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Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act

 

 

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newsmarkie at googlemail

May 17, 2008, 7:22 AM

Post #1 of 21 (6215 views)
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Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act

from the wikileaks mailing list

regards

mark

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Wikileaks Press Release <press [at] wikileaks>
Date: Sat, May 17, 2008 at 2:18 PM
Subject: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under
the Communications Decency Act
To: newsmarkie [at] gmail
Cc: Wikileaks News Releases <news [at] lists>


Wikileaks Press Release
Sat May 17 14:09:38 GMT 2008

Wikileaks has revealed that the Wikimedia Foundation Board (which legally
controls Wikipedia.org and Wikinews.org) has killed off a Wikinews report
into the Barabara Bauer vs. Wikimedia Foundation case.

Wikinews.org is a collaborative general news site that often produces
quality original reportage and is meant to be editorially independent from
the WMF.

The WMF board also suppressed, prior to publication, a Wikinews
investigation into child and other pornography on Wikipedia, which was
subsequently and independently covered by Valley Wag and other media outlets
this week.

The US Communications Deceny Act (CDA) section 230 grants providers of
internet services (such as the Wikipedia and Wikinews) immunity from legal
action related to their user generated content provided they do not exercise
pre-publication control.

In deleting articles articles unfavourable to the WMF prior to publication,
Wikileaks states that the WMF control of Wikinews not only appears to lack
journalistic integrity but that "The Wikimedia Foundation may have set a
dangerous precedent that could see it lose its CDA section 230 immunity."

The EFF and Sheppard Mullin are using CDA section 230 as the primary defense
of the WMF in the Barbara Bauer defamation case.

WikiLeaks is an international union of organizations and individuals and is
unrelated to the WMF.

Links:

*
http://wikileaks.org/wiki/Wikinews_suppressed_article_on_Barbara_Bauer_vs._Wikipedia_case
*
http://wikileaks.org/wiki/Wikinews_suppressed_Wikipedia_pornography_investigation
* EFF and Sheppard Mullin Defend Wikipedia in Defamation Case
http://www.eff.org/press/archives/2008/05/02
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george.herbert at gmail

May 18, 2008, 1:54 AM

Post #2 of 21 (6102 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Hmm. I don't know that it's possible to exercise pre-publication
control when the article is live to the public the moment it's
created...

POST-publication control, such as removing libelous or offensive or
questionable content, has been held to be protected under CDA and
other legal theories.

I think WikiLeaks are confused.



--
-george william herbert
george.herbert [at] gmail

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node.ue at gmail

May 18, 2008, 4:29 AM

Post #3 of 21 (6082 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

It's certainly possible (and I'm not saying this is what happened
because I have absolutely no idea) that the articles were being
developed by someone who interviewed people who work for the
Foundation, and that person was forbidden to submit the articles, or
told to remove some things.

On 18/05/2008, George Herbert <george.herbert [at] gmail> wrote:
> Hmm. I don't know that it's possible to exercise pre-publication
> control when the article is live to the public the moment it's
> created...
>
> POST-publication control, such as removing libelous or offensive or
> questionable content, has been held to be protected under CDA and
> other legal theories.
>
> I think WikiLeaks are confused.
>
>
>
> --
> -george william herbert
> george.herbert [at] gmail
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
>

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guillom.pom at gmail

May 18, 2008, 5:10 AM

Post #4 of 21 (6078 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Hello,

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 1:29 PM, Mark Williamson <node.ue [at] gmail> wrote:
> It's certainly possible (and I'm not saying this is what happened
> because I have absolutely no idea) that the articles were being
> developed by someone who interviewed people who work for the
> Foundation, and that person was forbidden to submit the articles, or
> told to remove some things.

In which case, it would be self-censorship, not censorship nor
editorial control by the foundation.

--
Guillaume Paumier
[[m:User:guillom]]
"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you
have imagined." Henry David Thoreau

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wiki.ral315 at gmail

May 18, 2008, 8:13 AM

Post #5 of 21 (6091 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail> wrote:

> I think we all may be missing the point here, however. Regardless of
> the legalities, what possible business could WMF have in keeping
> Wikinews from publishing stories that are critical of WMF? Is this not
> about as clear a conflict of interest as you get?
>
> Personally, I don't agree that Virgin Killer is child porn (or porn at
> all, I see nothing sexual at all about the image), but the fact that I
> disagree with the story makes me no less disturbed to see it getting
> quashed. I'm glad for Wikileaks, this type of thing is totally
> unacceptable, and I'm doubly disappointed to see it from WMF. (Doesn't
> Wikinews have some type of "not censored" policy? Does that only apply
> if they don't dare criticize Wikimedia?)
>

I've seen the deleted article. I don't feel comfortable discussing
specifics, but there's no doubt in my mind that it was libelous (and on a
purely personal note, it was a horribly written article). I would hope that
administrators, and by extension, perhaps the Foundation, would act to
remove any articles that looked like that.

