The Kubernetes Code of Conduct Committee (CoCC) is the body that is responsible for enforcing and maintaining the Kubernetes Code of Conduct.
The charter defines the scope and governance of the Code of Conduct Committee.
- Ana Margarita Medina (@AnaMMedina21), Lightstep
- Danielle Lancashire (@endocrimes), Independent
- Hilliary Lipsig (@hlipsig), Red Hat
- Jeremy Rickard (@jeremyrickard), Microsoft
- Xander Grzywinski (@salaxander), Defense Unicorns
- Aeva Black (@AevaOnline)
- Jennifer Rondeau (@Bradamant3)
- Carolyn Van Slyck (@carolynvs)
- Celeste Horgan (@celestehorgan)
- Carlos Tadeu Panato Jr. (@cpanato)
- Jason DeTiberus (@detiber)
- Eric Paris (@eparis)
- Jaice Singer DuMars (@jdumars)
- Karen Chu (@karenhchu)
- Nabarun Pal (@palnabarun)
- Paris Pittman (@parispittman)
- Tasha Drew (@tashimi)
- Tim Pepper (@tpepper)
- Vallery Lancey (@vllry)
- Slack: #code-of-conduct
- Private Mailing List: [email protected]
- Open Community Issues/PRs
- GitHub Teams:
- @kubernetes/code-of-conduct-committee - General Discussion
- Steering Committee Liaison: Sascha Grunert (@saschagrunert)
Please email [email protected] to initiate an incident report. Please do not make reports via our public slack channel.
Our Incident Report Handling Procedures describes how we handle reports while protecting the safety and confidentiality of all involved parties.
The members and their terms are as follows:
- Jeremy Rickard (Microsoft)
- Ana Margarita Medina (Lightstep)
- Danielle Lancashire (VMware)
- Hilliary Lipsig (RedHat)
- Xander Grzywinski (Microsoft)
Please see the bootstrapping document and election process guidelines for more information on how members are picked and their responsibilities.