[Foundation-l] Attribution survey, first results
Thomas Dalton
thomas.dalton at gmail.com
Wed Mar 4 18:20:32 UTC 2009
2009/3/4 Anthony <wikimail at inbox.org>:
> On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 1:02 PM, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Do we really want to only listen to the opinions of those people
>> actually willing to make a fuss if they don't get their way?
>>
>
> We should. If someone isn't willing to make a fuss if they don't get their
> way, they don't really care in the first place, do they?
It's a matter of priorities. If a decision is made that I don't agree
with I have to weigh up how bad it is that this bad decision has been
made, how much harm me making a fuss will cause and how likely it is
that me making a fuss will make any difference. (This varies depending
on your definition of "fuss", obviously.) I think it this situation
making a fuss is very unlikely to make any difference once a decision
is made, and the pointless drama will detract from people improving
the projects, so I am unlikely to make a fuss as long as I am
confident the decision is a legal one.
> I imagine
>> most Wikimedians are sufficiently mature to accept it if the majority
>> disagree with them.
>>
>
> Accept what, that the majority disagrees with them? If that's what you
> mean, yeah, most Wikimedians are.
Accept that they've lost the argument and move on.
> (This is assuming only options actually legal
>> under the license are considered.)
>>
>
> I don't think that caveat has been met, though I'd present a higher one
> either. Only ethical options should be considered. Mere legality isn't
> sufficient.
How are you going to define "ethical"? It's an entirely subjective
concept, a vote is pretty much the only way we can handle it.
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