Good. Cost is low to make these changes, even if they have "little real impact" (a common complaint), they're worth making to demonstrate exactly how arbitrary language is to change.
Ten years from now no one will even remember or care that master/slave was a term in computing.
> Ten years from now no one will even remember or care that master/slave was a term in computing.
I don't think it will take them that long to regret this change. Now that everyone knows linux will just roll over, they'll push for greater changes to the "Code of Conduct." Then developers will get deplatformed at an alarming rate. And I'll have my popcorn ready. It'll be quite the show.
It's not inevitable. It can be resisted. It takes a leader who can stand up to the pressure and say no. That's not a trivial thing. The pressure is considerable, especially these days.
> they're worth making to demonstrate exactly how arbitrary language is to change
Why is that so important? Also, who doesn't know that? Plenty of changes over the past few decades, for example "restroom". Language changes all the time.
Not good, it only serves to increase the precedent for hijacking unrelated concepts for political purposes. Language has meaning, twisting that meaning to ascribe negative connotations to terms is divisive and counterproductive. Calling everything and everyone racist devalues the term 'racist' after which a new term for (the actual concept of) racism needs to be found.
I'm not certain that the cost actually is low. My company also announced that they'll be making similar changes. They mentioned there are over 4000 mentions of "master" in our Confluence docs. And they're all not in the same context, so someone will have to read over each instance and change it on a case by case basis. Between these changes and all the PRs that will have to be created to remove master branches / alter CI pipelines, etc., this will easily require thousands of dollars worth of wages. Globally, this is a multi-million dollar effort. And for what gain? Are slaves around the world going to appreciate that techies will no longer be burned with being reminded of their existence?
I'm surprised at how many people don't initially remember what Y2K means, since it was a huge thing that everybody was talking about about for about 6 months before and 2 weeks after. Mention it now, and virtually everyone says "Hah, I forgot about that!"
Ten years from now no one will even remember or care that master/slave was a term in computing.