ilikepi 2 days ago

There is some more context on a post[1] in /r/ruby, including the fact that the maintainers and others had been working on a proposal[2] for a formalized organizational governance structure as recently as yesterday. The latter also adds some context into Mike McQuaid's involvement: the proposal was influenced by the structure put in place by the Homebrew project.

[1]: https://old.reddit.com/r/ruby/comments/1nkzszc/ruby_centrals...

[2]: https://github.com/rubygems/rfcs/pull/61

  • mikemcquaid 2 days ago

    I'm trying to help, where I can, to mediate. On a call right now about this. Had 4 in the last 24 hours with affected parties past and present on both sides.

    I'm not involved beyond just caring a lot about Ruby.

    • esnard 2 days ago

      I know nothing about the Ruby ecosystem, but I really do appreciate that someone cares that much to mediate this mess. Thank you.

    • mikemcquaid 2 days ago

      Posted an update in a thread (or whatever you're meant to call it) on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mikemcquaid.com/post/3lz7klsyue22f

      TL;DR: I've been given a lot of private nuance from both sides here but, even just based how the two sides have treated me personally, it's very hard not to put the blame primarily on RubyCentral. I've been a maintainer on Homebrew for 16 years: it's a hard job. If in doubt: I'll side with maintainers.

      • yawaramin 2 days ago

        Sure, but it's two different things. Maintainers are in charge of their projects, and Ruby Central is in charge of the package index. Each has different priorities, which is fine. If they can't find a way to live with each other, maybe a parting of the ways is required.

        • mikemcquaid 2 days ago

          Parting of ways? Sure. In this case they are in charge of the package index but have removed most maintainers from their projects, implicitly taking charge there too. This is a problem.

          • zem 2 days ago

            do they see themselves as more like debian, where the ruby gem and the open source project it packages are two separate things?

  • swat535 2 days ago

    Also notable reply from DHH:

    "Ruby Central has been the RubyGems maintainer and operator since the beginning. They paid people to work on it (including this now disgruntled former contractor).

    They're improving their practices and protocols. This is good."

    https://x.com/dhh/status/1969168477475786830

    • knzai a day ago

      A bit of useful context for DHH’s response: he’s had beef with at least one of these maintainers before, and tried to get him removed from stuff.

      As André Arko’s employer at his day job at the time, I was tangential to it, so I don’t know all the details, and my memory is imperfect.

      But as I understand it, DHH either organized or was part of a group of prominent rubyists who wrote a letter to the Board of Directors of the trade guild (or some other similar unusual non-profit structure) that André had organized to help get funding to support the open source work he and some others did for Ruby infrastructure like Bundler and/or Rubygems. I don’t know the exact terms of the sanctions they sought, but in the end it resulted in his orgs work getting folded into RubyCentral, iirc.

      For some reason it seems they disapproved of how André had found a way to get paid for working on open source. He was managing to pay himself and some other people a good wage for part-time open source work. He was even managing to get a bit more diversity involved in it than a lot of Ruby open source infra work typically has (employing a black trans woman SE as part of this). Whatever their actual motivations they disapproved of André founding his own org and running it as he did.

      The irony of their most prominent signatory getting rich off open source, via a different less direct avenue of monetization seemed entirely lost on them.

      Anyway, I think it blew up in their face and things got settled out into what the status quo of rubygems maintenance was since then.

      Now, I’ve heard rumors that perhaps this is actually related. RubyCentral has had a rough few years and DHH has more than a little pull with at least one of their largest funders.

      It’d be incredibly petty to do something like dangling funding in front of RC if they’d finish icing out maintainers that he didn’t see eye to eye with. But it would certainly fit the way the events happened. I don’t know anything directly enough to swear by this and wouldn’t want to implicate anyone even if I did.

      But I guess look at the known character of the people involved and draw your own conclusions. Does this seem in character to prior behaviors?

      • julik a day ago

        Interesting scoop!

        • knzai a day ago

          Thanks. Re “scoop” as I said, I wouldn’t swear to any of this on the stand and it certainly doesn’t meet journalistic standards. Consider it opinion piece/color commentary.

          That said both the person this time and people before who allegedly signed onto DHH’s nonsense I’m incredibly disappointed in. Most of them I considered at the least collegial acquaintances and some of them friends. So I felt like I knew them at least well enough to say they were above his sort of divisive rhetoric. But people frequently disappoint.

          Maybe I have it all wrong and André, REDACTED, and REDACTED* have done something awful or something…. but from what I know of their characters I seriously doubt it.

          Of course, IDK what the DHH crowd is actually thinking, if any of this is true, since in that case they don’t exactly discuss this openly, purely dealing in backroom shenanigans that one could almost think verged on collusion and that leads some groups like RC to possibly violate contract and employment law (at the very least copyright if you check who actually has the copyright on some of the stuff they distribute…). That is if any of the things people are saying is true.

          But hey, Rubyists are all “nice” right? Nobody says ethical or kind was a requirement.

          * There’s at least two people that I kno- err that is that I strongly suspect, have been tarred by mere association with André. I have a theory it’s more than just them. Apparently he’s insidious about leaking liberal labor thoughts like people should get paid enough to support their families in expensive tech hubs, even if they are working on open source. But apparently “professional open source maintainer” is anathema to some people’s vision and they’d prefer everything to depend on volunteer labor only. Which is a position multi-millionaires who successfully monetized that volunteer labor could take, sure. But it’d make them hypocrites, in the worst of ways. Especially since their alleged actions are leading to some of said maintainers losing work doing so, but they supposedly seem okay with funding others. At that point it stops being a logical, if unethical platform, and more personal spite?

thomascountz 2 days ago

An update from Ruby Central: Strengthening the Stewardship of RubyGems and Bundler

https://rubycentral.org/news/strengthening-the-stewardship-o...

  • DannyPage 2 days ago

    > We want to express our deep gratitude to the many cohorts of maintainers who have contributed to Bundler and RubyGems over the past two decades. Ruby tooling would not be what it is today without their dedication and leadership. Their work laid much of the foundation we are building on today, and we are committed to carrying that legacy forward with the same spirit of *openness and collaboration*

    - The bolded part doesn’t track with locking out the entire team without notice or explanation.

    - “Thanks for the hard work, the adults will take it from here” rarely works out.

  • krmbzds 2 days ago

    > We thank the maintainers and respect their legacy.

    After removing them without explanation, cutting them off projects they have maintained over a decade and ignoring them when they asked for restoration or dialogue. I feel sad for the maintainers. This is not how they deserve to be treated.

  • jmuguy 2 days ago

    So essentially they randomly cut off a bunch of long time maintainers for some vague legal and/or security reasons. If there was real reason to do that in a hurry, that's what we need to see, not a corporate PR message.

    • awilson5454 2 days ago

      100%. I assumed this was inspired by the supply chain attack, but what a horrible way to address this. Reverting it back before revoking it a second time is even more bizarre. Severely mixed messages from leadership, perhaps?

    • gedy 2 days ago

      It’s not clear to me - did they entirely cut them off, or did they reduce their role as admin of the GitHub org?

      If so, I'm not defending it, and I could understand why someone would feel insulted by that - but also get why an org doesn't want too many with elevated privileges.

  • raesene9 2 days ago

    If they're trying to strengthen security, this feels like an odd way to go about it.

    Making unplanned unexpected changes to GitHub ownership and removing people with lots of experience and institutional knowledge with little notice (based on the original story) and presumably no great hand-over, feels risky and not a great way to improve people's trust in their governance.

  • loloquwowndueo 2 days ago

    Totally reads like post-facto CYA. they could have communicated this to the maintainers internally beforehand instead of blindsiding them.

    • downrightmike 2 days ago

      The NPM breach was an email that stated the dev needed to update their MFA by the next day in order to keep their access.

      If you're arguing that is what ruby central should have done, that's a social engineering attack.

      • mrinterweb 2 days ago

        How would a heads up email look like a phishing email? Blindsiding the maintainers like this is just cruel.

      • loloquwowndueo 2 days ago

        It’s entirely possible to distinguish between legit internal communication and a phishing email. (It gets harder and harder every day but ultimately still possible)

  • TehCorwiz 2 days ago

    > Moving forward, only engineers employed or contracted by Ruby Central will hold administrative permissions to the RubyGems.org service.

    Several of the people removed are employees or contractors of Ruby Central. This doesn't pass the smell test. Not to mention it's post-facto in that they did all of this before notifying anyone.

    • byroot 2 days ago

      > Several of the people removed are employees or contractors of Ruby Central.

