On 3 August 2010 09:04, James Alexander <[email protected]> wrote: > While I disagree with the policy I'm not sure we can say that they aren't > allowed to make it. I think a more restrictive policy would be allowed just > not less restrictive.
That's pretty much exactly what I was going to say. The German Wikipedia is entitled to create whatever policies it likes as long as they don't go against global policy (and being more restrictive isn't against the global privacy policy) or against the fundamental principles of the movement. I think this policy is ridiculous (Sebastian's analogy to cookies is very unconvincing - the contributions page is already public, the analogy could be used to argue to the removal of all attribution, but if edits are going to be attributed (and, of course, they are) then the information is going to be public and making a rule that says only people with the time and technical expertise to write their own contributions analysis script are allowed access to contribution statistics doesn't make any sense to me at all), but it's not up to me. _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
