All that I'm saying is that I THINK the majority of the people on this
mailing list are bored and tired of the conversation and it's the same 10
people who seem to be arguing it and I think that many people on this list
probably have no strong opinion, or fairly mainstream beliefs, about the
filter. Mainstream meaning that the filter can be beneficial to those who
desire it and many of us don't care how it's executed as long as we don't
have to anything technical to make it happen.
Have fun though running in circles! I trust WMF will make the decision on
what to do for the community (god forbid! trust!) and I also trust that
they're taking all of your concerns, citations, facts, arguments, ideas and
concepts into consideration.
I'll be comfortable with whatever is decided on upon by WMF, and usually I'm
not one to give up so easily. But isn't there some old saying about arguing
on the internet? Perhaps someone needs to plan an "Image Filter Conference"
to break it all down offline.
Also, people are extremely rude, in classic poor-manners Wikimedia style,
and *I* believe that many people on this list have no desire to participate,
because, like so much of the environment on Wikimedia, they are
uncomfortable and not-interested in being drilled drilled drilled until they
break down, give in, or can't stand up for themselves anymore. Or be called
a name, or twelve.
And all the data in the world right now is not going to change the way I
feel, and this stuff just frustrates me. And I'm a researcher for a living
who spends the hours of her day "citing sources" and gathering data and
information. And all the cries of censorship isn't either. I'm also a person
who likes hardcore fetish photography that is illegal in some states, goes
by a pseudonym due to of my hobbies, and who's favorite band is Skinny
Puppy. I saw Marilyn Manson in concert when he was ripping off SPK for
chopping the heads off of chickens on stage and putting partially nude
children in cages (with permission of their parents, heh) during his shows.
The only thing that offends me more on Commons and Wikipedia and whatever is
bad quality porn and self-indulgent cockshots (aka I want better sexual
content that actually is awesome looking and worth using in articles!) And I
know I'm not the only one here.
But, I also don't have a problem with people wanting to control what they,
their kids, their grandmas, their cats, their classrooms, whatevers see. And
I'm not the only one, and again, I'M PUTTING MY TRUST, in WMF to make the
decision. That's what I make donations to the foundation every month for.
That's why I donate my time to contributing to Wikimedia projects.
I'm over commenting about this subject. I'm going to go back to thinking of
ways to have more women and men create better sexual content for Commons as
a project and go attend my "Feminists, Technology and Museums" conference.
-Sarah (Missvain, SarahStierch)
Who would move to Berlin in a heartbeat to be an unpaid intern for
Einstürzende Neubauten. So don't think I don't love my Germans ;-) (and
Bayern Munich is my favorite team!)
On Fri, Sep 23, 2011 at 8:41 AM, Tobias Oelgarte <
tobias.oelgarte(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
Please don't do the rhetorical trick that a mass
of users would support
some point of view without actual proof. ("You've just posted what many
of us think and feel.")
The chat was of course dominated by the word "German". It's the one and
only poll that states the opposite to the view of the board. But you
could just leave out the comments from Ottava and it would be the half
amount of use of this word.
The main problems/questions remain:
* Is the filter any good?
* Is there a big audience that would enjoy and need a filter?
* How do we decide what will be hidden considering NPOV?
* ...
None of this questions where followed before the decision. Actually the
questions where raised after the decisions in combination with the
referendum. Thats one of things i really wonder about.
Am 23.09.2011 14:19, schrieb Sarah Stierch:
+1
You've just posted what many of us think and feel. I read the transcript
for
office hours with Sue from yesterday and it was the same thing. 45
minutes of image filter skepticism and more. I'm glad I couldn't attend it,
seemed like a painful and unintellectual experience to sit through.
And if i had a dollar for the mentioning of "Germans" I'd be rich. And
here people are arguing about lack of coverage about other projects and
languages. So tired of the "Us vs. Them" mentality.
I'd rather talk about GMOs, JFK, Creationism and the end of the world
next
year....at this point.
Sarah Stierch
Who is never bored and is surely not mainstream, but is happy to be
called so
right now.
Sent via iPhone - I apologize in advance for my shortness or errors! :)
On Sep 23, 2011, at 8:03 AM, me(a)marcusbuck.org wrote:
After some thinking I come to the conclusion that
this whole
discussion is a social phenomenon.
You probably know how some topics when mentioned in newspaper articles
or blogs spur wild arguments in the comments sections. When the
article mentions climate change commentators contest the validity of
the collected data, if it mentions religions commentators argue that
religion is the root of all evil in the world, if it is about
immigration commentators start to rant how immigrants cause trouble in
society, if it is about renewable energies commentators tell us how
blind society is to believe in its ecologicalness.
It's always the same pattern: the topic is perceived well in the
general society (most sane people think that climate change is real,
that renewable energies are the way to go, that religious freedom is
good and that most immigrants are people as everybody else who do no
harm), but a small or not so small minority experiences these
attitudes as a problem and tries to raise awareness to the problems of
the trend (usually exaggerating them). The scepticists give their
arguments and the non-scepticists answer them.
The non-scepticists usually have not much motivation to present their
arguments (because their position is already the mainstream, so not
much incentive to convince more people, just trying to not let the
scepticists' opinions stand unwithspoken) while the scepticists have
much motivation to present their arguments (if they don't society will
presumedly face perdition). This difference in the motivation leads to
a situation where both groups produce a similar content output leading
to the semblence that both groups represent equal shares of society.
I think the same is happening here. The majority of people probably
think that an optional opt-in filter is a thing that does no harm to
non-users and has advantages for those who choose to use it. (Ask your
gramma whether "You can hide pictures if you don't want to see them"
sounds like a threatening thing to her.) But the scepticists voice
their opinions loudly and point out every single imaginable problem.
I just want to point out that an idea like a free community-driven
everybody-can-edit-it encyclopedia with no editorial or peer-review
process would never have been created if a long discussion would have
preceded its creation. The scepticists would have raised so many
seemingly valid concerns that they'd buried the idea deep. I'm feeling
that a group of worst-case scenarioists are leading the discussion to
a point where the image filter is buried just because everybody is
bored about the discussion.
Marcus Buck
User:Slomox
PS: Please don't understand this as a longish version of "You guys
opposing my opinion are trolls!". I don't think that the points raised
by scepticists should be neglected. But I think that many people
reject the image filter because of very theoretical concerns for the
sake of it completely removed from pragmatical reasons and that the
length of the discussion is in no way indicative of the real
problematicness of the topic.
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Art<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SarahStierch>
and
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