The Wikimedia Foundation has not censored Wikinews on previous stories that
criticized them (the Marsden affair, for example). When I first heard about
this, I was shocked; after reading the article itself, I realized why it was
deleted (and would have deleted it myself, honestly).

--
[[User:Ral315]]
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geo.plrd at yahoo

May 18, 2008, 10:23 AM

Post #6 of 21 (6091 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

I fail to see why this is so controversial. I serve as an editor for a student paper. If the administration sees legal issues with something, it is their prerogative to request removal or rewriting of stories. The publisher of any major news publication has the same power. Without this power, the newspaper would be shut down due to lawsuits.  
Although some people here scream censorship, I would like to thank everyone who worked on removing the libel from our site for their vigilance which keeps the doors open and the servers on.


----- Original Message ----
From: Ryan <wiki.ral315 [at] gmail>
To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l [at] lists>
Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2008 8:13:31 AM
Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail> wrote:

> I think we all may be missing the point here, however. Regardless of
> the legalities, what possible business could WMF have in keeping
> Wikinews from publishing stories that are critical of WMF? Is this not
> about as clear a conflict of interest as you get?
>
> Personally, I don't agree that Virgin Killer is child porn (or porn at
> all, I see nothing sexual at all about the image), but the fact that I
> disagree with the story makes me no less disturbed to see it getting
> quashed. I'm glad for Wikileaks, this type of thing is totally
> unacceptable, and I'm doubly disappointed to see it from WMF. (Doesn't
> Wikinews have some type of "not censored" policy? Does that only apply
> if they don't dare criticize Wikimedia?)
>

I've seen the deleted article.  I don't feel comfortable discussing
specifics, but there's no doubt in my mind that it was libelous (and on a
purely personal note, it was a horribly written article).  I would hope that
administrators, and by extension, perhaps the Foundation, would act to
remove any articles that looked like that.

The Wikimedia Foundation has not censored Wikinews on previous stories that
criticized them (the Marsden affair, for example).  When I first heard about
this, I was shocked; after reading the article itself, I realized why it was
deleted (and would have deleted it myself, honestly).

--
[[User:Ral315]]
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geo.plrd at yahoo

May 18, 2008, 10:25 AM

Post #7 of 21 (6065 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

When a trained attorney says something could cause a lawsuit, generally they are right, and generally the best course of action is to kill the something in question before someone dashes to their friendly neighborhood U.S. Courthouse.


----- Original Message ----
From: Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton [at] gmail>
To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l [at] lists>
Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2008 9:13:59 AM
Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act

On 18/05/2008, Jimmy Wales <jwales [at] wikia> wrote:
> Thomas Dalton wrote:
>  > As I explicitly said, it doesn't matter if you actually demand it or
>  > not, just saying there are legal concerns is effectively a demand for
>  > its removal.
>
>
> No, it is not.

Yes, it is. When a person in authority makes a suggestion that is
within the remit of that authority, there is no effective difference
between that and an order.

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swatjester at gmail

May 18, 2008, 10:28 AM

Post #8 of 21 (6077 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

The issue in short form (without taking any sides on it) is that your
student newspaper, if it writes something illegal, is liable as an
organization. Wikimedia, however, is protected under the CDA as long
as it acts as a provider, and not an editor. Wikileaks is implying
that by pulling the story they are acting as an editor. Mike Godwin is
saying otherwise. So, that's why this is controversial: because the
issue at hand is involving the potential liability of the foundation.

-Dan
On May 18, 2008, at 1:23 PM, Geoffrey Plourde wrote:

> I fail to see why this is so controversial. I serve as an editor for
> a student paper. If the administration sees legal issues with
> something, it is their prerogative to request removal or rewriting
> of stories. The publisher of any major news publication has the same
> power. Without this power, the newspaper would be shut down due to
> lawsuits.
> Although some people here scream censorship, I would like to thank
> everyone who worked on removing the libel from our site for their
> vigilance which keeps the doors open and the servers on.
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Ryan <wiki.ral315 [at] gmail>
> To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l [at] lists
> >
> Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2008 8:13:31 AM
> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in
> danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act
>
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail>
> wrote:
>
>> I think we all may be missing the point here, however. Regardless of
>> the legalities, what possible business could WMF have in keeping
>> Wikinews from publishing stories that are critical of WMF? Is this
>> not
>> about as clear a conflict of interest as you get?
>>
>> Personally, I don't agree that Virgin Killer is child porn (or porn
>> at
>> all, I see nothing sexual at all about the image), but the fact
>> that I
>> disagree with the story makes me no less disturbed to see it getting
>> quashed. I'm glad for Wikileaks, this type of thing is totally
>> unacceptable, and I'm doubly disappointed to see it from WMF.
>> (Doesn't
>> Wikinews have some type of "not censored" policy? Does that only
>> apply
>> if they don't dare criticize Wikimedia?)
>>
>
> I've seen the deleted article. I don't feel comfortable discussing
> specifics, but there's no doubt in my mind that it was libelous (and
> on a
> purely personal note, it was a horribly written article). I would
> hope that
> administrators, and by extension, perhaps the Foundation, would act to
> remove any articles that looked like that.
>
> The Wikimedia Foundation has not censored Wikinews on previous
> stories that
> criticized them (the Marsden affair, for example). When I first
> heard about
> this, I was shocked; after reading the article itself, I realized
> why it was
> deleted (and would have deleted it myself, honestly).
>
> --
> [[User:Ral315]]
> _______________________________________________
> foundation-l mailing list
> foundation-l [at] lists
> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> foundation-l mailing list
> foundation-l [at] lists
> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l


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gmaxwell at gmail

May 18, 2008, 10:47 AM

Post #9 of 21 (6073 views)
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Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 1:25 PM, Geoffrey Plourde <geo.plrd [at] yahoo> wrote:
> When a trained attorney says something could cause a lawsuit, generally they are right, and generally the best course of action is to kill the something in question before someone dashes to their friendly neighborhood U.S. Courthouse.

Yet Wikimedia gets email from (people claiming to be) the attorneys of
companies and people that the projects have written about, demanding
that articles be taken down or changed with some regularity, but as
far as I can tell their demands are not met with some regularity.

Wikinews, in particular, contains a lot of non-neutral and highly
opinionated material. I've complained about WN on the lists a number
of times. The articles posted to Wikileaks were, in my somewhat
considered opinion, far closer to non-libelous than some other
material on WN, but this is the first time that I'm aware of the WMF
directing the users to remove an article due to concerns like this.
(Thats not to say that it hasn't happened before, ... such things
don't tend to leave obvious public records).

The CDA argument is completely spurious. As Mike said, the case law
says otherwise (Zeran v. AOL). The theory that service providers must
be totally hands-off in order to retain immunity is a common piece of
slashdot armchair lawyer idiocy. Usually they chalk it up to "common
carrier status" but now it seems to be fashionable to chalk it up to
CDA 230. The irony is that CDA 230 is a big part of the reason why
that isn't true.

One of the biggest effects CDA 230 had was reversing the judicial
trend assigning responsibility for posts to providers who perform any
form of moderation (For example, Stratton-Oakmont & Porush v. Prodigy
which is no longer good law). Today, if the provider didn't have
knowledge of the libelous material posted by a user then you shouldn't
expect them to be held liable no matter how censorious, non-neutral,
or even sloppy they are. Moderation, including incomplete or
incompetent moderation, doesn't break the immunity provided by S. 230.

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geo.plrd at yahoo

May 18, 2008, 10:55 AM

Post #10 of 21 (6075 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Correct me if I'm wrong, but the liability only extends until they are made aware of it, right?



----- Original Message ----
From: Dan Rosenthal <swatjester [at] gmail>
To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l [at] lists>
Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2008 10:28:43 AM
Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act

The issue in short form (without taking any sides on it) is that your 
student newspaper, if it writes something illegal, is liable as an 
organization. Wikimedia, however, is protected under the CDA as long 
as it acts as a provider, and not an editor. Wikileaks is implying 
that by pulling the story they are acting as an editor. Mike Godwin is 
saying otherwise. So, that's why this is controversial: because the 
issue at hand is involving the potential liability of the foundation.

-Dan
On May 18, 2008, at 1:23 PM, Geoffrey Plourde wrote:

