Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-15 Thread Keegan Peterzell
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 1:28 PM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:

 On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 09:45:38AM -0400, Sydney Poore wrote:
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization
  
   Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
   people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
   dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.
 
  Besides your acknowledged bias towards confronting people with their bias
  and forcing a discussion,

 Yes, and this bias against bias has a name, it's called NPOV.


etc...

Yes yes, Kim, I enjoy your discussion but we all well got the thought you
are provoking a long time ago.  This piecemeal dissection of an email is the
same sort of response many anons, registered (new and established) accounts
get on talk pages all the time.  And you wonder why it's discouraging.

The internet is a source of product- tangental, ephemeral, no matter- and
customer base relies on the product.  Wikipedia provides the encyclopedia as
a product.  Following that, 99.99% of the consumers don't know, or really
want to know, how the sausage is made.  If you want to wade into the English
Wikipedia in 2011 the experience is likely to be the same as if it were
2005: you can get templated, nothing can happen, you can get a response from
someone helpful, or you can get an asshole.  It's really all the same, no
matter how we color the glasses.

We attract intellectuals, and what we like is an argument.   What we have,
ten years into Wikipedia and 17 years into the internet boom is a new
generation of young and old intellectuals who are unfamiliar with flame
wars, USENET, email lists, old talk pages, and the concept that anyone can
edit.  Anyone can subscribe to this list- do you think they'd know what is
going on in our group dynamic?  The same applies, and has always applied to
Wikipedia.

We make people scared to edit.

~Keegan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Keegan
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Kim Bruning
 
 I fundamentally disagree.  If the content can be managed to be culturally
 sound, that is effective to disseminate globally.  If Islamic countries do
 not want to see images of Mohammed, that is effect in maintaining other
 content without blocking the site.  Same applies to other religious imagery,
 political imagery, sexual imagery, and whatever else.  The filter is for
 images, and while pictures are louder than words, we can at least have the
 words while maintaining cultural integrity.

The end game for this strategy of giving every (sub-) culture their own
subset of the images and/or text (when every medium agrees all at once),
and where everyone lives past each other is actually well known and well
studied: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization

Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.

Then again, that's a deeply held cultural belief in the part of the
world that I live in, and you might not share it. ;-)

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Sydney Poore
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 8:17 AM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:

 
  I fundamentally disagree.  If the content can be managed to be culturally
  sound, that is effective to disseminate globally.  If Islamic countries
 do
  not want to see images of Mohammed, that is effect in maintaining other
  content without blocking the site.  Same applies to other religious
 imagery,
  political imagery, sexual imagery, and whatever else.  The filter is for
  images, and while pictures are louder than words, we can at least have
 the
  words while maintaining cultural integrity.

 The end game for this strategy of giving every (sub-) culture their own
 subset of the images and/or text (when every medium agrees all at once),
 and where everyone lives past each other is actually well known and well
 studied:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization

 Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
 people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
 dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.

 Then again, that's a deeply held cultural belief in the part of the
 world that I live in, and you might not share it. ;-)

 sincerely,
 Kim Bruning


Besides your acknowledged bias towards confronting people with their bias
and forcing a discussion, it is also not very practical that we be the host
for discussions on talk pages continuously with large groups of people. It
fatigues our established users when discussions are repeated continuously on
article talk pages. Sometimes it is needed to address content decisions. But
comments are frequently not responded to in a timely manner perhaps leaving
people feeling that no one cares about their views.

And lots of people want to look up information or edit an interesting topic
without having a consciousness raising discussion. There are many
opportunities for people to interact and learn from each other without us
placing them in a position where they feel like they need to do it or stay
away.

So, I don't think that pushing people to see material that they are not
comfortable seeing is necessarily beneficial to WMF projects or the person.


Sydney Poore
User:FloNight
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread David Gerard
On 14 September 2011 14:45, Sydney Poore sydney.po...@gmail.com wrote:

 Besides your acknowledged bias towards confronting people with their bias
 and forcing a discussion, it is also not very practical that we be the host
 for discussions on talk pages continuously with large groups of people. It
 fatigues our established users when discussions are repeated continuously on
 article talk pages. Sometimes it is needed to address content decisions. But
 comments are frequently not responded to in a timely manner perhaps leaving
 people feeling that no one cares about their views.
 And lots of people want to look up information or edit an interesting topic
 without having a consciousness raising discussion. There are many
 opportunities for people to interact and learn from each other without us
 placing them in a position where they feel like they need to do it or stay
 away.
 So, I don't think that pushing people to see material that they are not
 comfortable seeing is necessarily beneficial to WMF projects or the person.


You appear to be confusing editor fatigue with reader fatigue.

Doing stuff because it reduces editor conflict has, so far, been an
effective way to reduce value to the readers. This is why we don't
have POV forked articles: they solve a problem for the editors at the
expense of the readers.

You are also putting forward pretty much the same excuse for POV forks
that Microsoft did in pushing POV forking for Encarta editions: where
they wanted to make something marketable that would play nice and not
risk upsetting people, rather than because the content was actually
neutral, accurate or authoritative. That is: something for the
convenience of the publisher, at the expense of the reader.

The real world is holistic - everything links to everything else, and
I'd have thought it *really obvious* that carving out chunks of that,
particularly in the cause of making your own life easier over that of
the reader, is POV-pushing.


- d.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Andrew Garrett
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:17 PM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
 The end game for this strategy of giving every (sub-) culture their own
 subset of the images and/or text (when every medium agrees all at once),
 and where everyone lives past each other is actually well known and well
 studied:
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization

 Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
 people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
 dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.

I think you're taking the use of an image filter to a bizarre
absolute. There *are* shades of grey here. My understanding of the
proposal is that it people will voluntarily have certain images that
have the potential to cause offense hidden by default, with a
click-to-show. When somebody starts saying that they want meaningfully
different article content for every country or point of view, then I
think you'd be justified in bringing this up.

-- 
Andrew Garrett
Wikimedia Foundation
agarr...@wikimedia.org

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Sydney Poore
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 9:52 AM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

 On 14 September 2011 14:45, Sydney Poore sydney.po...@gmail.com wrote:

  Besides your acknowledged bias towards confronting people with their bias
  and forcing a discussion, it is also not very practical that we be the
 host
  for discussions on talk pages continuously with large groups of people.
 It
  fatigues our established users when discussions are repeated continuously
 on
  article talk pages. Sometimes it is needed to address content decisions.
 But
  comments are frequently not responded to in a timely manner perhaps
 leaving
  people feeling that no one cares about their views.
  And lots of people want to look up information or edit an interesting
 topic
  without having a consciousness raising discussion. There are many
  opportunities for people to interact and learn from each other without us
  placing them in a position where they feel like they need to do it or
 stay
  away.
  So, I don't think that pushing people to see material that they are not
  comfortable seeing is necessarily beneficial to WMF projects or the
 person.


 You appear to be confusing editor fatigue with reader fatigue.

 Doing stuff because it reduces editor conflict has, so far, been an
 effective way to reduce value to the readers. This is why we don't
 have POV forked articles: they solve a problem for the editors at the
 expense of the readers.

 You are also putting forward pretty much the same excuse for POV forks
 that Microsoft did in pushing POV forking for Encarta editions: where
 they wanted to make something marketable that would play nice and not
 risk upsetting people, rather than because the content was actually
 neutral, accurate or authoritative. That is: something for the
 convenience of the publisher, at the expense of the reader.

 The real world is holistic - everything links to everything else, and
 I'd have thought it *really obvious* that carving out chunks of that,
 particularly in the cause of making your own life easier over that of
 the reader, is POV-pushing.


I see nothing about this image filter that hides images that is POV-pushing.


Not when all that you are doing is putting in place an image filter that
does not remove images but hides them, and still allows you to click through
and see the image.

Some people need it in place because the place they read articles prohibits
controversial images.

Other people want it because of a desire to keep controversial content out
of their home. Giving these user control over image selection may bring *
more* people to Wikipedia, and an article with controversial content.
Intellectual curiosity may entice them to click through and see the image
now or later. That is a Good Thing.

Sydney Poore
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Marcin Cieslak
 Sydney Poore sydney.po...@gmail.com wrote:

 Other people want it because of a desire to keep controversial content out
 of their home. Giving these user control over image selection may bring *
 more* people to Wikipedia, and an article with controversial content.
 Intellectual curiosity may entice them to click through and see the image
 now or later. That is a Good Thing.

May or may not. Did you ever live in a politically restrictive country?

//Saper


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Sydney Poore
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:49 AM, Marcin Cieslak sa...@saper.info wrote:

  Sydney Poore sydney.po...@gmail.com wrote:

  Other people want it because of a desire to keep controversial content
 out
  of their home. Giving these user control over image selection may bring *
  more* people to Wikipedia, and an article with controversial content.
  Intellectual curiosity may entice them to click through and see the image
  now or later. That is a Good Thing.

 May or may not. Did you ever live in a politically restrictive country?

 //Saper


Hello Saper,

Could you explain how that you think an user controlled image filter would
make a difference to a person who lives on a country politically restricted
country? Do you think that it would hurt or help, or make no difference?

Sydney Poore
User:FloNight
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Marcin Cieslak
 
  Other people want it because of a desire to keep controversial content
 out
  of their home. Giving these user control over image selection may bring *
  more* people to Wikipedia, and an article with controversial content.
  Intellectual curiosity may entice them to click through and see the image
  now or later. That is a Good Thing.

 May or may not. Did you ever live in a politically restrictive country?

 //Saper


 Hello Saper,

 Could you explain how that you think an user controlled image filter would
 make a difference to a person who lives on a country politically restricted
 country? Do you think that it would hurt or help, or make no difference?

Can you help me in understanding in why such a user control feature may
possibly bring more people to Wikipedia? I am especially interested in
countries where access to information is restricted by the environment,
for example by governments, whether the same reasoning applies to them
as to less restrictive regions. 

I am asking this because I happened to grow up and have first 8 years
of my education in such an environment and I still remember those times
and how we approached the limited access to information.

//Saper



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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Strainu
2011/9/14 Andre Engels andreeng...@gmail.com:
 On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 6:37 PM, Marcin Cieslak sa...@saper.info wrote:
 I am especially interested in
 countries where access to information is restricted by the environment,
 for example by governments, whether the same reasoning applies to them
 as to less restrictive regions.


 Probably, although there might be additional cases where they want to block
 images, not because they themselves disagree with them, but because
 possession on their computer might be illegal for them.

My understanding is the images WILL be downloaded, just as collapsed
tables are downloaded. So with or without the filter would not make
much of a difference for the people Saper is talking about.

Strainu

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Kim Bruning
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 11:54:07PM +1000, Andrew Garrett wrote:
 On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:17 PM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
  The end game for this strategy of giving every (sub-) culture their own
  subset of the images and/or text (when every medium agrees all at once),
  and where everyone lives past each other is actually well known and well
  studied:
  ? ? ? ?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization
 
  Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
  people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
  dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.
 
 I think you're taking the use of an image filter to a bizarre
 absolute. There *are* shades of grey here. My understanding of the
 proposal is that it people will voluntarily have certain images that
 have the potential to cause offense hidden by default, with a
 click-to-show. When somebody starts saying that they want meaningfully
 different article content for every country or point of view, then I
 think you'd be justified in bringing this up.

Well, when I ask people why they want the feature, that's what it
comes down to. They say they want to be able to hide things that are
offensive to their own culture. (Given that it would work) This
method would allow them to do so, without imposing straight-out
censorship on their fellow (wo)man.

Why else would you need to hide things from yourself, if not because
somewhere in your past, you learned that it was wrong or
uncomfortable to look at?

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Richard Farmbrough
Unfortunately the proposed mechanism (which cannot with integrity be 
disentangled from the proposal, for juts such reasons as this) would 
download the images regardless, the filter would merely affect the 
display.  It is possible that even a smarter mechanism might suffer the 
same drawback if a web accelerator is in use.

On 14/09/2011 18:17, Andre Engels wrote:
 Probably, although there might be additional cases where they want to block
 images, not because they themselves disagree with them, but because
 possession on their computer might be illegal for them.




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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Kim Bruning
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 09:45:38AM -0400, Sydney Poore wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillarization
 
  Due to my knowing the historical context, I would actually prefer that
  people were confronted by cultural differences and have a healthy
  dialogue about them, to prevent or mitigate pillarization.

