Response Guide¶
This is a Code of Conduct (CoC) incident response guide used by the Code of Conduct Committee and LLVM event organizers.
Code of Conduct Committee¶
All responses to Code of Conduct reports will be managed by a Code of Conduct Committee.
Additional Code of Conduct Response Teams¶
In-person events will have an additional response team to immediately respond to an incident. For example:
Each LLVM Developers’ Meeting has a Code of Conduct response team.
For LLVM meetups, the local organizers will be the first point of contact.
Any other event funded by the LLVM Foundation or listed on the LLVM website, will have a code of conduct response team or point of contact for CoC reports.
These teams should determine if an immediate response is needed before sending the report to the Code of Conduct committee.
Receiving a Report¶
Reports are typically received by email (conduct@llvm.org) or in person from the reporter or event CoC response team.
When receiving a report by email, the CoC Committee should acknowledge receipt within 24 hours. The acknowledgement should be understanding and compassionate but no commitment should be made on whether this is a violation or which action will be taken. Specific guidance is in the checklist below.
For in-person events that have a violation reported, the report should be sent to the Code of Conduct committee within 24 hours by the on-site CoC response team.
Immediate Response Checklist¶
The CoC committee generally works, decides, and communicates together. If the report indicates that an immediate response is required and other committee members are not available, any committee member may take the immediate action they think is necessary. In-person Code of Conduct response teams should use this checklist to determine if an immediate response is needed.
If the incident involves physical danger, contact the appropriate law enforcement or event security immediately. Ensure the reporter feels safe and stay with them if possible until help arrives.
If the act is ongoing and involves harassment or threats against someone in any space (online or physical), any appropriate response (e.g., ban, physical removal, or moderation) may be used to immediately stop it.
For events that include talks, organizers should end talks early if the violations include harassment or violent threats. There may be talks where other types of code of conduct violations occur and organizers should do their best to determine if a talk should be ended early or not.
When undertaking an immediate response, document the action and notify the committee within 24 hours.
Response Procedure¶
The following is a summary of the steps the committee takes when responding to a reported incident.
Determine if there is a need for an immediate response.
Acknowledge the report within 24 hours.
Discuss the incident report, gather more information, and determine a resolution.
During this process, the reporter will be informed of the resolution and feedback is requested. This feedback may or may not be used to re-evaluate the resolution.
Inform the reportee of the resolution. The reportee is provided options to appeal.
The resolution is implemented.
All reports, data, notes, and resolutions are logged in a private location (e.g., Google Drive or other database).
The committee will never make public statements about a resolution and will only publish transparency reports. If a public statement is necessary and requested by the committee, it will be given by the LLVM Foundation Board of Directors.
Report Acknowledgement¶
When a report is received, the committee will reply to the reporter to confirm receipt within 24 hours of the incident being reported.
This acknowledgement will contain:
Acknowledgement of the incident report
Next steps of the committee for responding to the incident
Reminder of confidentiality policy regarding the report and parties involved
All incident reports should be assessed if they require immediate response and acted on accordingly.
Incident Response Assessment¶
The committee will assess the incident and determine an appropriate response. The assessment will be documented and retained in records. Here are some guidelines for the process:
Review report documentation to determine the content and context of the incident.
Request additional information if needed from the reporter.
Determine if it occurred within the scope of the CoC.
Determine if it violated the CoC and specifically which part.
Consult documentation of past incidents for patterns of behavior (if available and applicable).
Follow up with the reportee to get their view or any other additional information.
Determine appropriate resolutions to the incident when all information has been gathered.
Notify the reporter of the resolution and request feedback. This may or may not be used to reevaluate the resolution.
The committee will aim to have a resolution agreed upon within two weeks of receipt of the incident report. In the event that a resolution cannot be determined within that time, the CoC committee will respond to the reporter(s) with an updated and projected timeline for resolution.
Following Up With the Reportee¶
When following up with the reportee, the committee will:
Explain that an incident was reported that involves the reportee.
In this explanation, the focus will be on the impact of their behavior, not their intent.
Reiterate the Code of Conduct and that their behavior may be deemed inappropriate.
Give them the opportunity to state their view of the incident.
Explain the possible resolutions that may be enforced should the CoC committee determine there is a breach.
The reportee will be given a week to respond with the option to request additional time if needed and subject to approval of the CoC Committee.