> I fail to see why this is so controversial. I serve as an editor for 
> a student paper. If the administration sees legal issues with 
> something, it is their prerogative to request removal or rewriting 
> of stories. The publisher of any major news publication has the same 
> power. Without this power, the newspaper would be shut down due to 
> lawsuits.
> Although some people here scream censorship, I would like to thank 
> everyone who worked on removing the libel from our site for their 
> vigilance which keeps the doors open and the servers on.
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Ryan <wiki.ral315 [at] gmail>
> To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l [at] lists
> >
> Sent: Sunday, May 18, 2008 8:13:31 AM
> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in 
> danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act
>
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail> 
> wrote:
>
>> I think we all may be missing the point here, however. Regardless of
>> the legalities, what possible business could WMF have in keeping
>> Wikinews from publishing stories that are critical of WMF? Is this 
>> not
>> about as clear a conflict of interest as you get?
>>
>> Personally, I don't agree that Virgin Killer is child porn (or porn 
>> at
>> all, I see nothing sexual at all about the image), but the fact 
>> that I
>> disagree with the story makes me no less disturbed to see it getting
>> quashed. I'm glad for Wikileaks, this type of thing is totally
>> unacceptable, and I'm doubly disappointed to see it from WMF. 
>> (Doesn't
>> Wikinews have some type of "not censored" policy? Does that only 
>> apply
>> if they don't dare criticize Wikimedia?)
>>
>
> I've seen the deleted article.  I don't feel comfortable discussing
> specifics, but there's no doubt in my mind that it was libelous (and 
> on a
> purely personal note, it was a horribly written article).  I would 
> hope that
> administrators, and by extension, perhaps the Foundation, would act to
> remove any articles that looked like that.
>
> The Wikimedia Foundation has not censored Wikinews on previous 
> stories that
> criticized them (the Marsden affair, for example).  When I first 
> heard about
> this, I was shocked; after reading the article itself, I realized 
> why it was
> deleted (and would have deleted it myself, honestly).
>
> --
> [[User:Ral315]]
> _______________________________________________
> foundation-l mailing list
> foundation-l [at] lists
> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> foundation-l mailing list
> foundation-l [at] lists
> Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l


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dgoodmanny at gmail

May 18, 2008, 1:22 PM

Post #11 of 21 (6074 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Libelous content is one thing; but as for "vile" -- there are a lot
of vile things and people in the world, and we need to cover them
objectively. Is it being seriously suggested the foundation intends to
remove sourced negative content depicting evil aspects fairly and
frankly when appropriate to an article? Or articles about people
that when written fairly inherently contain sourced strongly negative
content?

If not the standards of libel what broader standards are they proposing?

