[Foundation-l] Fwd: Wikimedia Foundation's partnership with Kaltuna and l...
daniwo59 at aol.com
daniwo59 at aol.com
Fri Jan 18 04:34:35 UTC 2008
In a message dated 1/17/2008 11:07:47 PM Eastern Standard Time,
tstarling at wikimedia.org writes:
Maybe not so slippery. It's been a long time since the Answers.com deal
(i.e. the agreement by the Foundation to promote the Answers.com one-click
tool on Wikipedia), and we haven't seen many similar deals since then.
Maybe the consistent community backlash at each of these announcements is
keeping us away from edge of said slope.
-- Tim Starling
The name Kaltura is fascinating, and the etymology is very telling: Russian
through Hebrew. See
_http://www.doubletongued.org/index.php/dictionary/haltura/_ (http://www.doubletongued.org/index.php/dictionary/haltura/) (the kh
sound is alternately transliterated as h kh, or k)
especially:
Citations: _1923_
(http://www.doubletongued.org/index.php/citations/haltura_2/) Nikita Balieff New York Times Magazine (June 24) “Off Stage and Us Again”
p. 9: “Haltura” is a word which has been used frequently by the Russian
actor during Bolshevism and signifies an extra job on the outside of his own
theatre. The “haltura” apparitions are staged without any artistic aims, and
interest the actor only as a means by which he can earn an extra few million
rubles.
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