      Who?

      > Not to mention it's post-facto in that they did all of this before notifying anyone.

      Isn't that pretty much the number one rule when restricting accesses? First remove accesses, then communicate?

      • TehCorwiz 2 days ago

        At least Ellen Dash. The author of the pdf the post links to.

        • byroot 2 days ago

          They haven't been contracted by Ruby Central since May by their own account: https://bsky.app/profile/duckinator.bsky.social/post/3lz7lec...

          The other people I know who had their accesses removed have resigned from RC a while ago, and the one I still see with access on https://rubygems.org/gems/bundler are people I know are currently employed or contractors.

          As far as I can tell, this part of the Ruby Central statement seems to check out. Now you can of course debate whether commit rights should be limited to employees, but have have no indication that they lied here.

  • bradgessler 2 days ago

    It reads like lawyers and auditors took over RubyCentral.

    • julik 2 days ago

      * Get appointed as paid managers of a non-profit * Get advice from legal * Legal suggests removing long-term maintainers without liability contract the same way people get fired: immediately and instantly, and screw the consequences. "Open-source? Never heard of it. Protect your entity legally" * Instantly follow the advice of the lawyers to the letter.

      Well done, well done.

      • observationist 2 days ago

        Aim it right at my foot?

        Are you sure?!

        Well, ok, I'm not a lawyer, but... ok, fine, let's do it!

    • blibble 2 days ago

      it's the professional management class at it again

      see: mozilla, nominet (recovered, thankfully)

      • observationist 2 days ago

        Mozilla is toast. It basically exists as a tax writeoff for Google at this point, and serves no recognizable purpose beyond that, and maybe nostalgia.

        How MBAs aren't synonymous with leeches by this point is the most amazing ongoing PR campaign in history. They do nothing but suck and suck and suck, and they keep sucking, and they will never stop sucking until their host dies, and then they just move on.

        • immibis a day ago

          Widespread recognition of what you said about MBAs is synonymous with class consciousness, which won't happen.

  • corytheboyd 2 days ago

    Aren’t supply chain attacks caused by package maintainer accounts being compromised? I suppose too many people with keys to the package repository itself is also liability, but those accounts being compromised just hasn’t been what is happening.

    • krmbzds 2 days ago

      [flagged]

      • woodruffw 2 days ago

        Your last sentence reads like a weird swipe: as best I can tell, there's no cultural war dimension to this whatsoever?

        • krmbzds 2 days ago

          [flagged]

          • the_hangman 2 days ago

            It's been a while but if memory serves me correctly the controversy at that time was actually about him unilaterally deciding that people at basecamp shouldn't be talking about politics in off-topic slack channels after people started trying to organize support for something he didn't agree with. IIRC something like 1/3 of the company quit at that time

            • zorpner 2 days ago

              Specifically, it was in a meeting called by Jason Fried to address people who were concerned about the ongoing existence of an internal list of "funny customer names" (which by all accounts was extremely racist), in which Ryan Singer (who had reportedly previously posted a fair bit of politically right-wing content on internal forums -- those were all deleted when the "no politics at work" policy was rolled out) repeatedly asserted that white supremacy/privilege did not exist (he then resigned).

              In the aftermath, DHH dug through old chat logs to find a time in the past when one of the people complaining about the list participated in a discussion about same without complaint, and posted it in a way that was visible to everyone saying that their prior participation meant that their current complaint was invalid.

              Then they rolled out the no-politics-at-work policy in this post dated April 26 2021 -- I would encourage anyone interested in the specifics to read through the various versions and edits of this post made in the week following, all without noting that it was being actively changed: https://world.hey.com/jason/changes-at-basecamp-7f32afc5

            • krmbzds 2 days ago

              Am I the only one who feels like discussing politics at work is inappropriate? While I'm not apolitical, I appreciate having a space where the constant bombardment of politics is momentarily absent. It's refreshing to focus on work without the need for political discourse.

              • bigstrat2003 2 days ago

                No, you're not the only one. I think work should be a politics-free zone. We are there to get stuff done, not argue and hate each other.

              • crote 2 days ago

                The problem is that everything is political: if politics don't impact you, you are living a very privileged life.

                On the one hand, I do agree that endless debating over relatively minor ideological differences is pointless, and only going to lead to time-wasting and resentment. I certainly have the same desire for some peace and quiet, and being able to focus solely on my work.

                On the other hand, we live in a society where questions like "am I allowed to use the office bathroom" have been made political, and where your coworkers are genuinely worried about whether they'll get arrested and deported from the country for no reason whatsoever during next week's sprint planning. Their issues are real and by definition require the business as an entity to respond to political developments.

                You might have the luxury of putting your head in the sand and pretending they don't exist, but that's not going to magically solve your coworkers' problems. Unless the company wants to restrict its hiring to the absolutely minuscule group of people who will never be impacted by politics, it'll have to engage in some level of political discussion.

          • woodruffw 2 days ago

            I’m not seeing how this is related to the subject of the thread. But also, I think DHH’s politics are manifestly controversial: downplaying that doesn’t make for a good argument.

  • sussmannbaka 2 days ago

    that’s a lot of words to write “we did a hostile takeover”

  • yxhuvud 2 days ago

    It might have been a good idea to do that communication BEFORE creating all that drama.

  • tarellel 2 days ago

    This is just RubyCenteral trying to get ahead of the news and save face before they end up looking like complete @$$ bags.

  • thomascountz 2 days ago

    I think the fear from Ruby Central might have been that, had they communicated openly, a maintainer/community member with admin access could do their own hostile take-over, and that that would expose Ruby Central to some legal liability, if not a complete loss of control.

    I'm not in a position where I'd have to make a decision like this, and I don't have all the information, but I like to think that if I had made a decision like this, I'd show some more respect in the aftermath.

    Something more akin to: "That was really awful, I'm sorry. We were suddenly faced with the severity of our legal exposure and had to immediately lock everything down. It's not a reflection of trust or anything, it was legally what had to be done. Now that we've taken stock and are now squared away, we have to make a more explicit controls framework, and we hope we can make it up to you, make this right, and have you lead as a maintainer again."

    ...Then again, maybe this wasn't about legal exposure. Or maybe it was and former contributors/maintainers are getting apologetic emails right now...

    • loloquwowndueo 2 days ago

      1. You lock everyone out of the org for whichever valid but idiotic reason. 2. The instant you do, you send them all an email explaining the situation.

      That’s how you do it in those cases. You don’t blindside them and then wait for them to react, restore their access back (which totally negated and nullified the “I wanted to preempt a takeover attempt” argument) and continue to skulk around instead of being open about it.

      • chao- 2 days ago

        Seconding this.

        Ruby Central is not a large organization by headcount, but in terms of impact, it is massive. Any person up to the task of leading an organization like this must know that drastic, public action involving long-term contributors will necessarily require an explanation. Inevitably. They must also know that in an information vacuum, people will assume the worst.

        This is not difficult to foresee.

        I truly hope this is settled without too much collateral damage, and I hope that the people in leadership learn a lesson about communication.

      • thomascountz 2 days ago

        You're completely right. In a generous interpretation, having so little communication over such a long period is where this went wrong. In any case, having your highly-tenured team dissolve and feeling like things were "hostile," is an indicator that you'll need to do better. Then again, who knows what the goal actually was? Maybe this went perfectly to plan. Given there was nothing approaching an acknowledgement of regret or apology in the press release, maybe this went exactly to plan.

        • ryandrake 2 days ago

          It reads like the confrontation-avoiding Office Space solution: "We fixed the glitch [...] so it will just work itself out naturally."

  • michaelem 2 days ago

    So uh… “compliance reasons”? That sounds rather concerning.

krmbzds 2 days ago

The recent actions taken by Ruby Central - removing long-time RubyGems and Bundler maintainers without warning, seizing administrative access, and consolidating control under a small, centralized group - represent a serious breach of trust within the Ruby ecosystem.

This was not a misunderstanding. It was a hostile takeover of key infrastructure, undermining both the long-standing maintainers and the broader community that relies on RubyGems and Bundler every day.

The Ruby ecosystem thrives on collaboration, openness, and mutual respect. What we've witnessed over the past week violates those principles. Ruby Central's actions - unilateral access revocations, exclusion of experienced volunteers, and refusal to engage in transparent dialogue - are not just organizational missteps. They're a threat to the decentralized and community-driven spirit that has sustained Ruby for decades.

I oppose this power grab.

