I took it as stating the obvious, what we all knew to expect, with one bonus:
1. *"The Wikimedia Foundation Board affirms that Wikimedia projects are not censored"* is stated first, and as a positive affirmative assertion. Everything else follows that. I like that establishment of basic principle as being first and clearly said, before discussing the minority cases of contentious material. It gives something firm to stand on as a principle, if in years to come, this or that group or country tries to limit or manipulate. A positive statement's useful that way.
It then says what we all pretty much knew it would.
2. Actively manage uploaded files to make sure they are relevant and appropriate to our mission and criteria; and 3. Develop a way that people who don't want to see certain types of image can collapse or not see them without other people being affected.
No surprises, much as anyone expected. Endorsement of not-very-contentious conclusion.
FT2
On Wed, Jun 1, 2011 at 10:52 PM, David Gerard dgerard@gmail.com wrote:
On 1 June 2011 21:35, Nathan nawrich@gmail.com wrote:
Forgive me if I find these resolutions rather toothless; this is another in a string of board resolutions that simply "urge the projects." I'd love to understand what the Board thinks such resolutions will accomplish.
It says very effectively (I thought) to the censorious: "We have given your position a great deal of due careful consideration, and urge you to go away. The issue is dead." Of course, I could just be projecting my own feelings onto it. In which case, it's even better.
It should be thought of, IMO, as being primarily for external consumption.