 Besides your acknowledged bias towards confronting people with their bias
 and forcing a discussion,

Yes, and this bias against bias has a name, it's called NPOV. 

If someone is POV pushing, then hell yes I'm going to confront them,
NameTheProblem, and attempt force a discussion. If they don't want to talk
after 3 such attempts (warnings), they can be blocked, or even banned
permanently.


We know many non self-preserving versus preserving systems:

*lawlessness versus rule of law
*bsd versus gpl 
*wordpress (1POV) versus wikipedia (NPOV).

If wikipedia is to not merely be a collection of opinions, NPOV is
rather important.

And the combination of NPOV and consensus forces people to confront
their biases, discuss them, and resolve them, and in that way reach
the closest approximation to the truth that we can achieve.

You may have heard of this process. ;-) It's what we use to write an
encyclopedia.

  it is also not very practical that we be the host for discussions
  on talk pages continuously with large groups of people.

Fortunately, this doesn't happen in most of the encyclopedia.
Consensus has worked rather well for 10 years and counting. 

 It fatigues our established users when discussions are repeated
 continuously on article talk pages. 

That's clearly pathological. Repeated discussions and positions fall under 
[[WP:3RR]].

The long consensus loop (also documented in [[WP:BRD]] for particular 
applications) applies. 


 Sometimes it is needed to address content decisions.

There is no other reason for talk page discussions. Wikipedia is
[[WP:NOT]] a discussion board. 

 But comments are frequently not responded to in a timely manner
 perhaps leaving people feeling that no one cares about their
 views.

[Citation needed]. The rule of thumb is that if your concerns are
not addressed on the talk page for 24 hours (enough time for every
time zone to respond), you may go ahead and be [[WP:BOLD]] and apply
your content change.

 And lots of people want to look up information or 

This group I can sympathize with, somewhat, and I'm willing to
discuss the upsides and downsides to catering to this group. My
position here is that -in general- giving people the ability to hide
within their own culture leads to pillarization in the long term.
This is a most unpleasant state of affairs.

If you have a rotten tooth, do you go to the dentist to have it
pulled (even though this is briefly very unpleasant) or do you leave the
tooth to rot further (where at some point, you will suffer pain all
day) ?

[people want to] edit an interesting topic without having a
consciousness raising discussion. 

You mean edit an interesting topic using only their own POV, and not
taking other POVs or NPOV into account?

That's POV pushing. That's not permitted. Either reach consensus and
adhere to NPOV, or leave. That's a founding issue. It is
non-negotiable.

 There are many opportunities for people to interact
 and learn from each other without us placing them in a position
 where they feel like they need to do it or stay away.

The point of any wiki is to allow people to interact and learn from
each other. Some of the things you will learn might be 
uncomfortable. 

If you can't deal with this, then yes you might want to stay away.
Fortunately there are not many people who are like that in the 21st
century. (Though more than I thought)

 So, I don't think that pushing people to see material that they
 are not comfortable seeing is necessarily beneficial to WMF
 projects or the person.

Participants/Editors are going to have to see all pages unmodified
or they cannot judge the page for POV issues, vandalism, or etc.

Pillarization among *participants* always leads to internal
strife. That must be prevented.

Non-participants are an interesting problem. We really want them to
become participants, rather than passive fence-sitters. 

A wiki usually serves its participants first, (with the world at
large being a secondary goal; after all - the entire world is
invited and welcome to participate if they want to). I can't ASSUME
things about non-participants. For all I know anything we do
(including filtering) might hurt them. If they don't speak up, we
don't know.

sincerely,
Kim Bruning

-- 

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Thomas Morton

 A wiki usually serves its participants first, (with the world at
 large being a secondary goal; after all - the entire world is
 invited and welcome to participate if they want to).


I've commented at length already on why this is the wrong approach; and
forces us into an even more insular community with greater biases (you only
have to look at the different ways that different language Wiki's present
topics to understand how little neutrality we have. There is a bias; it's
just that each community agrees on it).

This is a vicious circle that ignores our readers (who are a much wider
cross section) and leaves a somewhat close minded and inaccessible community
that believes it is the pillar of neutrality :)


I can't ASSUME
 things about non-participants. For all I know anything we do
 (including filtering) might hurt them. If they don't speak up, we
 don't know.


 And this takes us full circle to just about my first question on this long
thread has anyone actually asked our consumers what they would like to
see?

I am going to guess this will again go unanswered and un-actioned :)

Tom
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Andrew Garrett
On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
 Well, when I ask people why they want the feature, that's what it
 comes down to. They say they want to be able to hide things that are
 offensive to their own culture. (Given that it would work) This
 method would allow them to do so, without imposing straight-out
 censorship on their fellow (wo)man.

 Why else would you need to hide things from yourself, if not because
 somewhere in your past, you learned that it was wrong or
 uncomfortable to look at?

I'll answer with an example.

I am very uncomfortable with medical images. It's not a cultural
thing, you can get these things by in PG movies these days. But
whenever I see an image of somebody being given an injection, or being
seriously injured, or who is seriously injured, I am physically sick
and in danger of passing out. It's called 'vasovagal syncope', if
you're curious.

When I want to look up a medical term (that I often don't understand
in the first place and have no idea what to expect of) on Wikipedia,
I have to very quickly scroll down or look away if it's illustrated
with a particularly graphic image. Obviously, I would like to view
Wikipedia in such a way that I am warned before I'm shown something
that is going to affect me in such a way. However, I realise that I am
not everyone and there is no reason to remove thousands of
high-quality, educational images from articles because I'm not
comfortable with medical imagery. That really would be censorship.

Therefore, it would be really nice if I could choose, just for my own
sake and on my own behalf, to have these images hidden to start with,
and if I want to see them I can click on them and have them shown to
me.

Maybe you don't have any problems viewing any image whatsoever, but
there are plenty of people for whom it's more than just a 'preference'
based on some cultural norm that you don't agree with because you're
modern and you transcend cultural taboos. But I'd wager that, in
general, (if you get away from Wikipedians) you're in the minority.

—Andrew
-- 
Andrew Garrett
Wikimedia Foundation
agarr...@wikimedia.org

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Kim Bruning
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 10:50:55PM +0100, Thomas Morton wrote:
 
  A wiki usually serves its participants first, (with the world at
  large being a secondary goal; after all - the entire world is
  invited and welcome to participate if they want to).
 I've commented at length already on why this is the wrong approach; and
 forces us into an even more insular community with greater biases 

Initially, this is how the system worked exclusively, and we got more and
more participation. Since 2005, people have slowly been making things
harder for new participants, and the trend reversed itself.

So your conclusion does not match the statistics. The inverse conclusion is
warrented. A stronger emphasis on anonymous participation and greater ease
of access to talk pages (perhaps through tools such as liquid threads)
will likely improve our situation considerably. I certainly doubt it will harm 
it
:-P

 (you only
 have to look at the different ways that different language Wiki's present
 topics to understand how little neutrality we have. There is a bias; it's
 just that each community agrees on it).

The fact that we have different language wikis working past each other is
actually a form of (inadvertant) pillarization. 

As a thought experiment:

In fact, if culture issues are the reason for this filter, couldn't we just
terminate commons? Then each project could keep images that are ok in
their culture, and discard images that they are 'uncomfortable' with.
 
If you have reasons why we shouldn't terminate commons, those reasons are
likely to overlap with some reasons why we shouldn't filter.

 This is a vicious circle that ignores our readers (who are a much wider
 cross section) and leaves a somewhat close minded and inaccessible community
 that believes it is the pillar of neutrality :)

There is a vicious circle happening, but I really doubt that steps such as
more openness, more outreach, clearer and easier editing, and more
prominent access to talk pages are part of that circle. :-P

The vicious circle I see is as follows:

*START: Wikipedia works by having amateurs work together using a tight, rapid
feedback cycle for editing. (More mistakes are made, but they're caught as
quickly)

* People start 'raising the bar for quality'
* some people fall below the bar
* more discussion is requested, and more pre-study is required.
* It takes longer to make an edit to an article
* less mistakes are made, but less mistakes are caught too.
* Netto less articles are written, although only slightly higher quality 
  quality (diminishing returns)

* END: You practically have to write an article fully-formed in userspace.
   a lot of  work done in mainspace ends up deleted or reverted.

  I can't ASSUME
  things about non-participants. For all I know anything we do
  (including filtering) might hurt them. If they don't speak up, we
  don't know.
  And this takes us full circle to just about my first question on this long
 thread has anyone actually asked our consumers what they would like to
 see?

Yes. We do. That's why we have a discussion tab on every single page.
Would you like it to be more prominent, in blinking letters 3 miles high?
Perhaps we should do something like that (within reason) if you think it
will help. But the community attitude will have to change a bit too. Right
now the community is becoming more and more insular, and unwilling to
talk to strangers.

Outside participation is possible, permitted, and encouraged at page-level
granularity. Where it is not, we have a problem with a known solution. 

At the moment, very few people are going page-by-page and solving it
though. We may need some new forms of patrol. :-)


sincerely,
Kim Bruning


-- 


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-14 Thread Kim Bruning
On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 09:41:41AM +1000, Andrew Garrett wrote:
 On Thu, Sep 15, 2011 at 3:56 AM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
  Well, when I ask people why they want the feature, that's what it
  comes down to. They say they want to be able to hide things that are
  offensive to their own culture. (Given that it would work) This
  method would allow them to do so, without imposing straight-out
  censorship on their fellow (wo)man.
 
  Why else would you need to hide things from yourself, if not because
  somewhere in your past, you learned that it was wrong or
  uncomfortable to look at?
 
 I'll answer with an example.
 
 Therefore, it would be really nice if I could choose, just for my own
 sake and on my own behalf, to have these images hidden to start with,
 and if I want to see them I can click on them and have them shown to
 me.

And that's fine. Your user agent can do this for you in part. If you don't
understand how your user agent works [1], we could certainly add some
options to wikipedia to do this for you. There is exactly 0 problem
with this.

The only problem is with people who make categories that say this
might be an offensive image. (They probably would miss medical
anyway. The bias is against sex, nudity, and etc). It turns out that
such categories are censorship tools, and should be avoided. Even if
we don't use them to censor, others certainly can and will.

Clicking something to Hide all images until I want them shown, is a
standard function of your browser[2], or a plugin could be made to
provide an extra button in the wikipedia UI.

Hmm, the default firefox image options are not that great actually. There's
no way to tell that there were images there in the first place.
HideImages plugin is close to what you want. Maybe we need a better
firefox plugin. And maybe an extension could be written that does
this function.

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


[1] many people have never heard of F5 or CTRL-F, let alone suchd
complex things as clicking in a menu. I don't understand this, but
I've given up and am willing to work with it.
[2] In firefox: Edit-Preferences [content] [X] Load images automatically

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-13 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 13, 2011 at 07:39, Keegan Peterzell keegan.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 Milos, you state that Americans see everything involving nudity under the
 label as porn and offensive, and filtering with that mindset is a bad idea.
  You're correct about Americans acting that way in general.

Just a short note: No, I didn't say that Americans see
everything...; I said that it's about particular part of American
society. Majority of Americans which I know are sane.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-12 Thread David Gerard
On 12 September 2011 06:49, Yaroslav M. Blanter pute...@mccme.ru wrote:

 Only countries which have lists of monuments compiled by the government
 and having the status of the law are eligible for WLM. This is in some
 sense POV but no more POV than say writing articles of members of
 parliament who were elected by direct vote. If Japan has such a list (I
 hope it does) next year it would be eligible to participate. My
 understanding is that somehow the organizers did not expect such interest
 and did not try to contact chapters outside Europe. Presumably next year
 they will do. On the other hand, by the next year some of the European
 countries may exhaust their monuments (in the sense that the most of the
 pictures will be taken and the articles written or judged to be impossible
 to write). Thus, NPOV does not seem to be a problem to me.


It would be systemic bias rather than a NPOV problem as such.


- d.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-12 Thread Yaroslav M. Blanter
 It would be systemic bias rather than a NPOV problem as such.
 
 
 - d.
 

