Linus Torvalds on his insults: respect should be earned.

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  • čas přidán 2. 09. 2014
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    Linus Torvalds: “I don't respect people unless I think they deserve the respect. There are people who think that respect is something that should be given, and I happen to be one of the people who is perfectly happy saying no respect should be earned. And without being earned, you don't get it. It's really that simple.”
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @Raylightsen
    @Raylightsen Před 2 lety +828

    Respect should be earned.
    Disrespect should be earned.
    To be ignored is free.
    I think this is how humanity works.

    • @heloxiii8894
      @heloxiii8894 Před 2 lety +18

      and it's fineeeeeeee

    • @wpyoga
      @wpyoga Před rokem +10

      To be ignored is the most important human right.
      Internet access is NOT a human right. You pay for the privilege.

    • @RR-et6zp
      @RR-et6zp Před rokem +2

      It’s the male merit vs female communitarian point of views

    • @RR-et6zp
      @RR-et6zp Před rokem

      @@heloxiii8894 It’s the male merit vs female communitarian point of views

    • @ME0WMERE
      @ME0WMERE Před rokem +2

      @@RR-et6zp What.

  • @danielh7678
    @danielh7678 Před 3 lety +2133

    I have the feeling that this mentality only works when you're in a position of authority, like Linus is. If I started talking to my tech lead or my boss like this, even if I might know more than them technically, I'd get fired.

    • @JayMaverick
      @JayMaverick Před 3 lety +380

      That's the whole point of the video. You get fired from one place, but you might be embraced by another place because they resonate with your style of communication.
      Of course if you find yourself being angry at everything constantly, then it's a different sort of problem.

    • @adaminoue3524
      @adaminoue3524 Před 3 lety +68

      Interestingly, I read your comment and thought about how being as abrasive as Linus would be fine in my current job, but not so fine in any prior job. I definitely think that the most important thing is the technology (results) and bosses will tolerate more than you think if you're an excellent programmer, but only in certain cultures (and probably not nearly half in the US at this time).

    • @laurens9561
      @laurens9561 Před 3 lety +36

      Happened to me twice. Didn't even talk 1 / 10th of the shit talked about here, And I was demonstrably right in the cases that most probably led to me being fired.
      Would still do it again.
      I will probably not land a high paying job very soon any more, but I really don't care.
      I most definitely don't have the success, finances or smarts like Linus, but I really feel what he's saying, so I guess it's stronger than ourselves.
      About authority, I don't think that's the thing. It works only if you can find people that are ok with this direct and open attitude AND share a common goal that is also profitable in financial terms, or gives respect or energy from doing this.
      Also, in Linus case, his authority grew naturally, in part because it's his baby, but also because the respect he deserved over the years from being dedicated and working hard.
      But yes, in general, I agree with what you say.

    • @gustavoturm
      @gustavoturm Před 3 lety +26

      @Мукура Блуд That's not "The beauty of open source", that is "the beauty of open source when you develop famous software everyone is interested in", as everyone is interested in, these people are kinda stuck with their bosses.

    • @ps3301
      @ps3301 Před 3 lety +11

      Look at Steve jobs . Most people who worked with him couldn't stand him as he was so demanding beyond belief.

  • @h.m.6228
    @h.m.6228 Před 4 lety +461

    "Shut up and compile that kernel!"

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 3 lety +22

      Bonus points if you use your own compiler, like Terry did.

    • @ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf
      @ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf Před 3 lety +3

      @@fungo6631 Cringe.

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 3 lety +19

      @@ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf Uh, oh! Another CIA glow in the dark!

    • @ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf
      @ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf Před 3 lety

      @@fungo6631 Cringe.

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 3 lety +7

      @@ldskjfhslkjdhflkjdhf CIA glow in the dark alert!

  • @mohammedfarahmand7809
    @mohammedfarahmand7809 Před 5 lety +852

    "Not everybody agrees, and that's fine, too!"

    • @juliankandlhofer7553
      @juliankandlhofer7553 Před 4 lety +22

      How dare you say that! I disagree!!!1!11!1!

    • @MrShadz
      @MrShadz Před 4 lety +14

      @RoastedLemonz OMG I'm so offended by your disagreement on Julian's disagreement!1!!1!!111!

    • @aronalfayez
      @aronalfayez Před 3 lety +16

      YOU ASSAULTED ME EVERYONE SAW IT! CANCEL THIS COMMENT!

    • @leonardonovara9348
      @leonardonovara9348 Před 3 lety +10

      For modern standards, that's racist and you should be cancelled.

    • @FunnyPigRun
      @FunnyPigRun Před 3 lety +1

      Bro. This joke has become too real, and it's not funny anymore... Like, "main" branch? Are you f*cking serious? The newest "git" even warns you about changing the default branch name.

  • @aliedperez
    @aliedperez Před 5 lety +1528

    0:43 _(...) I've actually seen projects that took the whole political correctness so far that the project is no longer is about the technology_
    that's prophetic, isn't it?

    • @enlocktv6103
      @enlocktv6103 Před 5 lety +43

      Sorry, I'm out of the loop. What happened?

    • @lyxar777
      @lyxar777 Před 5 lety +256

      Linus bend the knee, end of last year, and permitted the PC-cancer into the kernel-community, by stepping down and letting them install a "code of conduct". You know, just like they did in e-sports. Multiple kerneldevs then threatend to pull their code.
      In other words: Linux is now infected, down to the kernel. It's not "taken over" yet, but the cancer has firmly taken root, and will only spread.

    • @dervishosman9599
      @dervishosman9599 Před 4 lety +103

      @@lyxar777 Sorry, infected by what exactly? Your perception of an ideological encroachment?

    • @lyxar777
      @lyxar777 Před 4 lety +212

      Dervish: It has no fitting official name yet (they themselves call it "intersectional feminism", which is misleading since it has nothing to do with the original feminism. In fact, the original feminists despise it. Opponents call the perpetrators "SJWs", but that's misleading too, since it has nothing to do with justice or being social).
      A fitting name would be something like "Cultural and sexual marxism", since that's essentially their ideological system: Applying Marx's beliefs about economies to culture. For example, instead of declaring a class-hierachy the problem, they declare a cultural and sexual hierachy the problem. Some things stay the same though, such as establishing a new "influencer-class" (themselves), to engineer society.

    • @rafal5863
      @rafal5863 Před 4 lety +106

      ​@@lyxar777 How Orwellian that there is no name for it. Linux was the last bastion of meritocracy. I saw it at a big western multinational telco vendor. The rot starts with HR and new equity rules. In less than 12 months (one revision cycle) the equipment can't get 99.99% uptime any more.
      Socialists have a name for this process. "The long march through the institutions." Give it a wikipedia.

  • @dk418
    @dk418 Před 3 lety +609

    Torvalds: Respects should be earned, but disrespect is free.

    • @TheZorboidOrbb
      @TheZorboidOrbb Před 2 lety +37

      It was probably earned too.. Only thing you get for free is idgaf

    • @genericdeveloper3966
      @genericdeveloper3966 Před 2 lety +27

      That's something abusive people say to justify being an asshole.

    • @fabiotrucco7969
      @fabiotrucco7969 Před 2 lety +1

      You made a very good point

    • @srki22
      @srki22 Před 2 lety +36

      He is trying to justify abusive behaviour. It is the disrespect that should be earned, not respect. Google tit for tat strategy. My default position is to show respect to everyone until they create reasons for me to disrespect them.
      For example, I would give my seat to an elder person on a bus out of respect, but if I see that it is a disrespecting asshole or Karen, I would not give up my seat.
      You should always give a benefit of the doubt because we are not robots so we can make mistakes. There are some really good developers that would refuse to work in such environment even if they are not at the end of his rants.

    • @IkeaHomeSP
      @IkeaHomeSP Před 2 lety +5

      @@srki22 i agree w/ the last line of your statement but the problem w/ it is that most ppl will give you genuine reason to not respect them w/in a few interactions, and then you have ppl complaining about not getting the respect they supposedly deserve. it also helps to consider that different ppl have a different scope or gauge to whom how or why they extend respect. generally, i tend to respect ppl most for cathartic behaviour, or honesty rather, which is often misconstrued as being mean or abusive. those types of ppl are just sick of your (im gemeralizing) bullshit. in my experience, once youve figured out what they perceive as worthy of their respect, and adapt to that, they are the fairest and most reliable ppl to have in your life. i always draw the line w/ someone when i catch them in a lie or expecting more from me than what they are willing to penny.

  • @Wayne-wo1wc
    @Wayne-wo1wc Před 3 lety +446

    "I think Americans are far too concerned with superficial friendliness and politeness. Even when people are angry with you and are basically telling you to fuck of they will still continue to use "thank you" and "please" which becomes completely bizarre when their voice is telling you they are not being friendly at all."

    • @Kimchi_Studios
      @Kimchi_Studios Před 3 lety +34

      This man saw the future. Look at America now, holy shit that was fast.

    • @ryanwallace983
      @ryanwallace983 Před 3 lety +22

      @@Kimchi_Studios America has always been like this lol-look at southern culture “bless his/her heart” can usually be inferred to mean the stupid fucker based on tone

    • @timisa58
      @timisa58 Před 3 lety +37

      This isn't about superficial friendliness. This is about a man who openly insults other human beings in an over-the-top-manner. I am certain if he insulted you, you would not respect him. You may remain quiet and kiss his arse, but that would last until you finally realized just what a jerk he is and had enough.

    • @ryanwallace983
      @ryanwallace983 Před 3 lety +5

      @@timisa58 he is an ass, I don’t think anyone is contesting that...

    • @sd7335
      @sd7335 Před 3 lety +40

      @@timisa58 And yet this is an honest man, who doesn't need to hide behind superficial words as OP described. I rather talk to someone like this, then being waterboarded with fake pretense.

  • @RowanGontier
    @RowanGontier Před 7 lety +559

    The test for me is how Linus reacts when he is insulted. He faces nice people, from what I've seen.

    • @champfisk5613
      @champfisk5613 Před 3 lety +126

      He showed it when people applauded the guy for the respect opinion. He didn’t really like it I think.

    • @LemonVRC
      @LemonVRC Před 3 lety +82

      @@champfisk5613 And that's totally fine. He doesn't have to work with this crowd anyways, who cares.

    • @champfisk5613
      @champfisk5613 Před 3 lety +37

      @@LemonVRC meh you are him, I appreciate his contribution, but still doesn't mean he has to be a dick

    • @RowanGontier
      @RowanGontier Před 3 lety +6

      @@turtle1692 Lots of truth to that. I wish Linus followed that advice when it comes to sun like players such as Nvidia and Intel. I guess he realises that gods fall.

