2009/1/8 Anthony <wikimail(a)inbox.org>rg>:
On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 12:54 PM, Thomas Dalton
<thomas.dalton(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
As for majority required, I would say something
more than 50% should
be necessary. We traditionally favour the status quo in pretty much
everything we do (except, for some reason, with the 3RR, I've never
understood that... but that's a discussion for another time and
place). Also, if we say 50% is all that's required and the result
comes out as 50.3% or something, you should know it's going to cause
massive drama (if we chose 60% and the results is 60.3% there is still
going to be plenty of drama, of course, but hopefully less). I'd go
with a requirement of 60%, but that's really just a number plucked out
of thin air, I welcome suggestions from people with actual reasons!
I'd say 100%, because you shouldn't purport to take away someone's right to
attribution without their permission.
We discussing a move to CC-****BY****-SA, attribution is still
required. I'm not an expert on the attribution requirements of
CC-BY-SA (I've just read them, but it isn't entirely clear to me
whether Original Author is, in the context of a wiki, just the latest
editor or all editors), but it seems clear to me that we can require
people to link back to Wikipedia (in particular, the history page) so
that everyone is, at least indirectly, attributed. Given that that's
how most people are using the GFDL anyway, I really don't see the
problem.