--- title: Contributor Code of Conduct sidebar: true ... # Peace on Earth to all men of good will May you do good and not evil. May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others. May you share freely, never taking more than you give. # Operational Security A huge problem with software that relates to privacy and/or to money is that frequently strange and overcomplicated design decisions are made, (passive tense because it is strangely difficult to find who made those decisions), decisions whose only apparent utility is to provide paths for hostile organizations to exploit subtle, complex, and unobvious security holes. McAffee reported that this is a result of plants - the state plants engineers in nominally private organizations to create backdoors. Shortly after he reported this he was arrested and murdered by the US government. (To be precise he was arrested at the instigation of the US government, and then "mysteriously" murdered while in prison. Prison murders remain "mysterious" only if carried out by the state.) These holes are often designed so that they can only be utilized efficiently by a huge organization with a huge datacentre that collects enormous numbers of hashes and enormous amounts of data, and checks enormous numbers of hashes against an even more enormous number of potential pre-images generated from that data. Another huge problem is that if we get penetrated by enemy shills, entryists, and buggers, as the Patriot Front is and the Jan Sixth protestors were, we are likely to wind up like the January sixth protestors, who as I write this are imprisoned indefinitely being tortured by black guards recently imported from the northern part of black Africa, awaiting trial with no likelihood of any actual trial for years. Recall that when the Ethereum project began, key contributers were grabbed by the FBI on vague trumped charges, held incommunicado, and threatened with thirty five years imprisonment and never seeing their children again, and since then the Ethereum project has been strangely cooperative with state objectives. Satoshi maintained cast iron operational security when Bitcoin was getting started. The Ethereum foundation failed to do so, with people acting under their own official government names and tax numbers, and as result, was nobbled. ## No namefags A participant who can be targeted is likely to introduce unobvious security flaws into the software architecture. All contributors should make some effort to protect themselves against a third party subsequently coercing them to use the reputation that they have obtained by contributing to make subsequent harmful contributions. For example when Telegram founders visited the US, they caught heat. All contributors will use a unique name and avatar for the purpose of contributing to this project, and shall not link it to other names of theirs that are potentially subject to pressure. In the event of videoconferencing, the participants shall wear a mask over the lower part of their face that conceals the shape of their mouth and jaw and a rigid hat like a fedora that conceals the shape of the upper part their head. Apart from your mouth, the parts of your face that communicate non verbal information turn out to be surprisingly useless for identifying individuals. If you wear glasses, should not wear your usual glasses, because facial recognition software is very good at recognizing glasses, and easily distracted, confused, and thrown off by unusual glasses. Even if there are gaping holes in our security, which there will be, and even if everyone knows another name of a participant, which they will, no need to make the hole even bigger by mentioning it in public. People who lack security are likely to result in code that lacks security. They come under pressure to introduce an odd architecture for inexplicable reasons. We see this happening all the time in cryptographic products. # Code will be cryptographically and pseudonymously signed Everyone participating in the project should have a username unrelated to the name and identity that they use for other purposes, and an ssh key that they use signing commits to this project, and for no other purpose, separate from any key used for signing in to remote machines, and located in the `.git` directory of their local repository (not their `.ssh` directory, for public keys in the `.ssh` directory get exposed to too many machines, revealing a relationship between nym and network address) with the public key also located in the `.gitsigners` file, where it is shared with everyone through the upstream repository Note that the file is called `.gitsigners`, not `.gitallowedsigners`, `gittrustedsigners` nor `.gitapprovedsigners`. Everyone should sign every commit, everyone who submits a pull request or otherwise makes their commits available to others should add themselves to the `.gitsigners` file and if their commits are good, eventually other people will trust them. When we are truly eating our own dogfood, will not need a `.gitsigners` file, because we will have a public ever growing data structure creating a unique append only mapping between public keys and arbitrary data. Of necessity, we will rest our developer identities on ssh keys, until we can eat our own dogfood and use our own system's cryptographic keys. Login identities shall have no password reset, because that is a security hole. People should rely on ssh for login. Every pull request should be made using `git request-pull`, (rather than some web UI, for the web UI is apt to identify people through the domain name system and their login identities.) The start argument of `git request-pull` should correspond to a signed commit by the person requested, and the end argument to a signed and tagged commit by the person requesting. When creating the tag for a pull request, git drops one into an editor and asks one to describe the tag. One should then give a lengthy description of one's pull request documenting the changes made. When accepting a pull request, the information provided by the requestor through the tag and elsewhere should be duplicated by the acceptor into the (possibly quite lengthy) merge message. Thus all changes should be made, explained, and approved by persons identified cryptographically, rather than through the domain name system. ## setting up automatic git signing of commits Suppose you choose the nym "`gandalf`". (First make sure that no one else is using your nym by glancing at the `.gitsigners` file, which should be in sorted order, and if it is not, run the linux sort command on it) then at the root of your repository ```bash ssh-keygen -t ed25519 - C gandalf -f .git/gandalf #to create your key pair git config user.signingkey .git/gandalf.pub #tell git to use this key pair git config user.name gandalf #will be ignored git config user.email gandalf@ #fake email will be ignored git config include.path ../.gitconfig #sets various defaults, ssh signing among them ``` Then add\ `gandalf ssh-ed25519 «your-public-key-as-in-gandalf.pub»`\ to the .gitsigners file to publish your