2011/10/5 Michael Snow wikipedia@frontier.com
On 10/5/2011 7:03 AM, Domas Mituzas wrote:
The only thing we truly could do is restore read access. But if the it.wikipedia community really wants to strike, there's very little we can do to stop them. :)
I sure agree with that. There're plenty of ways to inflict pain without
terminating the service entirely.
Editor strike means not editing, it doesn't mean full service downtime.
When labor unions go on strike, they do more than not show up for work. They form picket lines and take other actions designed to obstruct activity so that company operations cannot proceed. Taken to its logical conclusion, if the Italian Wikipedia community collectively wants to go on strike, then what they have done is apply the full range of tools to carry that out.
Looks like you forget that as exists a right to strike, there is a right to work. Italian Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Yesterday, today? Sure.
How do we deal with an editor who starts deleting his contributions out
of spite? In contrast to strike actions, in those countries that recognize the right to organize collectively, sabotage and destruction are generally considered illegal and beyond the pale of acceptable behavior. Certainly we should not support anyone in the Italian community who thought it was a good idea to vandalize or delete portions of the encyclopedia as part of their protest.
Oh yeah, just like worst actions exist (vandalism) we have to respect medium-bad (?) ones (blanking the entire site).
But I don't think someone acting out of spite is a good comparison, since it seems pretty clear that this action is not being taken out of spite. I am happy to keep my trust in the Italian Wikipedia community, that it is in the best position to judge whether this protest is needed, what measures are appropriate to the situation, and how long to carry on with it.
--Michael Snow
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