Inclusive language

We want to encourage a culture of inclusivity, and part of doing that is making sure we use appropriate language where we can.

While some people may argue that these words aren't offensive to them, or that the words were never added with an offensive intention, they need to be aware that these words are potentially offensive to other groups of people, and we should endeavour to remove the usages.

This effort also helps fulfill our commitment to the :

"In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming community, we are committed to making participation in Wikimedia technical projects a respectful and harassment-free experience for everyone [...]"

Terms to avoid and their alternatives
The following list is incomplete. See the #Resources section below for other recommendations. We use different alternative words in different contexts, for better grammatical or technical accuracy.

It is noted that there are some cases where we may not be able to change/remove some of our usages of these words, such as until the upstream developers has fixed them and it trickles down into our deployed software. This is okay as it is out of our control. It could be worth checking with the upstream if they plan to fix similar issues in their own codebases. However, we can and should address these words in our codebases when we are able to.

How to help
If you're looking to help with this effort, is a good starting point for some discussion around the issue, and also to find specific tasks for areas of code that needs updating.

Some of these may be as simple as updating/improving comments and variable names.

Others may be more complex and need functions and hooks renaming, while following our.

Some usages may need to stay around for longer, but will generally stop being the canonical code, showing the intention for this to be removed in the near future.

Resources

 * Other organizations' related guidelines and documentation (via [ https://github.com/cdanis/inclusive-style-guides cdanis] and [ https://github.com/ietf/terminology ietf] which list many more)
 * American Chemical Society Inclusivity Style Guide
 * Android Open Source Project's "Coding with Respect"
 * Apple's Style Guide - (section on inclusive language, entry on master/slave, entry on blacklist/whitelist)
 * Bluetooth SIG's "Appropriate Language Mapping Tables"
 * Chromium's "Inclusive Code" document
 * Google's "Writing Inclusive Documentation"
 * Google's "Developer documentation style guide word list"
 * Internet Engineering Task Force:
 * Terminology, Power, and Inclusive Language in Internet-Drafts and RFCs (draft v.4)
 * Inclusive terminology in IETF Documents (work in progress)
 * Microsoft's "Bias-free communication" document
 * Twitter Engineering
 * W3C Manual of Style
 * Inclusive Naming Initiative
 * https://www.writethedocs.org/guide/writing/reducing-bias/
 * Woke, a non-inclusive language detection tool