    • @JensHove
      @JensHove Před 3 lety +25

      @@champfisk5613 PC is regressive, and destructive. Honesty is what moves innovation. You don't like it? Leave. Cry-babies like you are becoming a scourge upon this planet.

  • @kagedrengen
    @kagedrengen Před 5 lety +755

    How times have changed...

    • @CeroTee
      @CeroTee Před 5 lety +42

      You mean how much he has sold himself.

    • @aliedperez
      @aliedperez Před 5 lety +16

      CeroTee hopefully for more than 30 pieces of silver...

    • @lowellhouser7731
      @lowellhouser7731 Před 5 lety +45

      Have they? Has Linus been forced out, has he caved to his daughter's wishes, has he been bought, say by Microsoft and Google because Linux is about to begin a decade of growth that will see it become their competition? Lots of questions with no answers.

    • @felipecabrera511
      @felipecabrera511 Před 5 lety +58

      He did it because of his little SJW daughter

    • @lowellhouser7731
      @lowellhouser7731 Před 5 lety +43

      Felipe Cabrera I'm sure that she's part of this. But I think that everybody is missing an angle on this. In 2018 alone, Microsoft has bought Git which was founded by Linus specifically to maintain Linux, and bought it's way into the Linux Foundation in the same year that Valve has integrated WINE seamlessly into Steam to grow the Linux user base specifically as a counter to Microsoft's obvious designs to close the Windows ecosystem. At the same time next year a Linux powered smartphone which completely avoids the Google ecosystem is landing on the market that will actually get even the FSF approval, and it's coming from a company that has experience succeeding with Linux devices. It will eventually be a competitor.
      In other words, it makes a lot of sense for both Microsoft and Google to be behind this, especially Microsoft. The only way M$ can possibly take down Linux is from within.

  • @noodlekingjr
    @noodlekingjr Před 11 měsíci +47

    1:42 "Living together is not by finding some lowest common denominator" As much as I lead with empathy in as many situations as possible, this is probably the most true he said during his whole answer.

    • @zyansheep
      @zyansheep Před 4 měsíci +1

      Well, it *could* be, and often is in many places, but its a matter of politics whether and where and to what degree it happens.

  • @whatever-wn1nk
    @whatever-wn1nk Před 3 lety +249

    Treating someone with respect and actually respecting someone are 2 different things.

    • @benruss4130
      @benruss4130 Před 2 lety +24

      everyone starts at 'common courtesy' you can either go up or down the ladder based on your actions.

    • @andyhilal1228
      @andyhilal1228 Před 2 lety +46

      He cannot differentiate between these:
      Respect: basic decency which should be afforded to all by default, in recognition of their humanity. Assumption of goodwill until shown otherwise. This kind of respect is not earned but can be lost.
      Respect: admiration and status earned over time by the display of someone's best qualities and high performance. This kind of respect must be earned, and is not given by default.
      There is a time and place for each of these things. He should learn to put down someone's work or opinions without insulting their humanity.
      But hey, what can we expect from someone who has no humanity himself outside of his work.

    • @benruss4130
      @benruss4130 Před 2 lety +9

      @@andyhilal1228 that kind of respect isn't respect at all it is common courtesy. Respect is earned, and any "respect" that is shown prior is disingenuous.

    • @ahilal
      @ahilal Před 2 lety +26

      @@benruss4130 fine, semantic distinction, but okay. Linus should treat people with common courtesy and he does not, disingenuously arguing that "respect should be earned" and whining about political correctness instead of just not being an asshole.

    • @mishafinadorin8049
      @mishafinadorin8049 Před 2 lety

      @@ahilal Is he really such a great asshole and are his remarks really undeserved?

  • @hedgeearthridge6807
    @hedgeearthridge6807 Před 3 lety +291

    I love how Linus is so calm and nice, yet so abrasive at the same time, LOL. You can tell he's not actively trying to be mean, and that he's not hateful. Like he said, people are different. Grow up in different cultures, in different families, and have different personalities and worldviews. And nobody's perfect either, of course. But I greatly respect him for it

    • @Ravie1
      @Ravie1 Před 3 lety +50

      Saying things to people like they should be retroactively aborted isn't being abrasive, it's hostile and hateful. Linus seems to confuse expression of self and expression of contempt, you can express dissatisfaction to people in a way that communicative and gives them the opportunity to improve, or you can be a self aggrandizing ass and make it about making yourself feel better than other people like he seems to. The man seems to create conflict for no reason, and he's not being playful.

    • @taragnor
      @taragnor Před 3 lety +20

      @@Ravie1 Yeah, it's one thing to say someone's work was terrible. That's bluntly honest and abrasive. It's quite another to insult the person directly.

    • @jacobscrackers98
      @jacobscrackers98 Před 2 lety +3

      Maybe part of the problem is not being able to tell tone from a text post.

    • @jonkiparsky7369
      @jonkiparsky7369 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jacobscrackers98 Maybe part of the problem is Torvalds is an asshole, and people tolerate him being an asshole.

    • @thomasjefferson4195
      @thomasjefferson4195 Před rokem +6

      @@Ravie1 wahhhhhh

  • @ryanfranz6715
    @ryanfranz6715 Před 2 lety +169

    Some people are polite because they’re genuinely considerate, but most are polite because they need to be. This just shows the degree to which he genuinely doesn’t answer to anyone. His personality is un-touched by the pressures of society, which basically by definition, makes it a personality society condemns.

    • @newchannel1220
      @newchannel1220 Před 8 měsíci

      Respect should be earned.
      but if you have a gun, same thing.

    • @carljones9640
      @carljones9640 Před 7 měsíci +9

      Hard necro-post response, but I think you've got a pretty twisted view on humanity. Most people don't begrudgingly participate in social norms. Most people are more than happy to participate in social norms. I think you might be projecting.

  • @kalebbruwer
    @kalebbruwer Před 3 lety +98

    There are plenty of programmers who have 0 intuition and meanwhile IT is a field centered on problem solving so you will honestly ask "how the hell did this guy get this far?"

    • @bishop8000
      @bishop8000 Před 2 lety +18

      Yep. But privately, not on a public forum, and failing that hopefully with less dehumanizing language.

    • @thomasjefferson4195
      @thomasjefferson4195 Před rokem +39

      @@bishop8000 "dehumanizing langauge"
      Guys I spotted the gender studies major

    • @stevezelaznik5872
      @stevezelaznik5872 Před rokem

      @@thomasjefferson4195 There’s blunt “Listen, man, you’re not yet a strong enough coder in C to be contributing to the kernel.” vs “Your mother should have aborted you.” His abrasiveness is more than offset by his enormous contributions to Linux.

    • @pharoah327
      @pharoah327 Před 7 měsíci +1

      IT is not Computer Science. These are different fields with maybe 5% overlap, if that.

  • @theuberman7170
    @theuberman7170 Před 3 lety +30

    Teaching someone HOW and WHAT to improve is more effective than just insulting them or just respecting them.

    • @JonnyTBooker
      @JonnyTBooker Před 3 lety +3

      You can't teach someone that isn't willing to learn!
      and when your more concerned about your "feelings" than the work maybe you should just go home to mommy and not play with the grown ups!

  • @tc2241
    @tc2241 Před 8 měsíci +62

    I’ve worked with people who thought themselves to be the genius amongst baboons. It’s a pain in the ass working with those individuals. Especially when their biases impede progress.

    • @zion6680
      @zion6680 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Progress how?
      I've worked with an asshole who thought that way about everyone, and their way of doing things were never up to his standards - turns out though he really was the genius, and everyone else me included had baboon intellect. So should he have allowed me to do my job terribly when he could do it better than me in every way and I was merely an inconvenience? Because, I would've impeded progress.
      I'm only asking because I'm curious, how do you know for sure that you are in fact not the problem and it's the other guy?
      My guess is that the proof is always going to be in the pudding.

    • @Xsomono
      @Xsomono Před 7 měsíci +5

      ​@@zion6680Isn't this a different issue though? The guy's questions was chiefly about whether it is acceptable to insult. I think it's okay for someone far more competent to do what they want and not spend time one working well with people who's work is worse. I still think that more competent people shouldn't insult others. Avoiding insults is not something that impedes your own work.
      Linus said here that respect has to be earned but I'd say even people who haven't deserved your respect should not be insulted.

    • @RaniaIsAwesome
      @RaniaIsAwesome Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@XsomonoInsulting your enemies in certain situations is fine. Insulting people under you or who are trying their best, never is.

    • @Xsomono
      @Xsomono Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@RaniaIsAwesome Well, I'd say insulting people who intentionally harm other people is fine, although maybe that's what you meant.

    • @wtfJunk
      @wtfJunk Před 6 měsíci

      I think in the discussions here are two factors mixed together: moral and efficiency.
      Let’s ignore the moral and only focus on efficiency. Does Linus actually want to collab with people even if they are stupid? If so, he should respect, teach them and help them improve. If not, he should insult them and kick them out. I can tell that Linus actually dont like to work with people

  • @UnashamedlyHentai
    @UnashamedlyHentai Před 2 lety +77

    Respect isn't a bool. It's a continuous value on a spectrum. Disrespect should earned just as respect is, and in proportion to people's actions.

    • @SomeRandomPiggo
      @SomeRandomPiggo Před rokem +10

      It's a float

    • @FlamencoDeniz
      @FlamencoDeniz Před 9 měsíci

      lol

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@SomeRandomPiggo And it starts from 0.0

    • @kraidev
      @kraidev Před 5 měsíci

      @@SomeRandomPiggo Respect is inaccurate???

    • @SomeRandomPiggo
      @SomeRandomPiggo Před 5 měsíci

      @@kraidev True, could use a double but of course even that is inaccurate to a point

  • @Artybruh
    @Artybruh Před 7 lety +40

    I feel, it's not about "giving respect", it's more about not being a bully and treating other humans with basic decency. Are these developers he is working with malicious and intending to make mistakes? He can assert dominance, show anger, and put people in line WITHOUT the personal insults such as suggesting they were too stupid to find a tit to suck on as a kid.

    • @Jp-ue8xz
      @Jp-ue8xz Před 7 lety +4

      malicious intent? to be an evidently stupid adult and attempting to contribute to a project knowing you're not able to, is malicious intent

    • @Artybruh
      @Artybruh Před 7 lety +3

      Yeah, well, that's just like, your opinion, man.

    • @taxman6095
      @taxman6095 Před 7 lety +6

      If banter is bullying to you then you're probably too soft to be programming kernels in the first place.

    • @Artybruh
      @Artybruh Před 7 lety +3

      Tax Man lol what he was saying wasn't banter though

    • @salter1630
      @salter1630 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Jp-ue8xz you are a moron who should go back to studying basic english, as you clearly do not know the definition of "malicious" or "intent".
      To begin with "intent" already means "intentions" and I highly doubt these people are coming here with the intention of being "an evidently stupid adult" and malicious intent involves having the intent to do harm - they might have bad ideas, but bad ideas aren't malicious intent, as we know from the phrase "The road to hell is paved with good intentions".

