Spell out preferred channels—issues, email, annotations—and expected response times. Encourage questions that show work. Discourage sealioning and bad‑faith nitpicks. Provide examples of constructive critique. Remind everyone that your notes are drafts, not verdicts, and that kindness beats cleverness when shared understanding is the goal.
Document what happens when someone feels unsafe: where to report, who reads it, and what remedies exist. Offer anonymous options. Keep records confidential. Block or mute persistently harmful accounts. If legal risks appear, pause publication and seek counsel before harm compounds or evidence disappears.
End notes with gentle prompts: specific questions, next experiments, or decisions you are weighing. Provide an RSS feed, newsletter, or fediverse handle for follow‑ups. Credit valuable replies prominently. By making collaboration rewarding and visible, you transform casual readers into co‑investigators who help everyone learn faster.
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