Even more concerning is the idea that contributor access could become contingent on employment status or ideological alignment. Whether someone is employed by Ruby Central - or holds left-leaning, right-leaning, or apolitical views - should have no bearing on their ability to contribute to open source. Merit, dedication, and community trust must remain the foundation.

If Ruby Central is serious about supporting the Ruby community, they must:

- Immediately restore access to all maintainers removed during this incident.

- Publicly commit to a transparent, community-driven governance model, similar to what the RubyGems team had begun drafting.

- Respect the autonomy of open source maintainers, regardless of whether they are employed by Ruby Central.

- Acknowledge the harm caused by these actions and engage in meaningful dialogue to rebuild trust.

The Ruby community has always been about people - diverse, passionate, and united by a love for a beautiful language. It's time we demand that the institutions claiming to represent us act accordingly.

And if Ruby Central does not do this we must pressure sponsors to stop funding Ruby Central and ultimately; if all else fails, we must build and maintain our own infrastructure unencumbered by these shenanigans. Also, in order to re-establish trust in the community; the people responsible for causing this ruckus should be fired.

Ruby-Level Sponsors (Top Tier): Alpha Omega, Shopify, Sidekiq

Gold-Level Sponsor Flagrant

Silver-Level Sponsors: Cedarcode, DNSimple, Fastly, Gusto, Honeybadger, Sentry

  • type0 2 days ago

    From https://rubycentral.org/news/strengthening-the-stewardship-o...

    > "Their work laid much of the foundation we are building on today, and we are committed to carrying that legacy forward with the same spirit of openness and collaboration."

    what do they mean by openness, it doesn't even say who wrote this

    • diordiderot 2 days ago

      > spirit of openness

      Public hostility towards anyone right of Zohran Mamdani

  • byroot 2 days ago

    > What we've witnessed over the past week

    Who is "we"? And what did they witness?

    All we got right now is one side of the story.

    It is indeed surprising such change wouldn't be immediately followed by a public announcement, but they've been founding and managing RubyGems for a very long time now, so it's not even clear to me how this can be a "takeover".

    I'll happily join with my pitchfork if it turns out this is indeed a malevolent move, but until I've read their side of the story, I'd rather wait and see.

    Edit: 35 minutes later, here we go: https://rubycentral.org/news/strengthening-the-stewardship-o...

    • tremon 2 days ago

      All we got right now is one side of the story

      That's because Ruby Central chooses not to communicate. I'm not going to reserve judgment against intentionally mute hostile actors.

      • byroot 2 days ago

        Organizations are necessarily slower to communicate than individuals, give them a couple days. People need to chill out before jumping to conclusions like that.

        • adgjlsfhk1 2 days ago

          Organizations should not do things like this without having their communication done in advance. They new what they were going to do, so they should have the blog post explaining exactly what and why they were doing to release (at the latest) at the same time.

        • mrbombastic 2 days ago

          What why? An organization is made up of individuals who had a heads up because they had a bunch of meetings and made the decision to do this, if anything they had a head start on communication. Their silence is their choice.

        • milliams 2 days ago

          Based on the OP, the initial changes were made 10 days ago - more than enough time to communicate something publicly.

        • x0x0 2 days ago

          They couldn't email longtime contributors with a heads up, here's whats happening before revoking commit rights and making changes like this? That's nonsense.

    • bradly 2 days ago

      > All we got right now is one side of the story

      Well, we have all of Ruby Centrals actions including their action to not be more public during these actions. Their actions are their story. If their actions don't communicate their intent, that is on them to handle that in a professional way to not be in this situation.

  • simonw 2 days ago

    Why did you include that list of sponsors at the bottom of your post?

    What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.

    Were those parts (or indeed your entire comment) written with the help of an LLM?

    • dragonwriter 2 days ago

      > Why did you include that list of sponsors at the bottom of your post?

      Clearly, that was because this information directly supports readers following through on the call to action: “And if Ruby Central does not do this we must pressure sponsors to stop funding Ruby Central”. That’s obvious.

      > What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.

      Yes, both the original pdf and the RubyCentral statement edplicitly refer to admin status being made contingent on being full-time employee of RubyCentral. If you just mean no one has explicitly brought upthe ideological angle, well, that’s a fairly easy concer to reach wrih something being contingent on employment at a particular nonprofit, so it would be weird to interogate like this even if you had clearly focussed on kn just that point.

      • simonw 2 days ago

        Where did the ideological alignment piece come from then?

        • krmbzds 2 days ago

          You can read it here: https://world.hey.com/dhh/no-railsconf-faa7935e

          The cancellation of DHH's keynote was purely political. At that time, RubyCentral's response was similarly uncommunicative and their explanation was BS.

          This is not the first strike.

    • UseofWeapons1 2 days ago

      The post is quite clear? They call on the sponsors to stop funding ruby central, and the employment status bit is a clear concern extending from ruby central’s supposed takeover.

      Read the post more clearly before accusing someone of LLM usage. And even if it is, they are still valid points to be discussed, as opposed to trying to bury it with an LLM accusation.

      • simonw 2 days ago

        I brought up LLM usage precisely because the two things I called out here are weird - the kind of details an LLM might add.

        If that's what happened then it's bad because it leaves people who read the comment confused - hence my questions asking about those.

        If the author confirms that those pieces I asked about serve an intentional purpose then I don't care if they used an LLM or not.

        My problem isn't with using LLMs to help write comments - there are plenty of reasonable reasons for doing that (like English as a second language). My problem is letting an LLM invent content that doesn't accurately represent the situation or reflect the LLM user's own position.

        (The author could also say "I didn't use an LLM", which notably they haven't done elsewhere on this thread yet.)

        • cxr 2 days ago

          What content has been invented?

          • simonw 2 days ago

            Maybe none? That's why I asked.

    • angoragoats 2 days ago

      > Why did you include that list of sponsors at the bottom of your post?

      The paragraph immediately preceding the list begins with a sentence mentioning the sponsors. How did you not see this?

      > What's with the "contingent on employment status or ideological alignment" bit about? That's not been mentioned anywhere else so far.

      “not been mentioned anywhere else” is false. If you click on the PDF linked to in this very post it mentions that only full time employees of RubyCentral maintained access to their GitHub account.

      I find it ironic that you’re so quick to question whether something is LLM-authored given that you write so much about using LLMs.

      • simonw 2 days ago

        I'm quick to question precisely because I can see LLM telltale hints in the text - in this case the "not just X but Y" pattern.

        I don't mind if it's LLM-assisted text if everything in it is a reviewed and accurate representation of the point the author is trying to make.

        But if the LLM throws in extra junk tha distracts from the conversation and the author fails to catch that in review, that's bad.

        I think it's likely I was mistaken here - that the author either didn't use an LLM or used it for minor style tweaks but ensured that it was making the points they wanted to make.

        • angoragoats a day ago

          There is no “extra junk that distracts from the conversation” in the post you’re responding to, and I and others are trying to point that out to you. You don’t seem to be responding to those points much if at all.

          • simonw a day ago

            I said "I think it's likely I was mistaken here", what more do you want?

            (Personally I'd still like to see the author clarify if they used an LLM or not, but that's more for my own personal curiosity at this point, to check if my radar needs adjusting.)

  • clanky 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • krmbzds 2 days ago

      Your account was created 5 minutes ago. Your username is "clanky". That's hilarious.

      For future reference, the flagged parent comment was: "Slop."

      • Antibabelic 2 days ago

        [flagged]

        • celticninja 2 days ago

          what are these hallmarks?

          is this becoming the latest way to attack an idea? instead of engaging with the actual content you just claim it is AI and therefore it can be ignored? seems disingenuous to say the least.

          • Antibabelic 2 days ago

            Overuse of rule of three, cliches like "This was not X. It was Y." and similar, obligatory bulleted list, overall overly grandiose. None of these are a smoking gun, but the smell is definitely here. AI detection tools also confirm my suspicions. I don't have a horse in the race in regards to the content, since I'm not a Ruby developer, I would just prefer to not see AI-written comments on HN. If this is so important, you can take the time to type it out yourself.

            • clanky 2 days ago

              em dashes disguised as hyphens as well.

          • evertedsphere 2 days ago

            It's not an attack on an idea.

            It's pointing out that the person who posted something couldn't be bothered to actually write it themselves. The "content" is the prompt, which is of course never shared because it's probably so trite that it's not going to get anyone's interest unless it's stochastically decompressed into a large amount of text.

            Like the sibling commenter, I do not write Ruby and do not care about this conflict apart from a general interest in supply chain stuff. I'm merely tired of the constant encroachment of obvious LLM prose in HN submissions and (albeit less commonly) in comments.

