Difference between revisions of "Wikispooks talk:Importing From Wikipedia"

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(add topic)
 
m (→‎Attribution: clarify)
Line 2: Line 2:
 
Discussion started following observations by [[User:Geo Swan]] [[User talk:Patrick Haseldine#Recognizing wikipedia contributors' IP rights?|here]] and [[User talk:Peter#Attribution question?|here]].
 
Discussion started following observations by [[User:Geo Swan]] [[User talk:Patrick Haseldine#Recognizing wikipedia contributors' IP rights?|here]] and [[User talk:Peter#Attribution question?|here]].
  
I agree that ''credit where credit is due'' is a good maxim and one which Wikispooks should make every effort to adhere to honestly. That said, ''every effort'' risks a descent into legalistic trivia. I'm satisfied that, to property credit a source site/date is probably sufficient in the vast majority of cases. On the question of imported Wikipedia pages that have been or MAY be deleted, my feeling is that to preserve the editing history purely for the purposes of individual contributor attribution is not necessary. Why? As publisher a balance has to be struck. The main considerations as I see them are:
+
I agree that ''credit where credit is due'' is a good maxim and one which Wikispooks should make every effort to adhere to honestly. That said, ''every effort'' risks a descent into legalistic trivia. I'm satisfied that, to property credit a source, site/date is probably sufficient in the vast majority of cases. On the question of imported Wikipedia pages that have been or MAY be deleted, my feeling is that to preserve the editing history purely for the purposes of individual contributor attribution is not necessary. Why? As publisher a balance has to be struck. The main considerations as I see them are:
 
# The number of pages likely to be involved
 
# The number of pages likely to be involved
 
##likely to be small in relation to the entire site contents.
 
##likely to be small in relation to the entire site contents.

Revision as of 17:46, 16 February 2014

Attribution

Discussion started following observations by User:Geo Swan here and here.

I agree that credit where credit is due is a good maxim and one which Wikispooks should make every effort to adhere to honestly. That said, every effort risks a descent into legalistic trivia. I'm satisfied that, to property credit a source, site/date is probably sufficient in the vast majority of cases. On the question of imported Wikipedia pages that have been or MAY be deleted, my feeling is that to preserve the editing history purely for the purposes of individual contributor attribution is not necessary. Why? As publisher a balance has to be struck. The main considerations as I see them are:

  1. The number of pages likely to be involved
    1. likely to be small in relation to the entire site contents.
  2. The sensitivity of their contributors to attribution preservation.
    1. Again likely to be small in relation to the entire contributor cohort
  3. Available contributor recourse where he/she feels aggrieved at alleged/possible Wikispooks non-attribution
    1. Ranges from threat of legal-action (I consider such a possibility negligible) to complaint (complaints would/will be dealt with objectively and appropriate action taken if judged valid)
  4. The likely size of the item 3 issue.
    1. Tiny - considering the average ratio of layout/tidying/typo edits versus substantive original work.

So we have a tiny proportion of pages of which a tiny proportion of contributors MAY have an issue, all but a vanishingly tiny proportion of whom could be dealt with by way of a sympathetic hearing to a complaint - All that discounts malicious intent of course, but that kind of attack is not deflected by careful attention to the minutia of attribution and licensing anyway.

There are clearly other reasons for wishing to preserve contribution history but, on balance, I feel it an unnecessary imposition to do so as a matter of policy just for attribution/licensing reasons

Comments anyone??

--Peter P (talk) 07:28, 16 February 2014 (GMT)--Peter P (talk) 07:28, 16 February 2014 (GMT)