public key to anyone who wants to make sure that commits are from the nym that they claim to be -- at least claim to be when their commits are displayed by the git aliases of `.gitconfig` The nym in `.gitsigners` is the one that matters, though `user.email` and `user.name` should be the same or sufficiently related to show you are not up to anything funny. # No race, sex, religion, nationality, or sexual preference ![On the internet nobody knows you are a dog](../images/nobody_know_you_are_a_dog.webp) Everyone shall be white, male, heterosexual, and vaguely Christian, even if they quite obviously are not, but no one shall unnecessarily and irrelevantly reveal their actual race, sex, religion, or political orientation. Unnecessarily informing people one is female or Jewish or nonwhite should get similar treatment to unnecessarily informing people one is a pure blooded Aryan. All faiths shall be referred to respectfully. Even if they happen to be making war on us, this software may not be very relevant to that kind of warfare, in which case that discussion can be held elsewhere. All sovereigns shall be referred to respectfully, if they are referred to at all, which they should not be. If this software is likely to frustrate their objectives, or even contribute to their overthrow, no need to make it personal, no need to trigger our enemies. War will come to us soon enough, no need to go looking for it. # No preaching supererogation Status must be on the basis of code, good code, and clever code, not on cheap claims of superior virtue. When someone plays the holier than thou card, he does not intend to share what we are sharing. Out of envy and covetousness, he intends to deny us what we are sharing, to deny us that which is ours. If he is holier than we are, he not only wants what we have, which we will gladly share. He wants us to not have what we have. Christians are required to turn the other cheek, and people attempting to maintain a politically neutral environment need to turn the other cheek. But you very quickly run out of cheeks, and then it is on. You cannot be politically neutral when the other guy is not being neutral. You have to bring a gun to a gunfight and a faith to a holy war. People who start politics in an environment intended to be politically neutral have to be purged, and a purge cannot be conducted in a politically neutral manner. You have to target the enemy faith and purge it as the demon worshiping heresy that it is, or else those attempting to maintain political neutrality will themselves be purged as heretics, as happened to the Open Source and Free Software movements. You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you. We want to maintain a politically, racially, religiously, and ethnically neutral environment, but it takes two to tango. You cannot maintain a politically neutral environment in a space where an enemy faction wants their politics to rule. Neutrality cannot actually be neutral. It merely means that the quietly ruling faction is quiet, tolerant of its opponents, and does not demand affirmations of faith. If an enemy faith wants to take over, the ruling faith can no longer be quiet and tolerant of that opponent. ## No claims of doing good to random unknown beneficiaries We are doing this for ourselves, our friends, our kin, and our posterity, not for strangers a thousand miles away, and we only care about strangers a thousand miles away to the extent that they are likely to enable us to make money by making them secure. If someone mentions the troubles of people a thousand miles away, it should only be in the frame that we will likely have similar troubles soon enough, or that those people a thousand miles away, of a different race, religion, and language, could use our product to their, and our, mutual advantage, not because he cares deeply for the welfare of far away strangers that he has never met in places he could not find on a map. ## No victim classes, no identity politics, and no globalism The Open Source and Free Software movements were destroyed by official victimhood. Status and leadership must be on the basis of code, good code, and clever code, not on cheap claims of superior oppression. The experience of the Open Source and Free Software movement demonstrates that if victimhood is high status, code and code quality must be low status. If victimhood is high status then “you did not build that”. Rather, if victimhood is high status, then good code, silicon fabs, and rockets spontaneously emerged from the fertile soil of sub-Saharan Africa, and was stolen by white male rapists from the brave and stunning black warrior women of sub-Saharan Africa, and social justice demands that the courageous advocate for the brave and stunning black warrior women of sub-Saharan Africa takes what you have, what you gladly would share, away from you. Unless, when a female contributor unnecessarily and irrelevantly informs everyone she is female, she is told that she is seeking special treatment on account of sex, and is not going to get it, no organization or group that attempts to develop software is going to survive. Linux is a dead man walking. # Style `.gitconfig` adds several git aliases: 1. `git utcmt` to do a commit without recording your timezone in the git history 1. `git lg` to display the .gitsigner trust information for the last few commits. 1. `git graph` to graph the commit tree with signing status 1. `git alias` to display the git aliases. We ignore the Gpg Web of Trust model, and instead use the Zooko identity model. We use ssh signatures to verify that remote repository code is coming from an unchanging entity, not for Gpg Web of Trust. Web of Trust is too complicated and too user hostile to be workable or safe. No one ever used it in the intended manner. The web of trust model was written around email, to protect against physhing and spearphysh attacks. And who uses email for discussions and coordination these days? That was useful in back in the days when when everything important was happening on mailing lists like the cypherpunks mailing list. But even back in the day the web of trust model had too many moving parts to be very useful. In practice people only used Zooko identity, and Web of Trust was a cloud of confusing complexity and user hostile interface on top of Zooko identity. What gpg identity is primarily used for in practice is to make sure you are getting the latest release from the same repository managed by the same person as you got the previous release - which is Zooko identity, not Web of Trust identity, and has no real relationship to email. Zooko identity is about constancy of identity, Web of Trust is about rightful use of email addresses. Web of trust was a true names mechanism, and today no one speaks the truth under their true name. Web of trust was designed for a high trust society - but in a high trust society you don't need it, and in a low trust society, the name servers were too vulnerable to enemy action, and died, leaving the Web of Trust user interface in every installed copy of gpg a useless obstacle.