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How you can participate
Every User is encouraged to contribute to the cheqd Network. To make this easy, it is important to explain HOW a User can contribute, and what the best practices are for making changes.
For this reason, it is important to distinguish when a change can be made entirely off-ledger, and when a change is needed to be voted on, and made on-ledger. To do this we must differentiate between minor changes which are able to take place entirely off-ledger and major network changes which need to be formalised on-ledger.
These are changes that are insignificant, and do not affect the way the Network runs overall. Minor Network changes include, but are not limited to:
- Textual edits to the Governance Framework or written general documentation;
- Sensible additions to general documentation to improve clarity;
- Minor code changes;
- Finding, reporting and suggesting fixes to bugs;
- Translating the cheqd documentation into various languages.
See more below:
These are changes that have a materially significant effect on the Network. Such changes SHOULD be made via a Proposal, following the steps in the decision tree diagram below.
Major Network changes include, but are not limited to:
- Materially significant Architecture Decisions (ADs), such as:
- An additional feature to cheqd;
- Removal of a feature of cheqd;
- Parameter changes for the Network;
- Community pool decisions;
- Materially significant changes to a cheqd Principle;
- Significant connections to other infrastructure.
See more below:
Whenever a major network change takes place on the Network, reference MUST be made to cheqd's Foundational Principles. The Principles should act as a checks and balance against major network changes.
This means, that major network changes should never oppose a Principle, unless it is acting to update or change a Principle.
You do not have to own any CHEQ to participate in our community discussion. You are free to learn about cheqd and participate in our community discussions across multiple platforms and forums.
We want learning about cheqd and participating in the community to be easy and accessible. For this reason, we have decided to make sure our Governance, Learning and Product wikis and our source code are natively interconnected.
What does this mean?
If you are a technical person and want to make changes directly to our source code, on a text-based or code-based change, you can do this directly on our GitHub.
If you are non-technical and want to make edits in a more visual way, you can do this here on GitBook by becoming an editor.
Quick note: we have a separate GitBook for:
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Which both link to their respective GitHub repositories.
If you want to stay updated with cheqd news, we recommend that you join us on:
- 1.Twitter: Follow us here to keep up to date with the latest cheqd news and to be the first to hear about special announcements;
- 2.Telegram: Join our community here to participate in general conversation about cheqd with our core community following and be the first to hear about special announcements.
- 3.Discord: Join our community here to participate in general conversation about cheqd with our core community following and be the first to hear about special announcements.
- 4.Community Slack: Our community slack is where our Node Operators will be onboarded. This a great place to interact with technical members of the community.
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We also kindly ask you to familiarise yourself with our Code of Conduct which sets our clearly defined expectations and behaviour that we want to uphold in the community.
This ensures that the cheqd community remains a safe and welcoming place, for any person regardless of who they are.