  • @chrnehmke
    @chrnehmke Před 3 lety +94

    I personally think linus is half right on the respect front. So here is my humble opinion in the vast sea of opinions in the internet: A baseline of respect should be given in the sense of simply being polite to each other. BUT more respect should be earned. Like starting at zero and either going up or down, depending on how well people work together.

    • @SoundboundOfficial
      @SoundboundOfficial Před rokem +3

      That baseline is lost the moment you do something very stupid. Stupidity doesn't grant you kindness. And maybe, just maybe, that bad feeling the rudeness invokes in you will prevent you from doing such stupid things in the future. If you respond to stupidity with kindness, you can be sure they'll do it next time as well.

    • @chrnehmke
      @chrnehmke Před rokem +5

      @@SoundboundOfficial thats what i have said. "Like starting at zero and either going up or down, depending on how well people work together." this obviously counts for every behavior.
      also people can still make up for stupid actions and earn back some or all of their trust that way.
      If you want an example, just look at the history of no mans sky.

    • @astrahcat1212
      @astrahcat1212 Před rokem

      Someone who screams at people on the street isn't deserving of respect as they haven't earned it, druggies, criminals and crazy people are everywhere.
      'Respect should be given in the sense of simply being polite to each other' - > You dealing with a neighborhood with drug cartels and criminals, being polite isn't going to help you.
      Being polite to others is something that earns you respect, but those who aren't polite aren't deserving of respect.

    • @kairatkempirbaev7183
      @kairatkempirbaev7183 Před 9 měsíci

      @@SoundboundOfficial Humiliating somebody has nothing to do with respect. You either give respect or you don't.
      Showing disrespect on the other hand is Ego.

    • @winnyace82
      @winnyace82 Před 9 měsíci

      @@astrahcat1212 Well, yes. It's what OP said in his comment. You think OP would respect to criminals or crackheads? I don't think so.

  • @Mbd3Bal7dod
    @Mbd3Bal7dod Před 6 lety +76

    I think there is a base "amount" of respect that ever one have "from me " but it will increase of decrease very fast based on there actions

  • @user-mu2qq3eb7t
    @user-mu2qq3eb7t Před 3 lety +22

    find people you like working with, that's a great point too.

  • @robertwaghorn1259
    @robertwaghorn1259 Před 5 lety +301

    What a loveable penguin man

    • @aparisg9734
      @aparisg9734 Před 3 lety +13

      Thats what we call a genius

    • @aparisg9734
      @aparisg9734 Před 3 lety +7

      @@depression_isnt_real he is so Nice look at him as a big baby

  • @albirtarsha5370
    @albirtarsha5370 Před 3 lety +35

    There is a difference between respect and dignity. No one should be denied dignity without real consideration for the reason that dignity is denied.

    • @ChristopherSalisburySalz
      @ChristopherSalisburySalz Před 3 lety +20

      Yes. You can tell someone they aren't up to the task without the insults.

    • @RR-et6zp
      @RR-et6zp Před rokem

      It’s the male merit vs female communitarian point of views

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před 8 měsíci

      @@ChristopherSalisburySalz THIS.

  • @matpsycic
    @matpsycic Před 7 lety +209

    Respect should be earned.. but you don't dish out disrespect like halloween candy 😅

    • @user-my5cu7oy5i
      @user-my5cu7oy5i Před 2 lety +7

      Now go cry mommy

    • @thememeoverlord.1949
      @thememeoverlord.1949 Před 2 lety +3

      Quit being such a wimp.

    • @martinenn
      @martinenn Před 2 lety +3

      why not ?

    • @thememeoverlord.1949
      @thememeoverlord.1949 Před 2 lety

      @@martinenn because other people see that.

    • @Schcarraffone
      @Schcarraffone Před 2 lety +5

      he does not. I ve seen Linus going very long in mail threads to help people asking for clarifications even if really not experts...
      when he FLAMES someone i quite always saw this to be really deserved...

  • @cestarianinhabitant5898
    @cestarianinhabitant5898 Před 9 lety +164

    Respect should be earned is indeed reflective of the environment I grew up in as well, and I drew the shortest straw in that as a child, I was never respected.
    So I got to think about this topic a lot, and the answer I found for myself was to have a sort of base-level of respect, that everyone I do not know gets from me, those I don't like go below that level, those I really don't like sink to the lowest levels, those I do like get a bit above that base-level, those I "truly" do respect are even higher up.
    However, one of the things I've found influence respect a lot is politeness, it is easier to earn respect by being polite than by being abrasive, and similarly, it's easy to lose respect by being abrasive, but not by being polite (unless you are respected for your abrasiveness, which as far as I know is completely unheard of)
    I consciously avoid blatantly insulting people, unless I detest them, and I want them to detest me right back. Because I have found that if I want to be heard, words mixed with insults will fly right through one ear and out the other. Words mixed with positive feedback (e.g. on the things I actually do like about whatever the topic is), will be heard. So while I was abrasive once as well, I am not anymore. It's not about respect, it's about self-respect for me, and for me it disrespects my own person to throw insults at individual people unless I really just want to see them burn from the bottom of my heart.

    • @knocks42
      @knocks42 Před 9 lety +7

      Great comment!

    • @antoncordell4490
      @antoncordell4490 Před 9 lety +12

      Cestarian Inhabitant Respect should be earned.
      You have an 'Innocent until proven guilty' attitude towards people you meet for the first time. That's a good way to be.
      However Linus has to respond to people he might never have met and only know of them from what they have written, many of which have proven undeserving of respect, just by their input.
      When Linus says "I don't know how he is alive when he obviously doesn't have the intelligence to find his mothers teat as a baby." It may be abrasive and not 'politically correct', yet accurate. He likes to call a spade a spade. It's not personal, but rather an analogy of how he sees someones understanding of a subject.
      It's a lot like being a manager sorting through job applications, you have to make quick decisions based not on the person, but rather what they have presented to you in their application.

    • @cestarianinhabitant5898
      @cestarianinhabitant5898 Před 9 lety +24

      Anton Cordell Yup, that's right, but the difference is that I don't judge people by what they say as easily as I judge them by what they do. Writing a bit of bad code; what's the big deal? Doesn't make it a stupid person, just means he didn't do it well enough. Everyone can make mistakes, it happens to the best of us. He disrespects everyone until they have proven worthy of respect, it's a very negative way of life, and mentally unhealthy (I can't imagine this attitude makes him happy...)
      But as the lead Linux kernel maintainer and developer, I think his attitude might actually be a necessary evil. The kernel needs to be the most solid part of any Linux system, as the guy who makes sure it stays that way, being spiteful towards programmers that send him dubious or imperfect code is probably the right thing to do in the long run. Without this attitude the kernel would be a lot more messy and unstable than it is right now, with a lot more of broken or incomplete features.

    • @halofreak1990
      @halofreak1990 Před 3 lety +4

      @@cestarianinhabitant5898 The thing is, when you submit patches to the Linux kernel, you ought to know the rules, especially the ones that provoke his rants. So if you break them, don't be surprised if Linus rips you a new one.

    • @catriona_drummond
      @catriona_drummond Před 2 lety +1

      I see respect as a resource. I give everyone a bit of it for free when we first meet. Like a credit. And then they can either make more from it, or they can squander it. So yeah, great respect is mostly earned. A little respect is what we deserve by default. And no respect is the result of wasting it with one's words and actions.

  • @Cryogenics12
    @Cryogenics12 Před 9 lety +353

    I differentiate between the notions of "respect" and what I would call simple decency. Deep respect or admiration or belief in someone's work/abilities/ethic is indeed something that is earned. It takes time and special circumstances.
    Decency is a whole different matter. By all means tear their logic to pieces if something is wrong, but no need to be an overbearing asshole. Say something along the lines of "Your solution does not work for X reasons or Y reasons. Or, this is suboptimal." It really is possible to be honest, constructive, and professional. It's all about critique of LOGIC, not saying they should have been aborted which is pretty deplorable to say in any context. Even if Linus is an ass at times, I'm glad he's here.
    To me that isn't really about being politically correct. It's simply common sense. If you are honest yet don't go out of your way to be vicious to someone, they will likely work with you quite well. Obviously, people are not perfectly rational robots at all times, even people with a high level of composure. However, when things do become tense, if people see that you are honest but generally well-meaning 90% of the time, the professional or even personal relationship/friendship/whatever is still very salvageable. You have not lost someone who could end up being a major plus to your project/cause.
    This is not to say that people should be on the other end of the spectrum either. There are people out there who freak out if someone even disagrees with them.

    • @w500nm
      @w500nm Před 8 lety +34

      Yeah I can see straight thru the guy, he is full of shit. You don't start meeting people and making friends by being disrespectful or indecent

    • @JaviLavandeira
      @JaviLavandeira Před 7 lety +26

      Well, this isn't about making friends, but about creating a product (an operating system kernel).
      It makes all sense in the world to be rude to people who have been told again and again that their code isn't up to the required standards, and yet they keep trying to force the admins to get the code merged.

    • @Cryogenics12
      @Cryogenics12 Před 7 lety +16

      Javi Lavandeira
      I said nothing about "friends" whatsoever. If you read my comment carefully you would understand that. What I'm referring to is basic professionalism.

    • @JaviLavandeira
      @JaviLavandeira Před 7 lety +17

      Oh, but you *were* talking about making friends, and I see that you've now edited your message to say something else.
      When did the substance of a message become less important than the words used to convey it? I think you people are becoming way oversensitive and too offended at big, scary words. You can take your "basic professionalism", your euphemisms and your political correctness and stick them all deep inside your ass, where they belong. :-)
      I'm on Linus' side here. When you have a bad developer submitting crappy code and getting rejected again and again, who keeps trying other channels after being told to stop being annoying, at some point you have to stop being subtle and tell the guy to go the fuck away, which is exactly what happened here.

    • @Cryogenics12
      @Cryogenics12 Před 7 lety +15

      The last edit I made was well before your comment. Your reading comprehension is pitiful.

  • @williammacleod6417
    @williammacleod6417 Před 9 lety +879

    A society of victims by default. If Linus Torvalds told me to retroactively abort myself it would probably be one of the highlights of my whole year.

    • @LTS1287
      @LTS1287 Před 9 lety +38

      If your life is that devoid of joy I pity you. Linus is a god only in his own mind. The Linux kernel is a team effort and although he's the captain he's really not that special. Neither is Linux for that matter. Do yourself a favor and go to a park, hug your relatives, or find some other way to unplug.

