On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 2:46 AM, Nikola Smolenski <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wednesday 21 January 2009 19:32:15 Erik Moeller wrote: > > 2009/1/20 Nikola Smolenski <[email protected]>: > > > Don't know about this wording thing, but as a Wikipedia author, I have > to > > > say that I do not think that attributing me in this way is sufficient. > As > > > a Wikimedian, I believe that a lot of people will feel the same. > > > > That's probably true, Nikola. The proposed attribution language is > > intended to balance the various positions (ranging from 'an URL should > > always be fine' to 'names should always be given'), the established > > I'm not sure that these positions should be balanced. I'd say the key to this whole relicensing debate is that the positions shouldn't be "balanced". It is my firm conviction that you ought not violate some individuals' rights for the good of some other (larger) group of individuals. Thus, the arguments about how difficult and onerous it is to give credit fall on deaf ears. It doesn't matter how difficult it is to credit people. People have a right to be credited, and printing a URL in a book or on a T-shirt or at the end of a movie doesn't cut it. This is especially true because *it's the Wikimedia Foundation's fault* that it's so difficult to track authors in the first place. I personally was arguing for more care to be taken in this space and/or an *opt-in* move to a dual licensing scheme (and adoption of the real name field) *over 4 years ago* (yes Mike, I double-checked this one). The fact that these concerns were ignored for so long *is not the fault of the authors*. Our rights should not be violated or "balanced" away. _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
