On 9 June 2018 at 18:14, Brion Vibber <bvibber(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
On Sat, Jun 9, 2018 at 10:00 AM Alex Monk
<krenair(a)gmail.com> wrote:
This is outrageous. Not only are you blatantly
misrepresenting what
various
people are saying in the other thread and their
intentions,
Perhaps. I've tried to go by the plain readings of position statements and
I could have made a mistake?
For example where you said "IMHO specifically because some people are
trying to avoid being bound by it or protesting its existence by looking
for loopholes to avoid it", which is not at all what that thread is about
as has been made very clear in that thread.
On 9 June 2018 at 18:14, Brion Vibber <bvibber(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
you are now
suggesting that repository owners do not in fact
get to decide what goes
in
their repository and what does not, as if this
has been the case all
along.
Yes I'm definitely explicitly saying that. Same applies to pages on
Wikipedia: you don't get to own them and veto others' clarifications. And
sometimes an admit makes an edit stick that you don't like.
This is a bad analogy. Repository owners *are* essentially the admins, and
in this case get content control. The people involving themselves are more
akin to global users like stewards trying to override local admin actions,
and in this case they're not really supposed to have such control of
content. Like with on-wiki stuff, it's not really so bad when a global user
comes and does uncontroversial cleanup, but global permissions are not for
the purpose of involving oneself in local controversy.
On 9 June 2018 at 18:14, Brion Vibber <bvibber(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
It is
incredibly ironic how against the spirit of the CoC this all is.
Can you clarify?
Making Wikimedia technical spaces less welcoming to outsiders.