  • slopeater 2 days ago

    [flagged]

    • thomascountz 2 days ago

      I don't think posts like this: an off-topic reply to a post where the same off-topic topic has already been killed, will have the effect you want it to have.

      Unless that effect is to make yourself more angry and to have your comments downvoted in order to feel more righteous and to justify your behavior... but otherwise this won't change anything.

      Please do write a blog post about, and feel free to share it on HN.

    • milliams 2 days ago

        >- Immediately restore access to all maintainers removed during this incident. […]
      
        Markdown bullet points in a place with no markdown support.
      
      Markdown quote markers in a place with no markdown support.
  • armchairhacker 2 days ago

    > Even more concerning is the idea that contributor access could become contingent on employment status or ideological alignment. Whether someone is employed by Ruby Central - or holds left-leaning, right-leaning, or apolitical views - should have no bearing on their ability to contribute to open source. Merit, dedication, and community trust must remain the foundation.

    Is there any evidence of this? It's not in the PDF.

    Also, this comment is clearly AI and more importantly, it affects the quality. Ex: "It's time we demand that the institutions claiming to represent us act accordingly." It seems "the institutions" have been representing them fine until now, why "it's time"? "This was not a misunderstanding. It was a hostile takeover"..."This was a hostile takeover" (or "is", it's still ongoing). "The recent actions taken by Ruby Central - [list]...Ruby Central's actions - [different list]"...the comment tries to explain what Ruby Central has done and what the maintainers demand, but it's vague and disorganized; the linked PDF is better.

anilgulecha 2 days ago

Feel bad for the RubyGems community, sending my gratitude and empathy. Ruby was a leap in my career, and i have a soft spot for the language and community

I'll wait for RubyCentral's side on this, but on the face of what's written, these actions do not seem to be transparent or in good faith. Is there something posted from RubyCentral's side?

I wish the Ruby community strength, and a transition over to a community-owned org, one way or another.

(With NPM, WordPress, now this - seems like package repositories are becoming a flashpoint of corporate takeovers..)

davidw 2 days ago

Seems relevant: https://ruby.social/@getajobmike/115231677684734669

I'm just reposting it though. I haven't followed any of this myself.

  • mijoharas 2 days ago

    > The unstated reason for this change was that many of the existing Rubygems maintainers have recently quit (including their only full-time engineer) due to their continued relationship with DHH.

    Can someone expand on what this means? Is it a continued relationship between Ruby Central and DHH, or the maintainers and DHH? Why does the other party have a problem with that?

    EDIT: It seems the post was clarified since I copy/pasted this, and it's RC and DHH. Why do the maintainers have a problem with this? I though the stated reason was about RC removing everyone's access with no warning.

    • mperham 2 days ago

      DHH is a white supremacist. Here he complains about too many brown people in London.

      https://world.hey.com/dhh/as-i-remember-london-e7d38e64

      • mijoharas 2 days ago

        Ok... wow. I was willing to give the benefit of the doubt, but hearing him decry the lack of "native Brits"[0] and support the Tommy Robinson march is... something.

        > In 2000, more than sixty percent of the city were native Brits. By 2024, that had dropped to about a third.

      • viiralvx 2 days ago

        Over the years, I saw him inching closer to white supremacy. I didn't realize that he's gone this far off the deep end, yikes.

      • felipec a day ago

        You are hallucinating. There's nothing there that is "white supremacy".

        • mijoharas a day ago

          DHH says he wants fewer non-white people in London in that article[0].

          Do you not think that the article says that or do you not think that is white supremacy?

          [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45303305

          • felipec 9 hours ago

            > DHH says he wants fewer non-white people in London in that article

            No, he didn't say that.

            That's what you guys on the woke left always do: create a straw man and pretend he said the most appalling things you can think of.

            The real DHH did not say that.

            • mijoharas 6 hours ago

              The article is on his blog[0], and is written in the first person. I assume we're agreeing that he wrote that?

              Are you saying that the blog did not say that he wants fewer non-white people in London? I picked out the specific parts in [1].

              In addition there is this quote:

              > I thought I might move there one day. That was then. Now, I wouldn't dream of it. London is no longer the city I was infatuated with in the late '90s and early 2000s. Chiefly because it's no longer full of native Brits.

              He wouldn't dream of moving to London now because it now has a large proportion of non-"White British" people[1]. Is that not saying that he "wants fewer non-white people in London"?

              Which part do you think is incorrect? The post reads quite clearly to me. I don't think he's being oblique.

              [0] https://world.hey.com/dhh/as-i-remember-london-e7d38e64

              [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45303305

      • the_gastropod 2 days ago

        While it's jarring to see someone call DHH a "white supremacist", the shoe fits. In that blog post he laments that London is "no longer full of native Brits" (what does that even mean? It's clear by the numbers he gives that he's counting "white people born in Britain") and frames demographic change as a "nightmare". That isn't neutral nostalgia (something he's claimed he doesn't have: https://world.hey.com/dhh/legacy-without-nostalgia-b19708c9) it's the same ethno-nationalist logic as "America for Americans", that old KKK slogan. When you argue that a city (especially one that's always been a multi-cultural hub) becoming less white is inherently a loss, you're not just being contrarian. You're espousing a white-supremacist worldview.

        • GreenWatermelon a day ago

          I can't reply to the parent any more because it's flagged, so I'll reply to you, because I need to get this out.

          Overtime I gave him so much benefit of the doubt, and steelmanned his arguments because I really respected him as a Software Engineer and I aligned with him on his views in technology... But that blog post was the last straw. It's clear-as-day racism. No room for misinterpretation.

          I was willing to overlook his remarks about DEI, Trump, Kirk, etc.... because there were nuggets of truth and genuine pain points.. but it turns out he was a racist, white supremacists all along. Sigh...

        • immibis a day ago

          And yet the comment is flagged. On HN, you may not call anyone a white supremacist for any reason, ever.

      • baggy_trough 2 days ago

        [flagged]

        • mijoharas 2 days ago

          In the linked article, DHH links out to a wikipedia article titled "Ethnic groups in London"[0].

          He then uses a statistic that "only a third" are native brits in 2021, which roughly lines up with the "White British" line in the chart.

          You can argue that "white supremecist" is a charged and problematic term, but I'd say that "Here he complains about too many brown people in London." is a fairly accurate representation of the article. I'd say "disgraceful slander" is a bit too strong as a rebuttal.

          [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_groups_in_London

          • wild_egg 2 days ago

            No dog in this race but, as an outsider, it's always seemed really odd that some countries (Japan sticks out) are allowed to prioritize cultural preservation but European countries are not.

            • lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 2 days ago

              That's an interesting observation and I think it comes down to immigration policy. I haven't actually looked into it but I've heard that Japan basically doesn't allow for long-term immigration, except probably in exceptional cases like PhDs.

              Where EU countries (I know this excludes the UK but it didn't for a long time) allow easy long-term immigration by EU policy. Even with Brexit, I don't think that culture of easy immigration is going to just up and disappear. So having a culture and/or policy of easy immigration alongside "well, actually, not those guys" where "those guys" includes anybody who's not already culturally/ethnically part of the nation is, minimally, counter-productive and perhaps a bit hypocritical.

              • projectazorian 2 days ago

                > I haven't actually looked into it but I've heard that Japan basically doesn't allow for long-term immigration, except probably in exceptional cases like PhDs.

                Hasn’t been correct for at least the past decade, if you post here there’s a good chance you would be able to relocate to Japan and have permanent residency within 1-3 years.

                Japan has one of the most generous immigration policies in the developed world at the moment.

            • cogman10 2 days ago

              There aren't a whole lot of people celebrating Japan's immigration policies. Further, their policies have been around for quite some time. It's one thing to continue enforcing decades old policies and quite another to create those same policies today.

            • GuinansEyebrows 2 days ago

              > it's always seemed really odd that some countries (Japan sticks out) are allowed to prioritize cultural preservation

              can we clarify... by whom? just kidding :) whether a country is "allowed" to do something is probably a red herring.

              spitballing here, i think folks who engage in criticism of ethnonationalism are most likely to criticize the ethnonationalism they see close to home, as opposed to what might be happening on the other side of the planet.

              there are valid critiques of japan's treatment of its nondominant ethnicities, and lots of anecdotal experiences covering the same, but it's a lot easier to discuss the nuances of an issue like this when you're more intimately familiar with the culture and sociopolitical history of a region.

