I’d also consider erring on the side of being clear and explicit about the norms you expect people to follow. For instance, someone who only skims the explanation of QF (or lacks the hacker/lawyer instinct for finding exploits!) may not get that behavior that is pretty innocuous in other contexts can be reasonably seen as pretty collusive and corrupting in the QF context. For instance, in analogous contexts, I suspect that logrolling-type behaviors (“vote” for my project by allocating a token amount of your available funds, and I’ll vote for yours!) would be seen as fine by most of the general population.[1]
I would have assumed logrolling type behaviours were basically fine here (at least, if the other person also somewhat cared about your charity), so +1 that explicit norms are good
I’d also consider erring on the side of being clear and explicit about the norms you expect people to follow. For instance, someone who only skims the explanation of QF (or lacks the hacker/lawyer instinct for finding exploits!) may not get that behavior that is pretty innocuous in other contexts can be reasonably seen as pretty collusive and corrupting in the QF context. For instance, in analogous contexts, I suspect that logrolling-type behaviors (“vote” for my project by allocating a token amount of your available funds, and I’ll vote for yours!) would be seen as fine by most of the general population.[1]
Indeed, I’m not 100% sure on where you would draw the line on coordination / promotional activities.
I would have assumed logrolling type behaviours were basically fine here (at least, if the other person also somewhat cared about your charity), so +1 that explicit norms are good