On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 7:56 PM, Tobias Oelgarte < [email protected]> wrote:
> You would have to proof that your facts are indeed true. But if you > accept it as a huge difference between cultures, how can you impose a > filter for a culture that doesn't need it or wants it? > Just like a normal addition to Mediawiki: Those who don't want to use it, don't have to. > How would you expect to find a good compromise in decisions on what to > filter and what not? Do you intend to put an extremist conservative Arab > and and the most liberal German inside the same room, close the door, go > away, come back after two weeks and look if they could find a compromise > about Yes or No? How should this work? > Quite simple: add one filter for each, and describe for each what they filter, then let every user for themself decide whether to filter the one, the other, neither or both. > The referendum showed that cultural neutrality is important for the > voters. But how do you think to find a compromise between hell and > heaven, without having hell and heaven inside the discussions at commons > at earth? > See above - if your filters are not almost the same, don't use the same filter, but create two different ones. -- André Engels, [email protected] _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