    • @williammacleod6417
      @williammacleod6417 Před 9 lety +48

      I'd say it more fully embraces your concept of a joy filled life to embrace interactions in all of their nuances as opposed to getting caught up on being polically correct. And I think you'll find the result of many individuals groundbreaking work results in an effort of many individuals. And full disclosure, I'm not a Linux proponent in any capacity, so your fanboy angle doesn't fly either.

    • @LTS1287
      @LTS1287 Před 9 lety +20

      William MacLeod
      "Embrace interactions in all of their nuances?" That's a fancy way of saying that you will put up with other people's crap. My position is that one should be a man/woman and stand up for oneself instead of allowing a man-child to treat them like a welcome mat. Its not about being a fanboy its about human decency. If you want to live your life as a castrato and allow people to treat you like crap then go right ahead. I don't kiss anyone's ass.
      Yes I'm a fan of Linux. Yes I'm a fan of free software. What does that have to do with it? Where is my "fanboy angle"? I even said that Linux isn't that impressive which it isn't. There are far more interesting projects that don't get any attention.
      I respect Linus Torvalds for starting Linux but I don't respect his attitude. It takes true inner strength to treat people as you would want to be treated. Anyone can be an egomaniac and treat people as nothing but worker bees. It takes a MAN to step outside of himself and realize that what he's doing is wrong. Linus does not do that. Instead he makes excuses. Its not political correctness. Saying that someone should have been retroactively aborted has NOTHING to do with political correctness. It has EVERYTHING to do with being an entitled asshat. Linux is bigger than Linus. He acts like he wrote the whole kernel himself when he has really contributed less than 5% to its codebase.

    • @ThoughtForge5
      @ThoughtForge5 Před 9 lety +54

      LTS1287
      Jesus, you act like *you're* the person he said needed to be retroactively aborted. I wish people would get this passionate about shit that actually mattered. That would be cool.

    • @blackneos940
      @blackneos940 Před 9 lety +4

      ThoughtForge5 You just parroted Linux, and you want respect.....? Earn it, then. And shut your damn mouth.....

  • @nikjs
    @nikjs Před 5 lety +6

    good to see the man in the flesh! Salute, Linus, and I'm so glad to see we're on the same page in this topic!

  • @bbuerk9193
    @bbuerk9193 Před rokem +30

    “Respect should be earned” in a vacuum is completely reasonable thing to say, but, if you look at the context of who Linus was disrespecting and why, you start to see the issue. He’s not just just saying “respect should be earned,” he’s saying “respect should be earned, and these people didn’t deserve my respect because I think they’re less intelligent than me.” Anyone involved in tech knows Linus isn’t the only person who thinks this way, and I think it’s one of the reasons so many people are put off by tech culture

    • @SoundboundOfficial
      @SoundboundOfficial Před rokem +4

      Oh no, they expect intelligence in a tech project, how dare they? We just wanna draw dinosaurs, and be respected doing it too!

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před 8 měsíci

      @@SoundboundOfficial They expect THEIR level of intelligence, it's a different thing and you don't have to have it because even a normal person could contribute to the project otherwise you're arrogant.

    • @salter1630
      @salter1630 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@SoundboundOfficial There is a difference between great respect and basic respect. To not be able to follow simple courtesy makes you out to be an animal with no dignity rather than an intelligent member of the human species.

  • @pangruff
    @pangruff Před 5 lety +99

    Anyone giving discretionary time to an open source project has earned some respect already.

    • @NateB
      @NateB Před 4 lety +15

      A modicum, perhaps, but some come to open source projects with perverse ulterior motives. And if those are discovered, that modicum should go out the window.

    • @IrregularPineapples
      @IrregularPineapples Před 2 lety +9

      That's like saying when a stranger comes walking up to a group of friends playing football and starts to play the ball should be respected. I mean. No. The stranger doesn't know them, he doesn't own the ball, he doesn't know which team he should be playing in. You can argue that he's "contributing" to the game by playing football but everyone else are right to say "who the fuck is this guy and who does he think he is?"
      Now if the stranger comes prepared, maybe with a ball of his own and some gear and asks the group if he can join them to play for a bit then that's a whole different kind of thing.

    • @1994mrmysteryman
      @1994mrmysteryman Před 2 lety +4

      @@IrregularPineapples Your analogy makes no sense. The people he bashes don't just come out nowhere and start working on this project like toddlers.

    • @IrregularPineapples
      @IrregularPineapples Před 2 lety +2

      @@1994mrmysteryman ...yes they do, why be in the mailing list otherwise?

    • @CynicalOldDwarf
      @CynicalOldDwarf Před 2 lety

      Not really, especially on large well established projects as a some people join these just for the clout of being on a big project they can plonk on their CV.
      Even on smaller projects you get a lot of people joining just for the power rush, I used to contribute to a well established OSS game and met plenty of coders that gave no care to how the game played or what the community wanted, and just pushed changes based on their own whims.
      So no, submitting code contributions should not automatically earn you respect

  • @Xalgucennia
    @Xalgucennia Před 8 lety +107

    I think the problem here isn't so much about respect, but about civility, no matter how bad an employee is, insulting them, especially on a public mailing list is just sorta unprofessional.
    Having said that of course, it is hard to tell the context of the insult, based simply on the words, it depends somewhat on the relationship between the employer and the employee, and how seriously and belligerently the insult was meant

    • @skullfucker3381
      @skullfucker3381 Před 5 lety +2

      Stop typing stupid shit it is things like this that fck over employees gullible dumb fuck.

    • @frishter
      @frishter Před 5 lety +8

      Skull Fucker And you wonder why you keep getting fired.

    • @lyxar777
      @lyxar777 Před 5 lety +1

      Fuck PC.

    • @Xalgucennia
      @Xalgucennia Před 4 lety +9

      @zer0flag
      Even if they weren't paid, even if you work at a charity, basic standards of civility and professionalism still apply.

    • @aldobernaltvbernal8745
      @aldobernaltvbernal8745 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Xalgucennia there is a difference between raising money for children with leukemia and contributing to nogasm on github.

  • @vintprox
    @vintprox Před 2 lety +6

    It's kind of going in extremes with words: you don't give out respect left and right, but there are just simple grounds where you don't need to earn it to be heard either. It's supposed to be in the middle.

  • @stupidburp
    @stupidburp Před 7 lety +79

    There is a difference between having respect for someone and communicating with others in a respectful way. You can dislike someone and still be civil when speaking to them. You do not have to do so. You have the option to be rude or offensive. However this expression of your character can be considered a serious flaw of character. A flaw serious enough that others may be justifiably rude in response. This leads to a less civil society as interactions devolve into insults and arguments.

    • @staffan144
      @staffan144 Před 5 lety +3

      Big deal, get over it.

    • @LenTos1337
      @LenTos1337 Před 3 lety +2

      You must be respectful in your conversation with other people to achieve expected result from them, I don't like the things Linus says because he sounds very childish when he insults someone or says something like "this is the best because I like it". I mean, you have the right to dislike something or someone but to discuss it you have to have good argument and not personal preference and insults. If you have to work with someone that treats you like shit just leave that place asap

    • @Oswee
      @Oswee Před 2 lety +3

      How do you politely say "F*** off and don't waste my valuable time"? Every second some dumbass who had not spend a single day on the kernel, thinks he has something valuable to add. That he has an opinion. But he does not realize the whole problem scope nor context as Linus does. 80% of people in general are dumb. And you can't politely talk to every one of them. So you should just cut it short. And the shortest way is to add some rudeness.
      Other thing i strongly believe in... polite soft-talk leads to relaxed and lazy development. Instead more agressive and stright language keeps the fire burning which leads to more agressive competition, drive for respect, pure innovation.
      That said, i totally support Linus attitude.

    • @bokuden693
      @bokuden693 Před 2 lety +2

      Arguments are good in general because you test the strength and stability of your ideas.

    • @bokuden693
      @bokuden693 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Oswee actually 95% are pathetic if you use iq as a benchmark and if you also use personality tests like big 5,its much worse. Also I totally agree with you about telling others to piss off when they say things that make no sense and waste everyone's time. Again it just boils down to whether you want to be goal directed and increase your productivity or waste time and live in a delusion like most of the fools in this world.

  • @povelvieregg165
    @povelvieregg165 Před 9 lety +329

    A bit tiring how this keeps coming up. I think it is grossly unfair to Linus. A lot of this is as he says hyperbole and joke like. And these comments are in relation to technology discussion. I've never heard that Linus is a bully in a personal conversation. It is just words, he doesn't screw people over. A lot of sweet talking people who are backstabbers and ruining peoples lives in various ways. I never heard any story about Linus actually doing something mean to someone, the way Steve Balmer, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates etc have done.
    And honestly it does annoy me slightly that American's keep grinding on about this. One talks about being so inclusive, but yet American's act as if American sense of politeness, friendliness and proper behavior is universal. I had an American colleague who kept getting offended about everything. It was quite tiring for everybody trying to explain to him all the time that something was not intended as an insult and was completely neutral.
    I think Americans are far too concerned with superficial friendliness and politeness. Even when people are angry with you and are basically telling you to fuck of they will still continue to use "thank you" and "please" which becomes completely bizarre when their voice is telling you they are not being friendly at all. Just like people can be perfectly friendly and nice while swearing a lot. I'd say content and tone is far more important to show respect and friendliness. When an American customer representative drones away to me with a robot voice about how much his company values me as a customer and what a pleasure it was to serve me, I just find it really offensive because his voice clearly indicates that what he is saying isn't true.
    I am not Finnish myself but being a fellow Nordic I'd say Linus likely thinks the most offensive thing is being fake and dishonest.

    • @kshinji
      @kshinji Před 5 lety +27

      "you are so stupid that I can't believe you found a tit to suck on" - makes me wonder how he ended up being a programmer not a stand-up comedian, this is prime, golden
      (oh and by the way, I would not be surprised if you didn't pick up on the sarcasm there, so yeah, it was sarcasm)

    • @ShaferHart
      @ShaferHart Před 5 lety +37

      @@kshinji that actually is very funny lol. Find a sense of humor.

    • @ShaferHart
      @ShaferHart Před 5 lety +41

      "I think Americans are far too concerned with superficial friendliness and politeness. Even when people are angry with you and are basically telling you to fuck of they will still continue to use "thank you" and "please" which becomes completely bizarre when their voice is telling you they are not being friendly at all."
      Bro, you fucking said it.

    • @Tony_Goat
      @Tony_Goat Před 4 lety +5

      These are not Americans, these are pansies you are talking about.