            • dismalaf 2 days ago

              A very ironic example is that Americans moving to Mexico is seen as bad, whereas Mexicans moving to the US is seen as necessary by the left...

              In Canada here, we have land acknowledgements and it's politically correct to say we stole the land and should give it back to the natives. Then when native Europeans want to keep their land, it's white supremacy...

              It's a very obvious double standard.

          • mijoharas 2 days ago

            just double checked, there is a separate section of the article that has the "foreign born" population of london, which is 36%, so he's definitely excluding any non-white english people there.

            • paulbjensen 2 days ago

              I used to work at a Ruby on Rails shop many years ago (New Bamboo, now part of ThoughtBot) which is in London.

              I got pointed to the blog post, and it was such a strikingly-bad hot take that I had to write a response: http://paulbjensen.co.uk/2025/09/17/on-dhhs-as-i-remember-lo...

              In my opinion, initially I thought "Oh David's been sucked into some kind of social media bubble (on X) or disinformation space", but then as I read the post, down to the bit where he started talking about "demographic replacement", I came to the view that this is who he is a person.

              It's shocking and disappointing.

              • properpopper 2 days ago

                Thanks for your post! Is there a way to add a comment there?

                • paulbjensen 2 days ago

                  You're welcome.

                  Unfortunately not - the page is a html export from a markdown editor (Typora), not a blog engine.

          • prh8 2 days ago

            This is only one of many examples over years of DHH’s ideology. Analyzing this one instance (the most recent) does not change anything, this is a drop in a bucket

        • 15155 2 days ago

          [flagged]

          • cogman10 2 days ago

            Don't write long blog posts about how your country doesn't have enough white people (and should start deporting brown people) and you won't be called a white supremist. Pretty simple.

            • bigstrat2003 2 days ago

              Or maybe don't call someone names corresponding to behavior that they haven't endorsed.

              • cogman10 2 days ago

                Maybe don't repeat nazi slogans if you don't want to be labeled a white supremacist.

                > Denmark is primarily a country for the Danes, Britain primarily a united kingdom for the Brits, and Japan primarily a set of islands for the Japanese.

            • 15155 2 days ago

              Nowhere does the blog post say that, which is why this is libel.

              • cogman10 2 days ago

                > There's absolutely nothing racist or xenophobic in saying that Denmark is primarily a country for the Danes, Britain primarily a united kingdom for the Brits, and Japan primarily a set of islands for the Japanese.

                That is a white supremacist rhetoric and fascist rhetoric. Looking for racial purity based on geography was a core tenant of the Nazis [1], some of the most famous white supremacists (white german supremacists. Nobody is at their level.)

                It's not libel if it's true.

                [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nur_f%C3%BCr_Deutsche

                • 15155 2 days ago

                  How is nationality equivalent to race? Watch this:

                  America should be a country for Americans.

                  Which race am I talking about here?

                  • cogman10 2 days ago

                    The real question is who isn't American? When someone says "X is for Xes" they are implicitly saying "and not for Ys".

                    If you don't believe that's the case, then tell me exactly what that phrase means other than to exclude some group. To claim "these are not real Americans".

                    • 15155 2 days ago

                      Totally dodging the issue. You claimed "white supremacist" was an accurate title, cited Nazis who invaded other countries and eradicated the local culture/population/racial groups without assimilating (eerily similar to mass immigration), and then immediately moved the goalposts when it was illustrated how ignorant such a statement could be.

                      > who isn't American?

                      Is this a trick question? People who were not born in America are clearly not American, save for naturalized citizens and a handful of other caveats. If you were born in Iceland, Greenland, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark (just picking some traditionally/predominantly-white countries to really drive it home) and are not the child of a diplomat or even a citizen: you are not American.

                      Seriously: do you believe you are Japanese? If you actually are Japanese, do you think you're Peruvian, too? Are you also a Liechtensteiner? People are citizens of specific nations, believe it or not - this is not some new, misunderstood concept.

                      > means other than to exclude some group

                      Why is it a foregone conclusion that exclusion is automatically unjust?

                      Are countries not permitted to exclude people? Again: this is not based on race. Does one have an automatic right to immigrate wherever they please?

                      • cogman10 a day ago

                        You are feigning ignorance.

                        I'm done, you aren't been honest in this exchange.

                        But let me spell it out.

                        When someone says "America for the Americans" they are saying "not the Latinos or Muslims or brown people I don't like". This is crystal clear with how ICE is currently operating and by the number of Latino citizens they've arrested.

                        Also, yes, someone that naturalizes is American. We're a melting pot nation. You can be two things. American and Japanese. American and Peruvian, American and Mexican. Where you or your parents were born does not take away from you being American.

                        Feel free to write more about how "actually no, it's just a patriotic call".

                        • 15155 a day ago

                          You lost three comments ago - now you're resorting to broad generalizations, false statements, and a litany of other logical fallacies.

                          > When someone says "America for the Americans" they are saying "not the Latinos or Muslims or brown people I don't like".

                          Strawman / circular reasoning. People can want less immigration in their country from everywhere and have it not be about "brown people" - you are the only one commenting about race. Countless legal immigrant Latinos don't want people "cutting in line," either, but that doesn't mesh with your diatribe.

                          > Also, yes, someone that naturalizes is American

                          Naturalization is subject to laws of the nation granting citizenship: and nations are allowed to exclude people based on criteria of their own design - not yours. We're not all "citizens of the world" with unlimited rights to immigrate under all circumstances: deal with it.

                          > not take away from you being American

                          Sure, but you might not be allowed to naturalize in the first place if you do not meet the criteria - or - gasp! - the country wants fewer new citizens!

                          I'm positively thrilled with the what the $30B+ invested into ICE is buying - years worth of illegal activity are being corrected as we speak.

    • mperham 2 days ago

      I clarified the toot.

      • mijoharas 2 days ago

        Thanks Mike, I editted, and asked this:

        > Why do the maintainers have a problem with this? I thought the stated reason was about RC removing everyone's access with no warning.

        I seem to remember some of DHH's controversy due to banning politics at basecamp or something. Is it related to that?

        • kubectl_h 2 days ago
          • junon 2 days ago

            Yet another "it's okay if I move there, but now that they have moved there, it sucks and is 'foreign'" take.

            It just reads like thinly veiled racism.

            • sebastianz a day ago

              > It just reads like thinly veiled racism.

              Thinly veiled? What veil - it's completely naked, one can clearly see all the constituent parts, including the repugnant bits.

          • ilikehurdles 2 days ago

            DHH has grown on me so much in the last few years. Love that he's talking about this and putting so many good products out at the same time.

            • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF a day ago

              Hoo yeah. DHH's racism is looking thick, solid, and tight. Keep us all posted on your continued progress!

        • bakugo 2 days ago

          > I seem to remember some of DHH's controversy due to banning politics at basecamp or something. Is it related to that?

          I wouldn't be surprised. The presence of this quote in the linked document:

          > A person’s character is determined not only by their actions, but also the actions they stay silent while witnessing.

          Suggests that the person who wrote it is deeply obsessed with political activism.

          • lstodd 2 days ago

            Inaction is an action in itself, they are right in this. IDK where you see a deep obsession in a recognition of this obvious fact.

            • bakugo 2 days ago

              No, inaction is inaction.

              Claiming otherwise is just a roundabout way of saying "you must actively support my agenda at all times, otherwise I will consider you my enemy, even if you take a neutral stance" that political activists love to use to pressure normal people into supporting them.

              • abraae 2 days ago

                Also consider that many people are not in the US and are not obliged to wade into US politics.

              • ranger_danger a day ago

                I think it depends on why there is inaction.

              • lstodd 2 days ago

                Inaction is a manifestation of one of two things: ignorance, or conscious decision to not act. I agree that strictly only the latter can be considered an act, while the former .. well. Not an act, but a then the question arises if an unconscious person can even be considered a person _in_relation_to_having_a_conversation_with_them_. That last point I must even more press.

                I think this is what we are discussing. Please share your viewpoint on this.

                • derefr 2 days ago

                  > Inaction is a manifestation of one of two things: ignorance, or conscious decision to not act.

                  Under which of these categories would you classify the following assertion:

                  > As much as I've learned about subject X, I still feel that neither I — nor most people who are already acting, for that matter — truly have enough information to take an informed stance here, as the waters are being actively clouded by propaganda campaigns, censorship, and false-flag operations by one or both sides; and I believe that acting without true knowledge can only play into someone's hand in a way that may damage what turns out to be an innocent party I would highly regret damaging, when this all shakes out a decade down the line. I find myself too knowingly ignorant to conscientiously act... yet I also do not highly prioritize gaining any more information about the situation, as I have seemingly passed the threshold where acquiring additional verifiable and objective information on the conflict is cheap enough to be worth it; gaining any further knowledge to inform my stance is too costly for someone like me, who is neither an investigative journalist, nor a historiographer, nor enmeshed in the conflict myself. So I fear I must opt out of the conflict altogether.

