We're quite pleased to share this information with you. This press release was distributed a few hours ago - we now have the news posted on the WMF wiki and we've updated the blog.
Thanks are owed to many volunteers who spoke to the media and spread the word about this situation, as well as those who have been working on these and similar issues for quite some time. Thank you for helping to make this possible!
Best,
Glad that's over with.
FMF
On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 7:01 PM, Jay Walsh jwalsh@wikimedia.org wrote:
We're quite pleased to share this information with you. This press release was distributed a few hours ago - we now have the news posted on the WMF wiki and we've updated the blog.
Thanks are owed to many volunteers who spoke to the media and spread the word about this situation, as well as those who have been working on these and similar issues for quite some time. Thank you for helping to make this possible!
Best,
-- Jay Walsh Head of Communications WikimediaFoundation.org +1 (415) 839 6885 x 609
'Wikimedia Foundation applauds IWF decision to reverse Wikipedia censorship in the United Kingdom' Removal from Internet blacklist will also allow UK Wikipedians to resume editing
San Francisco CA, December 9 - Earlier today the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), a non-profit agency tasked with preventing access to potentially illegal internet content, reversed its ruling earlier this week that prevented over 95% of UK internet users from accessing an article about an album by a German rock band, The Scorpions. As a result, UK Wikipedia users were unable to access all of the editing functions on Wikipedia. With this decision, the IWF has removed Wikipedia from its internet 'blacklist.'
"We are grateful to the IWF for making this swift decision, and to thousands of internet users from around the world for their outpouring of support," said Sue Gardner, Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation. "Millions of Britons now have access to all of Wikipedia, and volunteers can resume their important editing work. The Wikimedia Foundation greatly admires the work of our volunteers
- they care deeply about Wikipedia and are the first responders in
dealing with potentially illegal content on Wikipedia." Gardner added that both the Foundation and its community of users "work hard to be responsive and responsible when it comes to legitimate legal concerns."
Mike Godwin, General Counsel for the Wikimedia Foundation stated: "We recognize the good intentions of Internet watch groups, including their focus on blocking and discouraging illegal content. Nevertheless, this incident underscores the need for transparency and accountability in the processes of the Internet Watch Foundation and similar bodies around the world."
Added Godwin, "In the long run, monitoring groups need to develop a public set of 'best practices.' These best practices should, at a minimum, decrease the impact on content found to be lawful, acknowledge the context in which the content at issue occurs, and be maximally transparent both to service providers and to individual users. There should be no false or misleading error messages when online censorship does occur."
The Wikimedia Foundation had criticized the the lack of transparency in the IWF's decision making and appeal process, as well as the suspension of editing functions that resulted following the censorship. UK Wikipedia editors account for over 25% of all editing activity on the English Wikipedia.
The Wikimedia Foundation is open to dialog on these issues with the IWF and other Internet watch groups.
Wikipedia, the fourth most-visited website in the world, is funded in large part by donations from its users. The Wikimedia Foundation is in the midst of its fifth global giving campaign. For more information, visit http://donate.wikimedia.org
'About the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikipedia' wikimediafoundation.org wikipedia.org
The Wikimedia Foundation is the non-profit organization which operates Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. According to comScore, Wikipedia and the other projects operated by the Wikimedia Foundation receive more than 270 million unique visitors per month, making them the 4th most popular web property world-wide. Available in more than 265 languages, Wikipedia provides more than 11 million articles contributed by a global volunteer community of more than 100,000 people. Based in San Francisco, California, the Wikimedia Foundation is an audited, 501(c)(3) charity that is funded primarily through donations and grants.
For more information, contact:
Jay Walsh Head of Communications Wikimedia Foundation jwalsh@wikimedia.org +1 415-839-6885, ext 609 http://blog.wikimedia.org/
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2008/12/10 David Moran fordmadoxfraud@gmail.com:
Glad that's over with.
Till next time. Or until they come up with a less visible mechanism.
- d.
Jay Walsh jwalsh@wikimedia.org wrote:
Internet ... internet ... internet ... internet ... internet ... Internet ... Internet
"Internet" should be capitalized as a proper noun, but is also commonly written lowercase (like "the sky"). Either way, the capitalization should be consistent. I couldn't find the edit link for your email, so I'll just leave a note. ;)
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Jesse Plamondon-Willard wrote:
Jay Walsh jwalsh@wikimedia.org wrote:
Internet ... internet ... internet ... internet ... internet ... Internet ... Internet
"Internet" should be capitalized as a proper noun, but is also commonly written lowercase (like "the sky"). Either way, the capitalization should be consistent. I couldn't find the edit link for your email, so I'll just leave a note. ;)
And sometimes even pluralized, like "I was searching through your internets"
Cary
2008/12/11 Cary Bass cary@wikimedia.org:
And sometimes even pluralized, like "I was searching through your internets"
"intarwebs", get it right!
- d.
Don't forget intranets.
David Gerard wrote:
2008/12/11 Cary Bass cary@wikimedia.org:
And sometimes even pluralized, like "I was searching through your internets"
"intarwebs", get it right!
- d.
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On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 2:44 PM, KillerChihuahua puppy@killerchihuahua.comwrote:
Don't forget intranets.
Hehe, this is a real one. Intranet is just a private network, so there actually are quite a few intranets out there :)
-Chad
I surf the intartubes on my way to the information superhighway.
-Dan On Dec 11, 2008, at 3:00 PM, David Yellope wrote:
My favorite word is the Intrawebz _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
Oh no, please don't start this. Think of the topic people, think of the topic!
gotta keep the pointless emails up or people say were dying away......
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 8:45 PM, Isabell Long isabell121@gmail.com wrote:
Oh no, please don't start this. Think of the topic people, think of the topic!
-- Regards, Isabell Long. isabell121@gmail.com [[User:Isabell121]] on all public Wikimedia projects. OpenPGP Key ID: C395CE07
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2008/12/11 Chad innocentkiller@gmail.com:
On Thu, Dec 11, 2008 at 2:44 PM, KillerChihuahua puppy@killerchihuahua.comwrote:
Don't forget intranets.
Hehe, this is a real one. Intranet is just a private network, so there actually are quite a few intranets out there :)
Back in the good old days there were multiple internets too, they then all merged together to become *the* *I*nternet.
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