Right, but we do have this systemic bias already in place: in ALL our
projects, the articles on localities in Sweden are longer and better
written (and better illustrated) than the articles on localities in Burkina
Faso. We could indeed initiate smth like an effort to improve articles on
localities in Burkina Faso (which may be combined with the outreach effort
in the global South or whatever keywords are currently used), but it is
clear to me that the overlap between users participating in WLM and users
capable of writing articles on Burkina Faso is close to zero if it at all
exists.

Cheers
Yaroslav

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-12 Thread Béria Lima

 *I do see two other problems with WLM, which are (...)  involvement of the
 chapters as a precondition
 *


Be organized by a Chapter is *not* a condition. The Andorra WLM is organized
by 
Amicalhttp://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Associaci%C3%B3_Amical_Viquip%C3%A8dia(who
is not a chapter). If any country want to participate next year, you
people don't want to have a chapter to organize it.
_
*Béria Lima*
http://wikimedia.pt/(351) 925 171 484

*Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter livre
acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. É isso o que estamos a
fazer http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Nossos_projetos.*


On 12 September 2011 06:49, Yaroslav M. Blanter pute...@mccme.ru wrote:

 On Mon, 12 Sep 2011 10:51:33 +0900, KIZU Naoko aph...@gmail.com wrote:
  Off topic alert:
 
  I haven't given a closer look to your main topic, Milos, so I cannot
  give a responsible statement in any way. But your reference to Wiki
  Loves Monuments, while I agree it's heavily Europe-focused, I strongly
  disagree with you on its decadency, as an (retired) aesthetic. While
  the determination what artworks are heavily depends on the community
  to appreciate, so partly I understand your concern, if WLM is carried
  on only by European chapter people, it can hardly of NPOV at some
  future moment, but artworks belong to the critical part of the sum of
  human knowledge along with the information who created them and then
  have appreciated or rejected them.
 

 Only countries which have lists of monuments compiled by the government
 and having the status of the law are eligible for WLM. This is in some
 sense POV but no more POV than say writing articles of members of
 parliament who were elected by direct vote. If Japan has such a list (I
 hope it does) next year it would be eligible to participate. My
 understanding is that somehow the organizers did not expect such interest
 and did not try to contact chapters outside Europe. Presumably next year
 they will do. On the other hand, by the next year some of the European
 countries may exhaust their monuments (in the sense that the most of the
 pictures will be taken and the articles written or judged to be impossible
 to write). Thus, NPOV does not seem to be a problem to me.

 I do see two other problems with WLM, which are (i) competition format,
 which implicitly stimulates certain strategies we normally do not want to
 stimulate; (ii) involvement of the chapters as a precondition - some
 countries do not have chapters, some chapters showed no interest, some were
 unable to organize anything in the end. But I am not sure such discussion
 belongs to this thread.

 Cheers
 Yaroslav



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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-12 Thread Keegan Peterzell
I didn't participate in the referendum.  I understood from the beginning
that this was going to be implimented, the matter of community opinion is
nice to ask for but didn't really matter, and ultimately the only thing that
comes of this is help answering Islamic users questioning us showing
depictions of Mohammed.

The conversation in this thread has been engaging in helping me decide my
opinion on a personal level: I'll go with the filter as responsible concept.

Milos, you state that Americans see everything involving nudity under the
label as porn and offensive, and filtering with that mindset is a bad idea.
 You're correct about Americans acting that way in general.  I could pull a
juvenile prank and replace someone's computer background with the image of a
penis, and it will be called porn.  It's not, it's an image of a penis, but
that's the feeling we evoke.

We're growing and developing in Islamic countries and countries with a high
percentage of Islamic population.  A highly held principle is not seeing,
publishing, or distributing depictions of Mohammed.  This is a deeply felt
belief, one which makes any claims to offending morals seem trivial.  We had
a massive problem at the Arabic Wikipedia over providing content that
depicted Mohammed. From our standpoint in customer relations on OTRS and on
Wikimedia projects in general, we could do little but provide information on
how the hide all images with the disclaimer of NOTCENSORED, NPOV, you should
be more cultured than to believe that's actually what Mohammed looked
like/be more open minded...the list goes on.

Now, when we choose to point to cultural trends as a reason something is
bad, the argument will die.  If you inform most of the Western readers that
you are offended by images of Mohammed, at some point someone will have the
same reaction that happens when talking about Americans and sexual images.
 Americans might have the same argument used against them with Muslems.  The
point is that we have to respect cultural norms and see why they are what
they are.  We can disagree, but the first step for globalization is the
ability to say Oh, I see where you're coming from.

What is fundamentally ingrained in a culture is part of the root of that
culture.  We're global, but culture is not.  Which leads to...

On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 2:58 AM, Fajro fai...@gmail.com wrote:

 Can anyone explain me how this Image Filter is not against the mission
 of the Wikimedia Foundation?

 Letting some users to block Wikipedia content is NOT a good way to
 disseminate it effectively and globally as stated in the mission
 statement.

 http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Mission_statement


 --
 Fajro


I fundamentally disagree.  If the content can be managed to be culturally
sound, that is effective to disseminate globally.  If Islamic countries do
not want to see images of Mohammed, that is effect in maintaining other
content without blocking the site.  Same applies to other religious imagery,
political imagery, sexual imagery, and whatever else.  The filter is for
images, and while pictures are louder than words, we can at least have the
words while maintaining cultural integrity.

-- 
~Keegan

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Keegan
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-11 Thread Kim Bruning
On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 08:35:00AM +0100, WereSpielChequers wrote:
 
 As for Kim's Red team Blue team shenanigans, why would anyone bother? 

  But if devout Bahais decide to use this filter ...

Heh, I never thought about trolling devout Bahai. ;-) I wouldn't use
a filter though. I'm sure smart *categorisation* could have
interesting effects all by itself.

 I can understand why spammers try to ...

On the other hand, those spammers definitely would have some neat ways to
exploit synergies between the new *category system* and 3rd party
filters. Similar filters already exist, it would only be logical for
them to incorporate high quality curated data.

I can also think of ways to mess with the *category system* that would
help spammers, even in an otherwise unfiltered internet. 

The one thing most of the proposed red vs blue simulations would NOT include
... is an on-wiki filter.

I am  proposing something ...errr... categorically different from
that. ;-)

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-11 Thread KIZU Naoko
Off topic alert:

I haven't given a closer look to your main topic, Milos, so I cannot
give a responsible statement in any way. But your reference to Wiki
Loves Monuments, while I agree it's heavily Europe-focused, I strongly
disagree with you on its decadency, as an (retired) aesthetic. While
the determination what artworks are heavily depends on the community
to appreciate, so partly I understand your concern, if WLM is carried
on only by European chapter people, it can hardly of NPOV at some
future moment, but artworks belong to the critical part of the sum of
human knowledge along with the information who created them and then
have appreciated or rejected them.

Recording those things always inherits its own systematic bias, to
some extent. It may  seem bored and look a certain culture's
hegemonical promotion. But it might be only to the contemporary, and
the coming age may have a different view and even would appreciate
such records. Here I'd like you to recall on two series of exhibitions
in Germany in the late 1930s, that is, Entartete Kunst and the other
(really propaganda) one. Records on those exhibitions let us have a
deep insight what then happened and people thought, and, on the
unfortunately lost works, what they could be.

I have no foresight on WLM and its future. But archival approach for
artworks per se, it matches our mission and thus we support it.

Cheers,

On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 4:19 PM, Milos Rancic mill...@gmail.com wrote:
 Not long ago I had a gaffe on internal-l, by publicly expressing
 opinion what do I really think about Wiki Loves Monuments, although my
 intention was to send a private email. However, WLM has a number of
 good sides: Commons will be filled with photos, people will spend time
 together, it makes at least some parts of the movement more coherent.
 Besides the fact that making depictions of depictions is a classical
 European type of decadency. Anyway, if that's the worst thing in our
 movement, I could live with that.

 But, it is not.

 If Board doesn't intervene *now*, it could be easily concluded that
 the worst thing ever happened to our movement has started these days.

 Up to the end of the so called referendum, everything was as usual:
 Because of I promised to myself that won't use at this point phrase
 Jimmy's sexually impaired rich friends Board articulated something
 in opposition of majority of editors (yes, majority of editors; I
 really don't care what one sexually impaired member of Concerned Women
 for America with 17 edits thinks about Wikipedia [1][2]); then it
 wanted to implement it anyway, including bizarre questionnaire called
 referendum; then heated discussion sparked; then results came; then
 results from German Wikipedia came, as well.

 Logically, we have the solution: If Board really cares what Concerned
 Women for America think, let it, please, implement that filter on
 English Wikipedia and leave the rest of the projects alone -- if they
 don't ask for the filter explicitly. As members of that organization
 probably don't know any other language except English, everybody will
 be happy. Except the core editors of English Wikipedia, of course. But
 Board doesn't care about them, anyway; which means that English
 Wikipedia is reasonable scapegoat for Wikimedia movement to please
 sexually impaired Americans and others.

 But, we have one much more serious problem in front of us. Instead of
 going toward the solution, we are going in opposite direction. Instead
 of concluding this three years long drama, Censorship Committee and
 Board want to analyze the numbers and prolong agony for another
 three years. And if that agony has something useful, important at the
 end, I could even say that we need to make reasonable sacrifice (in my
 area it would be solved by slaughtering pig or goat or whatever, which
 is more reasonable than wasting three more years, by the way).

 But, it doesn't have.

 The most important reason for this bizarre expression of mismanagement
 is to please, as mentioned before, sexually impaired Americans. If
 that's the main reason, please, please them *now* or forget
 everything.

 Like WLM, this Board's pet project is expression of decadency. This
 time American. However, unlike WLM, this project won't fill Commons
 with photos. Quite opposite, this project will make significant
 problems to the Commons community. People will spend time together
 indeed, but in arguing who is right and who's not. It already divides
 the movement on a couple of lines.

 I realized that I started to participate in this madness when I asked
 for some data from the results. And now, community is asked to
 participate into the Next steps [3]! Holy Thing! That will produce
 much more sexual content than any porn photo on Commons. In Serbian
 we say for that fucking in healthy brain. If not exterminated at the
 beginning, that brainfuck (unfortunately, not programming language
 [4]) will produce much more problems than any image filter 

Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-11 Thread Yaroslav M. Blanter
On Mon, 12 Sep 2011 10:51:33 +0900, KIZU Naoko aph...@gmail.com wrote:
 Off topic alert:
 
 I haven't given a closer look to your main topic, Milos, so I cannot
 give a responsible statement in any way. But your reference to Wiki
 Loves Monuments, while I agree it's heavily Europe-focused, I strongly
 disagree with you on its decadency, as an (retired) aesthetic. While
 the determination what artworks are heavily depends on the community
 to appreciate, so partly I understand your concern, if WLM is carried
 on only by European chapter people, it can hardly of NPOV at some
 future moment, but artworks belong to the critical part of the sum of
 human knowledge along with the information who created them and then
 have appreciated or rejected them.
 

Only countries which have lists of monuments compiled by the government
and having the status of the law are eligible for WLM. This is in some
sense POV but no more POV than say writing articles of members of
parliament who were elected by direct vote. If Japan has such a list (I
hope it does) next year it would be eligible to participate. My
understanding is that somehow the organizers did not expect such interest
and did not try to contact chapters outside Europe. Presumably next year
they will do. On the other hand, by the next year some of the European
countries may exhaust their monuments (in the sense that the most of the
pictures will be taken and the articles written or judged to be impossible
to write). Thus, NPOV does not seem to be a problem to me. 

I do see two other problems with WLM, which are (i) competition format,
which implicitly stimulates certain strategies we normally do not want to
stimulate; (ii) involvement of the chapters as a precondition - some
countries do not have chapters, some chapters showed no interest, some were
unable to organize anything in the end. But I am not sure such discussion
belongs to this thread.

Cheers
Yaroslav



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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-10 Thread WereSpielChequers
As this debate has ploughed on I've become less likely to use this feature
myself. But am still utterly unconvinced by the opposition arguments.

Re: Demagogy of multiculturalism when it means pushing POV by right-wing
US. As long as the image filter would enable Moslems to opt out of seeing a
certain set of cartoons, then this to me is about globalisation not about
appeasing Conservapedia and its fans. Actually one of the most predictable
risks of implementing this is that we will be attacked by our American
critics Wikipedia enables censorship, Moslems now allowed to censor images
they dislike, but naturally no block all porn option for Christians (all
porn is bound not to be an option because definitions of porn are so
divergent. But if it were they'd pick another unimplemented option such as
swimsuit or respectable swimsuit).

