Sorry, but I still do not understand why it is there at all (I mean under the paragraph about resignation as a member of the association)
What you say is that at any time, Jimbo (or the board) can just delete any one account. I agree with this naturally. But that is true of absolutely any user. Be it a trusted user, a new user, a bugging user, a banned user, or a vandal. And be him registered in the association or not registered.
This is true for everyone, for any user.
So, why is this only mentionned under the paragraph about those who are just resigning from the association ? Either this is mentionned for absolutely all users, or it is not mentionned at all.
Say, if I register to the association next month.
Then, for some personal reasons, I decide to unregister (for example, if I wish not that my name appear in the list any more), why should I have my account on wikipedia itself deleted ? Why more than right now as I am not a member at all ? What is the difference ?
Alex R. a écrit:
From: "Anthere" anthere8@yahoo.com
Ray Saintonge a écrit:
Anthere wrote:
Section 4.2. WRITTEN RESIGNATION.
<..snip..>
I understand the intent, but...why may the board decide to remove the account of a user upon the reason he resigned from the association ? A resignation is a voluntary act, not the act of a banned user or a vandal. So, it is up to the wikipedian to ask the deletion of his account if he wishes so. No ?
Who does the account belong to? It is something that is owned by the web site, not the user of the web site; like the credit card is owned by the bank or the passport is the property of the government that issued it. Only they have the right to take it back. Any user account does not belong to the user, this is why Jimbo was able to "freeze" the mediator role account. If Wikimedia turns off the servers and erases the user pages they are gone and so are the user accounts.
Also, all text on Wikipedia is released under the GFDL so the user cannot really request that any text that they have input on Wikipedia be removed, no? I know user talk sub pages are an exception to this and if someone posts personal information they can also get the page history blanked for privacy reasons, but isn't the information that users post done so under the GFDL?
It is really even a violation of the Board of Trustees to remove it (but let them get sued by someone for violating the GFDL, not the member). I am sure that if someone asked to have it removed for a good reason the Board of Trustees would remove it. It seems to me that what it is really about is to protect the user so that no one can accuse them of violating the GFDL, just my opinion though, maybe we should ask Jimbo to submit this to a panel of Florida judges and get them to figure out what it all means!
Alex756