Hi Lodewijk,

Thanks. You hit the nail on the head in your last paragraph where you say,

"I'm however not particularly surprised that this issue eventually arises, as this was bound to happen. I am also curious for what the intended policy implications would be (based on the current UCoC) and maybe then there could a conversation be had if that is indeed what we wanted to achieve." 

That is exactly what I was hoping us to have a conversation about. (My first mail in this thread was addressed to the Board members, who I am sure are indeed well aware of the essay. You can find press coverage of it here.)

As far as the arbitration case is concerned, ArbCom took the very rare step of self-initiating this case in response to the essay. I didn't start the case, nor am I a party to it. 

Best,
Andreas

On Tue, May 2, 2023 at 9:03 PM effe iets anders <effeietsanders@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Andreas,

interesting questions. I don't think your assumption "As you are no doubt aware, a Wikimedian and a non-Wikimedian co-author recently published..." is true. I was definitely not aware of it, and I doubt many others are either. I was able to piece together some of your claims, but not all (simply due to lack of time, I'm sure). Just offering this information so that you can provide the necessary context as needed. I was unable to dive deep enough to give this proper attention. One thing I did note was that you were the person who started the arbitration case. It might be beneficial for this discussion if someone else familiar with the matter, could summarize it. If only for the simple fact that they may have more appreciation of what is and isn't known by the wider community. (For example, I was unable to verify myself that the workplace and real name were indeed shared, and that this information could not be assumed to be public knowledge)

Assuming all your stated facts to be correct, I would actually not be certain what the right approach would be either. Surely, it can not be the intent to encourage doxxing off-platform, but we can't attempt to block academic discussion on complex matters either. Wikipedia does not live in a vacuum. I would rephrase your question "are [Wikimedians] permitted to share contributors' private information such as their workplace address in these various venues, without obtaining explicit consent to do so? " to something like: "Should Wikimedians be sanctioned when they disclose private information without explicit consent in the source of academic (or political, societal) discourse outside of Wikimedia". 

I'm however not particularly surprised that this issue eventually arises, as this was bound to happen. I am also curious for what the intended policy implications would be (based on the current UCoC) and maybe then there could a conversation be had if that is indeed what we wanted to achieve. 

Lodewijk




On Mon, Apr 24, 2023 at 6:01 AM Andreas Kolbe <jayen466@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Wikimedia Foundation Trustees and all,

The Universal Code of Conduct (UCoC) has been in force for some time. The Enforcement Guidelines have now been endorsed by the community. But as with any new document, shared understandings and clarifications must develop over time. Until then, practical enforcement is anything but routine. Here is an example.

Section 3.1 of the UCoC states that the following is harassment:

Disclosure of personal data (Doxing): sharing other contributors' private information, such as name, place of employment, physical or email address without their explicit consent either on the Wikimedia projects or elsewhere, or sharing information concerning their Wikimedia activity outside the projects.

As you are no doubt aware, a Wikimedian and a non-Wikimedian co-author recently published an academic essay criticising aspects of the English Wikipedia's Holocaust coverage. In their essay, the authors mention the legal names and the places of employment of two longstanding Wikipedia contributors who, as WMF Trust & Safety will confirm, have suffered years of egregious harassment because of their Wikimedia participation. I understand this has included threats to their children, calls to their workplace asking for them to be fired, etc. 

Given this history, the authors' decision to share precise information about these contributors' workplaces in their academic essay struck me as ill advised. It is hard to justify on scholarly grounds – the Holocaust topic area is unrelated to the academic positions held by these two Wikipedians. And surely it must have occurred to the authors that providing information on their workplaces might exacerbate the harassment they are already experiencing, of which the authors were well aware. 

Needless to say, neither of the two contributors gave their consent to having their names and workplaces shared in the essay, which criticises them severely – and in at least some cases very unfairly. 

Given that explicit consent is what the UCoC requires for sharing of personal information, sharing details of these Wikimedians' workplaces – especially in the context of harsh and inflammatory criticism of their editing, and a long history of prior harassment suffered by these contributors – struck me as a bright-line violation of UCoC Section 3.1, specifically:

Disclosure of personal data (Doxing): sharing other contributors' private information, such as name, place of employment, physical or email address without their explicit consent either on the Wikimedia projects or elsewhere, or sharing information concerning their Wikimedia activity outside the projects.

The reason I am mentioning this here is that the English Arbitration Committee, which opened an arbitration case soon after publication of the essay, appears largely to have taken a different view to date, preferring to apply the most charitable interpretation of a local English Wikipedia policy instead of the UCoC definition.[1] 

Local policy on English Wikipedia says that sharing a contributor's personal information (on Wikipedia) is not harassment if said contributor has voluntarily posted their own information, or links to such information, on Wikipedia at some time in the past.[2] In this specific case, one of the two contributors once, over a decade ago, posted a link to a Dramatica page containing their name and a previous place of employment (different from their current place of employment as shared in the essay). I understand they tried later on to have that edit oversighed but were refused. The other contributor is open about their legal name and workplace on Wikipedia. 

As we can see, the English Wikipedia's local policy is not aligned with the UCoC. The UCoC – which we are told defines a minimum standard that takes precedence over any and all local policies and must not be ignored or circumvented – demands that Wikimedians wanting to share other contributors' personal information obtain "explicit consent" from the contributors concerned. "Explicit consent" is generally considered to be a much higher standard than implied consent.[3] "Explicit consent" is telling an author, "Yes, it is fine for you to mention my name and workplace in your essay."

And unlike local policy, the UCoC says that it covers conduct outside of Wikimedia spaces as well. It says it applies to –

all Wikimedia projects, technical spaces, in-person and virtual events, as well as the following instances:

Private, public and semi-public interactions
Discussions of disagreement and expression of solidarity across community members
Issues of technical development
Aspects of content contribution
Cases of representing affiliates/communities with external partners

On the face of it, "public interactions" and "expressions of disagreement" would seem to include writings a Wikimedian publishes about another contributor in a journal, a newspaper, a blog, etc., or statements they make about them in press interviews.

ArbCom on the other hand appears to have taken the view that the UCoC only applies to places "like Wikimedia listservs, affiliate zoom calls, and Wikimedia in-person events. But that doesn't include peer reviewed papers." 

So, the question I am now unclear about is: Are Wikimedians communicating about Wikipedia outside of Wikimedia spaces – from academic journals, newspapers and TV interviews to blogs and discussion forums – bound by the UCoC (and specifically Section 3.1) or not? Very specifically, are they permitted to share contributors' private information such as their workplace address in these various venues, without obtaining explicit consent to do so? 

Clarification would be very welcome. I feel we do need some guidance as to what the words in the UCoC are intended to mean in practice, and how much leeway local projects should have in interpreting its intent.

Regards,
Andreas


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