I'll admit I mostly link it because of this topic:

  https://communitymgt.fandom.com/wiki/Cookie_Licking

which is a real thing that kills communities quickly. Though, their
other anti-pattern pages are good, too.

There's an amazing number of trackers on the web these days. I don't
think we should exclude access because of them, or warn about them
either. (That'd directly rule out most of the top 100 websites, I
believe...)

If you're concerned about trackers (as I am), you'll already have
multiple browser plugins installed to block them. But I won't block it
if you want to put a warning on the wiki page - consider this a -0 on a
warning? :)

-Joan "what was life like before ASF-style numerical voting?" Touzet

On 2019-05-18 13:02, Patricia Shanahan wrote:
> 
> 
> On 2019/05/13 16:43:11, Joan Touzet <woh...@apache.org> wrote: 
> ...
>> * Some excellent resources are below, including a final article on why
>>   "If you don't teach me, how can I learn?" is a tried-and-true
>>   derailing technique and not an honest request for assistance. I'd
>>   think that these kinds of articles would be good as a "Resources"
>>   section, which I think is generally better than a FAQ since it can
>>   be too narrow, and thus be "game theoried"/"rule lawyered" around
>>   by the determined derailer.
> ...
>>   * https://communitymgt.fandom.com/wiki/Community_Management_Wiki
> 
> According to the Ghostery Firefox plug-in, this page carries 11 trackers. Do 
> you feel strongly that it should be included in the Resources page?
> 
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: diversity-unsubscr...@apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: diversity-h...@apache.org
> 


---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: diversity-unsubscr...@apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: diversity-h...@apache.org

Reply via email to