    • @ice-rv7tz
      @ice-rv7tz Před 3 lety +11

      I really hate how the insult is taken with literally no context as to what warranted it. The guy getting insulted could've been a dumb fuck but we will never know (in this video at least)

  • @hugo9618
    @hugo9618 Před 2 lety +18

    I think no one earns my respect. Now I can insult everyone without guilt

    • @MrDante224
      @MrDante224 Před měsícem

      You always could...but remember you aren't exempt from consequences.

  • @sammysam2615
    @sammysam2615 Před 3 lety +56

    You don't have to respect anyone but you definitely don't disrespect people either. Respect must be earned and never handed out.

    • @Artaxerxes.
      @Artaxerxes. Před 2 lety

      It's either respect or disrespect

    • @adisharr
      @adisharr Před 2 lety +3

      @@Artaxerxes. There can be a middle ground, it's not binary.

    • @filipelimartins
      @filipelimartins Před 2 lety

      @@adisharr how?

    • @adisharr
      @adisharr Před 2 lety

      @@filipelimartins Have a neutral opinion? How can you see someone walking down the street and respect them or disrespect them w/o knowing them at all? You can also respect someone for being a hard worker but not respect them in other areas.

    • @filipelimartins
      @filipelimartins Před 2 lety +1

      @@adisharr if you leave someone alone you are respecting him

  • @CrazyFanaticMan
    @CrazyFanaticMan Před 5 lety +132

    Yeah I always felt this way about teachers. We were always expected to show them respect, but I only respected the ones who deserved it because there were alot of dickheads who let their position of authority get to their heads and they made me either hate school or hate whatever particular subject they were teaching because they weren't helping me learn the material

    • @einarabelc5
      @einarabelc5 Před 3 lety +3

      Would you respect Linus Torwalds under the same precept then? because that's what he's doing here.

    • @CrazyFanaticMan
      @CrazyFanaticMan Před 3 lety +14

      @@einarabelc5 Well, he's not a teacher and I never had him as one. But if I ever have him as a professor one day, then I would definitely hold him under the same precept

    • @MegaVRAK
      @MegaVRAK Před 3 lety

      this applies across everything : )

    • @CrazyFanaticMan
      @CrazyFanaticMan Před 3 lety +5

      @@MegaVRAK No, there are always exceptions to every rule.
      Take the creators of reese for example. Say what you will, but they will automatically always have my eternal respect and gratitude.

    • @hiii4636
      @hiii4636 Před 2 lety +5

      I feel this way towards my family. They're expecting me to respect them when they're all unreasonable sons of bitches with short tempers. As i'm used to it, I often prefer to either laugh it off or ignore it, but motherfucker sometimes I just have enough of them because of how annoying they are. They expect me to think highly of them when even in the most minor of things, they would complain or mock me. Especially my mother and grandmother. I could still somewhat understand my mother's unreasonable-ness because she's been taking care of me for so long, but gosh my grandma is on a whole different level.
      It's like it runs on the fucking family line. It's a good thing i'm different from then and actually knows what PATIENCE means. Sorry about the curses here, i'm just genuinely pissed off right now as i've had enough of it once again for like the millionth time.

  • @atomheartother
    @atomheartother Před 3 lety +230

    I don't think anyone will read this but for the record linus has changed his mind about this and admitted his abrasive behavior was problematic

    • @nyrtzi
      @nyrtzi Před 3 lety +42

      And then after taking a short break continued to be about as abrasive as before. That too is old news.
      Then again the problematic part only seems to come out when some manage to piss him off by doing things that waste other people's time. I wonder how many people would actually even care if the clickbaity tech media didn't try to make a quick buck using this.
      To me it seems that people are conflating separate issues here and would need to be way more specific about what exactly they find problematic. Is it a problem that he gets pissed off or how he expresses that? Or do people have a problem with the meritocracy within the project?
      One way for people to avoid situations where they piss him off would be to think their ideas through better and possibly discussing them with Linus' "lieutenants" before taking those ideas to Linus himself. In other words just the normal process of vetting ones ideas before presenting the to the "boss" of the organization. Then again I assume that people normally have the common sense to do that and the incidents where Linus gets pissed off at having his time wasted are just the exception.
      But yes, I do understand that the way people react to someone messing up can have a chilling effect on the motivation and productivity of others. Then again it seems likely to me that this issue of poorly given feedback which is very common in all kinds of projects and work life in general is getting so much attention in this case simply due to how high profile a project the Linux kernel is and how the media wants to benefit from any incident.

    • @changofaceanimations5402
      @changofaceanimations5402 Před 2 lety +32

      @@nyrtzi tldr: The media is twisting Linus' reasonable reactions to extremely toxic and incompetent people.

    • @ShaferHart
      @ShaferHart Před 2 lety +25

      "changed his mind" lol he got pressured by his woke bosses to tip toe around the babies. I saw a comment from the lady involved in that brouhaha. It was obvious she didn't care about the project's present nor its future: she was just being destructive for destructiveness sake, like most sjws. I'm so glad Linus survived that effing bs.

    • @based_demo
      @based_demo Před 2 lety +3

      Sadly he also let in PC culture into Linux.

    • @Rogueixpresents
      @Rogueixpresents Před 2 lety +3

      Respect is earned.

  • @Raghudegaucho
    @Raghudegaucho Před 5 lety +47

    Who else is watching this in Sep 2018?
    It's the perfect reply to anyone bashing on torvalds today.

  • @mark_makes
    @mark_makes Před 2 lety +3

    What a fantastic answer to an interesting question.

  • @nkumm
    @nkumm Před 10 měsíci

    Does anyone know what happened off-camera at 0:54 that caused that huge reaction?

  • @CantSeemToThink
    @CantSeemToThink Před 8 lety +116

    I also 100% agree with Linus, we need more honesty rather than back slapping which IMHO is wasting energy, people should be less easily offended and more focused on the matter and what is right or wrong rather then their feelings being hurt. I wish there were more people like Linus rather than politically correct assholes that will get us nowhere in terms of progress.

    • @___xyz___
      @___xyz___ Před 7 lety

      Ali Can Metan the Y is often very time consuming in the long run

    • @___xyz___
      @___xyz___ Před 7 lety

      ***** yes, you shouldn't ever insult someone over dissatisfaction, but it doesn't make the Ys any less cumbersome to formulate

    • @___xyz___
      @___xyz___ Před 7 lety

      ***** I don't know the context in the dispute. But I assume he (Linus) wasn't taking about UI.
      Anyhow, there always are people truly incapable of straightening their conduct to if so only soothe your sensitive intermediates. Torvalds, he the lance, the offender, stern. Some even rattle my earthcaressed scaffolds, so it bothers me, but in truth not.

    • @muntoonxt
      @muntoonxt Před 6 lety +6

      The only constructive part about "Your code is not good enough to be acceptable as a patch because of X. Fix it" is the "X".
      In your "Your code sucks" example, you neglect to include X. Obviously, it is not constructive.
      (That's not to say that I would _personally_ go about it the way Linus does.)

    • @hanro50
      @hanro50 Před 5 lety +1

      Natural selection...

  • @sebastianmalmsteen
    @sebastianmalmsteen Před 9 lety +370

    If Linus said to me "you should be retroactively aborted", I'd be laughing my ass off. Then I'd take the criticism and improve my work. I prefer honest and direct people like Linus a thousand times over the typical "boss" that I know that hates me, but just looks at me with a look of hate, and probably talks shit about me with others. I'd be glad to work for/with him

    • @OverG88
      @OverG88 Před 8 lety +14

      +Sebastián Aguilera It's ok if someone criticize in terms: "Ok, this is bad because of that and that and it you could fix it like this". But can criticism be: "What's this shit?". And that's what Linus does.

    • @OverG88
      @OverG88 Před 8 lety

      +Sebastián Aguilera It's ok if someone criticize in terms: "Ok, this is bad because of that and that and it you could fix it like this". But can criticism be: "What's this shit?". And that's what Linus does.

    • @TarikGuney
      @TarikGuney Před 7 lety +47

      Why not working with someone who is both kind and honest instead of choosing just one? Your comparison is flawed. I would like to choose someone who does not shit talk to me when criticizing my work. It is simply an indication of immature character that will fail over time.

    • @Yizak
      @Yizak Před 6 lety +1

      +Tarik Guney you hit the nail on the head

    • @sbrazenor2
      @sbrazenor2 Před 6 lety +4

      I know I'm a bit late to the party on responding, since you wrote your comment 3 years ago Sebastián, but I have a different view of management. I have been a manager and I have been managed, and I have seen how people view their relationship with their managers and I have seen how their managers view their relationships with this staff. I find it funny that people assume that their boss must hate them, when I find that many bosses are actually concerned for their welfare, growth, and would be eager to see them successful.
      Case in point: I worked with a younger guy, who was about 23 years old. The average employee in the role that he was in was about 35-45, so already he's the baby in the group and you would assume that everyone would lack respect for him. Everyone generally liked him, but felt that he was a bit too nervous. His boss, that he assumed hated him, actually looked at him more as a son (he's about the same age as his son), and tried to get him to realize that when he had to write him up for things it was purely administrative. (He's a truck driver and when you hit something, it comes with consequences, even if you just tear a fender off on a large rock.)
      Eventually the kid had too many scuffs and he had to be let go. I talked to our boss after it happened and he felt sad about having to do it, because he liked the kid and wanted him to do well. He wished he was able to have had a better impact with the conversations that preceded his firing, so that he'd still be around.
      The short TLDR version: Your boss doesn't always hate you, if they're not berating you. Sometimes they want the best for you, but they just don't say it.

  • @ahmedfarooqui6896
    @ahmedfarooqui6896 Před 10 měsíci +8

    If respect should be earned, then does that mean you treat people with disdain until they show value as per your personal criteria? That sounds like arrogance.

    • @LaepsynPaepsyn
      @LaepsynPaepsyn Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's correct. But as he said, he grew up in a largely dysfunctional family, which probably made him see things from that perspective instead of accepting people as deserving common courtesy even when they make mistakes or aren't as accomplished as he is in his field.

  • @doorbash
    @doorbash Před 3 lety +16

    Like Software, people change too. Please don't judge a man now because of something he said years ago. The fact that Linus changed his attitude years after (in Kernel mailing list) makes me respect him even more.

    • @danilodistefanis5990
      @danilodistefanis5990 Před 3 lety

      Marry him.

    • @GC-qe8vc
      @GC-qe8vc Před 2 lety +7

      @@danilodistefanis5990 he's taken!

    • @local.interloper
      @local.interloper Před rokem

      Hi, have you seen the 6.0 related mailings? They're comedy gold.

    • @tjitjo
      @tjitjo Před 7 měsíci

      @@danilodistefanis5990 marry your right hand, oh wait its busy trying to jack me off but I keep slapping it away. begone, harlot!

  • @dij3989
    @dij3989 Před 10 měsíci

    a comment on a reaction video mentioned footage of this entire conference. Where is it?

