David Shankbone is the author of the article at the beginning of this thread. I haven't been involved deeply enough in en.wp to have any real familiarity with him, but apparently he has taken photographs for many biography articles, including well-known musicians, actors, and world politicians. He was driven off Wikipedia by a stalker.
On 10/06/2008, Ray Saintonge saintonge@telus.net wrote:
Durova wrote:
Months ago I initiated a proposal to eliminate the word "wikistalking" because of exactly the problem that has manifested in this thread: it takes a serious crime and trivializes it, fostering confusion on a subject where victims already have a very difficult time making themselves heard and believed.
Once people have started using a word in a certain way you can't start pretending that they haven't. There is such a thing as cyberstalking, and I would tend to interpret wikistalking as a subset of that. Cyberstalking may very well have little if anything in common with "real" stalking, and use of that term may indeed result in trivialization. That doesn't change the fact that people use the word in the way that they do. That's why it's so important to begin by making sure we are all talking about the same thing.
Rules and laws will generally assume an ordinary dictionary definition in the absence of an onsite definition to override that. Where a word has multiple meanings a reader has the option to use whichever of those definitions suits him. This also applies where different dictionaries have different definitions, or usage has already gone beyond the dictionary. English dictionaries, in particular are more descriptive than prescriptive. Thus we sacrifice dictionary certainty for the sake of having a richer environment of word formation.
In cases of doubt one defines one's terms, and applies that definition strictly. That does wonders for maintaining focus in a subject.
With the notable exception of Gerard and a few others, this conversation is occurring on an absurd level.
Do we do any better by keeping it at an anecdotal level?
It's as if David Shankbone had stepped forward to announce that his car had been stolen, and responses had confused real auto theft with the game "Grand Theft Auto."
Who's David Shankbone? I don't see where anyone has said that any of these stalking claims were only a part of some video game.
Ec
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