Resolutions¶
The committee should agree unanimously on a resolution. In the event that the committee cannot reach a unanimous resolution, the LLVM Foundation Board of Directors will help resolve the situation and determine if the resolution can proceed without a unanimous vote.
When deciding on a resolution, the goal is to address the report in an appropriate way, while also looking to prevent or reduce the risk of continuing harm in the future. Any action deemed necessary by the committee will be taken, but below is a list of possible resolutions:
Taking no further action as the incident was determined not to be a violation.
A private verbal warning and/or reprimand from the committee to the individual(s) involved and request to stop this behavior. This conversation may happen in person, email, by phone, video chat, or IRC.
Request that the reportee avoid any interaction with, and physical proximity to, another person for the remainder of the event.
Refusal of alcoholic beverage purchases by the reportee at LLVM events.
Ending a talk/tutorial/etc at an LLVM event early. See immediate response checklist for further clarification.
Not publishing the video or slides of a talk.
Not allowing a speaker to give (further) talks at LLVM events for a specified amount of time or ever.
Requiring that the reportee immediately leave an event and not return.
Immediately ending any volunteer responsibilities and privileges the reportee holds.
An imposed suspension (e.g., asking someone to “take a week off” from mailing lists, bug tracker, IRC, Discord, repositories, or other communication forms).
A permanent or temporary ban from some or all LLVM Project spaces (online or in person).
Once a resolution is agreed upon, but before it is enacted, the committee will contact the reporter and any other affected parties to explain the proposed resolution. They will ask if this resolution is acceptable and must note feedback for the record. However, the committee is not required to act on this feedback.
Appeal Process¶
Any individual(s) determined to have violated the CoC have the right to appeal a decision. An appeal can be made directly to the committee by sending an email to conduct@llvm.org with subject line Code of Conduct Incident Appeal.
The email should include documentation related to the incident to support the appeal. The said documentation may include, but does not have to be limited to:
Information from the reportee justifying reasoning for the appeal.
Statements from other individuals involved in the incident to support the appeal.
Appeals can be requested up to 30 days after a resolution has been communicated to the individual(s). The committee will aim to evaluate appeals within two weeks of receipt. In the event that appeal can not be evaluated within that time, the CoC committee will respond with an updated and projected timeline.
Conflicts of Interest¶
Committee members should declare any conflicts of interest as soon as possible and before any official committee meetings. This can mean being friends with one of the involved parties, or anything else that may make it harder to remain neutral.
A conflict of interest does not inherently mean the committee member can no longer participate in the process, as that would make it very hard for the team to act on reports involving well-known people in the community. However, if a report concerns a team member or someone they work directly with, they probably should not take part in the process. The team will decide together on where to draw this line in individual cases. Where possible, any conversations with offenders should not be done by people who know them, as it can be very unpleasant for everyone involved.
If a report is received concerning a committee member, that member must not be involved in the response process. The rest of the committee will meet and decide on the report without the reported committee member being present, and will not share more information than they would have with a non-member. If a member of the committee is found to have violated the CoC, they may no longer be able to keep serving on the committee.
Confidentiality¶
All reports will be kept confidential with details shared only with the Code of Conduct committee members. However, the Code of Conduct Committee will always comply with law enforcement when directed. In the case that a CoC committee member is involved in a report, the member will be asked to recuse themselves from ongoing conversations, and they will not have access to reports after the enforcement decision has been made.
In the event of a temporary suspension or ban, the appropriate people must be notified of the ban in order to restrict access to infrastructure or events. These individuals will only be notified of the person’s name and the restrictions imposed. They will be under a confidentiality clause and not allowed to respond to questions regarding the ban and should direct all questions to the CoC committee.
Transparency Reports¶
Lack of transparency in the outcomes of our Code of Conduct incidents leaves our community without an understanding of how or if the organizers worked to resolve incidents. The CoC committee should aim to publish transparency reports, if reports are received, after major events (such as the LLVM Developers’ meetings) and on the following dates: Jan 15, April 15, July 15, Oct 15.
A transparency report consists of 2 parts:
An overview of the reports received, and resolutions.
A more detailed summary of each reported incident and the resolution while maintaining confidentiality.
These reports will be published on the LLVM website.
This guide was created and inspired by the following: the Django Project, Carpentries Response Guide, and the Write The Docs Response Guide.