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 4:10 PM, Anthony <wikimail [at] inbox> wrote:
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 2:38 PM, Mike Godwin <mgodwin [at] wikimedia> wrote:
>> Anthony writes:
>>>
>>> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 10:10 AM, Mike Godwin
>>> <mgodwin [at] wikimedia> wrote:
>>>> My view continues to be that the Foundation should almost never
>>>> engage
>>>> in direct editing or removal of project content, except (as in DMCA
>>>> takedown notices) when we are required to do so by law.
>>>>
>>> FWIW, I think that's an absolutely terrible decision that is the cause
>>> of a great deal of completely unnecessary ill-will toward the
>>> Foundation and its projects.
>>
>> I think there will be unnecessary ill will towards the Foundation and
>> its projects no matter what we do or do not do.
>
> I meant to take care of that objection by the use of the word "unnecessary". :)
>
>> But I think there would be more
>> unnecessary ill will towards the Foundation and its projects if the
>> Foundation used a heavier hand in removing content, precisely because
>> it would give rise to the expectation that the Foundation is
>> positioning itself in a fundamentally editorial role.
>
> I don't think more than a very small number of people are ever going
> to know what role the Foundation is positioning itself in. Even the
> vast majority of project contributors don't have a clue whether the
> Foundation removed those articles itself or they told someone else to
> remove it or they pointed it out to someone who decided of their own
> free will to remove it.
>
> And of those who are inside enough to know the role the Foundation is
> positioning itself in, it can easily be explained to them that removal
> of content which clearly violates the pre-established and codified
> terms of service is *not* the same as having an editorial role over
> that content. When Yahoo removes a message from its message board
> because it violates its terms of service, do people claim that they
> now have an editorial role over all the other messages?
>
>> Look how much
>> ill will is generated simply because I suggested to members of the
>> community that there are legal problems associated with a couple of
>> Wikinews articles!
>
> A lot of this was due to a misunderstanding of Section 230 of the CDA,
> which I think you're promoting by this hands-off policy. A lot more
> was due to what was at least perceived as an uneven application of
> these so-called "suggestions". Some of it I think you'll get no
> matter what, but I think a fairly applied policy of removal of certain
> kinds of information will get less ill will than the current strategy.
>
>> Thomas Dalton, for example, thanks that's the
>> equivalent of an order.
>
> I tend to agree with him there, actually.
>
>> Me, I think it's better to explain what's
>> going on and ask the community to do the right thing in the hope that
>> they will take my advice.
>>
> And that's exactly what I think is so hugely irresponsible. The
> foundation is routinely made aware of absolutely vile and libelous
> content being broadcast via its servers. In those situations I think
> it has a responsibility to remove that content, not to point it out to
> someone and hope they do the right thing. These servers are the
> property of the Wikimedia Foundation. The Wikimedia Foundation has
> every right to enforce its terms of service for those who use its
> property, and I'd say they have a responsibility to do so when they
> are made aware of it.
>
>> If I did what you suggest, and simply removed material from Wikinews
>> that I thought would generate a legal problem, there would still be
>> ill-will ("Censorship!"), and I'd still be called upon to justify the
>> removal, and there's still be ginned-up controversy.
>
> Right, taking responsibility for the content that you knowingly
> broadcast to the world doesn't solve every problem, but it'd solve
> others. I think John Seigenthaler, for instance, would have a lot
> less of a problem with Wikipedia if the foundation would act to remove
> vile content from the history of its biographies rather than telling
> the community of the problem and hoping it figures out a solution.
>
> I think another thing which can and should be done is to remove
> unreviewed articles from Google searches, and to display only the
> reviewed versions of an article to the public unless they explicitly
> request the latest version. And I don't think the foundation should
> wait around for the communities to magically reach a consensus on this
> issue before implementing such a plan. And I don't think it's fair to
> blame it all on Brion when it gets turned on, either (certain other
> features seem to have been implemented that way). I believe this is
> an executive decision that should come from the top down, either from
> the executive director or from the board. You can blame it all on me
> if you want, though (but make sure it's implemented according to my
> specifications if you do so). :)
>
>> In addition,
>> potential litigants would perceive the Foundation as playing a heavier
>> editorial role than it does, and would be more likely to sue us in the
>> hope of either getting the statutory immunity overturned or of getting
>> it construed in a way that diminishes its protection. I believe it
>> helps to think through what the social consequences of the direct
>> action.
>>
> I guess this is a possibility, though I find it hard to believe that
> the current precedent that a service provider is exempt even from
> knowingly distributing libelous content will stick. Whether the
> courts or congress, something's gotta give. The WMF better hope it's
> not the courts that give first, if it's going to stick with its
> hands-off-lets-hope-the-community-does-something approach.
>
>>> The only semi-coherent explanation for
>>> it seems to be that it is required for protection under Section 230 of
>>> the CDA, but as you and I both know this is absolutely not correct.
>>> In fact, everything I have read on the matter suggests that the whole
>>> point of Section 230 of the CDA was to allow service providers to
>>> engage in direct removal of project content without becoming liable
>>> for that which it failed to remove.
>>
>> That's a correct reading of the reasoning behind Sec. 230.
>
> I'll be sure to webcite this email and link to it often. :)
>
>> And if
>> you're AOL or MSN or abc.com or Google, you can afford to pay for a
>> dozen summary judgments in your favor every week, on Sec. 230 grounds.
>>
>> That's not us, however. Better than defending Sec. 230 every time it
>> comes up is to lower the public's expectation that the Foundation is
>> going to step in and fix everything for a would-be plaintiff. That
>> way, we spend less donated money on cases.
>>
>> Now, you may be wealthy, Anthony, and so it may seem sensible to you
>> to invite lawsuits that you can then get dismissed on Sec. 230 grounds
>> -- a kind of very expensive version of whack-a-mole.
>>
> Nah, I've got the opposite defense. I'm broke, plus I live in Florida
> (home of some of the world's most debtor-friendly asset protection
> statutes), so there's no sense in anyone suing me in the first place.
> The WMF is obviously in a more precarious position, being cash poor
> but having some intangible assets with a high fair-market value.
>
>> But if the purpose of our engagement with the community of editors is
>> to empower them to add to the availability of the sum of human
>> knowledge, then it makes sense to empower the community to fix as many
>> problems with the content they provide as possible, rather than take
>> that responsibility away from them and place it in, say, me or Sue or
>> Cary. So I prefer to advise community members rather than give them
>> orders (as if they felt any obligation to follow my orders, which
>> hardly anyone does), and I believe it's wiser to reserve my own
>> ability to remove content even though Sec. 230 allows it. That may
>> seem like an "absolutely terrible decision" to you (not merely
>> terrible, but "absolutely" so!), but perhaps you're a better attorney
>> than I am.
>>
> My comment was not made from a legal standpoint. It may very well be
> slightly less risky from a legal standpoint to take this hands-off
> approach. I do find that hard to believe, because basically no other
> service provider in the US is adopting this extreme of a position, but
> then again the WMF does run by leaps and bounds the world's largest
> non-profit website. But to my mind the risk is worth taking, because
> the alternative is so outrageous. I guess you wouldn't make this
> information public, but maybe you can tell the board your estimate of
> exactly how much greater a risk it'd be facing by adopting a hands-on
> approach to removal of libel.
>
>> I should add that there is a complicating factor with regard to Sec.
>> 230, and that's that while simple removal is protected, it's unclear
>> whether every court would agree that more subtle substantive editing
>> is protected -- by engaging in the development of the content of an
>> article, the Foundation and its agents or employees may
>> unintentionally negate Sec. 230 immunity, depending on the scope and
>> substance of the editing. That's a legal question that I'm studiously
>> avoiding investing the Foundation's donated funds in finding an answer
>> to. I'd rather see a richer defendant sort that one out for us.
>>
> On this point, I think I agree.
>
> Anthony
>
> _______________________________________________
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>



--
David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG

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wikimail at inbox

May 18, 2008, 1:33 PM

Post #12 of 21 (6082 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 4:22 PM, David Goodman <dgoodmanny [at] gmail> wrote:
> Libelous content is one thing; but as for "vile" -- there are a lot
> of vile things and people in the world, and we need to cover them
> objectively. Is it being seriously suggested the foundation intends to
> remove sourced negative content depicting evil aspects fairly and
> frankly when appropriate to an article?

