I, amongst others, have been seeing these calls for additional information as very close to trolling / stalking. Taking your points in order however:
On Tue, August 12, 2008 23:51, Thomas Dalton wrote:
Correction, there is no *legal* requirement. There is a moral requirement that people know who it is representing them.
"Moral" requirements don't cut much ice in this situation. Like it or not, WER Limited is obliged to operate under the Company Law of England & Wales as that is the law it is registered under. The Company as a whole represents Wikimedia in the UK. It doesn't, per se, represent individuals.
As I understand it, Paul will have to stand down at the upcoming AGM, since he was appointed not elected.
That is correct. One-third of the Board is required to resign each year and may seek re-appointment.
Assuming you actually allow interested parties to take part in the AGM (if you don't, you can expect trouble), I strongly doubt he'll be elected without telling the electorate a little more about himself.
As with every other registered company we will have an AGM to which all members of the Company will be invited, they being the "interested parties" required by law who are empowered to vote. As regards your bracketed aside I do not appreciate threats and would suggest you cease making them.
His on-wiki identity, at the very least.
As I said above, this repeated calling for what is, in every sense, unnecessary information - from a legal standpoint - is becoming very close to stalking. Should *any* member of or candidate for the Board wish to disclose information about themselves in addition to that required by Company Law to be published is their choice and theirs alone. It will never be something demanded by the Company.
Alison Wheeler