On Fri, Jul 5, 2019 at 10:11 PM Ocean Power
wrote:
> What about Australian indigenous songs that trace the path of songlines
> that both document collective history and folk knowledge and also
> rhythmically document land contours and other landmarks as a
> map/timeline/travel guide and often
Technically these are primary sources when they are first recorded /
written down. The first recorded / written theorizing about them is
secondary. Reporting on a concensus reached by that theorizing is tertiary.
Assuming that the singing, theorizing and reporting is done by different
parties.
What about Australian indigenous songs that trace the path of songlines that
both document collective history and folk knowledge and also rhythmically
document land contours and other landmarks as a map/timeline/travel guide and
often compile folkloric and secondary and primary knowledge over
The current mechanisms would allow anyone to alter the Indigenous content in an
article. That is unlikely to be acceptable to Ingenenous Australians. This is
why I propose a sister project with different rules to create such content and
then import it into en.WP etc as an unalterable unit into
Hi Samuel
Can you provide examples of tertiary sources from pure oral cultures? I've
never heard of any.
Cheers
Stuart
On Sat, 6 Jul 2019 1:19 am Samuel Klein wrote:
> I think we have all the mechanics needed for this.
>
> - Individual revisions aren't editable, once posted, and stay around
>
I think we have all the mechanics needed for this.
- Individual revisions aren't editable, once posted, and stay around
forever (unless revdeleted).
- Each wiki can have its own guidelines for how accounts can be shared.
- Rather than limiting who can edit, you could have a whitelist of
TL;DR: In https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T170826 the Analytics team
wants to add base firewall rules to stat100x and notebook100x hosts, that
will cause any non-localhost or known traffic to be blocked by default.
Please let us know in the task if this is a problem for you.
Hi everybody,
the