Lodewijk
I agree that your second paragraph is quite likely to be correct. I have
consistently argued that the performance of the Foundation could be
significantly improved if it were to engage more effectively with the
Community, and that in the past it has failed to do so. I have also
suggested a number of ways that engagement could be enhanced. I am aware
that this is not always comfortable for the people who find themselves
being criticised. But I believe that it is in the long-term best interests
of the Community, the Foundation and the Mission. I hope and believe that
the majority of the participants on the list can say the same about their
own postings.
Roland
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 9:46 PM, Lodewijk <lodewijk(a)effeietsanders.org>
wrote:
R,
if it's worth anything (probably not), what Seddon wrote on this list could
in those exact wordings equally well have come from me. I don't think his
words are why this conversation turned sour.
Unrelated to that: I'm pretty confident indeed that several of the
participants in this conversation are discussing these guidelines with your
behavior in mind in particular.
Lodewijk
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 4:21 PM, Rogol Domedonfors <domedonfors(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Dan
Actually, being insulted and falsely accused of generalised misconduct
by a
paid employee of the Foundation who has failed to
read my post correctly
is
what I call unconstructive behaviour. But
perhaps that is what you
expect
the donors money to be spent on.
Roald
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 9:14 PM, Dan Rosenthal <swatjester(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hey Rogol:
>
> "Alternatively,
> perhaps you would prefer me to ask your line manager whether this is
the
> sort of behaviour that she expects you to
exhibit in a public forum."
>
> This is the kind of "unconstructive" behavior the list is talking
about.
I
> fail to see how threatening to tattle to someone's manager, because
they
disagreed
with you about the wording of your posts in public, is either
constructive or the "sort of behavior" one would "expect you to exhibit
in
a public forum." But then again, I'd
venture to guess you knew that
already.
Cheers.
Dan Rosenthal
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 12:31 PM, Samuel Klein <meta.sj(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
>
> > Thoughtful, practical, good. Thank you.
> >
> > On Aug 22, 2017 9:03 PM, "John Mark Vandenberg"
<jayvdb(a)gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >
> > Hi list members,
> >
> > The list admins (hereafter 'we', being Austin, Asaf, Shani and I,
your
> > humble narrator) regularly receive
complaints about the frequent
> > posters on this list, as well as about the unpleasant atmosphere some
> > posters (some of them frequent) create.
> >
> > It is natural that frequent posters will say specific things that
more
> > frequently annoy other list members,
but often the complaints are due
> > to the volume of messages rather than the content of the messages.
> >
> > We are floating some suggestions aimed specifically at reducing the
> > volume, hopefully motivating frequent posters to self-moderate more,
> > but these proposed limits are actually intending to increasing the
> > quality of the discourse without heavy subjective moderation.
> >
> > The first proposal impacts all posters to this list, and the last
> > three proposals are aimed at providing a more clear framework within
> > which criticism and whistle-blowing are permitted, but that critics
> > are prevented from drowning out other discussions. The bandwidth that
> > will be given to critics should be established in advance, reducing
> > need to use subjective moderation of the content when a limit to the
> > volume will often achieve the same result.
> > --
> >
> > Proposal #1: Monthly 'soft quota' reduced from 30 to 15
> >
> > The existing soft quota of 30 posts per person has practically never
> > been exceeded in the past year, and yet many list subscribers still
> > clearly feel that a few individuals overwhelm the list. This suggests
> > the current quota is too high.
> >
> > A review of the stats at
> >
https://stats.wikimedia.org/mail-lists/wikimedia-l.html show very
few
> > people go over 15 in a month, and quite
often the reason for people
> > exceeding 15 per month is because they are replying to other list
> > members who have already exceeded 15 per month, and sometimes they
are
> > repeatedly directly or indirectly
asking the person to stop repeating
> > themselves to allow some space for other list members also have their
> > opinion heard.
> > --
> >
> > Proposal #2: Posts by globally banned people not permitted
> >
> > As WMF-banned people are already banned from mailing lists, this
> > proposal is to apply the same ‘global’ approach to any people who
have
> > been globally banned by the community
according to the
> >
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Global_bans policy.
