I understand your point. But unfortunately Dutch, French and German are rather bad examples. There are enough languages which would localise your name, like e. g. the Baltic languages Lithuanian and Latvian. Here an example from Latvian language Wikipedia: https://lv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhards_Šrēders (the former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder)
The Dutch Gerard Meijssen would not stay Gerard Meijssen in such languages, in Lithuanian language you would likely be called Gerardas Meisenas or the like, and also labelled as such.

Am 27.04.2015 um 22:32 schrieb Gerard Meijssen <gerard.meijssen@gmail.com>:

Hoi,
Transliteration is exactly that. My name is Dutch, it is used written the same in English, French and German. They are languages I understand (up to a point) I know that my name is pronounced substantially in all of them.

A name that is Ukrainian or Serbian could be should be transliterated differently.
Thanks,
     GerardM

On 27 April 2015 at 19:08, Leon Liesener <leon.liesener@wikipedia.de> wrote:
The problem with ISO is that it's a standard for language-independent
transliteration to Latin script. Since labels on Wikidata are
language-dependent, making use of ISO does not make sense really. If
you use ISO for Russian names in Cyrillic script, the label you get is
not in English. It's still in Russian but transliterated to Latin
script. ISO thus would only fit as an alias for the Russian interface
language, if at all.

2015-04-26 22:39 GMT+02:00 Gerard Meijssen <gerard.meijssen@gmail.com>:
> Hoi,
> <grin> ISO is a reliable source; it is THE standard </grin> Wikipedia is
> definitely not a standard by its own admission.
> Thanks,
>     GerardM
>
> On 26 April 2015 at 22:37, Yaroslav M. Blanter <putevod@mccme.ru> wrote:
>>
>> On 2015-04-26 22:33, Gerard Meijssen wrote:
>>>
>>> Hoi
>>> My point is that it is not a given that we should follow any WIkipedia
>>> for anything. Also the point of romanisation of Russian is not for the
>>> benefit of Russian speakers, it is for the speakers of English.
>>> Thanks,
>>>       GerardM
>>>
>>
>> On one hand, yes.
>>
>> On the other hand, no reliable source uses ISO. When NYT writes about a
>> Russian person, they do not use ISO, they use what the English Wikipedia
>> uses or smth similar. In my passport, they do not use ISO (fortunately), why
>> should then ISO be used on Wikidata in an entry about me?
>>
>>
>> Cheers
>> Yaroslav
>>
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>
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