                  I find myself increasingly arriving at exactly this stance on so many subjects that other people seem to readily take stances (and allow themselves to be spurred to action) on.

                  I suppose I may differ from the average person in at least one way — that being that, if I were tricked into harming innocent parties, I would hold myself to account for allowing myself to be tricked, rather than externalizing blame to the party responsible for tricking me. After all, only by my learning a lesson in avoiding being manipulated, do I actually lessen the likelihood of the next innocent party coming to harm. Which is a lot more important to me, in a rule-utilitarian sense, than is avoiding social approbation for not taking a stance.

                  • lstodd 2 days ago

                    > I also do not highly prioritize gaining any more information about the situation

                    You acknowledge your ignorance and then refuse to remedy that.

                    This is an act. Perfectly acceptable and understandable. But what is more important it's deliberate and you accept responsibility for any and all consequences.

                    > I suppose I may differ from the average person in at least one way — that being that, if I were tricked into harming innocent parties, I would hold myself to account for allowing myself to be tricked, rather than externalizing blame to the party responsible for tricking me.

                    Very commendable. I wish more people held themselves to this standard. It is one of the foundations of learning after all.

                    • lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 2 days ago

                      > refuse to remedy

                      They did not say this. They said they would not highly prioritize it. Which is, of course, reasonable: given two topics, I have little metric to prioritize learning about one over the other. I have no way to know that I am prioritizing my research adequately.

                      • lstodd 2 days ago

                        We all know what deprioritize means. But this is fine.

                        I would like to put the emphasis on doing this consciously. This is the important point. Too many people just do not think or know what introspection is.

                  • immibis a day ago

                    Like they already said, it's either true ignorance or it's a deliberate choice of wilful ignorance - or it's a conscious decision to feign ignorance. The latter is something that a lot of people do in order to escape accountability for their beliefs, and that has to be taken into consideration, and the previous comment didn't mention that possibility.

                    If someone doesn't know enough about an issue to care and also doesn't know the things that would motivate them to find out more about the issue that would make them care, that is true ignorance.

                    If someone doesn't know about an issue and deliberately avoids exposing themselves to things that would care, then it's a deliberate choice.

              • rexpop 2 days ago

                There is no "neutral stance," only ignorance of bias.

                https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10970937

                • tremon 2 days ago

                  All rhetorical dichotomies are false.

                  • rexpop 2 days ago

                    Since when does the PDP-6 implement only dichotomous state?

                    • tremon a day ago

                      I have never seen a PDP-6 in its natural habitat (only in zoos) so take this with a grain of salt, but I'm pretty sure the PDP-6 is not a rhetorical device.

      • wild_egg 2 days ago

        Didn't RC drop DHH from RailsConf because of his views? Seems weird to think they're collaborate on a coup or whatever is being suggested here.

        • konnorrogers 2 days ago

          They dropped him as keynote speaker a few years ago, and then under new leadership, brought DHH back for the final RailsConf hosted by Ruby Central this year.

          The Ruby Central that dropped him is not the same people running Ruby Central today.

          https://ruby.social/@rubycentral/114585914969796428

    • gizzlon 2 days ago

      > maintainers have recently quit (including their only full-time engineer) due to their continued relationship with DHH.

      Ehh, what?! Basically 0 developers in the US have quit as a protest against literal totalitarianism, major and obvious corruption, the end of vaccines (will kill countless) and the end of USAID (already killed.. how many kids?).

      But, sure, DHH.. that's where we draw the line!

      FFS

      Edit: maybe I misunderstood why they quit, quite confused. Still..

      Edit 2: Unclear if this has anything to do with DHH? And it turns out I also disagree with some of his views. But, it still stands, he's writing a blog, not literally killing kids. Where's the mass quittings for those people?

      • arccy 2 days ago

        what do those things have to do with Ruby? whereas DHH has a clear link

        • gizzlon 2 days ago

          Nothing, I'll give you that. It's just frustrating to see so little action taken against those with actual power who are doing quite horrible stuff

          • mort96 2 days ago

            And what exactly do you want the RubyGems maintainers to do about the rise of fascism in the USA..?

eutropia 2 days ago

Could someone with more insight as to the decision-making at Ruby Central weigh in on what's going on here? Between this and drama with the conferences over the years I'm just confused. They've been busy launching podcasts and doing fundraising, email campaigns and all that. Has there been a change in leadership?

  • swilk001 2 days ago

    Yes, they recently hired a new Executive Director.

    • bradgessler 2 days ago
      • RobotToaster 2 days ago

        Someone with absolutely no technical background, a recipe for disaster.

        • bradgessler 2 days ago

          Rhiannon worked with Ruby Central for a bit, left a few weeks ago, and just shared this: https://bsky.app/profile/rhiannon.io/post/3lz6zcflg2s26

          • jaredcwhite 2 days ago

            Oh wow. I'm absolutely alarmed after reading that. To be honest, I had been wondering if some of the PR disasters this year could be laid on Rhiannon's shoulders, but it sounds like the rot is coming from the top.

          • vintagedave 2 days ago

            Post not found, what did it say?

            • knodi123 2 days ago

              her followup post:

              Deleted my post, which I published before Ruby central released their blog explaining things.

              It’s ultimately not my place to say or speculate about what’s going on.

              It’s obviously a disastrously bad roll out or whatever is happening and I hope they are able to make things right w the community.

            • pmontra 2 days ago

              Interesting. It worked a few hours ago. Sorry, I didn't make a copy of the text.

        • drbragg 2 days ago

          Opposed to hiring someone with a technical background but no experience running a non-profit?

          • TehCorwiz 2 days ago

            It's easier to learn to run a non-profit coming from a technical management background than it is for an MBA to learn to be an engineer.

          • ehutch79 2 days ago

            As opposed to someone with experience with both?

            • drbragg 2 days ago

              I mean, that would be awesome. Got someone in mind?

          • daveguy 2 days ago

            Non sequitur. False dichotomy.

      • blibble 2 days ago

        looking at that CV, I have zero doubt that this will be a subscription service in 5 years time

        • ryandrake 2 days ago

          Yikes! At least they'll have someone "results-driven, client-focused," and "driving stakeholder engagement", because that's really what a software repository needs.

      • RHSeeger 2 days ago

        > Going in, I had heard there was something magical about the Ruby community, but I didn’t yet understand what that meant.

        ... so I decided to destroy it, because I cannot abide things I do not understand.

  • brightball 2 days ago

    I'm still not clear about why they dropped RailsConf. I assume the biggest sponsors threw their weight behind Rails World?

    • projectazorian 2 days ago

      It feels like funding for conference participation at US companies has plummeted since COVID. Pre-COVID, most engineers I worked with would attend at least one conference a year on the company’s dime. That’s now become uncommon for anyone below staff engineer or director level, at the places where I work anyway.

jacques_chester 2 days ago

At Shopify I was the person who first proposed that we needed to stump up $$$ for RubyGems (and only by implication Ruby Central).

This is not what I had in mind and now I'm embarrassed that I helped make it possible.

  • choilive 2 days ago

    Sounds like Shopify has some leverage then to open a line of comms with Ruby Central. "Explain yourselves or we will pull funding"

    • prh8 2 days ago

      The problem is that Shopify is leveraged by DHH (who is on their board) to be the financial support referenced elsewhere in today’s discourse. Shopify is a bad actor here

    • konnorrogers 2 days ago

      If that's the case, sounds contradictory to their status as a 501c3 and could get their tax exempt status pulled if it's true.

  • jacques_chester 2 days ago

    I should add, to clarify: I don't work at Shopify anymore and I'm not speaking for them. Purely a personal view.

ornornor 2 days ago

I took comfort in the fact that the ruby community seemed miraculously immune from these petty disputes and takeovers from the benevolent entity running the service. Seems like that’s not the case anymore :(

Sorry for all the maintainers, that must suck.

  • scragz 2 days ago

    I miss the days of "we're nice because matz is nice"

    • mijoharas 2 days ago

      It's often "Mats is nice and so we are nice" and sometimes abbreviated to MINASWAN (which confused me a lot when I didn't remember it)

    • jdminhbg 2 days ago

      A decade ago there used to be a site called rubydrama.org because of how frequently the community blew up at itself.

