[WikiEN-l] BADSITES ArbCom case in progress

Todd Allen toddmallen at gmail.com
Wed Sep 19 04:59:10 UTC 2007


fredbaud at waterwiki.info wrote:
> Links to a site, and references to a site, are the oxygen of the internet. We just don't help.
>
> Fred
>
>   
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Steve Summit [mailto:scs at eskimo.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2007 11:52 PM
>> To: wikien-l at lists.wikimedia.org
>> Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] BADSITES ArbCom case in progress
>>
>> We should, yes, "guard our editors and protect them from harm",
>> or however the saying goes. But at the same time, of course, we
>> have to protect the *project* from harm. And a wrong decision
>> here could really harm the project (not to mention that divisive
>> debates like these are quite harmful, too).
>>
>> Protecting editors from harm must surely acknowledge the
>> existence of off-wiki attacks. WP:NPA should certainly disallow
>> links which serve to attack, just as it prohibits other, on-wiki
>> attacks.
>>
>> However: we should not, cannot, must not attempt to enact blanket
>> bans on all links to "attack sites", as the notorious BADSITES
>> policy allegedly attempted to do. It's possible to justify such
>> an attempted ban under the "protect them from harm" doctrine, but
>> a ban goes too far. It harms the project, and does *not* help the
>> injured editor.
>>
>> I believe there are three underlying motivations for enacting
>> absolute bans:
>>
>> 1. We must not condone the activities of the attack sites.
>>
>> 2. We must punish the attack sites.
>>
>> 3. We must shield injured editors from being reminded of the
>> existence of the attack sites.
>>
>> It's a bitter pill to swallow, but numbers 1 and 2 hold no water.
>> The simple, sad fact is that THERE IS NOTHING WE CAN DO TO MAKE
>> AN ATTACK SITE GO AWAY. They exist whether we link to them or
>> not. They exist whether we talk about them or not. There's no
>> way we can punish them. And linking to them does *not* condone
>> them; that's not the way hyperlinks work.
>>
>> And then there's #3. I'll be accused of being a victim-blamer
>> here, I'm sure, but fear of being called a victim-blamer is how
>> we let ourselves get boxed into extreme, untenable positions,
>> so I'll persevere.
>>
>> Guarding our editors and protecting them from harm does not
>> mean that an aggrieved editor gets to make absurd demands for
>> protection or redress and have them followed without question.
>> In particular: if an injured editor declares that any reminder
>> of an attack constitutes a continuation of the attack, or makes
>> whatever declaration it is that somehow induces the rest of us
>> to enact blanket bans, we must politely, sensitively, but firmly
>> let the injured editor know that we've done as much as we can,
>> that the attack site continues to exist regardless of whether we
>> mention its name or not, and that the injured editor needs to work
>> through whatever remaining healing issues they have and move on.
>>
>> We mustn't twist the project into some misshapen repudiation of
>> its former self just because some numnutz at an attack site did
>> something unspeakable. You may not like acknowledging the
>> existence of the numnutz and the attack site, but I really,
>> really hate giving them the power to corrupt our project, or
>> worse, actively assisting and *enabling* them (by launching
>> into misguided knee-jerk reactions) in corrupting our project.
>> So, please, let's not.
>>
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>>     
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>   
I agree with you. At the same time, we should ensure we're not cutting
off more oxygen to us than them. For many attack sites, there's no real
reason to link to them at all anyway. Great, no big deal, let's avoid
it. But when we're talking about a site like michaelmoore.com, and
people are proposing in any form of seriousness to ban links to it,
we've got a problem. There are tons of potentially valid reasons to link
to that site, not least in [[Michael Moore]] itself, an unquestionably
notable figure.

Unfortunately, some people do nasty things. We should avoid providing
aid to them where possible, and I can't imagine that anyone would
disagree with that, but we should also avoid letting them do what they
set out to do-cause trouble.

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