No, I intentionally used the phrase "vile and libelous", and I mean
that as content which is both vile and libelous (although I'd also
suggest immediately removing information that is both vile and false
and presented as true, but not libelous under [[Hustler Magazine v.
Falwell]]).

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node.ue at gmail

May 18, 2008, 3:31 PM

Post #13 of 21 (6066 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Uh-oh. Isn't there some sort of rule against mentioning that website?
Ever, at all?

Mark

On 18/05/2008, Anthony <wikimail [at] inbox> wrote:
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 4:34 PM, Jimmy Wales <jwales [at] wikia> wrote:
>> David Goodman wrote:
>>> Libelous content is one thing; but as for "vile" -- there are a lot
>>> of vile things and people in the world, and we need to cover them
>>> objectively. Is it being seriously suggested the foundation intends to
>>> remove sourced negative content depicting evil aspects fairly and
>>> frankly when appropriate to an article? Or articles about people
>>> that when written fairly inherently contain sourced strongly negative
>>> content?
>>
>> I know of no one who has proposed any such thing.
>>
> Rereading what I wrote I apparently forgot to add "and libelous" to
> one of my instances of vile. I realized as I was writing this that
> someone might misunderstand what I was saying in exactly this way.
>
> But to clarify, I was talking about Encyclopedia Dramatica type stuff,
> not neutrally and objectively covered unpleasant material.
>
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>

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dgoodmanny at gmail

May 18, 2008, 5:05 PM

Post #14 of 21 (6080 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Right, I asked the question not to quarrel or be dickish, but
precisely to get the sort of reasonable clarification you just gave.
Thanks.

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 4:46 PM, Anthony <wikimail [at] inbox> wrote:
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 4:34 PM, Jimmy Wales <jwales [at] wikia> wrote:
>> David Goodman wrote:
>>> Libelous content is one thing; but as for "vile" -- there are a lot
>>> of vile things and people in the world, and we need to cover them
>>> objectively. Is it being seriously suggested the foundation intends to
>>> remove sourced negative content depicting evil aspects fairly and
>>> frankly when appropriate to an article? Or articles about people
>>> that when written fairly inherently contain sourced strongly negative
>>> content?
>>
>> I know of no one who has proposed any such thing.
>>
> Rereading what I wrote I apparently forgot to add "and libelous" to
> one of my instances of vile. I realized as I was writing this that
> someone might misunderstand what I was saying in exactly this way.
>
> But to clarify, I was talking about Encyclopedia Dramatica type stuff,
> not neutrally and objectively covered unpleasant material.
>
> _______________________________________________
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>



--
David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG

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birgitte_sb at yahoo

May 18, 2008, 6:39 PM

Post #15 of 21 (6083 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

--- On Sun, 5/18/08, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail> wrote:

> From: Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail>
> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act
> To: "Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List" <foundation-l [at] lists>
> Date: Sunday, May 18, 2008, 4:44 PM
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 12:58 PM, Mike Godwin
> <mgodwin [at] wikimedia> wrote:
> >
> > Todd Allen writes:
> >
> >> I agree that not all legal concerns can be
> discussed publicly, and
> >> have made that point myself. And if the Foundation
> believes that there
> >> is a legal concern, it can certainly OFFICE the
> article in question.
> >
> > My belief is that OFFICE removals should be very rare,
> and that OFFICE
> > edits should be practically nonexistent.
> >
>
> On that, I would agree. However, when it -is- WMF taking an
> official
> action, it should be clearly marked as such. If it is not,
> it should
> be made absolutely, 100% clear that this is "Mike
> Godwin, the editor"
> not "Mike Godwin, the WMF representative" putting
> forth the position.
> What should be studiously avoided (ESPECIALLY in cases
> where the
> material at issue is critical of WMF) is some grey area
> between the
> two.

I don't see the issue here. If you are approached as an administrator and asked to delete something and given information about why this is recommended it is clearly a request. To be completely clear, I have been approached about such a thing in past (i.e. before Mike Godwin). There was no doubt in my mind that I was expected to use my judgment as an administrator and uphold the trust of my community and not follow advice I believed to based on grounds the community would dismiss even if they could not all be given access to the necessary info.

