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O'Reilly's rules, like a non-binding resolution may be a nice gesture, but useless in reality.
- Amanda
I agree with you in the "Take on their concerns head on and remain calm" part, but whatever happened to content? Tim's post is as civilized, calm as ever, but he is ignoring /twisting the facts.
The summary of his take-aways makes it look like most of the feedback was on refining "the Code", proposing improvements. That's BS, sorry, but have to call it what it is. The overwhelming feedback was complete rejection of "the Code".
Tim can certainly maintain his own view, just don't pretend it's the take-away from the public feedback.
Every time Tim tries to "clarify", it takes him more and more space. That's a real sign that this is just a bad idea. Clarification should take less space, since it builds on the original.
Either Tim's a dreadful writer, or this is just not a good idea.
"looked a lot like a mob because the feedback was so consistently anti the proposal."
looked like a mob? Hang on. How is the apparent overwhelming rejection of Tim's proposal any different than the "majority" voting against something in politics? Granted there wasn't an official vote, but I'm guessing if there was the outcome would have been the same. (and probably explains why Tim didn't even put it to a vote)
"My goal here was to propose a system that would make it easier for sites to state their policies without having to write their own. There's no intent to create a single code that every blog is somehow supposed to sign up for, any more than the idea of Creative Commons is to say that every site must abide by their own policies."
Read "Mechanism is better than policy" and "There are some nuanced legal issues to be looked at." sections before making these misdirected comments.
And no, he's not trying to push "the Code". From TO's post:
"The mechanisms I proposed may not be the right ones, but I am convinced that the goal is worthwhile. Let's figure out the right way to reach it."
Neither O'Reilly or Wales is suggesting what I term in my parallel post (sorry Robert), the prospect of a Bureau of Online Blogs, or BOOB for short. Please read an interact rather than react to articles people put their time into.
Perhaps that should be the first rule of the Web 3.0 code of conduct, if you don't read do not enter. :)
Blogging Code of Conduct is a nice concept but it is not very economic for all the web users. It is against the law to post sensitive information online such as social security, age and health information, whether it is true or false. It involved Civil monetary penalties. We can let the law to regulate the bad apples. Those unfriendly suspicious images and comments will help the law enforcement to hunt down the bad apples.
I will be back for a story...
What nuanced legal issues? Bloggers can disallow any type comments they want. No one has the "right" to post a comment on someone's blog. So, I'm curious what "nuanced legal issues" there could possibly be.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/online-s...
Shelley Powers wasn't too impressed about their treatment of content on her blog either.
If you could help clear this up, I'd sure appreciate it.
A word I used in my blog response to this was 'sanctimonious' - I think it is exactly the sort of attitude Tim is showing right now, and it is why I will never take part in any Code of Conduct which has his name associated with it.
I found your posting via Google and would like to hear your opinion
regarding http://www.trustedblogging.com before it becomes public.
How do you like the concept?
/s
first bubble? No. Or if there was, it was orders of magnitude more
expensive than what startups can diamond kitty currently afford -- that's a real
difference in economics. So is the existence of Google Apps, and of
Amazon's EC2 and Simple DB, and even of Basecamp, for that matter.