As for Kim's Red team Blue team shenanigans, why would anyone bother? I can
understand why spammers try to subvert our processes and add their links and
spamcruft - they see us as a free source of advertising worth their time to
try and sneak their message in. But if devout Bahais decide to use this
filter to screen out certain images, how likely is it that there will be an
opposing team trying to sneak those images past their filter? Especially if
the filters are personal options that other editors can't see.

WereSpielChequers

Board is filled with a bunch of amateurs (not derogatory meaning!) --
 including yourself in the past and hypothetically including myself if
 I passed last election -- which position is the product of political
 will (community, chapters, Board will itself).

 Any sane body -- which is aware that it is there because of political
 will and not because of their expertise (no, Stu and Jan-Bart are not
 in the Board as experts when they act as apologists of Jimmy's
 deletion of artworks on Commons [1][2]) -- knows that it should
 delegate responsibilities to those who know the matter better.

 However, Wikimedia Foundation Board acts dilettantish whenever one of
 the Board member (or a friend of that Board member) has strong
 position toward some issue.

 For example, Wikipedia in Tunisian Arabic has been rejected by the
 Board, although relevant international institutions (and reality, as
 well) recognize it as a separate language [3]. Just after long
 discussion (in short period of time) between two Board members and
 Language committee, it was threw under the carpet as waiting [4]
 with the excuse to wait for non-existent initiative to create North
 African Arabic Wikipedia (it was my initiative at the end, just to end
 with grotesque Board's dilettantism, by claiming that their members
 are better introduced in linguistic diversity than relevant
 international bodies and Language committee as well; which I see as
 humiliating for the Board, but Board members don't think so).

 I didn't want to open this issue; but the flow of discussion --
 claiming that Board *really* knows what it is doing -- forced me to
 give it as an example.

 While I am sure that at least Arne cares about German Wikipedia and
 Bishakha cares about Hindi Wikipedia -- collectively, Board reacts
 just if someone points to their POV related to English Wikipedia.
 Everything else, including Serbian Wikipedia in 2005 and including
 Kazakh Wikipedia in 2011, are just safari-like care about interesting
 and strange species. Yes, Board cares when some project dares to
 question Jimmy's authority, like when Wikinews did it well and
 Wikiversity badly.

 If the Board members would be more honest in their intentions, not to
 hide behind demagogy of multiculturalism when it means pushing POV
 by right-wing US and similar phrases with similar opposite meanings,
 we could start to have real discussion. Not to mention that it is
 obvious that some of the motivations of some of the Board members are
 not even politically motivated, but very personally (and very has
 the meaning inside of the phrase).

 [1] http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2010-May/058026.html
 [2] http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2010-May/057795.html
 [3]
 http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Requests_for_new_languages%2FWikipedia_Tunisianaction=historysubmitdiff=2744156oldid=2741178
 [4]
 http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Requests_for_new_languages%2FWikipedia_Tunisianaction=historysubmitdiff=2748151oldid=2744156



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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-10 Thread Fajro
Can anyone explain me how this Image Filter is not against the mission
of the Wikimedia Foundation?

Letting some users to block Wikipedia content is NOT a good way to
disseminate it effectively and globally as stated in the mission
statement.

http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Mission_statement


-- 
Fajro

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-10 Thread Mikael
Since I moved to an internet connection that doesn't cripple my 
connection speed after 1 GB of traffic/month, I probably won't use this 
feature either.

But, as I to and fro have tried to follow the debate over the last week, 
I got curious about the feasibility of one possible solution that *I 
think* would sidestep some of the issues which has been presented 
concerning the categorization that has been deemed necessary:

What if the user has a default switch show images? [on/off] (as 
someone else already suggested somewhere - sorry, I don't remember in 
which post), and in every place where a picture is shown (or supposed to 
be shown), the user would have the ability to toggle the visibility of 
that particular image.

Kim Bruning: if these settings are stored server-wise, and given the 
lack of indications on any page about any ban-worthiness, do you think 
it still would be possible for a third party to create a list of banned 
images/banned pages and impose it on anyone? I mean, besides what is 
already possible by looking at category names such as sex, religion, 
people from country X etc.

Obviously, this would emphatically not be a think of the children or 
if you are a good insert-belief-here you should use our special 
filter tool, and it would be a pain in the neck to maintain for the 
user if he or she would like any kind of fine grained control - but 
quite purposefully so. (An image wouldn't - couldn't - be blocked until 
the user got to a page where the image is called for and actively 
blocked it for him/herself, i.e. no manual editing of the raw blacklist 
or whitelist.)

The reason I ask is that I'm no programmer, and have no clue about the 
technical feasibility of such a solution, how tampering-resistant this 
could be made (I *guess* the red team would have a harder time 
destroying this than a system based on a publicly visible 
categorization, but would it be in some sense sufficiently hard?) nor 
whether this would require too much of the servers, keeping track of 
settings of x million users times y million images.


I'd be happy to be educated in this.

\Mike


On 10/09 2011 09:35, WereSpielChequers wrote:
 As this debate has ploughed on I've become less likely to use this feature
 myself. But am still utterly unconvinced by the opposition arguments.

 Re: Demagogy of multiculturalism when it means pushing POV by right-wing
 US. As long as the image filter would enable Moslems to opt out of seeing a
 certain set of cartoons, then this to me is about globalisation not about
 appeasing Conservapedia and its fans. Actually one of the most predictable
 risks of implementing this is that we will be attacked by our American
 critics Wikipedia enables censorship, Moslems now allowed to censor images
 they dislike, but naturally no block all porn option for Christians (all
 porn is bound not to be an option because definitions of porn are so
 divergent. But if it were they'd pick another unimplemented option such as
 swimsuit or respectable swimsuit).

 As for Kim's Red team Blue team shenanigans, why would anyone bother? I can
 understand why spammers try to subvert our processes and add their links and
 spamcruft - they see us as a free source of advertising worth their time to
 try and sneak their message in. But if devout Bahais decide to use this
 filter to screen out certain images, how likely is it that there will be an
 opposing team trying to sneak those images past their filter? Especially if
 the filters are personal options that other editors can't see.

 WereSpielChequers

 Board is filled with a bunch of amateurs (not derogatory meaning!) --
 including yourself in the past and hypothetically including myself if
 I passed last election -- which position is the product of political
 will (community, chapters, Board will itself).

 Any sane body -- which is aware that it is there because of political
 will and not because of their expertise (no, Stu and Jan-Bart are not
 in the Board as experts when they act as apologists of Jimmy's
 deletion of artworks on Commons [1][2]) -- knows that it should
 delegate responsibilities to those who know the matter better.

 However, Wikimedia Foundation Board acts dilettantish whenever one of
 the Board member (or a friend of that Board member) has strong
 position toward some issue.

 For example, Wikipedia in Tunisian Arabic has been rejected by the
 Board, although relevant international institutions (and reality, as
 well) recognize it as a separate language [3]. Just after long
 discussion (in short period of time) between two Board members and
 Language committee, it was threw under the carpet as waiting [4]
 with the excuse to wait for non-existent initiative to create North
 African Arabic Wikipedia (it was my initiative at the end, just to end
 with grotesque Board's dilettantism, by claiming that their members
 are better introduced in linguistic diversity than relevant
 international bodies and Language committee as well; 

Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-10 Thread David Gerard
On 10 September 2011 12:14, Milos Rancic mill...@gmail.com wrote:

 And while I think that such tool would include other cultures as well
 (there are other cultures in the world, besides Christian and Muslim
 right-wingers), motivation for this filter didn't come from Muslims or
 indigenous people of Australia, but from American right-wingers [1]:
 moron Sanger and Fox News swill. Although we have Muslims on this
 list, *no* Muslim commented this thread. Although we have many
 cultures on this list, Americans are around 100% of supporters, while
 a number of people from other cultures oppose (including, of course,
 majority of Americans).


This is a good question, actually:

What are the use cases people see for *themselves*? Not for
hypothetical others, but *themselves*?

(And will the people presenting use cases largely be American?)

Were use cases gathered beforehand?


- d.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Tom Morris
On Thursday, September 8, 2011, Kim Bruning wrote:

 That said, even a self controlled filter can be problematic qua bias
 (especially if you're not sure entirely how to control it) [1]

 [1] http://www.thefilterbubble.com/ted-talk


I'm not sure what I think about the image filter, but that's a pretty ropey
comparison:

With the proposed image filter, the knowledge that a filter is in place
would be quite obvious: there'd be a big gray box with Image Removed or
something. And if you want to see them, you are only a click away from
loading them.

And how is bias being introduced into my views by being able to go to [[Cock
ring]] and not seeing a picture of a penis? I fail to see how being able to
opt-out of saucy sex pics actually moves us in any significant way closer to
a world where we live in filter bubbles. The main problem stated by Eli
Pariser is that the filter bubbles are created without consent or knowledge
of the user - his example is of political conservatives whose posts
disappeared from his Facebook stream and the same Google searches leading to
different results for different people. The proposed image filter wouldn't
have those problems: it's just when you go to a page which has, say, sexual
content, you'd know exactly what had been left out.

Again, I'm not sure whether I support the image filter, but it's a rubbish
argument to say that it creates filter bubble-type scenarios.

-- 
Tom Morris
http://tommorris.org/


-- 
Tom Morris
http://tommorris.org/
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Milos Rancic
On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 13:44, Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com wrote:
 On 9/7/11 9:15 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
 I think that damage produced by thiswhatever  should be localized.
 The target is English Wikipedia, Board is not especially interested in
 other Wikipedia editions and other projects in English; which means
 that it should be localized on English Wikipedia.

 Milos, you are way out of line here.  The board is not especially
 interested in English Wikipedia, and indeed, very little of our
 discussion of this feature has any particular relevance to English
 Wikipedia.

 Your ongoing campaign about this would be much more powerful if it
 acknowledged the actual facts rather than making up slurs against good
 people.

 - This has nothing in particular to do with English Wikipedia, any more
 than it has to do with all languages

 - This has nothing whatsoever to do with the United States

 - This has nothing whatsoever to do with Jimmy's rich friends

 If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.

So, you want to implement on German Wikipedia despite the fact that
84% of editors rejected it?

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Strainu
2011/9/9 Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com:
 If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.

Every single proposal I've seen on this feature from the staff assumed
that the filter will be enabled by default and could (perhaps) be
disabled. Did I miss something?

Strainu

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Thomas Morton

 2011/9/9 Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com:
  If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.

 Every single proposal I've seen on this feature from the staff assumed
 that the filter will be enabled by default and could (perhaps) be
 disabled. Did I miss something?


Could just be misreading; I see that as saying so the feature will be there
to use, but if you don't like it don't use it.

Nothing implying enabled by default...

Tom
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Kim Bruning
On Fri, Sep 09, 2011 at 03:54:46PM +1000, Andrew Garrett wrote:
 This is the point of the image filter. There are images that,
 notwithstanding their being educational and high quality, I don't
 necessarily want to see without warning. Even if I'm looking up
 'vagina' for whatever reason.

Are there any issues with the current article, then?

sincerely,
Kim Bruning

-- 
[Non-pgp mail clients may show pgp-signature as attachment]
gpg (www.gnupg.org) Fingerprint for key  FEF9DD72
5ED6 E215 73EE AD84 E03A  01C5 94AC 7B0E FEF9 DD72

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Andrew Gray
On 9 September 2011 13:31, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:
 2011/9/9 Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com:
 If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.

 Every single proposal I've seen on this feature from the staff assumed
 that the filter will be enabled by default and could (perhaps) be
 disabled. Did I miss something?

My understanding is that the filter *software* will be enabled for all
wikis. The default *setting* for that software will be to display all
images, and then any individual user can choose their own settings
apart from that default.

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image_filter_referendum/FAQ/en

All Wikimedia content loads on all user browsers by default. The
feature is activated only after all content has been loaded, and then
only when specifically requested by a user.

(A comparison: user email is enabled on all wikis. But users have to
individually turn it on for it to work.)

