| It's simpler than this honestly — the Tailwind CSS Twitter account is managed entirely by me (I made Tailwind), and I'm the only one who tweets from it and checks the notifications to see if there are people doing interesting work I can help elevate or having problems I can help with. Seeing a bunch of incessant vitriol in the mentions all the time about something I've worked really hard on for many years is very distracting and upsetting to put it mildly, and on days when my emotional reserves are already low from the stresses of figuring out how the hell to make money working on the project or having a young family it's really not a healthy thing to have to deal with. Criticism being delivered in good faith is welcome and productive, but constant holier-than-thou "wow whoever created this is extremely stupid compared to me and clearly has no idea what they are doing" is not that. I've only ever blocked two people for this sort of abusive crap since 2017, in case that provides some perspective. Tailwind CSS is a "company" now in the sense that Steve and I built a commercial product to make the OSS stuff sustainable, and it turned out to be successful enough that we could hire handful of other people to help out, but I certainly don't think of us as some sort of faceless corporate entity. We don't plan to grow the team and I don't plan to become a full-time manager — I just want to keep working on interesting OSS projects and we decided to use the revenue from our commercial stuff to make that possible by hiring people to help with customer support, working full-time on existing OSS things from the ecosystem (we hired the person who built the OSS Tailwind IntelliSense extension for example), and to keep up with the barrage of GitHub issues we see as a popular project. Tailwind CSS itself is very much a personal project of mine and a labor of love, and for better or for worse it's not as easy to detach yourself from projects you pour that much into as people (who have no perspective on the emotional challenges of being the face of a popular and polarizing project) make it sound. |