Thats Finns interpretation of this. Finn and some other users claims that there are no such things as privacy concerns with the Abuse filter, and claims they have a general consensus on the use of it. They even claim that the local authority "Datatilsynet" would not have any opinion on the matter and that they would refuse to respond on queries about it, but in fact they did reply. They where very specific on the issue and said that the use is outside the reach of the law, as the site is in the states, but if it were implemented on a site in Norway the solution has to apply to the law "Personopplysningsloven" or it must be strictly used for "administration of the system". Thats why I said we may _choose_ to use it anyhow.
Note that Norwegian users would be bound by local law both in Norway and partly also abroad, in addition to other local law. How this would be in this case I don't know, but an admin taking actions against a user because he have information from the AbuseFilter would at least be questionable. Note also that some of the users at no.wp has claimed that we should not relate to Norwegian law, and that Wikipedia should somehow be regarded as "international territory" or something similar. I'm not quite sure how they argue for this idea, I simply can't follow the logic on that. John Finn Rindahl skrev: > This issue has been discussed at rather great lenght at Wikipedia in > Norwegian (bokmål) and the mailinglist admin-wikipedia-no. I haven't yet > seen anyone who agrees with Johns interpretation that logging of attempts to > save (publish) blocked by an abusefilter is against Norwegian law. > > Finn Rindahl > > 2009/3/27 Thomas Dalton <[email protected]> > >> 2009/3/27 Mark Williamson <[email protected]>: >>> And what is "every other countries"? I'm not a lawyer, but even if you >>> are, have you done a legal study of all the countries on earth, >>> because there are a lot. >> He said "every" not "any". "that is not legal in every other >> countries" (assuming that last word was intended to be singular) means >> there is at least one country where it is not legal. "that is not >> legal in any other country" would mean there were no countries where >> is was legal. People using "every" and "any" incorrectly is a pet hate >> of mine, but he got it right! >> >> _______________________________________________ >> foundation-l mailing list >> [email protected] >> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l >> > _______________________________________________ > foundation-l mailing list > [email protected] > Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l > _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