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Kim Bruning
On Fri, Sep 09, 2011 at 09:24:36AM +0100, Tom Morris wrote:
 On Thursday, September 8, 2011, Kim Bruning wrote:
 
  That said, even a self controlled filter can be problematic qua bias
  (especially if you're not sure entirely how to control it) [1]
 
  [1] http://www.thefilterbubble.com/ted-talk
 
 
 I'm not sure what I think about the image filter, but that's a pretty ropey
 comparison:
 
 With the proposed image filter, the knowledge that a filter is in place
 would be quite obvious: there'd be a big gray box with Image Removed or
 something. And if you want to see them, you are only a click away from
 loading them.

This is true With the proposed image filter and only with the
proposed image filter -provided that the entire connection between
you and the wiki is transparent- (Which it need not be.)

If there are filters in between, it need not be true today. If your browser
is not under your control, it need not be true today.

That's today. A little while after the filter is introduced, we will
have 2 sets of effects, political and technical.

* Politically, people will see wikipedia as endorsing filters (it
  seems quite unlikely that they will take note of the subtle
  properties of our filter that make it tolerable to us) so more filters 
  will come into circulation, increasing the chance that there is a 
  filter not-under-your-control between you and the wiki. This
  will change the way the filter works.
* Technically, a new set of categories is created, or categories will
  be pressed into the new role. These categories are invaluable to
  filter makers. This means again there will be more filters (as
  above), but also that the little grey box will not be there to
  remind you that something is missing.

After that, we get back to the side effects of regular (non-wikipedia
kind) filters. This information is well documented all over the net.
You'll discover that not just images, but also the pages those images
are on will not be reachable. We've been told on this list that this
already happens to some people today. It seems pretty obvious that
the effect will be much multiplied once the categories are available
to third parties.

 And how is bias being introduced into my views by being able to go
 to [[Cock ring]] and not seeing a picture of a penis?  I fail to
 see how being able to opt-out of saucy sex pics actually moves us
 in any significant way closer to a world where we live in filter
 bubbles.

I just provided you with 2 steps in that direction, pretty much the
first moves on the blue-team and red-team sides. 

On or around move 2 (6-12 months) we can start seeing people either
deliberately or accidentally start filtering things that are nothing
to do with sex or drugs at all, up to and including censoring of
civic information.

This has happened with filters in the past. I don't yet see why our
filters wouldn't follow the same playbook. So far, there is nothing
to differentiate our history from existing history.

But ours will be different is not an argument. ;-)

 Again, I'm not sure whether I support the image filter, but it's a
 rubbish argument to say that it creates filter bubble-type
 scenarios.

Seriously? That's pretty definitive. [citation needed] Show me a
filter scenario where it *hasn't* happened! 

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread David Gerard
On 9 September 2011 12:54, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
 After that, we get back to the side effects of regular (non-wikipedia
 kind) filters. This information is well documented all over the net.
 You'll discover that not just images, but also the pages those images
 are on will not be reachable. We've been told on this list that this
 already happens to some people today. It seems pretty obvious that
 the effect will be much multiplied once the categories are available
 to third parties.


Note that this is what the Internet Watch Foundation does to block
images. (Thus, they blocked Wikipedia article text, but not the image
itself, which was on a different server.)

Censors tend not to worry about collateral damage.

Is the WMF claiming the filter will be free of side-effects?

[ ] yes
[ ] no

If yes, then how so?

If no, then just don't use the feature is a nonsense.


 And how is bias being introduced into my views by being able to go
 to [[Cock ring]] and not seeing a picture of a penis?  I fail to
 see how being able to opt-out of saucy sex pics actually moves us
 in any significant way closer to a world where we live in filter
 bubbles.

 I just provided you with 2 steps in that direction, pretty much the
 first moves on the blue-team and red-team sides.
 On or around move 2 (6-12 months) we can start seeing people either
 deliberately or accidentally start filtering things that are nothing
 to do with sex or drugs at all, up to and including censoring of
 civic information.
 This has happened with filters in the past. I don't yet see why our
 filters wouldn't follow the same playbook. So far, there is nothing
 to differentiate our history from existing history.
 But ours will be different is not an argument. ;-)


Indeed. Substantive answers to these points would be welcomed. From
the board, since they've determined the filter is happening.


- d.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Elias Gabriel Amaral da Silva
2011/9/9 Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com:

 If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.

You talk like the filter existence is fait accompli, a matter already
decided, and there is nothing people can do about it. The referendum
also gave this impression, by asking things about its details and
overall importance, but not asking if it should be implemented (like
normal referenda).

Do I understand it right?

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread dex2000
  

 On 9 September 2011 12:44, Jimmy Wales jwa...@wikia-inc.com wrote:
 
  If you don't like the feature, then don't use it.


In the unhappy event that this filter is enabled, will it be
possible/allowed for a community to make its use mandatory and to
punish readers who turn it off?

Sir48/Thyge

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread FT2
No. Same as you can't tell most preferences a user has set, or which
articles they watch. In simple terms, the filter code only filters content
when user prefs say so, and other users can't tell what filter prefs a user
has or what code is executed client-side (ie in their browser not at the
server) without actual access to their computer.

FT2

On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 7:09 PM, dex2...@pc.dk wrote:

 In the unhappy event that this filter is enabled, will it be
 possible/allowed for a community to make its use mandatory and to
 punish readers who turn it off?

 Sir48/Thyge

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Kudu
Wouldn't the filter use the preferences system for registered users?
In that case, the preferences are stored in the database.

~K

On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 2:44 PM, FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com wrote:
 No. Same as you can't tell most preferences a user has set, or which
 articles they watch. In simple terms, the filter code only filters content
 when user prefs say so, and other users can't tell what filter prefs a user
 has or what code is executed client-side (ie in their browser not at the
 server) without actual access to their computer.

 FT2

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Strainu
2011/9/9 FT2 ft2.w...@gmail.com:
 No. Same as you can't tell most preferences a user has set, or which
 articles they watch. In simple terms, the filter code only filters content
 when user prefs say so, and other users can't tell what filter prefs a user
 has or what code is executed client-side (ie in their browser not at the
 server) without actual access to their computer.

 FT2

That is not entirely true. It is theoretically feasible to get the
categories from the api and then call the code that hides the images
for the images that match a category. How practical it is remains to
be seen.

Strainu

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread MZMcBride
Jimmy Wales wrote:
 On 9/7/11 9:15 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
 I think that damage produced by thiswhatever  should be localized.
 The target is English Wikipedia, Board is not especially interested in
 other Wikipedia editions and other projects in English; which means
 that it should be localized on English Wikipedia.
 
 Milos, you are way out of line here.  The board is not especially
 interested in English Wikipedia, and indeed, very little of our
 discussion of this feature has any particular relevance to English
 Wikipedia.

It's not out of line to suggest that Wikimedia is especially interested in
the English Wikipedia. It's _indisputable_ at the Wikimedia Foundation
level. Whether it's as true at the Wikimedia Board level is a bit more
arguable, though there's a good deal of evidence to suggest that it's
equally true there. A cursory look at the Wikimedia Board resolutions is
pretty damning.

When the Wikimedia Foundation places the English Wikipedia on a pedestal and
treats all other wiki projects/families as peripheral, it's not at all
unexpected that occasionally people will vent frustration at this.

MZMcBride



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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Michael Snow
On 9/9/2011 3:37 PM, MZMcBride wrote:
 It's not out of line to suggest that Wikimedia is especially interested in
 the English Wikipedia. It's _indisputable_ at the Wikimedia Foundation
 level. Whether it's as true at the Wikimedia Board level is a bit more
 arguable, though there's a good deal of evidence to suggest that it's
 equally true there. A cursory look at the Wikimedia Board resolutions is
 pretty damning.
The resolutions are more a reflection of what issues the board is able 
to reach a consensus on, as opposed to what it is interested in. From my 
experience, there was a fair bit of discussion about various concerns 
involving, say, Wikinews or Wikiversity, but we had difficulty agreeing 
on what the solutions were, and sometimes whether interventions were 
necessary or even what the problems were. I don't mean to suggest that 
the board lacks the ability to deal with other issues and focuses on 
Wikipedia as a result - I think it reflects the uncertain position of 
the community generally, which hasn't coalesced much around any 
particular answer to those questions. I do hope the board continues 
working on some of those issues.

--Michael Snow

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Milos Rancic
On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 00:59, Michael Snow wikipe...@frontier.com wrote:
 The resolutions are more a reflection of what issues the board is able
 to reach a consensus on, as opposed to what it is interested in. From my
 experience, there was a fair bit of discussion about various concerns
 involving, say, Wikinews or Wikiversity, but we had difficulty agreeing
 on what the solutions were, and sometimes whether interventions were
 necessary or even what the problems were. I don't mean to suggest that
 the board lacks the ability to deal with other issues and focuses on
 Wikipedia as a result - I think it reflects the uncertain position of
 the community generally, which hasn't coalesced much around any
 particular answer to those questions. I do hope the board continues
 working on some of those issues.

Board is filled with a bunch of amateurs (not derogatory meaning!) --
including yourself in the past and hypothetically including myself if
I passed last election -- which position is the product of political
will (community, chapters, Board will itself).

Any sane body -- which is aware that it is there because of political
will and not because of their expertise (no, Stu and Jan-Bart are not
in the Board as experts when they act as apologists of Jimmy's
deletion of artworks on Commons [1][2]) -- knows that it should
delegate responsibilities to those who know the matter better.

However, Wikimedia Foundation Board acts dilettantish whenever one of
the Board member (or a friend of that Board member) has strong
position toward some issue.

For example, Wikipedia in Tunisian Arabic has been rejected by the
Board, although relevant international institutions (and reality, as
well) recognize it as a separate language [3]. Just after long
discussion (in short period of time) between two Board members and
Language committee, it was threw under the carpet as waiting [4]
with the excuse to wait for non-existent initiative to create North
African Arabic Wikipedia (it was my initiative at the end, just to end
with grotesque Board's dilettantism, by claiming that their members
are better introduced in linguistic diversity than relevant
international bodies and Language committee as well; which I see as
humiliating for the Board, but Board members don't think so).

I didn't want to open this issue; but the flow of discussion --
claiming that Board *really* knows what it is doing -- forced me to
give it as an example.

While I am sure that at least Arne cares about German Wikipedia and
Bishakha cares about Hindi Wikipedia -- collectively, Board reacts
just if someone points to their POV related to English Wikipedia.
Everything else, including Serbian Wikipedia in 2005 and including
Kazakh Wikipedia in 2011, are just safari-like care about interesting
and strange species. Yes, Board cares when some project dares to
question Jimmy's authority, like when Wikinews did it well and
Wikiversity badly.

If the Board members would be more honest in their intentions, not to
hide behind demagogy of multiculturalism when it means pushing POV
by right-wing US and similar phrases with similar opposite meanings,
we could start to have real discussion. Not to mention that it is
obvious that some of the motivations of some of the Board members are
not even politically motivated, but very personally (and very has
the meaning inside of the phrase).

[1] http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2010-May/058026.html
[2] http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2010-May/057795.html
[3] 
http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Requests_for_new_languages%2FWikipedia_Tunisianaction=historysubmitdiff=2744156oldid=2741178
[4] 
http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Requests_for_new_languages%2FWikipedia_Tunisianaction=historysubmitdiff=2748151oldid=2744156

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-09 Thread Phil Nash
MZMcBride wrote:
 Jimmy Wales wrote:
 On 9/7/11 9:15 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
 I think that damage produced by thiswhatever  should be localized.
 The target is English Wikipedia, Board is not especially interested
 in other Wikipedia editions and other projects in English; which
 means that it should be localized on English Wikipedia.

 Milos, you are way out of line here.  The board is not especially
 interested in English Wikipedia, and indeed, very little of our
 discussion of this feature has any particular relevance to English
 Wikipedia.

 It's not out of line to suggest that Wikimedia is especially
 interested in the English Wikipedia. It's _indisputable_ at the
 Wikimedia Foundation level. Whether it's as true at the Wikimedia
 Board level is a bit more arguable, though there's a good deal of
 evidence to suggest that it's equally true there. A cursory look at
 the Wikimedia Board resolutions is pretty damning.

