On 2 August 2012 21:07, MZMcBride z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
Brandon Harris wrote:
On Aug 2, 2012, at 5:45 PM, Andreas Kolbe jayen466@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Aug 2, 2012 at 12:11 PM, MZMcBride z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
What type of action was the SOPA blackout in January?
You mean, given the $500,000 Google donation Wikimedia received in
November
2011, one month after the Italian Wikipedia's blackout, and two months before the English Wikipedia's SOPA blackout, and round about the time Wikimedia first made public statements denouncing SOPA?
Good question.
This is inserting a conspiracy theory where one does not exist.
The English Wikipedia community voted on the blackout and directed it
into
existence, not the Foundation. We merely facilitated.
To be clear, my question isn't about Google or donations or anything like that. My question, more directly, is: if the SOPA action from January 2012 were held in August 2012 (following the implementation of this new statement from the General Counsel's office), would it be considered a "community initiative" or not?
Given that this statement was written as a response to the January 2012 SOPA blackout, it seems like a reasonable question. Philippe and others have indicated that such actions would _not_ fall under this new doctrine. Is this correct?
My sense is that the statement is written as a response to the overtures that have been made to the WMF since the January 2012 SOPA blackout. Like many people outside of the WMF umbrella (and quite a few inside it, as well, based on comments we see regularly), it seems that many of these advocacy groups believe that WMF=Wikipedia. Those of us "in the know" understand that there's an awful lot more that is involved, and that there are widely divergent opinions on many issues between projects and within the broader community.
It's easy to forget (in fact, most people have forgotten) that the English Wikipedia community had been discussing some form of action in relation to SOPA for almost two months before the blackout. The Italian Wikipedia blackout in late 2011 demonstrated some significant fault lines if a large project suddenly closes up shop; because of this, I think the WMF justifiably had an interest in ensuring that if the English Wikipedia community followed suit, it was done in a controlled way that would not cause short-term or long-term harm to the actual project. I'm not talking "reputational harm", but damage to the hardware, software, and data that are integral to the project.
The line between what constitutes a community initiative and what's considered a request from an outside group still isn't clear to me, especially when I consider the Wikimedia Foundation to view the entire Wikimedia editing community as an outside group some days.
Ah, interesting point. My read of this was that the guideline would consider an initiative requested by a non-WMF community or organization to be an "outside group", whereas an initiative from one or more WMF communities, or from the broader general WMF community, would not fall under these guidelines. The recent request for comment with respect to the Internet Defense League[1] would be an example of an initiate that would fall within this guideline, I think.
I think your questions illustrate the need for improving some of the prose within the guideline so that these issues are clear to future readers, both inside and outside of our broader community. It's quite possible that my own interpretation is off the mark as well.
Risker/Anne
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_comment/Internet_Defense_League