less often than men. Stop complaining, let women decide what they want to do in life and accept that! And no, it is not discrimination, harassment or "the patriarchy". It is just that women are fully capable human beings that can make their own decisions on what they want to do in life.

    As a result, you will have significantly less female contributors in any larger tech project, whether in leadership position or more hands-on position. Again, stop complaining about this, it is by choice and it actually shows that women these days make their own decisions regarding what career they want. Implying that all these women that decide not to go into engineering are weak, oppressed little children that cannot make their own decisions or run away crying as soon as some hasher words are used (as is frequently done by "feminists") is one of the most misogynistic and repulsive things I know.

  • by Hall ( 962 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:12AM (#57347792)

    Does he reject code written by women ? Probably .... if it's bad code!. Does he know if a male or female wrote it ? Only based on the submitter's email address which can easily be faked or changed I would presume.

  • From the villain saddling the world with Windoz — and actively sabotaging compatibility with other people's software (DR-DOS, Samba), perception of Bill Gates has been gradually rising over the past 20 years — even on Slashdot, where the supposed "nerds" really ought to know better.

    And now a very personal attack on Linux and Linus (if you can even separate the two) — who, along with the BSDs and GNU have been providing the computing world with the alternatives.

    If New Yorker is not partakin

  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:24AM (#57347910)
    Current social norms assume that diversity is universally beneficial for any organization working on any project. While it is obviously true for any human-facing organization, it is less clear that infrastructure projects like Linux would benefit. While diversity can be beneficial, its not without its drawbacks and costs that should be considered. For example, uniformity makes it easier to standardize or build consensus. Diversity can lead to increase of in-group formation, politicing, and turf wars.

    The question that should be objectively examined, but is likely impossible to do so in a current political climate, is whether increasing diversity of the Linux contributors would lead to a better Linux kernel. Empirically, merit-based approach worked well up to this point and it isn't clear that it should be replaced by diversity-based approach. It is conceivable that all-white, all-male, all-antisocial, all-hostile group of kernel developers would produce the best possible kernel.
    • I'm not even convinced it's best for all human facing organizations. I would not want my country to be defended by a woman-led army, would not work

  • by Idisagree ( 4302481 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:38AM (#57348014)

    I knew this was a hit piece!

    Please go look at who's behind the sadistic COC , yes the feminazi troll who caused Linus to fall on his sword: Coraline Ada Ehmke, , she's a real peach!

    - a fully signed up member of the patriarchy.

  • by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:54AM (#57348156)

    . . . and promote and value excellent contributions, or you can care more about someones' feelz above all else. Linux just chose the latter, initiating a well-known downward spiral of complaining and inevitable technical stagnation that's been seen many times before once these CoCs are introduced into open source projects. At the end of the day, these two things are mutually exclusive, thanks to the everything-offends-me-and-if you-don't-agree-you're-a-misogynist-racist SJW brigade. This is the logical conclusion of weaponizing CoCs which target straight white males from the get-go, particularly those authored by people who hate the idea of meritocracy [postmeritocracy.org].

    Guess what? The real world doesn't give a *fuck* how you feel, especially in unforgiving disciplines like engineering and tech. Life ain't fair, and 99%+ of the people contributing to Linux don't give two shits about social justice one way or the other. Open source is *not* a social movement! Those people are there to code -- well -- and because they're adults they can handle a rant or two every one in awhile and even a nasty, well-deserved public undressing, and they don't need one of these batshit-crazy CoCs to tell them how to behave. The simple addition of "Don't be an asshole" would've addressed the specific concern without throwing the baby out with the bathwater while giving power to those who don't necessarily deserve it.

  • The accusation (Score:5, Insightful)

    by peppepz ( 1311345 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @09:59AM (#57348190)
    The prosecutors measured that he used 1,070 times the word "crap" on the LKML. However, they couldn't be bothered to filter away the occurrences of the word inside quoted replies:

    We did not disambiguate profanity in quoted replies versus original utterances, but we did count profanities in Subject: headers.

    so that number will include repetitions and other people's craps, and as such it does not accurately measure the magnitude of the defendant's crime. I believe that the inquisition should be repeated with more scrupulous zeal.
    And remember, even though he says that he's sorry, we're still talking about a male here, therefore he's not to be trusted: he could start again uttering mild profanities at any time.

  • by Shemmie ( 909181 ) on Thursday September 20, 2018 @02:10PM (#57350200)

    How they had the foresight to write the story before the events occurred.

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

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