After all it is not like WMF doesn't have access to the database if they must remove something. If they are asking an admin it is a recommendation, no grey area about it.

Birgitte SB




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wikipedia at verizon

May 18, 2008, 8:49 PM

Post #16 of 21 (6080 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Birgitte SB wrote:
>
> --- On Sun, 5/18/08, Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail> wrote:
>
>
>> From: Todd Allen <toddmallen [at] gmail>
>> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act
>> To: "Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List" <foundation-l [at] lists>
>> Date: Sunday, May 18, 2008, 4:44 PM
>> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 12:58 PM, Mike Godwin
>> <mgodwin [at] wikimedia> wrote:
>>
>>> Todd Allen writes:
>>>
>>>
>>>> I agree that not all legal concerns can be
>>>>
>> discussed publicly, and
>>
>>>> have made that point myself. And if the Foundation
>>>>
>> believes that there
>>
>>>> is a legal concern, it can certainly OFFICE the
>>>>
>> article in question.
>>
>>> My belief is that OFFICE removals should be very rare,
>>>
>> and that OFFICE
>>
>>> edits should be practically nonexistent.
>>>
>>>
>> On that, I would agree. However, when it -is- WMF taking an
>> official
>> action, it should be clearly marked as such. If it is not,
>> it should
>> be made absolutely, 100% clear that this is "Mike
>> Godwin, the editor"
>> not "Mike Godwin, the WMF representative" putting
>> forth the position.
>> What should be studiously avoided (ESPECIALLY in cases
>> where the
>> material at issue is critical of WMF) is some grey area
>> between the
>> two.
>>
>
> I don't see the issue here. If you are approached as an administrator and asked to delete something and given information about why this is recommended it is clearly a request. To be completely clear, I have been approached about such a thing in past (i.e. before Mike Godwin). There was no doubt in my mind that I was expected to use my judgment as an administrator and uphold the trust of my community and not follow advice I believed to based on grounds the community would dismiss even if they could not all be given access to the necessary info.
>
> After all it is not like WMF doesn't have access to the database if they must remove something. If they are asking an admin it is a recommendation, no grey area about it.
>
Quite so. If anyone asks you to help with something they could
accomplish just as well without you, it's entirely your decision whether
or not to assist. "I'm not comfortable participating, ask someone else"
is totally fine as an answer.

--Michael Snow


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saintonge at telus

May 19, 2008, 12:12 AM

Post #17 of 21 (6063 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

Geoffrey Plourde wrote:
> When a trained attorney says something could cause a lawsuit, generally they are right, and generally the best course of action is to kill the something in question before someone dashes to their friendly neighborhood U.S. Courthouse.
I find that attitude absolutely frightening. Considerably more
frightening than the remote prospect of a lawsuit on which it is based.
An attorney has an obligation to his client to advise him that certain
activities could lead to a lawsuit. Nevertheless, statute law is not
the beginning and end of the law; it is not a cathedral where all must
bow down in prayer. Thorough advice would include not only a recitation
of the statute, but possible defences to a prima facie breach of that
statute. It would include advice on the likelihood of prosecution, and
ways to mitigate that likelihood. There could be any number of other
factors that could be raised, based on the specific situation. He needs
to bring the client to the point where he can make an informed decision.

In the end though, it's the client's decision, and that decision depends
as much on the client's risk tolerance. Accepting the consequences of
one's own action does not mean hanging on a lawyer's every word whenever
a decision needs to be made just to have the convenient excuse, "My
lawyer said ..." whenever things go wrong. Such irresponsible people
might just as well be getting their legal advice from a tarot card reader.

Ec

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wikimail at inbox

May 19, 2008, 4:27 AM

Post #18 of 21 (6074 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 11:49 PM, Michael Snow <wikipedia [at] verizon> wrote:
> Quite so. If anyone asks you to help with something they could
> accomplish just as well without you, it's entirely your decision whether
> or not to assist. "I'm not comfortable participating, ask someone else"
> is totally fine as an answer.
>
> --Michael Snow
>

True, but I'd still say such a situation is pretty much identical to
the WMF performing the action itself.

It's an interesting situation, because the act of deleting the article
is certainly not illegal. I guess it's embarrassing? Or bad PR? I
don't know. If you read my earlier posts you'll see I don't really
understand why the WMF doesn't just perform the deletion itself.

I guess my difficulty in coming up with a good analogy is that I was
thinking of actions which were bad things, but the action of deleting
a libelous article is a good one. So here goes. If I leave a bag of
saplings out on my front porch and I ask someone to plant a tree in my
front yard, is it far to say that I planted a tree in my front yard?
What if I just tell the person that the location of the saplings and
"explain to some length" how cool it would be if I had a tree there?

