This commit addresses feedback that came up in a Fedora Discussion topic about whether Telegram groups are official or unofficial. The Code of Conduct was written at a time when we were only beginning to use Matrix more formally in the project. Since the time that the Code of Conduct was published, we have now shifted completely to Fedora Discussion and Fedora Chat/Matrix as our official chat platforms, as verified by the Communications page.
It might be more wise to link out to the Communications page in the Project docs, but for now, this commit addresses an important clarification about where the Code of Conduct is more rigidly applied and where it is more challenging to enforce.
This commit addresses feedback that came up in a Fedora Discussion topic about whether Telegram groups are official or unofficial. The Code of Conduct was written at a time when we were only beginning to use Matrix more formally in the project. Since the time that the Code of Conduct was published, we have now shifted completely to Fedora Discussion and Fedora Chat/Matrix as our official chat platforms, as verified by the Communications page.
It might be more wise to link out to the Communications page in the Project docs, but for now, this commit addresses an important clarification about where the Code of Conduct is more rigidly applied and where it is more challenging to enforce.
ref: https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/the-status-of-the-telegram-groups-within-the-project/172185/13