Mmhmm! This is what I was hoping with Weasyl initially—
I wouldn't call Weasyl a paragon of transparency.
Their
lone news outlet is still written half like press releases, none of it attributed to a human being. The only public repository of problems is
a vBulletin subforum, precisely like FA. Their
tech staff all have accounts that look effectively abandoned at a glance. There's no changelog; there's no roadmap; there's no mention anywhere of whatever happened with Benchilla, nor an explanation of who actually owns or runs or wrote the thing.
Transparency is
communication. It's actively making an effort to talk and explain and interact, not merely a lack of melodramatic coverups.
Contrast with, say, Firefox. Starting arbitrarily from firefox.com, there are
direct links to:
- The Mozilla blog (read: PR), last posted to yesterday with an overview of how they're shuffling the leadership around;
- This "contribute" page, which directs interested volunteers to help translate or write code or beta test or design UI or write documentation or provide user support;
- A form for people interested in working on firefox.com itself;
- The changelog and release date for the current release, including a human-friendly description of the most interesting stuff, links to more detailed documentation on a lot of it, a link to a list of changes relevant to web developers, a link to a query on their bug tracker listing every single change that made it into this release, and a link to a blog about notable future changes;
- Nightly builds of Firefox, complete with its own changelog; and
- An entire support site they built to help with user problems.
None of that even necessitates that the project is open source. Which, of course, it is: you can
get the source code for the browser itself, of course, but also that initial firefox.com website, the django extensions they use as a base for all their sites, their support site and addon site and every other website they run, their bug tracker, their build system, their testing infrastructure, their new programming language, the browser engine they're writing in it, their single-signon experiment, and on it goes. And you can file issues against these things and watch the development and see the state of the test suite and comment on all of it if you have something useful to say. Or you can fix a bug yourself and they'll put your name in about:credits.
Not to mention that half the people in the company
have their own blogs about stuff they're working on or planning; all their
release planning is public; and they
publish the conference numbers for their
weekly status meetings. And if even that weren't enough, there are less-official sources like
this curated changelog for every release branch.
That's more what I have in mind when I say "actively run in the open".