Luis,
During the SOPA blackout, National Public Radio offered a free back-up service on Twitter for people who needed research questions answered. I'm not sure what their success rate was compared to Wikipedia's Reference Desks, but can we return the favor? Journalism is actually under direct assault by the government now:
http://fair.org/take-action/media-advisories/the-accelerating-assault-on-jou...
Do you still think it is reasonable to conflate protecting readers and editors with frustrating intelligence agencies? Wouldn't actions to cause them to come in to compliance with the Bill of Rights make them less frustrated over time, even if it temporarily makes them more frustrated?
What is the status of my request to ask the Foundation's cloud providers to produce peer-to-peer versions of their applications capable of end-to-end encryption?
What actions have been taken to institute policies in response to receipt of government orders by the Foundatiopn to make sure that they are in compliance with superior law before being acted on?
What actions can the Foundation take to protect those of our readers and editors who are or act as journalists?
Sincerely, James Salsman