    • ursuscamp 2 days ago

      I've been a ruby user for almost 15 years. I've been to several RubyConfs in that time. I have never found that to be true. It's a thin veneer over rampant toxicity and political extremism. Many of the evangelists in the Ruby community garnered a horrible reputation outside of Ruby, then migrated to insular social media applications which no one uses, causing the slow and persistent decline in the popularity of the language.

      • sleight42 2 hours ago

        I started using Ruby almost 20 years ago. I've been to a boat load of Ruby conferences. I even ran a hippy dippy Ruby event on the east coast for about 10 years.

        It was welcoming.

        Then 2016 happened. Then some Rubyists began spewing hate and distrust at people just because of their religion.

        It wasn't political until certain groups made it political.

      • ryoshoe 2 days ago

        Although I haven't been in the ruby community as long as you, I have been to two RubyConfs. I didn't notice any overt toxicity or political extremism when I went but I'd be interested to hear more about your experience if you don't mind sharing?

Lio 2 days ago

Ruby Central really need to come out and explain what they are doing here.

At the least this looks like a very destructive and poorly communicated move.

drbragg 2 days ago

Ruby Central's whole thing is they maintain, develop, and secure bundler and ruby gems. Marty was previously a lead at Ruby Central and recently came back to RC as their Open Source Lead. It sounds like there was a clusterfuck getting the repo switched over but I'm not seeing how this is an attack on Ruby gems. Am I missing something?

  • woodruffw 2 days ago

    I think the missing piece here is that almost every person publicly involved with RubyGems’ development has left the project in recent weeks. I don’t have any special insight here, but from an outsider’s perspective it seems as through Ruby Central is trying to turn a former “host” relationship into a “control” relationship.

    • nevinera 2 days ago

      I think you're right, but I suspect the root here is one of legal liability - if rubycentral is operating as a nonprofit that hosts _a recurring attack vector on other companies_, they'll have legal obligations to secure that service against those attacks. I assume they are continuously deploying out of that repository, and took the simplest route to controlling the attack vectors?

      I'm not sure how anyone familiar with open-source communities would fail to predict the backlash though. They really should have forked the repository and switched the deployments over to their downstream fork (if I'm right about the root cause here).

      (I'm mostly thinking in terms of supply-chain attacks, like this one: https://blog.rubygems.org/2025/08/25/rubygems-security-respo...)

      • woodruffw 2 days ago

        That would be a pretty broad assumption of liability: I'm not very involved in Ruby but I am involved in Python packaging, and to my knowledge there's been no similar discussion around the PSF's keys-to-the-code control over PyPI (which is in a similar position in terms of supply chain attack vectors).

        In other words: that argument is interesting, but it feels strained to me :-) -- I don't think RubyGems or Ruby Central is actually legally liable in this way (or if they are, it suggests a failure of clarity in their EULA/TOS).

        • nevinera 2 days ago

          Well.. "legal liability" is kind of complex topic. Usually what really matters isn't "what the courts will actually determine if such a case is brought" it's "how much will it cost to prove that lack of liability, and what is the risk that we are wrong?". I also don't believe that such an organization is liable for anything beyond negligence, but whether the lack of an action constitutes negligence is .. well, one can rarely be totally confident in the outcome of that kind of proceeding.

          The (mostly PR) explanation they produced seems to express roughly the same thing I was guessing though: https://rubycentral.org/news/strengthening-the-stewardship-o...

      • blibble 2 days ago

        there is no contract to assign liability

        and I doubt you could ever get negligence to stick, given you are downloading code from some website and running it, on your own accord, entirely unprompted

        (but IANAL)

robin_reala 2 days ago

Looks like Homebrew are mediating in some capacity: https://bsky.app/profile/mikemcquaid.com/post/3lz6pkabzwk2o

  • mikemcquaid 2 days ago

    Not Homebrew, yes me. Just trying to mediate and meeting with as many people on both sides (past and present) as possible.

  • politelemon 2 days ago

    Why is homebrew involved in this?

    • dcchambers 2 days ago

      It's not. The lead maintainer of Homebrew (Mike McQuaid) is helping to mediate the conversation between the parties, per his own post.

      Has nothing specifically to do with Homebrew.

    • robin_reala 2 days ago

      Homebrew is one of the most developer-visible Ruby projects around.

dcchambers 2 days ago

Hasn't Ruby Central always 'owned' RubyGems.org, Bundler, and all related infra?

Removing existing maintainers from the project isn't good - and hopefully it's a temporary oversight as Ruby Central gets things set up in the new org. Either bad communication from Ruby Central - or they really did made a bad mistake here (maybe even with the best intentions, given recent NPM issues).

Edit: It seems like there's a lot more to the story here. Many volunteer RubyGems/Bundler maintainers have left because they disagree with decisions that Ruby Central (the nonprofit organization) has made and it seems like all of this is fallout related to that.

Alifatisk 2 days ago

So Ruby Central did a hostile takeover of RubyGems enterprise account in GH. Wow

nomdep 2 days ago

I can already see the future:

The Rails Foundation will start its own central gem registry and set of forked tools.

Then, RailsCentral will lose its sponsors and fade into irrelevance.

morpheuskafka 2 days ago

For those like me who are not Ruby users/devs, it might be good to explain who exactly Ruby Central is? I assumed they were analogous to Python Soft Foundation or Linux Foundation etc. as the entity of maintainers/owners/whatever of Ruby.

But it seems that they have nothing to do with the ruby-lang.org site where the Ruby binaries itself are distributed. Instead, their own site appears to primarily list them as responsible for organizing an annual conference?

And who owned the RubyGems infrastructure before this takeover? The website (and domain that the client actually calls to get the gems, presumably) seem to have already been part of Ruby Central, so what exactly changed here ownership wise, beyond just kicking the maintainers?

(unrelated -- seeing a mention of DHH here reminded me that I haven't seen anything of the Matt/WP drama in a long time on HN -- time to go Google whatever the resolution of that was)

  • nomdep 2 days ago

    Until a few years ago, RubyCentral was very similar to the Python Software Foundation in that it managed all the infrastructure and the main conferences - everything except language development.

    A few years ago, RubyCentral lost power when the Rails Foundation was created (most of the Ruby world revolves around Rails). The Rails Foundation organizes its own yearly conference, and RubyCentral stopped hosting theirs.

    However, RubyCentral still controls the package management tools and the package registry.

jfjjsjdjdjdj 2 days ago

The idea of a central repository for shared code is great, whether it’s rubygems, rpm, maven central, pypi, crates, packagist, nuget, etc.

But, none of these are a good idea. Any level of centralization leads to disappointment eventually.

wredcoll 2 days ago

Well, as part of this drama I got to learn that dhh, the rails guy, is now a proud right wing racist:

https://world.hey.com/dhh/as-i-remember-london-e7d38e64

(Btw, whats with people supporting racism in foreign countries anyways?)

  • felipec a day ago

    There's nothing racist there.

    • wredcoll 21 hours ago

      He's literally saying that britain is now bad because there's too many non-white people living there. Its kinda the definition of racism.

      Also, of course, the rally he talks up is named after someone who is literally proud to be a racist.

      If none of that triggers your moral compass, you may need to have it recalibrated.

      • felipec 8 hours ago

        > He's literally saying that britain is now bad because there's too many non-white people living there.

        No, he didn't. That's something you are hallucinating he said.

mooreds a day ago

I know Marty personally (he helps run the Boulder ruby meetup with me) and I am positive he acted in good faith, even if there were mistakes along the way. I also empathize with the volunteers who were unpleasantly surprised; never a good feeling. I'd encourage everyone to remember that there are people on both sides of the computer screen.

As mentioned in a sibling comment, there's a Q&A with him and other members of Ruby Central on Tue. Here's a link to the signup: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45302629

k33n 2 days ago

The idea that Ruby Central is "attacking" its own project -- that it has secured funding for -- for a decade plus, is not really based in reality. Not sure what goes on in their "Github Enterprise", but their vanilla github is pretty transparent. Marty has been doing good work in the repo as of late around the Orgs feature. I rely on rubygems.org, and my fork of rubygems.org on a daily basis.

The project is an objective public-good. It's sad that a former employee is attempting to burn it all down. I guess they thought it was all about them and not the millions of DAU's the platform has served without fail since inception. Contractors will come and go.

What are the OPs contributions even? I don't see a single commit from her handle on the 24 month view (below). Correct me if I'm wrong.

https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems.org/graphs/contributors...

lavela 2 days ago

Welp, so there goes another ecosystem I considered exploring.

