On 2015-05-25 10:49 AM, Eric Rescorla wrote:


On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 7:44 AM, Ehsan Akhgari <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    On 2015-05-22 10:16 PM, Eric Rescorla wrote:



        On Fri, May 22, 2015 at 6:24 PM, Ehsan Akhgari
        <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
        <mailto:[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>>> wrote:

             On 2015-05-22 9:14 PM, Eric Rescorla wrote:



                 On Fri, May 22, 2015 at 5:52 PM, Ehsan Akhgari
                 <[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>>
                 <mailto:[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>

                 <mailto:[email protected]
        <mailto:[email protected]>>>> wrote:

                      On 2015-05-22 7:38 PM, Adam Roach wrote:

                          On 5/22/15 17:59, Mike Connor wrote:

                              Can you name an example that would
        actually be widely
                              controversial?


                          Perhaps the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
        -- I'd have to
                          brush up on
                          Moroccan politics to be sure.


                      OK, so let's say that someone living in that
        region wants to be
                      identified as living in SADR.  Why is that not
        OK?  And why
                 is it up
                      to us to decide that?  And why would Mozilla care
        if the said
                      individual wants to be identified as living in the
        SADR or
                 in Morocco?

                              If not, I don't think this is a material
        concern.


                          Can you predict the entire worldwide political
                 landscape for the
                          rest of
                          the lifetime of the project?


                      Nobody can, but what is the point of this question?

                          There are some very plausible, very near-term
        futures
                 where an
                          alternate
                          government that currently controls parts of
        what are widely
                          recognized
                          as Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Nigeria begins to
        establish
                 diplomatic
                          relations with other countries. It isn't hard to
                 believe that,
                          much like
                          the gradual diplomatic acceptance of the PRC
        in the
                 '50's and '60's,
                          such an entity might gain recognition by a
        non-trivial
                          percentage of UN
                          member states.

                          And that? That would be controversial.


                      It seems like you're optimizing for a different
        goal than some
                      others in this thread: avoiding making controversial
                 decisions, and
                      your solution is to hand that off to another
        organization
                 (the ISO.)

                      Let me just talk about one of the most
        controversial cases
                 for a
                      second: ISIL, since you've mentioned it
        up-thread.  Let's
                 say that
                      there are people who self-identify as ISIL
        citizens, and
                 they would
                      like to be part of the Mozilla community.  What is
        the harm in
                      allowing that individual to self-identify as such
        for the
                 purposes
                      of their Mozilla contributions?

                      I think this debate simply boils down to what goal
        we're
                 trying to
                      achieve here.  If our goal is avoiding controversy
        at all
                 costs,
                      then your suggestion makes sense.  But I would like to
                 suggest that
                      our goal should be building a strong community
        that is open and
                      welcoming to all, no matter which part of the
        world they
                 were born
                      in, and live in, and how they identify where in
        the world they
                      live.  With that goal in mind, off-loading this
        decision to ISO
                      makes no sense, since that is effectively Mozilla
        taking a
                 stance on
                      what is and is not a country, and taking away the
        ability
                 of our
                      contributors to make this call.


                 Well, it's worth noting that this thread started (going
        on two
                 weeks ago
                 now) when someone complained about someone else using
        "Prishtina -
                 Kosovo - Albania" as their location.


             Of course.  We need to make it clear that it is the user
        who has
             decided how to fill that form, and what to put there,
        through the
             language around the UI where this information is
        displayed.  And we
             will obviously keep receiving complaints from people who don't
             recognize the states found on Mozilla Reps or other Mozilla
        venues,
             and we need to keep explaining that to them.

             You may argue that it's futile to keep trying to stop these
             complaints, but I'd say that is OK, since the more
        important thing
             is for us to be welcoming to individuals no matter how hey
        identify
             their location.

             > I suspect that the person

                 complaining didn't feel like we were fostering a welcoming
                 environment.


             Well, I have to say, with the current state of things, I don't
             believe we are as welcoming as we could be in this respect too


        Could you elaborate a bit on what you are arguing for? A
        freeform field
        or a method of extending the canonical list?


    A freeform field is unfortunately not suitable because of the
    reasons mentioned before (such as making it harder to perform
    searches because misspellings, etc.), so at the lack of that, I
    think we should be open to expending the canonical list using
    user-assigned code where ISO-3166-1 fails to list a country in
    situations similar to the one for Kosovo.


Thanks for clarifying. Do you believe Mozilla should curate this list or
merely record whatever people want to put there?

I believe it should not be curated by Mozilla, or a third-party organization that we hand this off to (as we currently do). The net effect of any sort of vetting on the list by Mozilla, ISO, or another organization is that in the cases where they get it wrong, we're making it impossible for individuals to self-identify the territory they consider themselves to be from.

> If curated, what should
be the conditions? If not curated, what if I want to put in "Sealand",
"Mars", or "People's Republic of Fuck You"?

I believe it's fine to ignore such cases when coming up with general rules, and treat them as spam and deal with them as such.

Note that the users can already enter such unhelpful information in other free-form (or pseduo-free-form) fields, such as the name field, and we don't need to worry about such cases more than worrying about any other spamming scenario.
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