 When the Wikimedia Foundation places the English Wikipedia on a
 pedestal and treats all other wiki projects/families as peripheral,
 it's not at all unexpected that occasionally people will vent
 frustration at this.

 MZMcBride

I think it's more the case that Wikipedia is the most prominent project 
within the WM umbrella, and therefore, it attracts commensurate attention. 
Whereas I have only slight experience of other language WPs than en:wp, my 
take is that when local problems arise, the natural focus for complaint 
seems to be Jimbo's en:wp Talk page rather than a Meta page. en:wp editors 
quite rightly have directed those complaints to more appropriate venues. 
Whether this is due to local wp problems, I cannot tell.

Whether en:wp should be regarded as a paragon of virtue w.r.t. WM seems to 
me to be extremely moot; being the most trafficked project within the WM 
umbrella, it clearly is going to be the cockpit for some disputes, perhaps 
more those based on policy rather than content, and it is, like any 
sub-project, self-governing, and the Foundation does not step in, in either 
an advisory, administrative, admonitory, or judicial capacity, and perhaps 
nor should it.

It would be wonderful if en:wp could be *the* model of behaviour, structure, 
review, and how to write an online encyclopedia, but, sadly, it ain't. I'd 
amplify, but I'm tired; of more or less everything. I didn't come here to 
fight for the obvious, because it should be simply that: obvious. I'm glad 
in a way, that I am banned from Wikipedia, because it no longer stresses me 
as it did- unfortunately for the world, I can no longer add to the sum total 
of human knowledge, as Jimmy so optimistically offered. I keep a list of 
articles suitable for en:wp, but missing; but it doesn't shrink in the 
current circumstances. What a waste of an opportunity! 


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-08 Thread Lodewijk
(as a side-respons: besides being quite rude of making your point this way;
it is nonsensical, because in this case it is the broadcaster (you) who
decides what to leave out, and not the receiver (me). Showing everything or
showing only the parts people want to see have just as much chance for bias.
You could even argue that forcing people to look at pictures and make them
feel uncomfortable gives them in their specific interpretation a larger bias
about the topic than you can ever induce by leaving the pictures out for
that same group.

Lodewijk

Am 7. September 2011 20:38 schrieb Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl:

 On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:30:54PM +0200, Kim Bruning wrote:
  On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:51:40PM +0200, Lodewijk wrote:
   The question shouldn't [...] be about whether we want to
   offer [...] people [...] Wikipedia?

 (
 just as a note: This quote is intended as an illustration of why
 it may be preferable to have an all-or-nothing policy for
 wikipedia articles, as opposed to we-hide-parts-of-the-article.

 If part of a story is hidden, you can introduce very
 strong bias.

 Obviously, it is not normally my intention to deliberately
 twist people's words. (Other than as an illustration here)
 )

 sincerely,
 Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-08 Thread Kim Bruning
On Thu, Sep 08, 2011 at 05:20:40PM +0200, Lodewijk wrote:
 (as a side-respons: besides being quite rude of making your point this way;

Interesting; it's actually a fairly common depiction, eg. :
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_JN5JdlnKd7g/Sp-5xSd6pKI/AUI/bXiSz5mhgao/s400/censorship.JPG
http://theresolute.net/files/2010/04/censored_text.jpg

Of course, if you don't like it, you could always filter it. :-)

 it is nonsensical, because in this case it is the broadcaster (you) who
 decides what to leave out, and not the receiver (me).

Ah, you think I'm talking about the image filter here. That's not
entirely true. As I have repeated many times, the category system
required for the filter to work is the actual potential problem. 

That said, even a self controlled filter can be problematic qua bias
(especially if you're not sure entirely how to control it) [1]

  Showing everything or showing only the parts people want to see have
  just as much chance for bias.

Strictly speaking, that would be statistically true if you were to block
randomly. If you block non-randomly, then per definition (the statistical
definition even!) you are introducing bias. 

 You could even argue that forcing people to look at pictures and make them
 feel uncomfortable gives them in their specific interpretation a larger bias
 about the topic than you can ever induce by leaving the pictures out for
 that same group.

I would hope that it would be a bias towards the truth. Reality and
truth tend to be uncomfortable to people, they may have to step outside
their comfort zone slightly. It's much more pleasant to believe that
the earth is flat and does not extend outside your little village. 

When I start to feel slightly uncomfortable, I know I'm probably getting
closer to the reality of matters. This is not always entirely pleasant at
first.

sincerely,
Kim Bruning
[1] http://www.thefilterbubble.com/ted-talk

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-08 Thread Andrew Garrett
On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 12:44 AM, Dan Rosenthal swatjes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 5:15 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.comwrote:

 
  Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?
 
 
 No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
 keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
 educational and high quality.

 You're saying that a picture of a stripper with her legs wide open can in no
 way be educational and high quality? The undertone from this statement is
 that It would be better and less offensive if her legs were closed which
 to me highlights the censorship problem precisely.

This is the point of the image filter. There are images that,
notwithstanding their being educational and high quality, I don't
necessarily want to see without warning. Even if I'm looking up
'vagina' for whatever reason.

It's about taking into account the visual preferences of readers
(click to show images like that to avoid being surprised) while still
recognising that such images are usually of high quality and have a
valid educational use.

-- 
Andrew Garrett
Wikimedia Foundation
agarr...@wikimedia.org

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-07 Thread Lodewijk
I think it is obvious that some people will have a problem with those
images, and others don't. Apparently Sarah is (justified or not - that
doesn't matter) under the impression that it would not be appreciated at her
work if she would open such images there. That she has this impression is a
fact. That she is because of that unable to access the textual contents of
the article is also a fact.

The question in place is now - should Sarah, if she wants to, be enabled to
selectively filter out images so that she can browse on Wikipedia without
worrying too much about whether the next page will contain an image that
people on her workplace would find inappropriate?

Of course people are allowed to have all kind of opinions on this - I heard
Kim (and others of an alledged vocal minority) saying very clearly no,
even though he found it necessary to twist my words for that. And the board
clearly said yes.

Lodewijk

Am 6. September 2011 22:45 schrieb Béria Lima berial...@gmail.com:

 
  *My boss (...) can't open the pregnancy article at work because the intro
  is NSFW our workplace.
  *


 I'm sorry but i don't find the problem in this article.

 *I can't open the [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really
  in your face photo of a vagina when you open it up
  *


 The article is about vagina. The only picture there who might be NSFW is
 this one: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Azvag.jpg who only shows
 what are the anatomy of a vagina. I find very educational.

 And BTW, if you don't want to see a vagina, don't open the article.

 *who is totally grossed out by that photo on the vagina article,
  gahhh, surely she can't be the only one!
  *


 No it was not. There are in fact a category in commons (
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Vagina ) and in that category i
 found the image who replaced the Image you dislike so
 much
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Human_vulva_with_visible_vaginal_opening.jpg
 .
 But not because you don't like, because the one in the article now is more
 clear.
 _
 *Béria Lima*
 http://wikimedia.pt/(351) 925 171 484

 *Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
 livre
 acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. É isso o que estamos a
 fazer http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Nossos_projetos.*


 On 6 September 2011 15:15, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:

  
   Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?
  
  
  No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
  keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
  educational and high quality.
 
  My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the
 pregnancy
  article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
  [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face
 photo
  of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
  [[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening
  it.
  I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
  exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these
 articles
  at work, take that as you will.
 
  Sarah
  who is totally grossed out by that photo on the vagina article,
  gahhh, surely she can't be the only one!
 
  --
  GLAMWIKI Partnership Ambassador for the Wikimedia
  Foundationhttp://www.glamwiki.org
  Wikipedian-in-Residence, Archives of American
  Arthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SarahStierch
  and
  Sarah Stierch Consulting
  *Historical, cultural  artistic research  advising.*
  --
  http://www.sarahstierch.com/
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-07 Thread Milos Rancic
On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 03:34, Marc A. Pelletier m...@uberbox.org wrote:
 On 06/09/2011 3:19 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
 I realized that I started to participate in this madness when I asked
 for some data from the results. And now, community is asked to
 participate into the Next steps [3]

 Milos, I think you're stepping out to the backyard there.  I'm probably
 one of the more vocal (and arguably acerbic) opponents of that entire
 filter idea, and the fact that (at least some members of) the board is
 actually willing to now listen to concerns is a _good_ thing.

I think that damage produced by this whatever should be localized.
The target is English Wikipedia, Board is not especially interested in
other Wikipedia editions and other projects in English; which means
that it should be localized on English Wikipedia.

By stating that it will affect just English Wikipedia and just other
projects which explicitly said that they want that filter, many
concerns would be addressed.

After that, significant period of time will have to pass up to the
filter implementation and there will be plenty of time for discussing
about particular details.

Without that localization, we have now serious problems:
* It is not yet clear would that filter be implemented or not. Board
said yes, but, obviously, Censorship committee didn't recommend its
implementation. That question requires simple yes/no answer and
someone should make that decision. Note that even the most moderate
regulations of sexually explicit images doesn't have chance to pass
any community confidence [1]. At the other side, Board wants that and
there are just two options for the Board: to say yes or to say no. Any
of the answers is better sooner than later: no would finish the
drama; yes would intensify it for a couple of days and then the
discussion about details could be continued. Otherwise, more emotions
would be involved and as yes is likely to be the answer, just more
people would be more frustrated with the outcome.
* Strong opposition inside of the second-largest community. If not
addressed immediately, referendums like that one on German Wikipedia
could be sparked all over the projects and we would have just more
problems.
* Note that the whole thing around image filter is not well understood
out of US and Australia. The most of the world knows to live with
rouge images and censorship isn't usually imposed by people
themselves, but by governments. Including others in internal issues of
US society triggers just more emotional reactions.

We need to stop wasting time and energy on personal wishes of two
Board members. As it isn't about removing the content, any solution is
better than wasting willingness on one nonconstructive and decadent
project. If that time and energy was spent on rewriting Parser, we
would have WYSIWYG editor a year or two ago.

[1] 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons_talk:Sexual_content/Archive_6#Second_poll_for_promotion_to_policy_.28December_2010.29

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-07 Thread David Gerard
On 7 September 2011 09:15, Milos Rancic mill...@gmail.com wrote:

 We need to stop wasting time and energy on personal wishes of two
 Board members. As it isn't about removing the content, any solution is
 better than wasting willingness on one nonconstructive and decadent
 project. If that time and energy was spent on rewriting Parser, we
 would have WYSIWYG editor a year or two ago.


Although I broadly agree with the rest of your message, I disagree
with the Parser bit on the end - basically, the parser rewrite had to
pass muster with someone at Brion or Tim level, as there's not really
anyone else who would be able to say these bits of syntax are out
and have it stick; and since I suspect Tim would rather spork his eyes
out than read the words parser rewrite ever again, getting Brion in
to work on it was the only way to make it go forward. Developer effort
is not fungible in the face of politics :-)


- d.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-07 Thread Milos Rancic
On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 10:22, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 7 September 2011 09:15, Milos Rancic mill...@gmail.com wrote:

 We need to stop wasting time and energy on personal wishes of two
 Board members. As it isn't about removing the content, any solution is
 better than wasting willingness on one nonconstructive and decadent
 project. If that time and energy was spent on rewriting Parser, we
 would have WYSIWYG editor a year or two ago.

 Although I broadly agree with the rest of your message, I disagree
 with the Parser bit on the end - basically, the parser rewrite had to
 pass muster with someone at Brion or Tim level, as there's not really
 anyone else who would be able to say these bits of syntax are out
 and have it stick; and since I suspect Tim would rather spork his eyes
 out than read the words parser rewrite ever again, getting Brion in
 to work on it was the only way to make it go forward. Developer effort
 is not fungible in the face of politics :-)

I had in my mind organizational efforts, mostly. However, I saw that
at least one tech employee is against the filter, as well as Tim is in
favor. So, they already waste their time. (Said so, I think that
important value of WMF is exactly the fact that their employees are
able to freely express their positions.)

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-07 Thread Kim Bruning
On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:30:54PM +0200, Kim Bruning wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:51:40PM +0200, Lodewijk wrote:
  The question shouldn't [...] be about whether we want to
  offer [...] people [...] Wikipedia? 

(
just as a note: This quote is intended as an illustration of why
it may be preferable to have an all-or-nothing policy for
wikipedia articles, as opposed to we-hide-parts-of-the-article.

