Hoi, Commons as a project provides a service to any and all projects. It does have its own community but as Commons is a shared resource it is similar but not the same in its autonomy. This should be obvious . Thanks, Gerard
On 13 March 2012 08:23, Ray Saintonge <sainto...@telus.net> wrote: > On 03/09/12 9:39 PM, Andreas Kolbe wrote: > >> On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 2:16 AM, Ray Saintonge<sainto...@telus.net> >> wrote: >> >> On 03/08/12 2:20 AM, Theo10011 wrote: >>> >>> The other issue is morality and responsibility. I don't think any >>>> executives or board members should make a statement about that video. >>>> It's >>>> a stated policy that they are not responsible for the content on the >>>> project. To hold them legally or morally responsible, for what 100,000 >>>> contributors might do at any given point, is unrealistic and >>>> unreasonable. >>>> They can not be held liable for actions of vandals, as much as of >>>> community >>>> members who upload media in good faith. Depending on how you perceive >>>> this, >>>> who does have some responsibility is the community itself. It governs >>>> itself, has its own rules about content, WMF regularly points to it in >>>> cases of content dispute. >>>> >>>> >>>> This raises an important point about the role of the board, and of >>>> >>> staff. The status of an ISP implies blindness to content. The more it >>> assumes editorial rights, the more it puts its role as an ISP into >>> question. It does not know about these contents until it receives a >>> properly formulated demand to take something down, at which point it must >>> act according to law. Third parties who just happen to feel offended by >>> some material tend to approach these matters with a strong bias, which >>> may >>> or may not reflect the reality of the law. Such people need to be >>> informed >>> of the proper legal channels with the assurance of knowing that >>> management >>> will abide with the law without itself being a tryer of the facts. >>> >> Why is it that the instinctive Wikimedia response to a problem is always >> burying one's head in the sand and hoping that the problem will go >> away? For goodness' sake. Sue has blogged her views about editorial >> judgment. The Board is in the habit of passing resolutions on project >> content. And in one of these, the Board decided last year that we would >> have an image filter, and instructed Sue to install one. To turn around >> now >> and say that all of this is something the Board can't even so much as >> *comment* on, when they've gave specific management instructions on this >> last year, is ludicrous. >> >> It's not at all question of burying one's head in the sand. It's a > question of the communities solving their own problems. Serious injustices > are a common occurrence in the communities, but a community is diminished > when it has to run to mother-WMF's apron strings to solve its problems. > Some communities will implement filters, others not; that's fine. > Eventually, each community will find its own balanced solution. > > Ray > > > ______________________________**_________________ > foundation-l mailing list > foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.**org <foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org> > Unsubscribe: > https://lists.wikimedia.org/**mailman/listinfo/foundation-l<https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l> > _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l