Sep 16, 2020, 10:59 by talk@openstreetmap.org:

>
> I would understand 'semi-public garden' to be, for example, a garden where 
> you pay an admission fee to enter, or one which is closed at night. Like 
> Martin, I would expect these to be completely acceptable to map.
>
Not a native speaker, not a lawyer. I would describe such areas as public 
(possibly privately owned).

> I think the intention is to deter people from mapping _fully private_ gardens 
> which can be viewed from public roads, is this correct?
>
I am not sure about other, but for me it is about discouraging mapping fully 
private garden in detail.

For example mapping garden area itself and trees (maybe even with their 
species), but
micromapping area where someone planted strawberries seems something that
is out of scope of OSM for privacy reasons.


> Nick
>
>
>
>
>
> From:>  Martin Koppenhoefer <dieterdre...@gmail.com>
>  > Sent:>  16 September 2020 08:51
>  > To:>  Mateusz Konieczny <matkoni...@tutanota.com>
>  > Cc:>  OSM Talk <talk@openstreetmap.org>
>  > Subject:>  Re: [OSM-talk] "Limitations on mapping private information" - 
> wiki page>  >  
>
>
> sent from a phone
>
>
>> On 16. Sep 2020, at 09:41, Mateusz Konieczny via talk 
>> <talk@openstreetmap.org> wrote:
>>  
>>
>> Do you think that this page is a good description of community consensus?
>>
>
>
> There are some points I would like to comment on:
>
> - 
> OpenStreetMap is not a property registry, thus > do not map individual 
> ownership>  of buildings or plots. There is no need to split residential 
> landuse into individual plots. (Compare > Parcel 
> <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Parcel>> .)
>
>
> Yes, we do not map individual ownership of land and buildings generally, but 
> unless the owner is a person, we could and privacy regulations would not 
> prevent us from doing it. It also isn’t an argument for refraining from 
> mapping property divisions, because these are interesting regardless of _who_ 
> is the owner
>
>
> “some structure of a semi-public garden appear to be the borderline of being 
> acceptable.“
>
> IMHO exaggerated, semi-public objects can be mapped in all detail and aren’t 
> borderline cases
>
> Well, at least according to my understanding of the term semi-public
>
>
> Cheers Martin 
>
>
>
>

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