If part of a story is hidden, you can introduce very
strong bias.

Obviously, it is not normally my intention to deliberately
twist people's words. (Other than as an illustration here)
)

sincerely,
Kim Bruning 


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[Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
Not long ago I had a gaffe on internal-l, by publicly expressing
opinion what do I really think about Wiki Loves Monuments, although my
intention was to send a private email. However, WLM has a number of
good sides: Commons will be filled with photos, people will spend time
together, it makes at least some parts of the movement more coherent.
Besides the fact that making depictions of depictions is a classical
European type of decadency. Anyway, if that's the worst thing in our
movement, I could live with that.

But, it is not.

If Board doesn't intervene *now*, it could be easily concluded that
the worst thing ever happened to our movement has started these days.

Up to the end of the so called referendum, everything was as usual:
Because of I promised to myself that won't use at this point phrase
Jimmy's sexually impaired rich friends Board articulated something
in opposition of majority of editors (yes, majority of editors; I
really don't care what one sexually impaired member of Concerned Women
for America with 17 edits thinks about Wikipedia [1][2]); then it
wanted to implement it anyway, including bizarre questionnaire called
referendum; then heated discussion sparked; then results came; then
results from German Wikipedia came, as well.

Logically, we have the solution: If Board really cares what Concerned
Women for America think, let it, please, implement that filter on
English Wikipedia and leave the rest of the projects alone -- if they
don't ask for the filter explicitly. As members of that organization
probably don't know any other language except English, everybody will
be happy. Except the core editors of English Wikipedia, of course. But
Board doesn't care about them, anyway; which means that English
Wikipedia is reasonable scapegoat for Wikimedia movement to please
sexually impaired Americans and others.

But, we have one much more serious problem in front of us. Instead of
going toward the solution, we are going in opposite direction. Instead
of concluding this three years long drama, Censorship Committee and
Board want to analyze the numbers and prolong agony for another
three years. And if that agony has something useful, important at the
end, I could even say that we need to make reasonable sacrifice (in my
area it would be solved by slaughtering pig or goat or whatever, which
is more reasonable than wasting three more years, by the way).

But, it doesn't have.

The most important reason for this bizarre expression of mismanagement
is to please, as mentioned before, sexually impaired Americans. If
that's the main reason, please, please them *now* or forget
everything.

Like WLM, this Board's pet project is expression of decadency. This
time American. However, unlike WLM, this project won't fill Commons
with photos. Quite opposite, this project will make significant
problems to the Commons community. People will spend time together
indeed, but in arguing who is right and who's not. It already divides
the movement on a couple of lines.

I realized that I started to participate in this madness when I asked
for some data from the results. And now, community is asked to
participate into the Next steps [3]! Holy Thing! That will produce
much more sexual content than any porn photo on Commons. In Serbian
we say for that fucking in healthy brain. If not exterminated at the
beginning, that brainfuck (unfortunately, not programming language
[4]) will produce much more problems than any image filter or any Fox
News scam.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_Killer#Internet_censorship
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concerned_Women_for_America.
[3] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image_filter_referendum/Next_steps/en
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainfuck

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Sarah Stierch

 Logically, we have the solution: If Board really cares what Concerned
 Women for America think, let it, please, implement that filter on
 English Wikipedia and leave the rest of the projects alone -- if they
 don't ask for the filter explicitly. As members of that organization
 probably don't know any other language except English, everybody will
 be happy. Except the core editors of English Wikipedia, of course. But
 Board doesn't care about them, anyway; which means that English
 Wikipedia is reasonable scapegoat for Wikimedia movement to please
 sexually impaired Americans and others.


I think this moves beyond just one organization. As a concerned feminist
who lives in America the idea of calling the women who support the
referendum, aren't into bad porn on Commons, and tacky use of sexualized
images on articles as educational when they really aren't, sexually
impaired - is beyond sexist.  Unless, perhaps, I'm mis-understanding your
post.

I realized that I started to participate in this madness when I asked
 for some data from the results. And now, community is asked to
 participate into the Next steps [3]! Holy Thing! That will produce
 much more sexual content than any porn photo on Commons. In Serbian
 we say for that fucking in healthy brain. If not exterminated at the
 beginning, that brainfuck (unfortunately, not programming language
 [4]) will produce much more problems than any image filter or any Fox
 News scam.


Voices are being heard who are against tacky bad sexualized images. The
group of people who support this Commons is the dump of the sum of crappy
free photos for the world way of thinking might be the loudest, but they
are the smallest in numbers, when it comes to English landscapes, from my
understanding. If people want to bombard us with more sexualized images,
we'll just keep fighting back. I can pay for my porn, I don't need it on
Commons.

The majority of the women (and men) who participate in this anti-sexualized
environment are generally liberal left-wing political individuals. Many are
pro-sex and embrace liberal sexual lifestyles or are open minded to what
other people do in their bedrooms. Some don't even live in America.  I think
you need to rethink your statements before you go around accusing
supporters, including women, of this referendum as sexually dysfunctional
conservatives.

Sarah

-- 
GLAMWIKI Partnership Ambassador for the Wikimedia
Foundationhttp://www.glamwiki.org
Wikipedian-in-Residence, Archives of American
Arthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SarahStierch
and
Sarah Stierch Consulting
*Historical, cultural  artistic research  advising.*
--
http://www.sarahstierch.com/
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 15:54, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think this moves beyond just one organization. As a concerned feminist
 who lives in America the idea of calling the women who support the
 referendum, aren't into bad porn on Commons, and tacky use of sexualized
 images on articles as educational when they really aren't, sexually
 impaired - is beyond sexist.  Unless, perhaps, I'm mis-understanding your
 post.

I am feminist as well and contrary to my previous examples -- which
were male-exclusive -- I intentionally gave example of one female
organization. I see no problem in being sarcastic toward any gender
while it is consistent.

 Voices are being heard who are against tacky bad sexualized images. The
 group of people who support this Commons is the dump of the sum of crappy
 free photos for the world way of thinking might be the loudest, but they
 are the smallest in numbers, when it comes to English landscapes, from my
 understanding. If people want to bombard us with more sexualized images,
 we'll just keep fighting back. I can pay for my porn, I don't need it on
 Commons.

We don't talk here about crappy images, but about *any* image which
depicts nude body or sexual act for *educational* purposes.

 The majority of the women (and men) who participate in this anti-sexualized
 environment are generally liberal left-wing political individuals. Many are
 pro-sex and embrace liberal sexual lifestyles or are open minded to what
 other people do in their bedrooms. Some don't even live in America.  I think
 you need to rethink your statements before you go around accusing
 supporters, including women, of this referendum as sexually dysfunctional
 conservatives.

Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Sarah Stierch

 Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?


No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
educational and high quality.

My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the pregnancy
article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
[[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face photo
of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
[[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening it.
I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these articles
at work, take that as you will.

Sarah
who is totally grossed out by that photo on the vagina article,
gahhh, surely she can't be the only one!

-- 
GLAMWIKI Partnership Ambassador for the Wikimedia
Foundationhttp://www.glamwiki.org
Wikipedian-in-Residence, Archives of American
Arthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SarahStierch
and
Sarah Stierch Consulting
*Historical, cultural  artistic research  advising.*
--
http://www.sarahstierch.com/
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Dan Rosenthal
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 5:15 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.comwrote:

 
  Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?
 
 
 No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
 keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
 educational and high quality.

You're saying that a picture of a stripper with her legs wide open can in no
way be educational and high quality? The undertone from this statement is
that It would be better and less offensive if her legs were closed which
to me highlights the censorship problem precisely.



 My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the pregnancy
 article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
 [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face photo
 of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
 [[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening
 it.
 I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
 exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these articles
 at work, take that as you will.

This raises twin issues. First, it raises the presumption that you and your
boss's workplace ought to be the model for how people around the world
determine what they should or shouldn't see -- at home OR at work.

Second, it echoes my first paragraph that it makes a judgment call about the
appropriateness of a specific image based on the perceived immoralness or
embarassment of that image.


 The majority of the women (and men) who participate in this
 anti-sexualized
 environment are generally liberal left-wing political individuals. Many are
 pro-sex and embrace liberal sexual lifestyles or are open minded to what
 other people do in their bedrooms. Some don't even live in America.  I
 think
 you need to rethink your statements before you go around accusing
 supporters, including women, of this referendum as sexually dysfunctional
 conservatives.


The above paragraph is one massive Citations Needed, but that aside, it
misses the point.

Many are carries with it that some aren't.
Some don't implies that some do.

In criticizing Milos for generalizing the opinions of one population, you
yourself are doing the exact same thing. We don't have that data, and I'm
sure if there WERE any it could be easily picked apart on methodological
issues. The broader lesson is that attempting to generalize a view on
morality to any populace is doomed to inaccuracy and failure.
 -Dan
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 16:15, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
 keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
 educational and high quality.

I really don't care about strippers. However, it would be quite
educationally to have short movies at least for the basic sexual
concepts. That includes hygiene of reproductive organs for example,
but some basic sexual positions, as well. And that would be much more
unacceptable to pro-censorship people than strippers.

 My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the pregnancy
 article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
 [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face photo
 of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
 [[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening it.
 I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
 exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these articles
 at work, take that as you will.

[[penis]] is the wrong artcile. [[human penis]] is the right one ;)
Note that depictions of penises are the most numerous in the future
sexual content category. Our editor base is ~85% male and there are
plenty of them willing to show their sexual organ.

I understand that access to nudity is a problem in many occasions.
That's one of the problems of our civilization which sexual education
should fix. In the mean time, we have to find some solutions for that.
If you need it, contact me and I'll setup proxy for you and your boss
to freely watch Wikipedia articles without images. ... Here is,
actually, a number of options:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Options_to_not_see_an_image

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 15:54, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 Logically, we have the solution: If Board really cares what Concerned
 Women for America think, let it, please, implement that filter on
 English Wikipedia and leave the rest of the projects alone -- if they
 don't ask for the filter explicitly. As members of that organization
 probably don't know any other language except English, everybody will
 be happy. Except the core editors of English Wikipedia, of course. But
 Board doesn't care about them, anyway; which means that English
 Wikipedia is reasonable scapegoat for Wikimedia movement to please
 sexually impaired Americans and others.


 I think this moves beyond just one organization. As a concerned feminist
 who lives in America the idea of calling the women who support the
 referendum, aren't into bad porn on Commons, and tacky use of sexualized
 images on articles as educational when they really aren't, sexually
 impaired - is beyond sexist.  Unless, perhaps, I'm mis-understanding your
 post.

Thanks to Fred, I've realized that it seems that you misread my email.
My sarcastic example related to particular organization, not to
concerned women/feminists from America. The organization is called
Concerned Women for America [1]. They started the whole drama in
2008 [2].

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concerned_Women_for_America
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_Killer#Internet_censorship

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread David Richfield
Hey Milosh,

I think we all say things in private mails that we wouldn't post on
public lists.  If I posted any of a number of my private emails to our
office mailing list I'd be at risk of getting fired.  I think highly
of you, and I'm sure most of the people here do, even when they
disagree with you.

Anyway, to the issue:

I understand the attitude of being against censorship at any costs -
it is a very important fight.  But as H.L. Mencken said:

Liberty is not a thing for the great masses of men. It is the
exclusive possession of a small and disreputable minority ...

The thing is, even if a lot of Wikipedia is written by a disreputable
minority, we want it to go to the great masses.  I completely get what
Sarah is saying here: not everyone wants that hard uncompromising
focus on uncensored liberty: it's inconvenient in polite society.

Sure, the image hiding feature is a compromise, but it's not a bad
one.  It's not intended to remove any images from Wikipedia, just to
allow users to make Wikipedia SFW (or SFL, depending on who you are)
as required, and is totally reversible, so I support it.

-- 
David Richfield

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 17:30, Milos Rancic mill...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 15:54, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 I think this moves beyond just one organization. As a concerned feminist
 who lives in America the idea of calling the women who support the
 referendum, aren't into bad porn on Commons, and tacky use of sexualized
 images on articles as educational when they really aren't, sexually
 impaired - is beyond sexist.  Unless, perhaps, I'm mis-understanding your
 post.