  • @superharryboy
    @superharryboy Před 3 lety +15

    So respect for Linus means "I won't attack your persona with insults because I deem you knowledgeable enough" ? If he doesn't find someone on par with his knowledge and skill level, his solution is to give them feedback on how mad he is at them for being a human failure. Yep, that seems very efficient and productive... Or it's just that he gets a dopamine rush when he insults people since he does it with a passion.

    • @Wayne-wo1wc
      @Wayne-wo1wc Před 3 lety +4

      Such insults are not totally personal. Usually he gave feedbacks because those works have to do with his project. For a huge open source project, it is good to keep some kind of people away in a straiforward way if you think their work is harmful to the project. Such damages are usually hard to reverse and gradually accumulate over time for such a big project. Maybe the fact he is mean is one of the reason linux is successful.

  • @msolano00
    @msolano00 Před 5 měsíci +3

    "respect should be earned" -> this is the way

  • @scranchmachine4572
    @scranchmachine4572 Před 5 lety +44

    you see linus prioritises productivity over feelings

    • @superharryboy
      @superharryboy Před 3 lety +5

      Then why why invest time in insulting other people for a newbie mistake? Isn't saying "no, that's wrong" enough and way more efficient than writing an essay on how stupid the person is?

    • @brianstorm597
      @brianstorm597 Před 3 lety +1

      @@superharryboy It definitely is. Not to mention that the feelings of a worker directly influence their ability to be productive. Most of the time this kind of attitude is just an excuse to be an asshole and seem tough in the process. Either that or the person simply doesn't know any better.

  • @eug_metta
    @eug_metta Před 6 lety +12

    I agree respect should be earned, but those who haven't earned it should at least be treated neutrally and not actively insulted.

    • @krunkle5136
      @krunkle5136 Před 8 měsíci

      He does do that. He starts insulting people when they have ideas he heavily disagrees with.

    • @murtajiz545
      @murtajiz545 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@krunkle5136 that’s not a cause for disrespecting someone though. That sort of thinking will land you in a *HEAP* of trouble in the real world. It’s important to remember that not everyone is Linus Torvalds.

  • @aum6032
    @aum6032 Před 3 lety +6

    Well giving respect and being courteous are two different things.. how hard it is to extend some fucking courtesy..

  • @mattizzle81
    @mattizzle81 Před 5 lety +13

    ADMIRATION should be earned. Respect is just a default social courtesy. It can be revoked if they are really undeserving of it, but basic respect is a given in social settings. Online I know it is a different world though and it's easy to say things you wouldnt say to someone's face, at least not in the same way. In that sense the internet is antisocial.

    • @asgoritolinasgoritolino7708
      @asgoritolinasgoritolino7708 Před 3 lety +2

      Respecting everyone indiscriminately is respecting nobody, if you give respect as a default social courtesy it stops having meaning, at least that's how I see it.

    • @Meatwad650
      @Meatwad650 Před 2 lety

      @@asgoritolinasgoritolino7708 I definitely don’t respect you, idiot.

  • @Dennis-er8xc
    @Dennis-er8xc Před 2 lety +2

    Respect should be earned.

  • @JK23-rj1if
    @JK23-rj1if Před 9 měsíci +5

    It's rarely acceptable to be nasty, and it's never necessary.

  • @beat461
    @beat461 Před 8 lety +69

    The more I find about this guy, the more I like him. Such a refreshing sight in this overly political correct culture we inhibit.

    • @JohnDoe-mv6go
      @JohnDoe-mv6go Před 8 lety +7

      +Johnnie Bassdrum What does bullying someone have to do with political correctness?

    • @beat461
      @beat461 Před 8 lety +7

      +John Doe i wouldn't go as far by saying he 'bullied' some people. He just expressed his opinions in a derogatory way. That is simply not a politically correct thing to do.

    • @JohnDoe-mv6go
      @JohnDoe-mv6go Před 8 lety +4

      Johnnie Bassdrum Telling people he wishes they would have been aborted isn't bullying?

    • @beat461
      @beat461 Před 8 lety +5

      John Doe Not in my book. Bullying is like repeatedly intimidating someone. this is just offending. Just words.

    • @JohnDoe-mv6go
      @JohnDoe-mv6go Před 8 lety +7

      Johnnie Bassdrum I don't see how publicly humiliating someone in front of their peers isn't bullying.

  • @wooka64
    @wooka64 Před 8 lety +50

    Agreed, in the real world we don't mean crap till we prove it.

  • @randomnumbers84269
    @randomnumbers84269 Před 8 lety +370

    The more I find about this guy, the more I like him. Such a refreshing sight in this overly political correct and social justice warrior bullied culture we inhibit.

    • @VenomousIncorporated
      @VenomousIncorporated Před 8 lety +15

      +Turnipkin
      I agree, I do think he has Aspergers though. Maybe not, but I believe so personally.
      Either way he's what some people would call an Asshole, and I honestly like him for it.

    • @nand3kudasai
      @nand3kudasai Před 8 lety +30

      +Turnipkin i would rather be insulted 10 times by a guy with his experience that falsely praised by a guy that knows nothing and being fired after that because i made a mistake or did something not "politically-correct" whatever that means.

    • @Thaden0
      @Thaden0 Před 8 lety +9

      I agree that things get way to 'pc'. But make sure to actually get the technicals here. Linus IS a hot head. He gets away with it because he's smart and in the father of Linux.. but he does ramp up to fast for what is otherwise a professional environment.

    • @mrinvader
      @mrinvader Před 8 lety +5

      +Jerónimo Barraco Mármol I would be positively honored to be insulted by torvalds! it would be the high point of my year!

    • @nand3kudasai
      @nand3kudasai Před 8 lety +20

      also, like the proverb says "better to be slapped with the truth than kissed with a lie"

  • @Pikksaar
    @Pikksaar Před 4 lety +10

    He can treat people however he wants, but treating people like shit hasn't ever been the solution. We should all know by know that being mean only brings resentment inside the people you are mean to. Trying to be appreciative and supportvie brings in them a feeling of "I have to do better for this guy appreciates what I do and I don't want to fail him."

    • @kairatkempirbaev7183
      @kairatkempirbaev7183 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@KurtFrederiksen Extremely nice arguments. Calling somebody so stupid and incapable to feed himself.
      I really don't see any arguments in this growl.

    • @kairatkempirbaev7183
      @kairatkempirbaev7183 Před 8 měsíci

      @@KurtFrederiksen You arguments are perfect as well. Will you cancel me now?
      LMAO

  • @collinmckinney6952
    @collinmckinney6952 Před 2 lety +20

    People not having earned our respect in our own eyes is not the bar we should set for justifying our own disrespect towards them. That doesn't mean you owe them the respect of entertaining their ideas or opinions. It just doesn't justify disrespecting them due to differing ideas or opinions. This is the thought pattern that is responsible for everything wrong with society.

  • @jamegumb880
    @jamegumb880 Před 6 lety +7

    Those insults sound like what my brother puts on forums and mailing lists.

  • @lashlarue7924
    @lashlarue7924 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I like Linus MORE for having come up with such great insults!! 🤣😂 I shall have to borrow those!! 😂😂👌👍🤩

  • @_Verac
    @_Verac Před 5 měsíci

    There is no such thing as a "baseline of respect that everyone should get"; rather, it is cooperation that forms the bare minimum for people interacting with each other. Through this cooperative interaction, people can earn respect, which further shapes their attitudes towards each other in future interactions and communications.

  • @codycherrington2314
    @codycherrington2314 Před 2 lety +59

    Treat everyone with respect until they prove they don’t deserve it. Simple

    • @Avenus112
      @Avenus112 Před 2 lety +1

      Baseline yes but beyond that it's a function of competence and contribution. He maybe takes it too far but that's because his opposite does so more.

    • @spacebrain1944
      @spacebrain1944 Před 2 lety

      It's often a bad model in a society of single-interactions. And in a reality where people change.

    • @n_x1891
      @n_x1891 Před 2 lety +1

      Try playing league of legends friend

    • @Avenus112
      @Avenus112 Před 2 lety +1

      @@n_x1891 That game selects for antisocial bullies. That LoL is contaminated by jerks doesn't project out to the population.

    • @n_x1891
      @n_x1891 Před 2 lety

      @@Avenus112 ah yes most popular game on the world only antisocial bully selection

  • @vammamies
    @vammamies Před 9 lety +9

    I fucking love this guy! :D

  • @aliedperez
    @aliedperez Před 5 lety +8

    Can someone send this to Linus?

  • @chetjuall2269
    @chetjuall2269 Před 6 lety +18

    It's the ability to dish out insults that should be earned not given. Torvalds is brilliant enough to get away with it. The sad part is he is influencing a platoon of programmers - most with a fraction of his skill - but made proud, by his influence, to be arrogant and rude. This fact may take it's toll on the morale of engineering workers worldwide - especially the morale of junior or inexperienced programmers. Torlvald's approach is unnecessary and, as he mentions, is possivly due to his family and cultural dynamics. A different approach is to say "I see you are having trouble. Please let me take you to find your mothers "tit"". One such exposure to her "tit", may very well fix the problem forever. Lashing out with abusive insults does nothing to help the programmer find the "tit". Another important point here is this: Sometimes when a person's work performance or competence is judged, they may be encountering serious problems in their lives and might otherwise perform better. I have a vague memory from Steven Covey's book, "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People". Covey describes a paradigm shift. A child is behaving wildly on a subway - angering the passengers. The paradigm shift comes when it is learned the child is on her way home from the hospital after witnessing the death of her mother. After the shift, the child's behavior no longer bothers the riders - In fact they may shed a tear.

    • @pharoah327
      @pharoah327 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Or we can stop coddling people and tell them to suck it up buttercup. Linus is not your life coach. Either work on the project or don't. Contribute something useful and you earn his respect. Screw up the project and/or try to submit bad code and you earn his ire. It's on you which side you want to see of him.

    • @SKYT75081
      @SKYT75081 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@pharoah327 This is exactly the example of the first point raised by the OP. You who have less than a fraction of the ability of the brilliant yet act like they are the shit, just ready to spit out rules and the how the world works for other people like it's somehow your business.
      The things is, getting on the good or bad side of Torvalds is going to be irrelevant and inapplicable for most of the developers out there as most people are just like you. The problem is that many well-meaning developers who will be productive in the very near future turning into yet another pile of garbage by getting on bad side of people like YOU. Having to bear through a lecture and snobbish from one incompetence to another, without anything useful to fruit from it as people like you are incapable and hostile, believing that the eccentricity of your behavior somehow will make you appear brilliant at what you do. So all the cons of having Torvalds next to you, with none of the pros.

