This e-mail strikes me as a major overreaction based on the information presented, especially since there is no indication that Russavia ever contacted the person he is accusing and asked him what was meant by the comment. In any event, the posting is wildly inappropriate for a public mailing list.
Newyorkbrad
On 8/2/14, Russavia russavia.wikipedia@gmail.com wrote:
In mid-July I was advised by an editor that on 5 July 2014 they had received via the Wikimedia mailing system an email from SatuSuro.[1] The editor in question, who stated that they ordinarily would not share private communications but felt compelled to on this occasion, forwarded me the email, along with all headers. In this email SatuSuro made the following statement:
"I am not 100% sure where you contextualise your comments from, but he is a local, and I know his parents house quite well...."
Upon reading it, I was absolutely gobsmacked. Firstly, the comment was wildly out of place in the context of the email, and secondly, this is how the email ended.
One will note that he states that he doesn't say that he knows me nor knows my family, but that he knows my parents' house quite well. This obviously made me quite squeamish, because it's not my home that he states he knows well, but the home of my parents.
I have never met SatuSuro (T.H.) in real life, and have had no reason nor great desire to meet him. So he is not known to me on a personal level in any way, shape or form.
With this in mind, I sent an email to my folks asking them if they knew T.H. or if they recognised him from his photo.[2] I told them that the guy had stated "I know his parents house quite well....".
They were concerned. My old lady, especially so, who looked at his comment the same way I did. I won't divulge what sort of search terms I found in her Google search history, even after I showed them the email which was sent by T.H.. Both my old man and old lady confirmed that they do not know T.H. by name nor by photo, and have no idea how he could know their house well.
I informed them that if they should see him near their home that they should contact the police. My folks, who are enjoying their retirement and have their four young grandkids at their house every other day, also took the grandkids aside and showed them T.H.'s photo and said that if they see this man that they should tell them or their parents straight away - a much needed lesson in "stranger danger" I guess.
It doesn't stop there, but I was informed the other day at a family get together, that they had shelled out a fair amount of money for multiple infrared cameras which are situated around their residence (in the open and hidden), recording equipment, added security monitoring and installation.
This is so not cool. Absolutely not cool. One may expect to deal with creepy stalker cunts as a result of participating in sites such as 4chan (I dunno, never participated, but it has that rep perhaps), but one should absolutely not expect to have to deal with such things from their participation in Wikimedia projects. And especially not from someone who is a member of a WM Chapter (WMAU) and the recipient of a scholarship from the WMF to travel to Wikimania next week.[3]
There is no reason at all that would have required T.H. to attempt to stalk me in real life, and there is absolutely zero reason or excuse for him to be stalking, not my home, but the home of my parents, which has resulted in them upgrading security, as great cost, to their castle.
A message to SatuSuro -- stop stalking the home of my parents you creepy fuck.
Russavia
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:SatuSuro [2] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SatuSuro_at_Wikimania_2013.jpg [3] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:TPS/Wikimania_scholars#2014_WMF_Schol... (#83) _______________________________________________ Wikimedia-l mailing list, guidelines at: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Mailing_lists/Guidelines Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l, mailto:wikimedia-l-request@lists.wikimedia.org?subject=unsubscribe