 Thanks to Fred, I've realized that it seems that you misread my email.
 My sarcastic example related to particular organization, not to
 concerned women/feminists from America. The organization is called
 Concerned Women for America [1]. They started the whole drama in
 2008 [2].

And to be more precise: I can't have a position about your position if
I don't know it; thus I can't be sarcastic toward your position.
However, the position of the Concerned Women for America is well
described and I can be sarcastic about it. That doesn't include just
their position toward sexually explicit content.

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Lodewijk
The question shouldn't be about who is right - whether it is good that
certain images are not considered safe for work - we are not in a position
to change the opinion of society, and we shouldn't want to be in such
position either.

The discussion however should be, if at all, about whether we want to offer
people the option to view content in such environments without being
constantly on their guard for what content might pop up. Do we want to offer
people to tweak the images of Wikipedia in such a way that it suits their
life style, that they can use Wikipedia where and when they would want to?

The board clearly answered that question with yes. Do you think it is better
to force people to choose between watching an article with an image they do
not want to see, and not seeing the article at all?

Lodewijk

Am 6. September 2011 16:44 schrieb Dan Rosenthal swatjes...@gmail.com:

 On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 5:15 PM, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com
 wrote:

  
   Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?
  
  
  No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
  keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
  educational and high quality.
 
 You're saying that a picture of a stripper with her legs wide open can in
 no
 way be educational and high quality? The undertone from this statement is
 that It would be better and less offensive if her legs were closed which
 to me highlights the censorship problem precisely.


 
  My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the
 pregnancy
  article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
  [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face
 photo
  of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
  [[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening
  it.
  I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
  exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these
 articles
  at work, take that as you will.
 
 This raises twin issues. First, it raises the presumption that you and your
 boss's workplace ought to be the model for how people around the world
 determine what they should or shouldn't see -- at home OR at work.

 Second, it echoes my first paragraph that it makes a judgment call about
 the
 appropriateness of a specific image based on the perceived immoralness or
 embarassment of that image.


  The majority of the women (and men) who participate in this
  anti-sexualized
  environment are generally liberal left-wing political individuals. Many
 are
  pro-sex and embrace liberal sexual lifestyles or are open minded to what
  other people do in their bedrooms. Some don't even live in America.  I
  think
  you need to rethink your statements before you go around accusing
  supporters, including women, of this referendum as sexually dysfunctional
  conservatives.


 The above paragraph is one massive Citations Needed, but that aside, it
 misses the point.

 Many are carries with it that some aren't.
 Some don't implies that some do.

 In criticizing Milos for generalizing the opinions of one population, you
 yourself are doing the exact same thing. We don't have that data, and I'm
 sure if there WERE any it could be easily picked apart on methodological
 issues. The broader lesson is that attempting to generalize a view on
 morality to any populace is doomed to inaccuracy and failure.
  -Dan
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Kim Bruning
On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:51:40PM +0200, Lodewijk wrote:
 The question shouldn't [...] be about whether we want to
 offer [...] people [...] Wikipedia? [*]
 
  Do you think it is better to force people to choose between
  watching an article with an image they do not want to see,
  and not seeing the article at all?

Well, if you put it that way, then yes,  very much better. ;-)

sincerely, 
Kim Bruning

[*] Case in point. ;-)

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Kim Bruning
On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:31:52PM +0200, David Richfield wrote:
  and is totally reversible, so I support it.
 

Yeah... about that. I propose a challenge to you too then.

I'm proposing to run a wiki server, emulating different scenarios with
the image filter and category system. The filter itself actually is
likely Mostly Harmless; at worst it'll likely stochastically reduce
admin effectivity. So for at least some of the scenarios, we won't
even run a filter on-wiki. ;-)

Now... the category scheme used by the filter, that's where life gets 
interesting.

If you're convinced nothing can go wrong, you can join blue team. Of
course, I'll be playing on red team. }:-)

#include evil_laughter.h;

Afterwards, we can swap, to see if the other team can hold blue.

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread John Vandenberg
On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 1:41 AM, Kim Bruning k...@bruning.xs4all.nl wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:31:52PM +0200, David Richfield wrote:
  and is totally reversible, so I support it.


 Yeah... about that. I propose a challenge to you too then.

 I'm proposing to run a wiki server, emulating different scenarios with
 the image filter and category system. The filter itself actually is
 likely Mostly Harmless; at worst it'll likely stochastically reduce
 admin effectivity. So for at least some of the scenarios, we won't
 even run a filter on-wiki. ;-)

 Now... the category scheme used by the filter, that's where life gets
 interesting.

 If you're convinced nothing can go wrong, you can join blue team. Of
 course, I'll be playing on red team. }:-)

 #include evil_laughter.h;

 Afterwards, we can swap, to see if the other team can hold blue.

I find this argument very unconvincing.

wikis are predicated on the belief that there are more people willing
to do good than bad, that they are highly protective of their
collective work, they are smarter and better organised, and all they
need to win the battles (as well as the war ..) is slightly more
advanced tools... like the block button.

add a mix of abusefilter, flagged revs, semi-protection, etc., and we
can slow down changes to the categorisation system and respond quickly
to attacks.  It wont be much different than template vandalism.

in short, game on Kim. ;-)

--
John Vandenberg

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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Kim Bruning
On Wed, Sep 07, 2011 at 02:55:43AM +1000, John Vandenberg wrote:
 wikis are predicated on the belief that there are more people willing
 to do good than bad, that they are highly protective of their
 collective work, they are smarter and better organised, and all they
 need to win the battles (as well as the war ..) is slightly more
 advanced tools... like the block button.

Right! And IMHO the image filter introduces novel elements for which those
beliefs need not hold. I think there are ways to get a crowbar in.

 in short, game on Kim. ;-)

I like your attitude! :-D

sincerely,
Kim Bruning


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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Milos Rancic
On Tue, Sep 6, 2011 at 17:31, David Richfield davidrichfi...@gmail.com wrote:
 I understand the attitude of being against censorship at any costs -
 it is a very important fight.  But as H.L. Mencken said:

 Liberty is not a thing for the great masses of men. It is the
 exclusive possession of a small and disreputable minority ...

 The thing is, even if a lot of Wikipedia is written by a disreputable
 minority, we want it to go to the great masses.  I completely get what
 Sarah is saying here: not everyone wants that hard uncompromising
 focus on uncensored liberty: it's inconvenient in polite society.

 Sure, the image hiding feature is a compromise, but it's not a bad
 one.  It's not intended to remove any images from Wikipedia, just to
 allow users to make Wikipedia SFW (or SFL, depending on who you are)
 as required, and is totally reversible, so I support it.

There are two separate issues: The first one, with which I agree, is
that image filter is not a big deal.

The second one is a meta question and it's related to our position
inside of the contemporary civilization.

Modern Western civilization has been built on the premise that just
particularly harmful works should be censored, if any at all; and if
censored, they are usually accessible in libraries, but couldn't be
[re]printed.

We are living in the age significantly different to just ~10-15 years
ago; exactly because internet and Wikipedia. Even particularly
harmful works could be found on internet. Consequently, the question
for us is: should we define Wikipedia as encyclopedia/library of
classical modernity or we should define it as unique global
phenomenon, just [remotely] connected to the concepts of encyclopedia
and library.

Those are, actually, two confronted concepts behind this debate. Those
who want to keep Wikipedia inside of its encyclopedic and librarian,
modernist frame, oppose to censorship, even in lite form, as this
image filter. Others, who see Wikipedia as unique (better, not
defined phenomenon, yet) and treat it as contemporary postmodernist
project without clear borders -- tend to accept various ways of social
influences in Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects.

While both positions seem legitimate, the problem with the second one
is that Wikipedia is by definition an encyclopedia, which
ideologically belongs to the modern period. There is no such thing as
postmodern encyclopedia as well as there is no postmodern science.
There are postmodern art, postmodern concepts, postmodern philosophy,
but there is no postmodern science, as science requires exact methods,
which is opposite to the conceptual relativism (i.e., there are no
many truths, there could be just different positions toward some
issue; not counting possible sophisms and scientifically unknown).

The other, the unique, the unknown thing is not Wikipedia nor
Wikisource etc.; the other thing is our movement. And it could
incorporate many different cultures, as well as it could be postmodern
by nature. That's the social issue and social relations are not
necessarily exact, scientific; quite opposite, they usually have
strong irrational color. And that's good and normal, as that
irrational part of us gives meaning to our lives.

In relation to those concepts, the question is where the border
between our rational and irrational is. For example, user interface
doesn't belong to the rational (although it has to be constructed
rationally). It should be easy to use, which could be quantified, but
which is not our rational choice, but our irrational feeling.

Because of that I don't oppose to the image filter, as it belongs to
the irrational part of the content (unlike deleting images, for
example). I would like to see the world full of bold people who don't
afraid to take a look into some image because of religious prejudices,
but I am not the person who should decide that instead of them. So,
without the context, image filter sounds acceptable to me.

However, the main part of the problem is not about freedom of choice,
but about mismanagement which tends to be spread into the chronic
movement agony.

I was serious when I asked the Board to take the action *now*. If they
were bold enough to make decision opposed by majority of core editors,
they should be bold enough to conclude it. Let them implement it ASAP
on English Wikipedia and conclude this drama. The present question is
not how to avoid confrontation -- as confrontation already exists --
the question is what's better: to have mid-level confrontation for
years or to push the issue as soon as possible, have higher level of
drama for a short period of time and to have low to insignificant
level of confrontation in the future. I think that prolonged mid-level
confrontation for more than a couple of months (and it already lasts
for a couple of months) would be very harmful for the community and
movement. The only other non-harmful (or not a lot harmful) option is
to forget everything.

Counting that Board wants 

Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Béria Lima

 *My boss (...) can't open the pregnancy article at work because the intro
 is NSFW our workplace.
 *


I'm sorry but i don't find the problem in this article.

*I can't open the [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really
 in your face photo of a vagina when you open it up
 *


The article is about vagina. The only picture there who might be NSFW is
this one: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Azvag.jpg who only shows
what are the anatomy of a vagina. I find very educational.

And BTW, if you don't want to see a vagina, don't open the article.

*who is totally grossed out by that photo on the vagina article,
 gahhh, surely she can't be the only one!
 *


No it was not. There are in fact a category in commons (
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Vagina ) and in that category i
found the image who replaced the Image you dislike so
muchhttp://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Human_vulva_with_visible_vaginal_opening.jpg.
But not because you don't like, because the one in the article now is more
clear.
_
*Béria Lima*
http://wikimedia.pt/(351) 925 171 484

*Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter livre
acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. É isso o que estamos a
fazer http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Nossos_projetos.*


On 6 September 2011 15:15, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:

 
  Does your feminism excludes necessity for sexual education?
 
 
 No, but, I can send you some pictures on Commons that have been speedy
 keeps of strippers with their legs spread wide because they are
 educational and high quality.

 My boss, who is bound to have a baby any day now, can't open the pregnancy
 article at work because the intro is NSFW our workplace. I can't open the
 [[vagina]] article at work either, because of the really in your face photo
 of a vagina when you open it up, however, I can totally read the intro to
 [[penis]] since there isn't a big giant penis in one's face upon opening
 it.
 I work in an educational environment (a museum institution, which has
 exhibits on sexuality, gender, etc) and I can't even look at these articles
 at work, take that as you will.

 Sarah
 who is totally grossed out by that photo on the vagina article,
 gahhh, surely she can't be the only one!

 --
 GLAMWIKI Partnership Ambassador for the Wikimedia
 Foundationhttp://www.glamwiki.org
 Wikipedian-in-Residence, Archives of American
 Arthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SarahStierch
 and
 Sarah Stierch Consulting
 *Historical, cultural  artistic research  advising.*
 --
 http://www.sarahstierch.com/
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Re: [Foundation-l] On curiosity, cats and scapegoats

2011-09-06 Thread Marc A. Pelletier
On 06/09/2011 3:19 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
 I realized that I started to participate in this madness when I asked
 for some data from the results. And now, community is asked to
 participate into the Next steps [3]

Milos, I think you're stepping out to the backyard there.  I'm probably 
one of the more vocal (and arguably acerbic) opponents of that entire 
filter idea, and the fact that (at least some members of) the board is 
actually willing to now listen to concerns is a _good_ thing.

-- Coren / Marc


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