    • @pharoah327
      @pharoah327 Před 4 měsíci

      @@SKYT75081 yeah but see the problem is that I have the skills to back it up. This is not a self assessment. This is from the words of every employer I've had and feedback from users of my software. I've even had several jobs give me a raise without me having to ask (and no, not a cost of living raise, an actual raise). I have a high level of skill mainly because I actually paid attention and tried my hardest while learning this stuff. It's only after writing tens of thousands of lines of code that you can consider yourself to be good at this. People who think they can skate by, do the minumum, and get undeserved praise is annoying. You gotta earn that shit. You gotta try your hardest and learn from your mistakes. You have to earn respect. I think the problem is junior devs fresh out of college thinking they write code like senior devs and not wanting to hear criticism. You will write shit code for the first 10 years of learning. It's only after that that you can consider your code to be passable and decent. Then if you continue to try your hardest and keep learning, you will one day write actually good code. Programming is hard and I don't think many people appreciate the difficulty behind it.

  • @CreativeVery
    @CreativeVery Před 7 lety +144

    Linus is my fucking hero.

    • @saltyman7888
      @saltyman7888 Před 7 lety +1

      #linusthuglife
      #btfo

    • @hcloud
      @hcloud Před 7 lety +1

      His response is in a way like Finland in a nutshell. Say what you think and no more. If someone is offended, too bad. I hope to see a statue of him someday in Helsinki.

    • @saltyman7888
      @saltyman7888 Před 7 lety

      sz1234sz
      i should move to finland.

    • @hcloud
      @hcloud Před 7 lety

      Long dark winters and crappy weather, dont do it :D If that is not a problem, welcome.

    • @saltyman7888
      @saltyman7888 Před 7 lety +3

      sz1234sz
      is finland right for me? I like cold, grey weather, being left alone, and working in a tech or engineering sector.

  • @Filaxsan
    @Filaxsan Před 6 lety +8

    Hero.

  • @StephenGlasskeys
    @StephenGlasskeys Před 8 lety +513

    Imagine if Linus had played Mr. Nice Sensitivity guy with every idiot that tried to insert broken/stupid code into the kernel. We wouldn't have a working linux kernel today, that's for damned sure.
    Kids today need to toughen up and drop this social warrior nonsense.

    • @kreynolds1123
      @kreynolds1123 Před 8 lety +17

      +Stephen Glasskeys "Imagine if Linus had played Mr. Nice Sensitivity guy with every idiot that tried to insert broken/stupid code into the kernel." Not all proposed changes are stupid or broken code, but just differ in design or philosophy or goal from Linus's vision.
      Like it or hate it, the Linux kernel is Linus's. And in the spirit of what Linus was saying one gets to chose people they like to work with, so If one don't like who he is working with, then he should go work on his own.

    • @StephenGlasskeys
      @StephenGlasskeys Před 8 lety +41

      +Keith Reynolds Agreed. *Everybody* knows Linus doesn't have a tolerance for nonsense, yet some continue to act surprised and shocked when he demonstrates his lack of tolerance for nonsense.

    • @JohnDoe-mv6go
      @JohnDoe-mv6go Před 8 lety +9

      +Stephen Glasskeys Everyone has the potential to one day contribute effectively, but if when they try to contribute they're berated for making a small mistake, do you really think they are going to even attempt to make another contribution?

    • @stormdey9440
      @stormdey9440 Před 8 lety +22

      +John Doe If all they see is 'being berated' instead of a team effort then it usually means they're too egocentric to see past the end of their own noses. The world needs more Linus Torvalds to flush out the pansies-asses who contribute nothing but waste valuable time on touchy-feely bullshit. Don't like the heat? Get out of the kitchen.

    • @kreynolds1123
      @kreynolds1123 Před 8 lety +4

      John Doe "Everyone has the potential to one day contribute...." sure, but take that to an extreme, and youll see that it is ineffective because it take way too much time to audit every ones code. But given enough time, a thousand monkys could randomly type out the entire linux kernel code.

  • @kiwis168
    @kiwis168 Před 5 lety +7

    Great inspiring man

  • @hinkhall5291
    @hinkhall5291 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I bet Linux is successful in large part because he doesn’t suffer fools.

    • @Xsomono
      @Xsomono Před 7 měsíci

      You can just ignore fools though, you don't have to actively put them down.

  • @JonnyTBooker
    @JonnyTBooker Před 4 lety +6

    Awesome respect should be earned

  • @untitled6981
    @untitled6981 Před 3 lety +4

    The merger of social skills and programming skills is a tricky one

  • @danimaster6647
    @danimaster6647 Před 3 lety +22

    The problem is you really just can get away with saying stuff like that if you're the go to guy in that specific area. If you are the guy who is on top in that technology you can throw away all good manners and people will still accept it. However he might take the motivation away completely from this guys he's tearing down. He says to them that they aren't smart enough to code for his product and that can do harm to their self esteem. Better just telling them what was wrong about their work

    • @Sirux7
      @Sirux7 Před 2 lety +4

      I can imagine if code needs to be written at this level of importance (Linux), you cannot start teaching people. You need to filter away those who are not good enough. That alone takes up so much time already. Though you can filter them with honest words about their skills while still respecting them as human beings and being thankful for their efforts to help.

  • @jamespong6588
    @jamespong6588 Před 4 lety +24

    Linus is based and red pilled I can tell by his shirt

  • @AB-wq2vy
    @AB-wq2vy Před 5 lety +76

    When working on a project as a project leader, and you find someone incompetent, there are couple ways to proceed.
    1. Tell them that this isn't going well for them and that their skills are not good enough for the job.
    2. Tell them that they are so incompetent that they should have been aborted and saying your surprised that they are still alive, because of their stupidity.
    Notice how the first response doesn't attack the project team member as a person. It is just honest feedback of their work. The other on the other hand attacks the person as a whole. "Nothing is good in them, they would be better off dead."
    It is just being a decent person really.
    Respect is mutual. I respect honest feedback for my work, I actually need to get some critical feedback in order to better my skills. But if I would get this kind of feedback from a boss like Linus, I would feel absolutely terrible. I would lose my confidence for working, start lacking self esteem and of course perform even worse.
    I would absolutely hate working for Linus with that attitude. I've had the worst bosses with that attitude. Feedback needs to be honest for sure, but not insulting.

    • @aldobernaltvbernal8745
      @aldobernaltvbernal8745 Před 4 lety +3

      "Oh yeah this isn't working out, you're fired :)"

    • @shawnpitman876
      @shawnpitman876 Před 4 lety +3

      No one cares what you think soyboi.
      Also, if Linus were to be giving you that kind of feedback, you think you'd still be working there? No, you idiot. You don't get that kind of feedback and get to keep your job. But I guess we can just add that to the pile of evidence we have that you're nothing more than a brain dead fool.

    • @XDBjoernXD
      @XDBjoernXD Před 4 lety +6

      @@shawnpitman876 I don't know whether this is a bad joke. How are you insulting just now? Please don't be a asshole.

    • @andreaagostinelli5310
      @andreaagostinelli5310 Před 4 lety +3

      Is just good manners. You being the boss doesn't allow you to forget how a conversation takes place between two adults.

    • @runatrix
      @runatrix Před 4 lety

      When you get too close of someone that level, most of the people are going to get burned. He surely will remember his mistake, wether some "respectful" feedback will help him to keep doing mistakes.

  • @childofnewlight
    @childofnewlight Před rokem +1

    I think the more appropriate word to use is "civility" or "decency." While respect may be earned, that is not justification for disrespect.
    You can be brutally honest to someone without telling them you think they should be dead. That's abusive.

  • @Nino-dn2jz
    @Nino-dn2jz Před 5 měsíci +1

    A good video showing that even the very smart have something to learn, even if it is very basic. Since the time of this video, I hope Mr Linus learned the difference between attacking the work and the person. To confuse respect and basic human decency and then dismiss the latter as a product of "political correctness" points to areas he should work on. Hopefully he shows by example as a person in positions of both power and prestige.

  • @KB2OXR
    @KB2OXR Před 9 lety +24

    He doesnt bite his toung and I like that . And he is right , respect has to be earned .

    • @LTS1287
      @LTS1287 Před 9 lety +2

      Yeah but that doesn't give a man cart blanche to treat people like garbage. Respect should be earned but its a two way street. Linus doesn't respect people because his ego has its own gravitational field. Its not like he wrote all that code himself.
      No achievement makes a man fundamentally better than anyone. Furthermore its elitists like him that turn Linux into a smelly little secret club for neck beards. At the end of the day its just software.
      Edit: Its been over a year since I made this post. More and more people keep adding to this. I have something I'd like to add.
      Yes, I understand Linus probably get a lot of shit code but to throw a temper tantrum because of it? That shows a really low level of self-actualization.
      Futhermore, to put up with that is to simply not respect yourself. I've had jobs with bosses on power trips and they're not even 1ppm as influential as Torvalds. I simply don't put up with people's shit! I've told bosses to treat me with respect and I've done it _RESPECTFULLY_. You know what the worse thing that's happened was? I worked at an automotive factory and some fat entitled woman had me mopping the floors. That's fine. She didn't break me. I mopped the damn floors and she was incredibly upset the rest of the day.
      Having a modicum of self worth doesn't make you egotistical. It part of what makes you a man and not a coward. Have some fucking backbone!
      If I was a project manager and I received bad code I'd highlight both the good and the bad points and have them fix their problems. You teach someone to code and you're giving them constructive criticism. Yes, I understand that Linus doesn't have that kind of time given the sheer volume of code he receives. Nor does he have enough people under him because its an open source project.
      I don't have a solution but cursing people out like a spoilt child is not solving anyone's problems. That's my opinion and I'm sticking to it. Read some things about positive reinforcement in the workplace. Remind people of their triumphs no their failures. They will always be more productive.

    • @jeffcampbell8371
      @jeffcampbell8371 Před 9 lety +3

      LTS1287 Are you the respect police? Why the fuck do you care how he treats anyone else? You don't like it, leave it. Or do you just enjoy bitching about how other people are, neglecting the irony?

    • @i4nix13
      @i4nix13 Před 9 lety

      Jeff Campbell LTS cares because he's right. The Linux Community praises itself through collaboration and people from different parts of the world from different walks of life and traditions working towards a common goal. Good leadership recognizes the differences and brings the best of both worlds together for the greater good. I believe in the Golden Rule and nobody I know likes to be talked down or disrespected, so why would I do that to somebody else? Why should anyone leave the job or community they love and have contributed to in some form or fashion because it's ok to not show anyone respect or common courtesy?

    • @blackneos940
      @blackneos940 Před 9 lety +1

      So by telling those vile things to people, he should be respected.....? Because he just lost some of mine..... Though I'm sure he wouldn't care..... And I don't need him to.....

