I guess it will take some time for the dust to settle and assess the damage and full course of events.
Regardless, from the looks of it so far, this Community Manager should probably be placed on forced leave and be stripped of all privileges, pending a thorough investigation. A psychiatric evaluation might also be warranted. Not because of any political ideology, but simply to assess if this person could and should be held accountable, legally and maybe even financially, for the inflicted damage to Godot as a project/product.
So far, it doesn't look good. Many years of hard work (maybe not so much code development but pretty much everything else) may have been irreparably damaged if not evaporated in mere days. Personally, I've been several times in a position where I considered Godot as the basis for application development. In hindsight I am now relieved I did not, for this drama would have turned that into a serious business liability. I can only imagine the (financial) implications for other companies who did pick Godot as a tech to build part of their business upon. While that may be considered collateral and "just the price of doing business", I'd would certainly hold this individual personally responsible for that damage. While a fork may mitigate some of the damage already done, it is not going to fix what went sideways here.
Based on just a cursory observation from what happened here, there is no doubt in my mind that (regardless of motivation or justification) this individual should never wield this much power, ever again. If Godot leadership does not take these actions back (into their own hands), it may find itself held accountable for the results of this situation. They may want to go find an experienced law firm too. I doubt this will be the end of this drama for them. While Open Source licenses may divert/absolve legal liability for technical/functionality/code-quality aspects, the same might not be true for liability as the result of harm-inducing behavior of individual people (like the kind that appears to have happened here).
If nothing else, let this episode be a lesson for doing proper vetting of people in a position of (potential) power. As most serious businesses know all too well, having anyone with opinions on the extremities of any ideological/political spectrum in a position of power, is typically not a bright idea. Though in this case I’d personally argue it’s a lot worse and appears to involve a mentally unhinged individual. Any reasonable person would have considered and reconsidered the implications of the actions so far taken .. and even then still waited for a considerable body of group consensus would have approved these actions before pressing the red button.
What are you even talking about? Damage? Legal issues?! It’s an open source project, not a licensed engine. What effect would any of this have on your business? Even if you get banned from the repo, just pull the code using another account and you’re good to go. You’re expending a whole lot of effort to rant about something that is essentially meaningless (and invisible) to the vast majority of current and potential Godot users, unless they have a comically large political axe to grind.
Unnecessary drama is (unfortunately) a time-honored tradition of the open source community. But, e.g., Linus Torvalds’ antics never curtailed the adoption of Linux.
At the end of the day, the only thing that matters is the product.
FOSS dramas we knew from the past were around technical topics mostly where devs have differing views (to system-d or to not to system-d, GNOME file picker, etc) while Godot's drama is anything but technical, but only around the world views and identity politics of the CM.
Regardless, from the looks of it so far, this Community Manager should probably be placed on forced leave and be stripped of all privileges, pending a thorough investigation. A psychiatric evaluation might also be warranted. Not because of any political ideology, but simply to assess if this person could and should be held accountable, legally and maybe even financially, for the inflicted damage to Godot as a project/product.
So far, it doesn't look good. Many years of hard work (maybe not so much code development but pretty much everything else) may have been irreparably damaged if not evaporated in mere days. Personally, I've been several times in a position where I considered Godot as the basis for application development. In hindsight I am now relieved I did not, for this drama would have turned that into a serious business liability. I can only imagine the (financial) implications for other companies who did pick Godot as a tech to build part of their business upon. While that may be considered collateral and "just the price of doing business", I'd would certainly hold this individual personally responsible for that damage. While a fork may mitigate some of the damage already done, it is not going to fix what went sideways here.
Based on just a cursory observation from what happened here, there is no doubt in my mind that (regardless of motivation or justification) this individual should never wield this much power, ever again. If Godot leadership does not take these actions back (into their own hands), it may find itself held accountable for the results of this situation. They may want to go find an experienced law firm too. I doubt this will be the end of this drama for them. While Open Source licenses may divert/absolve legal liability for technical/functionality/code-quality aspects, the same might not be true for liability as the result of harm-inducing behavior of individual people (like the kind that appears to have happened here).
If nothing else, let this episode be a lesson for doing proper vetting of people in a position of (potential) power. As most serious businesses know all too well, having anyone with opinions on the extremities of any ideological/political spectrum in a position of power, is typically not a bright idea. Though in this case I’d personally argue it’s a lot worse and appears to involve a mentally unhinged individual. Any reasonable person would have considered and reconsidered the implications of the actions so far taken .. and even then still waited for a considerable body of group consensus would have approved these actions before pressing the red button.