[Talk-us] take responsibility, not control.

2013-11-18 Thread Richard Weait
When you find a suspicious edit, try to be part of the solution,
rather than merely a reporting system.  :-)

If you are experienced enough, attempt to determine which account
introduced the suspicious data.  Contact that account through the user
mail system.  Presume good faith; they may well be a new and
enthusiastic mapper with an incomplete understanding of OpenStreetMap.
 They might also be more experienced than you are and be making some
form of advanced edit with which you are unfamiliar.  Your goal is to
make contact with the mapper in question, and find out what they
intended with their edit.  Ideally, either they will learn something
and become a better mapper, or you will.  :-)

If you aren't experienced enough to do this on your own, contact a
more-experienced mapper who you trust for their judgement and ask for
their assistance.  Follow along so that you can proceed with less help
next time.

If you aren't able to get a satisfactory response within a reasonable
time, say a week or two, consider asking other mappers for their
opinion on the edits.  Are they really a problem, or simply rare or
idiosyncratic?  Consider as a group if the data should stay or not.
Please note that a "satisfactory response" is not restricted to
another mapper agreeing with you.  :-)

Repair or revert data that is incorrect.  Get help from a
more-experienced mapper if you haven't done this before.

All of this should happen before you consider reaching out to the Data
Working Group.  The DWG and the OpenStreetMap sysadmins, do have
additional tools for dealing with spammers, vandals and persistent,
umm, "whackos".  But these tools are rather heavy and blunt
instruments.  The DWG wield these tools with exquisite finesse and
with surgical precision but you can help a great deal by solving
problems before they require intervention from DWG.  Reserve the DWG
for those things that you can not reasonably do for yourself.

You can make the initial contact and do the basic research.  Please do.

Take responsibility for improving the map (we all do), but also take
responsibility for improving the mappers.  Temper this by
understanding that the mapper who you improve may well be yourself.
And that's just fine, too.  :-)

Best Regards and Happy Mapping,

Richard

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Re: [Talk-us] take responsibility, not control.

2013-11-18 Thread Martin Koppenhoefer
2013/11/18 Richard Weait 

> Repair or revert data that is incorrect.  Get help from a
> more-experienced mapper if you haven't done this before.
>

Thank you Richard for this post. Very true that every single mapper can try
to make contact with other mappers in his surroundings and find a solution
for conflicts or teach them best practise or try to revert themselves
before putting the case on the national ML or asking DWG to revert.

On the other hand, when it comes to copyright infringements, you shouldn't
simply revert the edit but get it redacted, I guess? Otherwise the
infringements would be still contained in the full planet released by the
OSMF.

cheers,
Martin
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Re: [Talk-us] take responsibility, not control.

2013-11-18 Thread stevea

When you find a suspicious edit, try to be part of the solution,


What a really well-written post.  Thank you, Richard!

SteveA
California

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Re: [Talk-us] take responsibility, not control.

2013-11-20 Thread Steven Johnson
Excellent post, Richard. +1 to your suggestion that we all "assume good faith". 
We should all collaborate and encourage camaraderie between mappers.  

--SEJ

Sent from my electronic tether. 

> On Nov 18, 2013, at 12:12, Richard Weait  wrote:
> 
> When you find a suspicious edit, try to be part of the solution,
> rather than merely a reporting system.  :-)
> 
> If you are experienced enough, attempt to determine which account
> introduced the suspicious data.  Contact that account through the user
> mail system.  Presume good faith; they may well be a new and
> enthusiastic mapper with an incomplete understanding of OpenStreetMap.
> They might also be more experienced than you are and be making some
> form of advanced edit with which you are unfamiliar.  Your goal is to
> make contact with the mapper in question, and find out what they
> intended with their edit.  Ideally, either they will learn something
> and become a better mapper, or you will.  :-)
> 
> If you aren't experienced enough to do this on your own, contact a
> more-experienced mapper who you trust for their judgement and ask for
> their assistance.  Follow along so that you can proceed with less help
> next time.
> 
> If you aren't able to get a satisfactory response within a reasonable
> time, say a week or two, consider asking other mappers for their
> opinion on the edits.  Are they really a problem, or simply rare or
> idiosyncratic?  Consider as a group if the data should stay or not.
> Please note that a "satisfactory response" is not restricted to
> another mapper agreeing with you.  :-)
> 
> Repair or revert data that is incorrect.  Get help from a
> more-experienced mapper if you haven't done this before.
> 
> All of this should happen before you consider reaching out to the Data
> Working Group.  The DWG and the OpenStreetMap sysadmins, do have
> additional tools for dealing with spammers, vandals and persistent,
> umm, "whackos".  But these tools are rather heavy and blunt
> instruments.  The DWG wield these tools with exquisite finesse and
> with surgical precision but you can help a great deal by solving
> problems before they require intervention from DWG.  Reserve the DWG
> for those things that you can not reasonably do for yourself.
> 
> You can make the initial contact and do the basic research.  Please do.
> 
> Take responsibility for improving the map (we all do), but also take
> responsibility for improving the mappers.  Temper this by
> understanding that the mapper who you improve may well be yourself.
> And that's just fine, too.  :-)
> 
> Best Regards and Happy Mapping,
> 
> Richard
> 
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> Talk-us mailing list
> Talk-us@openstreetmap.org
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-us

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