Inclusivity Statement

Adapted from the Open Source Feels Diversity Statement.

Our goal is that all events we, the GOTO team, organize, attend or otherwise participate in are accessible, safe and inclusive for all.

We welcome you.

We welcome people of any gender identity or expression, race, ethnicity, size, nationality, sexual orientation, ability level, neurotype, religion, elder status, family structure, culture, subculture, political opinion, identity, and self-identification.

We welcome people wearing a baby sling, hijab, a kippah, leather, piercings, a pentacle, a rainbow, a rosary, tattoos, virtual reality devices or whatever.

We believe it’s possible for people of all viewpoints and persuasions to come together and learn from each other. We believe amazing things happen when folks with different perspectives approach other to create an open and understanding conversation. We believe in the broad spectrum of individual and collective experience and in the inherent dignity of all people.

We believe neurodiversity is a feature, not a bug. We believe in being inclusive, welcoming, and supportive of anyone who comes to us with good faith and the desire to build a community. We strive to make everyone feel welcome and know that their contribution is important because diversity makes the tech community stronger and more productive.

We believe accessibility for people with disabilities is a priority, not an afterthought. We will make sure that all of our events are well accessible to people with physical disabilities. We are aware that accessibility issues are diverse. If you are in need of an assistant to attend an event, we will provide a complimentary ticket. Please contact us with any comments, questions or requests.

We have enough experience to know that we won’t get any of this perfect but we have enough hope, energy, and idealism to want to learn how to improve. We may not be able to satisfy everyone, but we promise that if we get it wrong, we will listen to your feedback carefully and respectfully, and we will do our best to make good on our mistakes.

We protect our creativity and our diversity through our Code of Conduct.

We recognize that inclusivity is not as simple as words on a page (or website). We believe that together, we can make GOTO conferences, GOTO Nights and all other events in our community a warm and welcoming place for everyone.

Addressing Algorithmic Bias
Rethinking Connectivity
Agile Product Design From the Trenches
Bridging the Chasm Between Research and Software Development – A Story From a Fertility App
Lessons From Billions of Breached Records
We Need Guns, Lots of Guns - There Is No Silver Bullet
Deno: The JavaScript Runtime for the Serverless Era [remote speaker]
Panel Discussion with Challenges From the Audience
Bare-Metal Chronicles: Intertwinement of Tinkerbell, Cluster API & GitOps
More Developer Tools Secrets That Shouldn't Be Secrets
Inner Development Loop with Java on Kubernetes
Sabotaging a Transformation
The Importance of Forgetting for Both Humans and Machines
Avoiding The Temptation To Over-Engineer
Machine Learning Made Easy With PyCaret
Building a Managed Platform While Maintaining a Good Developer Experience
Automation Is Hard and We Are Doing It Wrong
Introduction to the Zig Programming Language
Cloud Chaos and Microservices Mayhem
Serverlesspresso: Building a Scalable, Event-Driven Application
Using Graph Database Technology to Resolve Transitive Vulnerabilities at Scale
Why Static Typing Came Back
Training & Monitoring AI
How to Stop Testing and Break Your Code Base
How We Will Look Back on NFTs – Pyramid Scheme or World Changing Tech?
Playing Games With Scrum!
Do You Feel Secure?
From Data Mess —> Data Mesh: Navigating People, Process & Platforms
Finding, Investigating, Report and Publishing Privacy Issues on Mobile Platforms
What the Hack?
The Java Agent: Modifying Bytecode at Runtime to Protect Against Log4J
Why You Don't Trust Your Linter
How Comic Strips Help Us Learn From Others' Agile Failures
Managers Are Not That Stupid
Patterns of Legacy Displacement