When someone is blocked for NOTHERE, it is judged on what they have done, we 
generally don’t care what they claim to have intended, as there is no way to 
prove or disprove such claims. Cheers, Peter

 

From: Stella Ng [mailto:s...@wikimedia.org] 
Sent: 25 April 2022 17:38
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Cc: H4CUSEG
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: Next steps: Universal Code of Conduct (UCoC) and 
UCoC Enforcement Guidelines

 

Hello Everyone,

 

I appreciate the questions and concerns regarding intent - I’m going to 
reference Jan Eissfeldt here, the Global Head of Trust and Safety, and how he 
interpreted this concern during the last CAC conversation hour on April 21st 
(https://youtu.be/3cd2FxovdXE)

 

As mentioned previously, the UCoC was created to establish a minimum set of 
guidelines for expected and unacceptable behavior. The policy was written to 
take into account two main points: intent and context. It trusts people to 
exercise the reasonable person standard - which indicates that based on a 
reasonable person’s judgment of the scenario, the personalities behind it, and 
the context of the individuals involved in, as well as any extrapolating 
information, could make a call on an enforcement action.

 

This is not a new way of working for many of our communities. For instance, 
guidelines against “Gaming the system” exist in 26 projects, most if not all of 
which refer to deliberate intention or bad faith.

 

We do not believe that the crafters of the UCoC were looking for people to 
engage in any form of law interpretation or anything complex, but instead, to 
exercise their experience using the parameters of what a reasonable person 
would be expected to tolerate in a global, intercultural environment. 

 

Regards,

Stella

 

 

On Mon, Apr 25, 2022 at 2:14 AM Peter Southwood <peter.southw...@telkomsa.net> 
wrote:

This question has been asked before, and so far no workable answer has been 
suggested. Cheers, Peter.

 

From: H4CUSEG via Wikimedia-l [mailto:wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org] 
Sent: 20 April 2022 19:44
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Cc: H4CUSEG
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: Next steps: Universal Code of Conduct (UCoC) and 
UCoC Enforcement Guidelines

 

Stella, how are the community members who review situations supposed to 
establish the mens rea of the accused? Intent is one of the hardest things to 
prove in criminal cases, and we're going to rely on volunteers to get it right? 
We should not look at intent at all, consider only the actual harm that 
occurred and focus on remediation, harm reduction and rehabilitation in stead 
of punishing people. 

 

Vexations

 

Sent with ProtonMail <https://protonmail.com/>  secure email. 

 

------- Original Message -------
On Tuesday, April 19th, 2022 at 2:24 PM, Stella Ng <s...@wikimedia.org> wrote:



Hello Andreas and Todd, 

 

I am not Rosie, but I believe I can field this. 

 

First, as a reminder to all, the UCoC was created to establish a minimum set of 
guidelines for expected and unacceptable behavior. However, it does not make 
existing community policies irrelevant. Currently, communities in our global 
movement may have different policies around the disclosure of private 
information (“doxxing”), specifically taking into context what is going on on a 
day-to-day basis, as well as relationship and political dynamics (such as the 
position of power or influence) that the individuals involved could have. 
Depending on the specific context of your examples, interpretation and action 
could differ widely under those doxxing policies. 

 

What would be contextually consistent across the communities, however, is the 
UCoC. If we look specifically at section 3.1, which is what doxxing is nested 
under, what is important to note is context - specifically that if the 
information is provided or the behavior is “intended primarily to intimidate, 
outrage or upset a person, or any behaviour where this would reasonably be 
considered the most likely main outcome” (emphasis added). The next sentence 
expands further that “Behaviour can be considered harassment if it is beyond 
what a reasonable person would be expected to tolerate in a global, 
intercultural environment.” (emphasis added) The policy as written is pretty 
clear that both intent and what is often called in law the “reasonable person 
<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/reasonable_person#:~:text=Noun&text=(law)%20A%20fictional%20person%20used,due%20care%20in%20like%20circumstances.%22>
 ” test applies. This is one of the reasons that the Enforcement Guidelines are 
built around human review since application of policy will always require 
judgment. The community members who review situations will hopefully read the 
text in context within the policy and will also have experience in 
understanding the parties involved, their unique dynamics within their 
respective communities, and their own project policies on doxxing as COI, as 
they will have the experience of dealing with the day to day. 

 

However, it is likely the standards could be clarified further in the round of 
Policy review that will be conducted a year after the completion of Phase 2.

 

Regards,

Stella

 

 

On Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 11:02 PM Todd Allen <toddmal...@gmail.com> wrote:

Actually, you're technically even breaching it saying it here, since the 
mailing list is "outside the Wikimedia projects".

 

I would agree that this needs substantial clarification, especially regarding 
both spammers and already-public information.

 

Regards,

 

Todd Allen

 

On Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 12:02 PM Andreas Kolbe <jayen...@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Rosie,

 

Could you kindly also look at and clarify the following passage in the 
Universal Code of Conduct:

 

·     Disclosure of personal data (Doxing): sharing other contributors' private 
information, such as name, place of employment, physical or email address 
without their explicit consent either on the Wikimedia projects or elsewhere, 
or sharing information concerning their Wikimedia activity outside the projects.

 

As written, the first part of this says that contributors must no longer state 
– on Wikipedia or elsewhere – that a particular editor appears to be working 
for a PR firm, is a congressional staffer,[1] etc.

 

The second part forbids any and all discussion of contributors' Wikimedia 
activity outside the projects. (For example, if I were to say on Twitter that 
User:Koavf has made over 2 million edits to Wikipedia, I would already be in 
breach of the code as written.)

 

Thanks,

Andreas

 

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Congressional_staffer_edits

 

On Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 5:09 PM Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight 
<rstephen...@wikimedia.org> wrote:

Hello,

 

The Community Affairs Committee of the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees 
would like to thank everyone who participated in the recently concluded 
community vote on the 
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:MyLanguage/Universal_Code_of_Conduct/Enforcement_guidelines>
  Enforcement Guidelines for the Universal Code of Conduct (UCoC). 

 

The volunteer scrutinizing group has completed the review of the accuracy of 
the vote and has reported the total number of votes received as 2,283. Out of 
the 2,283 votes received, 1,338 (58.6%) community members voted for the 
enforcement guidelines, and a total of 945 (41.4%) community members voted 
against it. In addition, 658 participants left comments, with 77% of the 
comments written in English.

 

We recognize and appreciate the passion and commitment that community members 
have demonstrated in creating a safe and welcoming culture. Wikimedia community 
culture stops hostile and toxic behavior, supports people targeted by such 
behavior, and encourages good faith people to be productive on the Wikimedia 
projects. 

 

Even at this incomplete stage, this is evident in the comments received. The 
Enforcement Guidelines did reach a threshold of support necessary for the Board 
to review. However, we encouraged voters, regardless of how they were voting, 
to provide feedback on the elements of the enforcement guidelines. We asked the 
voters to inform us what changes were needed and in case it was prudent to 
launch a further round of edits that would address community concerns. 

 

Foundation staff who have been reviewing comments have advised us of the 
emerging themes. As a result, as Community Affairs Committee, we have decided 
to ask the Foundation to reconvene the Drafting Committee. The Drafting 
Committee will undertake another community engagement to refine the enforcement 
guidelines based on the community feedback received from the recently concluded 
vote. 

 

For clarity, this feedback has been clustered into four sections as follows:

 

1.    To identify the type, purpose, and applicability of the UCoC training;

2.    To simplify the language for more accessible translation and 
comprehension by non-experts; 

3.    To explore the concept of affirmation, including its pros and cons; 

4.    To review the conflicting roles of privacy/victim protection and the 
right to be heard.

 

Other issues may emerge during conversations, particularly as the draft 
Enforcement Guidelines evolve, but we see these as the primary areas of concern 
for voters. Therefore, we are asking staff to facilitate a review of these 
issues. Then, after the further engagement, the Foundation should re-run the 
community vote to evaluate the redrafted Enforcement Outline to see if the new 
document is ready for its official ratification.

 

Further, we are aware of the concerns with note 3.1 in the Universal Code of 
Conduct Policy. Therefore, we are directing the Foundation to review this part 
of the Code to ensure that the Policy meets its intended purposes of supporting 
a safe and inclusive community without waiting for the planned review of the 
entire Policy at the end of the year.

 

Again, we thank all who participated in the vote and discussion, thinking about 
these complex challenges and contributing to better approaches to working 
together well across the movement.

 

Best,

Rosie


  
<https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/yBcvUBz7x7xW_texDbyEnK7BKs9wPMPAI4NuqDit5ipBVl-TBu9JIdHdySi6iZA1UTcm3AzWcx8bfkDvjMaftQqxtKRkjORZgmQ53i7g9bVQ6rEy7NhGdz4mZ6AcTe2tIAyMD9wH>
 

Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight (she/her)

Acting Chair, Community Affairs Committee

 <https://wikimediafoundation.org/> Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees

 <https://wikimediafoundation.org/> 


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