On Fri, 6 Jun 2014, at 5:02, Trillium Corsage wrote:
They're going to behave better if they know they can be held accountable for their actions.
That's not something you can force on people.
People can easily be anonymous by means of generic nicknames, shared IPs and whatnot - even releasing a contributors's IP out in the public, which clearly violates privacy of a registered contributor, would not help to hold him/her "accountable" if he does not want to. And if he wants to, he can put identifying information on his/her personal page anyway.
I don't see any relation of a privacy policy to such kind goal.