    • @DevSolution
      @DevSolution Před 9 lety

      LTS1287 "It's not like he wrote all that code himself" Well, this is true and it is also why this has become a problem. If he did write all that code himself he wouldn't vent on other people's bad code commits in his project. It is Linus' responsibility to make sure that code meets a standard that the project can benefit from, he likely goes through a ton of really bad code and have admittedly used this tactic to make sure that people think twice before giving him bad code. Could he be more diplomatic? Sure. But it is no secret how Linus opperates and yet there are ever more developers on and of linux not to mention users.

  • @1408kishan
    @1408kishan Před 9 lety +8

    "Respect should be earned. And without being earned, you don't get it."
    WORDS. Words of wisdom.

  • @adakcelina
    @adakcelina Před 2 měsíci +1

    The tech boss so open-source, even his feelings are actually public. Thats dope.

  • @eriktilton6250
    @eriktilton6250 Před 11 měsíci

    We have to be abrasive because we don't want to be surrounded by things and people we dislike. We have to scare away what doesn't help us and what doesn't help what we're trying to do. So go form an auxiliary arm that orbits not too closely

  • @charles8854
    @charles8854 Před 9 lety +9

    wow. great commentary from torvalds.

  • @marvinpolo3180
    @marvinpolo3180 Před 2 lety +4

    so if you meet someone new the baseline is being disrespectful unless they`ll earn your respect? man this dude did a lot for the world of software engineering but let's not study his moral compass.

    • @Sykale
      @Sykale Před 2 lety +1

      That what sickens me. People like Linus and in this comment section don't seem to realize that respect works both ways. You can't just expect everyone to respect you from the get go without respecting anybody because you are special and your respect needs to be earned.
      Or rather, you can expect it, but that's not good or healthy behavior. At all.

  • @Rajdeep369
    @Rajdeep369 Před 9 lety +3

    man of wisdom !

  • @aparisg9734
    @aparisg9734 Před 3 lety +1

    He is right the respect Should be earned

  • @HadToChangeMyName_YoutubeSucks

    It seems to me that the people who are most adamant about being treated with kid gloves are the first ones to toss out words like nazi, facist, hater, racist, sexist....

    • @JK360noscope
      @JK360noscope Před 3 lety +1

      It's as if they just learned the word without looking up the definition 🥲

    • @amanda.collaud
      @amanda.collaud Před 3 lety +1

      yes

    • @runatrix
      @runatrix Před 3 lety

      Interesting observation. Might be because they can't comprehend others so they have to put labels to simplify their understanding. And that same lack of comprehension doesn't allow them to see their own mistakes or take critics in a less personal way. Like in this video, Linus have insulted people maybe because they are doing a crap work or the release of the software is stressful, lots of moving pieces all the time, but those guys fail to see beyond the insult and want to be treated nicely for what? In my case I don't expect a congratulations when I do a good job, it is what I'm paid for, and if I get criticized I either try to improve or I have backup evidence that I did the best possible in a scenario. In an open source environment with no bosses they can say whatever they want, I think it is cooler because you probably get really grilled and learn more than in a censored environment like a regular company.

  • @ChrisP872
    @ChrisP872 Před rokem +3

    Back in the day more of us liked a good roast even if we were on the receiving end and the roaster was someone like a mentor or that you respected.
    I still do but sadly a lot of people take roasts to heart when they really shouldn't. From the right person and context, a roast just means, DO BETTER.
    I think some of Gen-Z gets it again but many of the Millennials were raised thin skinned and fragile.
    Of course, in most contexts, roasting someone is rude and possibly hurtful. But in the context of Linus talking about someone wanting to put a mess into his Linux Kernel a roast might be just the thing.

  • @natureiswonderful205
    @natureiswonderful205 Před 6 lety +2

    he is right
    respect should be earned

  • @mariomenezes5974
    @mariomenezes5974 Před 2 lety +1

    It cuts both ways and I realize that. - Agreed. As simple as this.

  • @jamieostrowski4447
    @jamieostrowski4447 Před 7 lety +3

    Except the problem is that all too often it is the people who know a little bit but think they know a lot and who want really badly to uplift themselves who are making the insults. They are playing off the presumption that because someone is bold enough to make insults then they must be knowledgeable.

    • @mircopaul5259
      @mircopaul5259 Před rokem

      Even though you are probably right, this is definitely the wrong place for this comment. Linus is definitely one of the most competent people on Earth when it comes to the linux kernel

    • @jamieostrowski4447
      @jamieostrowski4447 Před rokem +1

      @@mircopaul5259 That's true but we all know the power of influencing by example and the Dunning Kruger effect. While Linus is in a position to insult others, it doesn't mean he should.

  • @Vousie
    @Vousie Před 2 lety +8

    It's not about being less honest or more "politically correct" though. It's about not using rude, uncalled-for insults. Like in the example quote, he could've just said "why would someone make such a ridiculously stupid decision", rather than saying this person should be "retroactively aborted" and they're "too stupid to find a tit"...
    I agree with him about not treating people with respect unless they deserve respect, but to me, there's a certain level of respect that *anyone* deserves for the simple fact of being a human being. Past that (eg. if people want to be called "sir") they have to earn.

  • @JonathanLaliberte1
    @JonathanLaliberte1 Před 7 lety

    great answer.

  • @bluezone3
    @bluezone3 Před 7 lety +129

    People don't have to earn enough respect not to be insulted, that is the default way of treating another human being.

    • @bluezone3
      @bluezone3 Před 7 lety +18

      You will be kicked out if you act this way at a BIG software or IT company (not talking about start-ups). Some employees struggle with depression or other mental health issues. Some are quite sensitive to insults and condescending looks. This really shouldn't need any justification so I'm not sure I writing any. If people are insulting you where you work, you should be reporting that to HR or wherever you can. There is a basic, minimum amount of respect that should be enforced at all work places: the right not to be insulted.
      The reason Linus can get away with this is because he works in open-source and there is no HR department to enforce basic rules of respect. By acting this way, he alienates a whole set of people who cannot mentally deal with people who are toxic on a regular basis.

    • @z00h
      @z00h Před 7 lety +5

      +BOT Opie "You will be kicked out if you act this way at a BIG software or IT company (not talking about start-ups)." Of course you will, big companies are ridden by the PC cancer. Not because they care about their employees but because they want to look good in front of investors, which has an impact on their share price which in turn has a knock on effect on executive's bonuses and share options. HR departments are there to protect companies bottom line not employees, anyone who believes that it's otherwise is either very gullible or very inexperienced.

    • @ramirobasile578
      @ramirobasile578 Před 6 lety +6

      Sure. But Linus insults people that fuck up patches for his kernel (or at least that what I can gather from the examples that are brought up). Pretty sure he knows when someone deserves an insult over a patch review, which would then mean that isn't his "default" way of treating other human beings but rather his "angry because you fucked up" way.

    • @jaszynek7640
      @jaszynek7640 Před 6 lety +4

      I think it`s a cultural issue. In northern/eastern part of Europe saying that you "fucked something up" is no big deal, and you have to prove that you have skills to earn respect in workplace. Of course no one is born great programmer/engineer/doctor/welder etc. but no one will say that you are doing great while you are... not doing great, you have to work hard to get yourself out of the noob status.

    • @thdoom81
      @thdoom81 Před 6 lety +2

      "i work with people from a lot of different cultures and the one thing that unites us is that we can make jokes about each other"..in other words you seem like a racist fukface...this is the way people who want to abuse others personally talk...it's all fun and games until it starts getting out of hand

  • @harrypewpew901
    @harrypewpew901 Před 9 měsíci +16

    This just show that nerds are also bullies when given chance

    • @areshera4039
      @areshera4039 Před měsícem

      You look like you've never played the game Bully Scholarship Edition

  • @ioannisvisvikis8157
    @ioannisvisvikis8157 Před 2 lety +12

    I would never want to have anything to do with someone like him.

    • @triash
      @triash Před 2 lety +2

      Then better don´t work in a kitchen - i know, it´s not really comparable, but im pretty sure: at the end of the day Linus just wants some work done - how often did i felt the urge to yell at my colleagues "man are you fucking stupid or what" - but you can´t do that as an employee. Linus has the opportunity to work with people he likes / respects .. and he´s living the dream and tells most people to fuck off if they don´t do their job properly... because he can.
      I´m not like him because i think people TEND to work better with good motivation - but some just need some good old asskicking. You just have to reflect you actions and think about them - sometimes things can go over the top (like he admitted)... Beeing a "leader" is not easy at all - if it would be so easy, everybody could do it - but that´s not the case. You can debate about every "style" of leadership ... but i refuse to believe that you should sugercoat every action of everybody.

  • @shumito
    @shumito Před 10 měsíci +7

    Linus Torvalds, technically a brilliant guy. That's all. No more no less than that.
    It's hilarious when he tries to justify his attitude due to his family. Man you have a whole life to improve as a human being.

    • @semaph0re
      @semaph0re Před 9 měsíci +2

      you must be a Rust programmer

    • @krunkle5136
      @krunkle5136 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Improve, but in the eyes of whom?
      Cultures are different.

    • @msolano00
      @msolano00 Před 5 měsíci +1

      "Man you have a whole life to improve as a human being." why? To be accepted by you or people like you? I am sure that he is PRETTY happy the way he is and even better, he won't change the way he is to be liked by random people because he truly gives ZERO fucks. Its just a dude doing his thing, making the world a better place. He, being a douche, is doing more that can be said of 99.9999% of the population.

  • @stewiegriffin6503
    @stewiegriffin6503 Před 6 lety +2

    Can anyone tell me what kernel does without referring me to wikipedia page.
    And why they are developing it for so long ?

    • @NateB
      @NateB Před 4 lety +2

      Connects your hard drive to your CPU to your RAM to your video card so you can watch your favorite adult entertainment until you're blue in the face.

    • @senseisecurityschool9337
      @senseisecurityschool9337 Před 3 lety

      You know what apps (applications) are. The kernel is the thing that runs the applications. Whenever any application wants to do anything useful, it asks the kernel "please do this". The kernel knows how to actually do things, things like playing a sound through the speakers, or connecting to the internet.
      The kernel manages the ability to run two or more applications at once. The kernel is what says your video player app isn't allowed to reformat your hard drive. Maybe an application wants to "save a file". The kernel is the thing that knows what the heck "save" and "file" mean. The kernel knows how to take the idea of "save this to a file named boo.txt" and actually put the data on disk sectors 84673-84678.

  • @benhbr
    @benhbr Před 4 lety +1

    I understand holding out on respect, but not being actively disrespectful.

  • @Savin97
    @Savin97 Před 9 lety +48

    "Respect should be earned, Sweet, just like money"