OK, let me just ask you a few simple questions:
* You complain that the accreditation with the no (visible?) history tab is
not correct. Did you consult a lawyer or legal specialist (for example
Creative Commons in your country) for their opinion about this?
* The same question for the url when re-using the image
* You complain that the "power structure" in your wiki is changing because
of technical changes. Is there a clear opinion of your community that they
do not wish such change?
Of course we can always be conservative as you suggested: dont do anything
until we know for sure that everybody agrees. That way nothing ever changes,
and all improvements are halted. I will just end up having lots of people
being frustrated and complaining everything is so bad. Things have to
change, constantly, and sometimes they have to be reverted then too. And
every now and then it is you who is sad because he disagrees, but next time
you might be happy with it and it is your collegue who complains that the
proper self made-up procedures are not followed.
If you have serious arguments, like the answers to my questions above, then
they should, imho, be taken seriously into consideration - independent of
procedures. If you don't and there are only a few people complaining, sorry
- but then at some point you just have to accept that things are not going
to change your way.
Best, Lodewijk
ps: I found it highly confusing that you entered so many different
complaints into one email thread - it keeps jumping from one topic to
another. It would be helpful if you, next time, bring your arguments of
course earlier, but also that you focus on the issue at hand. If that is
finalized, and you have another topic: start a new thread.
2010/9/9 Teofilo <teofilowiki(a)gmail.com>
2010/9/7, Teofilo <teofilowiki(a)gmail.com>om>:
2010/9/7, Tim Starling
<tstarling(a)wikimedia.org>rg>:
Presumably this conspiracy would have to extend
beyond the WMF to
PediaPress and Purodha Blissenbach, the developers of Collection and
mobile.wikipedia.org respectively.
The absence of a history tab in the mobile format is in my view an
exact measurement of the temperature of the warmth of the relations
between the WMF and its contributors.
Let's not call this a conspiracy. Philosopher Pierre Bourdieu would
call it an unconcious strategy (1).
The other reason why we can't call this a conspiracy is that a
conspiracy is usually kept secret, while that agenda is known by a lot
of people. They even managed to organise a vote and found a majority
approving it at
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Licensing_update/Result
The result is the adding of "You agree that a hyperlink or URL is
sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license" on every
edit tab footer.
The result is that it is thought that it is OK to distribute contents
without the history tab, the author's names remaining in a format not
readable on the device the user is using. So all these things are
features of the new vastly known agenda. They are not bugs.
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