Hi, On 25.02.20 11:27, Richard Fairhurst wrote: > But more broadly, we value data for its correctness
True. (There's a few other things we value too, but correctness definitely is nice.) > You are inventing a suspected rationale ("an > advertising campaign") Tracking components in an URL are usually a sign for an advertising campaign. (They are often even called "campaign_ref=...".) If this is *not* and advertising campaign but they give the outward appearance of being one, is it then really me who is "suspecting" and "inventing"? > on the part of the contributor; judging them by your > own standards which aren't the agreed/stated values of OSM anywhere I can > see I don't follow. You said above that correctness is valued. The fact that advertising and correctness do not usually go hand in hand certainly needs no discussion. When I then say that we cannot trust data added as part of an advertising campaign - is that "judging by my own standards"? > I mean, isn't it also possible that, now we've all made such an outstanding > success of OSM and it's used in approximately eight gazillion mapping apps, > Hilton Hotels think it would be useful if their customers could use their > favourite mapping app to find a hotel they're staying in? Sure, I'm happy to compromise on "let's remove just those tags that do not contribute to finding the hotel someone is staying in". > Anyway, brb, got to delete https://www.openstreetmap.org/node/312915889 from > the map. Clearly added in an advertising campaign. The business owner hoped to attract more business by creating that node 11 years ago with "addr:housenumber=17". Bye Frederik -- Frederik Ramm ## eMail frede...@remote.org ## N49°00'09" E008°23'33" _______________________________________________ Tagging mailing list Tagging@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging