[OSM-talk] Re; [Tagging] was, This list requires moderation

Tom Hughes tom at compton.nu
Sun Feb 7 17:05:25 UTC 2021


And what evidence do have that those things haven't happened?

Tom

On 07/02/2021 16:42, 80hnhtv4agou--- via talk wrote:
> https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy#Long-term_blocks 
> <https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy#Long-term_blocks>
> Before a user is blocked permanently, they will have received at least 
> one warning, in their own language, telling them explicitly that an 
> longer block will be considered if they continue with their offending 
> behavior.
> A long-term block can only be placed after an internal DWG discussion 
> and if there is consensus within DWG.
> 
>     Sunday, February 7, 2021 10:33 AM -06:00 from Tom Hughes
>     <tom at compton.nu>:
>     I'm sure you'll be happy to tell us which part of the policy
>     that is contrary to?
> 
>     Tom
> 
>     On 07/02/2021 15:47, 80hnhtv4agou--- via talk wrote:
>      > this person is DWG.
>      > https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck_repair
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck_repair>
>      > <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck_repair
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck_repair>>
>      > https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck>
>      > <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck>>
>      > and blocks people for ten years,
>      > https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck/blocks_by?page=1
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck/blocks_by?page=1>
>      > <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck/blocks_by?page=1
>     <https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/woodpeck/blocks_by?page=1>>
>      > contrary to the OSMF ban policy.
>      > https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy
>     <https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy>
>      > <https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy
>     <https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Ban_Policy>>
>      >
>      > Sunday, February 7, 2021 6:34 AM -06:00 from Frederik Ramm
>      > <frederik at remote.org </compose?To=frederik at remote.org>>:
>      > Hi,
>      >
>      > I've chosen a somewhat cheeky subject on purpose. I don't mean to say
>      > that this list requires a moderator, or that people on this list are
>      > impolite and offensive and all that stuff - on the contrary, this
>      > mailing list is a place where discussions are generally factual
>     and we
>      > don't have trolls, abuse, bigotry, or any of that.
>      >
>      > What I am calling for is moderation in the sense of restraint, or (a
>      > definition from the Merriam-Webster dictionary) "observing reasonable
>      > limits".
>      >
>      > Discussions about tagging are important for OSM, and it is good that
>      > they are being held here on an open mailing list. It is also good
>     that
>      > we are actually discussing and not just upvoting and downvoting.
>     I don't
>      > want to change any of that.
>      >
>      > But the sheer volume of discussion is making it difficult for many to
>      > follow the debates. And let's be honest: About 75% of the discussion
>      > could be cut if we applied a little bit of ... moderation.
>      >
>      > Things that I see too often:
>      >
>      > * Repetition of one's own arguments. If you say something, and
>     someone
>      > else opposes that, simply let it stand. You have said your thing, the
>      > other guy has said their thing, you don't need to say "but I
>     still think
>      > that" and then repeat everything in other words.
>      >
>      > * Repetition of someone else's arguments in different words. All too
>      > often we have five people essentially saying the same thing in
>     slightly
>      > different words. Everyone believes that the other person has got it
>      > *almost* right but they want to add one tiny bit, or stress another
>      > aspect, and boom, there goes a new three-page essay.
>      >
>      > * Quick-fire responses. One person writes something, and three others
>      > reply immediately, without having fully read or understood the other
>      > responses, leading to a broad overlap between responses. If
>     people were
>      > willing to wait a little longer, maybe they could do away with their
>      > response altogether because someone else has already said it.
>      >
>      > * Mistaking the list for a voting platform - while it is important to
>      > gauge what the community opinion is, if one person says something and
>      > three others have opposed, then it is not necessary to add a fourth,
>      > fifth, and sixth opposing voice. Three against is clear enough.
>      >
>      > * Wanting to comment on everything - there's a few people here
>     who seem
>      > to see it as their responsibility to participate in every single
>     thread.
>      > I've been there, done that. Nowadays I still read all the
>     threads, and I
>      > ask myself: Is this an emergency where people will do something
>     really
>      > bad if I don't join the discussion and try to steer them away? If it
>      > isn't, then I try to remain silent on that topic even if (!) I think
>      > that people are maybe overlooking a minor detail or the
>     discussion isn't
>      > going exactly as I would like it.
>      >
>      > Before you post to this mailing list, remember that every single post
>      > uses some bandwidth, and bandwidth is limited. The more bandwidth is
>      > wasted on unnecessary "I 99% agree but there's this one little thing
>      > that I feel I need to write three pages about", the less bandwidth
>      > remains for the important stuff. And a high-bandwidth mailing list
>      > presents a higher hurdle for participation, so the more unnecessary
>      > words we make, the fewer people will be willing and able to
>     participate.
>      >
>      > Before you post, ask yourself: Does what I have to say really have an
>      > impact? Is what I am about to write something that the 100s of
>     readers
>      > of this list need to read?
>      >
>      > Set yourself reasonable limits; think about how you can help us
>     all to
>      > save bandwidth. For example such limits could be "don't send more
>     than
>      > one message per day on average", or "try to make it a habit to
>     reply to
>      > things on the next day, rather than on the same day - unless your
>     reply
>      > has already been made redundant by then".
>      >
>      > I think this mailing list is important and good work is being
>     done here,
>      > and I want to keep it functioning. Hence this call for
>     "moderation", in
>      > the sense of "observing reasonable limits". Your help is greatly
>      > appreciated.
>      >
>      > Bye
>      > Frederik
>      >
>      > --
>      > Frederik Ramm ## eMail frederik at remote.org
>     </compose?To=frederik at remote.org>
>      > </compose?To=frederik at remote.org> ## N49°00'09" E008°23'33"
>      >
>      >
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>     <https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk>
>      >
> 
> 
>     --
>     Tom Hughes (tom at compton.nu)
>     http://compton.nu/ <http://compton.nu/>
> 
> 
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> 


-- 
Tom Hughes (tom at compton.nu)
http://compton.nu/



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