What almost surprises me the most, is that such a mature ecosystem still doesn't have a formalized governance structure after all this time. How common is this among large and widely-used open source projects?

  • teknofobi 2 days ago

    Problem with package managers are they are quite expensive to run, so hard to manage in an otherwise open source ecosystem. There was some controversy around NPM before the GitHub acquisition https://www.businessinsider.com/npm-cofounder-laurie-voss-re..., which I guess is the exact problem a non-profit such as RubyCentral tried to solve.

    I would GitHub would be quite well-positioned to set up infrastructure around a fork of RubyGems if things fall apart.

    • lavela 2 days ago

      I don't understand yet how that relates to formalizing your decision structures as a group.

      I'm sure NPM as a company has some form of decision hierarchy and RubyCentral does as well, but it seems like Ruby Gems doesn't (or didn't). I learned the hard way that writing this down is one of the first thing you should do in any kind of group formation process.

      I get that organically grown tech projects don't have that from the start (and that they might not immediately recognize that they're a group at all), but I'd reckoned that an organization of the size of Ruby Gems, with such an importance, would have taken care of that a while ago and I think it's quite irresponsible that they didn't.

hu3 2 days ago

Copy-pasted below for posterity in case it goes down because I think this is a huge deal:

## Ruby Central’s Attack on RubyGems

Hi! I’m Ellen, but you probably know me as duckinator or puppy.

I really wish I didn’t have to write this, but I feel the Ruby community needs to know it.

I have been part of the Ruby community since I was 13, and one of the RubyGems maintainers for the last decade.

This community has helped me through very hard times, and you mean the world to me.

One of the most important lessons I learned from y’all is this:

> A person’s character is determined not only by their actions,

> but also the actions they stay silent while witnessing.

## This Month Has Been A Fuck Of A Year

This is what unfolded between September 9 2025 and September 19 2025, as I understand it.

On September 9th, with no warning or communication, a RubyGems maintainer unilaterally:

renamed the “RubyGems” GitHub enterprise to “Ruby Central”, added non-maintainer Marty Haught of Ruby Central, and removed every other maintainer of the RubyGems project.

He refused to revert these changes, saying he would need permission from Marty to do so.

On September 15th, this maintainer said he restored the previous permissions after talking with Marty. Marty stated the deletion was a “mistake” and “should never have happened”.

The “restoration” kept a notable change: Marty was now an owner of the GitHub enterprise.

The RubyGems team responded by immediately began putting in place an overdue official governance policy, inspired by Homebrew’s.

On September 18th, with no explanation, Marty Haught revoked GitHub organization membership for all admins on the RubyGems, Bundler, and RubyGems.org maintainer teams.

By doing this, he took control for himself and other full-time employees of Ruby Central.

Later that day, after refusing to restore GitHub permissions, Ruby Central further revoked access to the bundler and rubygems-update gems on RubyGems.org

I will not mince words here: This was a hostile takeover.

## My Stance On This

I consider Ruby Central’s behavior a threat to the Ruby community as a whole.

The forceful removal of those who maintained RubyGems and Bundler for over a decade is inherently a hostile action. Ruby Central crossed a line by doing this.

When called out, these changes were mostly reverted. Then, it was done again.

By crossing that line a second time after being called out for it, Ruby Central has made it extremely clear to me that they are not engaging in good faith.

Ruby Central’s behavior has forced my hand. I refuse to watch this without speaking up.

I am resigning from my position at Ruby Central, effective immediately.

To remove any doubt: Ruby Central unilaterally, with no explanation, revoked all access to RubyGems against both my wishes and the wishes of the entire RubyGems team.

Ellen Dash (@duckinator)

September 19, 2025

notmsn 2 days ago

[flagged]

  • prh8 2 days ago

    The only people who believe the world isn’t on fire are the ones with the matches

  • dismalaf 2 days ago

    The American Ruby community...

    They tried to cancel Matz for not supporting weird DEI corporate speak in the TOS, they've been trying to cancel DHH for years for his mild conservative lean.

    There's also a weird contingent who keep trying to push stuff like TypeScript for Rails and typing for Ruby, at one point they wanted to fork Rails when DHH made Hotwire default (they wanted React), etc..

    Outside the weird US corporate bubble, Ruby is doing just fine. Japan, Europe, Canada, etc... Rails World gets bigger and bigger, Ruby Kaigi is growing, etc...

    • JimmaDaRustla 2 days ago

      > mild conservative lean

      you're whitewashing that he's racist

      • dismalaf 2 days ago

        Do you have a source for this?

        Also, do you watch his podcast? His host (who's literally also one of his employees) is a black woman. Not proof he's not racist, but suggests probably not.

        Unless you just assume anyone to the right of you equals racist, which lots of leftists do. Which is one of many reasons why the global right is rising...

        • cjk 2 days ago
          • dismalaf 2 days ago

            Question: do Palestinians deserve their own country?

            • prh8 2 days ago

              Well they had a country until the US and UK stepped in...

              • dismalaf a day ago

                They've literally never had a country. Went from Roman to various foreign Islamic states (plus a crusader kingdom and the Mongols briefly) to Ottoman to British to part of Egypt (Gaza) and Jordan (West Bank) to current situation.

                Either way, it's weird that leftists will say every culture deserves their own land/country except Europeans...

      • caseyohara 2 days ago

        Is he? I use Ruby and Rails, but I don't pay much attention to DHH so this is news to me. Would you mind pointing me to a source for this?

        • projectazorian 2 days ago

          He endorsed British far-right agitator “Tommy Robinson” (not his real name) - in the US context this would be like endorsing eg. Nick Fuentes.

          • dismalaf a day ago

            So did Elon Musk. So did millions of Brits over the weekend. But I guess the further left the left goes, the further away the right becomes....

        • knodi123 2 days ago

          he's been moaning loudly and histrionically about how london is doomed because there's not enough white natives.

    • jaredcwhite 2 days ago

      A very biased take to be sure. Who is the "they" you are referring to? Who is "the American Ruby community"? Sounds like a thinly-veiled attack on "leftists".

      I know plenty of Rubyists in Europe who these days find DHH as a person to be completely odious, not to mention a maintainer in violation of CoC.

      • dismalaf 2 days ago

        > mention a maintainer in violation of CoC.

        Is he a Ruby maintainer? First I've heard of this...

        > know plenty of Rubyists in Europe who these days find DHH as a person to be completely odious

        Different circles I guess. I live in Europe half the year and most of the Europeans I know are way more right wing than DHH...

        • jaredcwhite 2 days ago

          IMHO he violated the CoC of the Turbo project. FWIW, I'm by no means a TypeScript guy so I was even sympathetic to his general ideas on that topic. But his handling of it was terrible.

          • dismalaf 2 days ago

            ?? Isn't Turbo his own project? Also in the previous comment you mentioned Ruby CoC which has nothing to do with any project that's not the Ruby interpreter/project itself...

rm808 2 days ago

[flagged]

fareesh 2 days ago

[flagged]

  • Spivak 2 days ago

    Look I don't even know what sides the various actors in this spat would see themselves on so don't consider what I'm about to say as an endorsement of their beliefs because I don't know what they are.

    That being said the freedom of (non-)association is one of the few non-violent means to signal your disapproval of someone else in a way that actually matters. The fact that folks are insulated from the consequences of their actions I think is a big part of how we got here. People spew hateful nonsense and sling accusations at each other that in person would get their teeth knocked out. Refusing to work with or collaborate with someone you consider to be distasteful is pretty mild and not terribly unreasonable even if it makes things awkward.

    I can't exactly blame someone for acting on their conscience even if I don't like it. Working with someone who are at odds with despite your differences I consider praiseworthy but obligatory.

    • fareesh a day ago

      i agree with all that

      but the stuff we're seeing is akin to not liking the same flavor of ice cream

      soft, mild, first-world problems

felipec a day ago

That's what wokeness does to open source projects.

I was banned from the RubyGems project by simply saying "no satisfactory resolution from the development team".

Now woke people are walking away from RubyGems because Ruby Central wants to align with DHH. I say good riddance.

Software should be about technical merit, not ideological agendas.

jmuguy 2 days ago

I know its against the content policy on HN but I really wish I could reply with that gif from Veep where she's nervously laughing while mouthing "what the fuck".

Seriously... wtf.

nilslindemann 2 days ago

Come to Python land, we treat people better.

  • claudiug a day ago

    based on what? I'm both communities and is not 100% like that :)