> >
> > This proposal does not prevent proxying, or canvassing, or “meat
> > puppetry” as defined by English Wikipedia policy. The list admins
> > would prefer that globally banned people communicate their grievances
> > via established members of our community who can guide them, rather
> > than the list admins initially guiding these globally banned people
on
> > how to revise their posts so they are
suitable for this audience, and
> > then required to block them when they do not follow advice. The role
> > of list moderators is clearer and simpler if we are only patrolling
> > the boundaries and not repeatedly personally engaged with helping
> > globally banned users.
> > --
> >
> > Proposal #3: Identity of an account locked / blocked / banned by two
> > Wikimedia communities limited to five (5) posts per month
> >
> > This proposal is intended to strike a balance between openness and
> > quality of discourse.
> >
> > Banned people occasionally use the wikimedia-l mailing list as a
> > substitute of the meta Request for comment system, and banned people
> > also occasionally provide constructive criticisms and thought
> > provoking views. This proposal hopes to allow that to continue.
> >
> > However people who have been banned on a few projects also use this
> > list as their “last stand”, having already exhausted the community
> > patience on the wikis. Sometimes the last stand is brief, but
> > occasionally a banned person is able to maintain sufficient decorum
> > that they are not moderated or banned from the list, and mailing list
> > readers need to suffer month after month of the banned person
> > dominating the mailing lists with time that they would previously
have
> > spent editing on the wikis.
> > --
> >
> > Proposal #4: Undisclosed alternative identities limited to five (5)
> > posts per month
> >
> > Posting using fake identities allows people to shield their real life
> > *and* their Wikimedia editing 'account' from the repercussions of
> > their actions. This provision to allow fake identities on wikimedia-l
> > is necessary for whistle-blowing, and this mailing list has been used
> > for that purpose at important junctures in the history of the
> > Wikimedia movement.
> >
> > However it is more frequently abused, especially by some ‘critics’
who
> > have used incessant hyperbole and snark
and baiting to generally
cause
> > stress to many readers. Sometimes this
is also accompanied with many
> > list posts on various unrelated threads as the ‘critic’ believes
their
> > criticism is so important that all
other discussions about Wikimedia
> > should be diverted until their problem has been resolved to their
> > satisfaction, which is unlikely anyway.
> >
> > Note this explicitly does not include anyone posting using their real
> > world identity, whether or not they have a Wikimedia account.
> >
> > Where a poster does not clearly link to either Wikimedia account, or
> > does not appear to be using a real identity, and only after it is
> > exceeding the five post limit, the list admins will privately ask the
> > poster to either verify their identity or stop posting until the end
> > of the month. Very frequently a whistle-blower is able and even
> > prefers to be documenting the problem on meta, but needs the high
> > profile of this list to spark the discussion and draw attention to
> > their meta page.
> >
> >
> > ---
> >
> > The five post allowance for proposals 3 and 4 are to ensure that
> > anyone who has not been globally banned can post criticisms without
> > repercussions, which is vital for whistleblowing and transparency
> > generally, but they need to use their five posts per month wisely.
> > Once they have used their five posts, community members can reply
with
> > less concern about being drawn into a
direct argument with the
poster.
> > It aims to force the poster to listen
to others in the community once
> > their limit of five posts has been reached.
> >
> > If there is support for these proposals, the list admins would not
> > immediately add moderation or bans, but would implement them as
> > needed, when we notice someone has exceeded one of these limits, and
> > we would make a note on a meta page where the community can review
> > these actions without allowing moderation meta-discussion to dominate
> > the discourse on the mailing list. Refinements to the list moderation
> > limits can then occur organically as we see how these rules plays out
> > in practise.
> >
> >
> > The RFC is at
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_comment/
> > wikimedia-l-post-limits
> >
> > However please also feel welcome to reply on-list if you wish to
> > express explicit support or opposition to any of the four proposals
> > above (please identify them by number, to ease counting). We will
> > count votes (here and on the meta RFC) after two weeks, and post a
> > more refined final version back to this mailing list.
> >
> > The list administrators will default to *enacting* all four
proposals,
> > but will refrain from enacting any
proposal receiving more opposition
> > than support.
> >
> > --
> > John Vandenberg
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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