Then some newspaper story comes out about how I planted a tree in my
front yard, and when asked about the story I say something like "there
is absolutely no truth to that story and I'm shocked that anyone would
engage in such shoddy journalism".

Anthony

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thomas.dalton at gmail

May 19, 2008, 7:11 AM

Post #19 of 21 (6053 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

> I don't see the issue here. If you are approached as an administrator and asked to delete something and given information about why this is recommended it is clearly a request. To be completely clear, I have been approached about such a thing in past (i.e. before Mike Godwin). There was no doubt in my mind that I was expected to use my judgment as an administrator and uphold the trust of my community and not follow advice I believed to based on grounds the community would dismiss even if they could not all be given access to the necessary info.

But would you ever dismiss it if it was the foundation's lawyer
telling you there were legal concerns? We all know the law trumps
community policy.

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thomas.dalton at gmail

May 20, 2008, 4:50 AM

Post #20 of 21 (6023 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

> Both Mike and Jimmy have tried to be clear when they're communicating
> an official position. There have been problems with this in the past
> (the events leading to Erik's short desysopping, for example, among
> others), but I think in general everyone's more aware of this now.
> The bulk of administrators and I hope all the Stewards are aware of
> the issues and won't sanction when there's no clear "the Foundation
> OFFICE hat was on".

I think, when Mike is giving legal advice, it's natural to assume he's
doing that in an official capacity, regardless of what headgear he may
be wearing.

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Anthere9 at yahoo

May 20, 2008, 6:34 AM

Post #21 of 21 (6021 views)
Permalink
Re: Fwd: [WL-News] Wikimedia Foundation in danger of losing immunity under the Communications Decency Act [In reply to]

George Herbert wrote:
> On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 1:47 AM, Ray Saintonge <saintonge [at] telus> wrote:
>> Jimmy Wales wrote:
>>> Thomas Dalton wrote:
>>>
>>>> As I explicitly said, it doesn't matter if you actually demand it or
>>>> not, just saying there are legal concerns is effectively a demand for
>>>> its removal.
>>>>
>>> No, it is not.
>> It is hard to avoid the impression that every word spoken by the pope is
>> /ex cathedra/. You and Mike in particular will frequently want to
>> comment as ordinary editors, but it is hard to avoid arguments like "but
>> Jimbo wrote in June 2003 that ...." You may have no memory of what you
>> wrote then, and may even have changed views since, but for someone who
>> is trying to push a point of view it is an irrefutable argument to be
>> exploited.
>>
>> Much as I would decry it, there remains a level of deference to
>> authority within the projects that is not easily overcome. Much of what
>> you say is treated as a demand irrespective of whether you intended it
>> that way.
>
>
> Both Mike and Jimmy have tried to be clear when they're communicating
> an official position. There have been problems with this in the past
> (the events leading to Erik's short desysopping, for example, among
> others), but I think in general everyone's more aware of this now.
> The bulk of administrators and I hope all the Stewards are aware of
> the issues and won't sanction when there's no clear "the Foundation
> OFFICE hat was on".
>
> Unfortunately, this sort of situation can sometimes lead to a negative
> feedback loop. Jimmy tries to communicate in a neutral manner without
> overusing authority, and then once in a while has to drop an official
> action hammer on someone. Some will perceive this as arbitrary hand
> of god behavior and treat everything else Jimmy says more
> deferentially as you note. Which was the opposite of the initial
> intent.
>
> I think that as a general rule, that can be combated by attempting to
> get to know Jimmy if you have to deal with him - and, generalizing,
> get to know the people in the "power structure" as it is both in the
> community and Foundation.
>
> Familiarity usually breeds some mutual respect and lessens the
> tendency to overreact in stress situations. A great deal of potential
> problems are headed off because someone does send a private email to
> someone else, or ask on IRC, or knows someone from posts to wikien-L
> or the foundation list.
>
>

I could not agree more.
It should be pointed out that Jimbo does not have the authority to act
alone, in the name of the Foundation. As WMF person, he does not have
any more authority than any other board member.

If an action is "board approved", then it must have been approved by the
entire board. If the action seem to be "under approval of board", then a
wise move might be to check with another board member.

If an action is more operational in nature (such as a legal-related
removal), it should probably be done by our lawyer, or under order of
our lawyer, by a staff member. (office hat on).
I would advise that Jimbo never do "office" action. He is no office. It
might be confused with authoritative action. And Mike is probably much
more likely to make a decision strictly based on legal considerations.

If the move does not belong to either of the two above categories, then
it is a "personal" edit, and should be treated as such. Which means it
is up to the community to decide whether Jimbo has a special authority
to edit or not.


Ant


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