On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 18:52, Tobias Oelgarte tobias.oelgarte@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 16.09.2011 16:15, schrieb Milos Rancic:
It's about implementing image filter on images which have copyright problems in Germany (but not in US), not about nudity.
And it got awesomely off-topic. Now we discuss about an opt-in filter to allow copyrighted images on the German Wikipedia? Please put to the topic.
Not opt-in, but opt-out :P
Sorry for hijacking the thread with a joke :)
I think that everything is so obvious that it's become tiresome to discuss it: * There is significant disproportion in position between editors with a couple of edits and the core of the community. * It's not likely that it would be ~85% against, but similar pool on English Wikipedia would likely finish with ~60% against. Hypothetical referendums on projects in many European languages would finish similarly to the referendum on German Wikipedia, as in this case macho-patriarchal culture, dominant in large parts of Europe, corresponds with libertarian positions, dominant among the core editors. * It's likely that staff and Board already know that correlation between the results of German Wikipedia referendum and global survey could be drawn to support previous two conclusions. Thus, they don't want to publish that part of data. * There is still significant minority of core editors who want the filter at any cost. * Board is divided and doesn't know what to decide.
I would repeat the best possible solution to end this: Implement it on English Wikipedia -- you (those who want that filter) have some numbers which would support that action -- and leave the rest of the projects alone.