[Foundation-l] Adult and Illegal content on Wikimedia projects
Gavin Chait
gchait at gmx.net
Sun Apr 9 07:32:41 UTC 2006
Actually the bullet points were from the SA constitution. Any comments on
the sanctity of Gaddafi are my own.
Extending my suggestion on the "rules" for wikibooks could have a simple
statement of what the purpose of books is to serve, and then specify that
any and all books will be evaluated by a special executive. Books found to
be against the spirit of wikibooks will be removed and the subject listed on
a banned list. An appeal should be allowed during which the people behind
the controversial book may submit their reasoning as to why the book should
remain. Once heard the executive should have a set period to decide. Once
a decision is made, however, it is final.
For instance:
"Wikibooks are to offer specific guidance, education or knowledge on any
topic with the specific limitation that the subject be one likely to benefit
society. Where a subject is likely to cause harm (material or otherwise)
then such a subject will be reviewed by the wikibooks executive. A current
list of subjects specifically banned from wikibooks is as follows:
- how to rape
- how to commit an act of terrorism
- .... and so on"
The executive and other terms in the above can be defined and agreed upon.
That way one person doesn't get saddled with making all the decisions, and -
most importantly - there is a context to the decision making process and
precedents can be set.
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Gavin
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