Today, we're launching a pioneering new code of conduct for addressing negative behavior on our sites, marking an important step in our 20-year evolution.
— Wikipedia (@Wikipedia) February 2, 2021
Learn more: https://t.co/H9quP2Q74N
Glad Wikimedia launched a Global CoC, but as the article says "A code of conduct without enforcement...is not going to be useful." I'm curious about enforcement (methods, rules, systems) in a global toxic community, where even prolific users can be toxic.https://t.co/zxiCoSe1c8
— caroline sinders (@carolinesinders) February 2, 2021
This is good to see and will be interesting to watch. Also notable how more and more sites are recognizing that Trust & Safety needs to include not just behavior on-site, but off-site as well. That's an increasingly important understanding. https://t.co/d6mprvqxPo
— Mike Masnick (@mmasnick) February 2, 2021
Today, we're launching a code of conduct that sets a universal baseline of acceptable behavior for the entire Wikimedia movement without tolerance for harassment. Learn more: https://t.co/i2MmjgsYrr
— Wikimedia Foundation (@Wikimedia) February 2, 2021
More good news from the wiki-world! Today, we're instituting a site-wide Universal Code of Conduct for participation in @Wikipedia and our other sites, creating clear standards of behavior and explicit definitions of harassment, on and off wiki. https://t.co/dMfw6OIbFT
— Katherine Maher (@krmaher) February 2, 2021
Today, we're launching a pioneering new code of conduct for addressing negative behavior on our sites, marking an important step in our 20-year evolution.
— Wikipedia (@Wikipedia) February 2, 2021
Learn more: https://t.co/H9quP2Q74N
.@Wikipedia Today in #BlackHistoryMonth2021 our BoT in partnership w/our volunteers has approved the 1st UCoC- fundamental to our future. https://t.co/t7UCbWGZcX
— Janeen Uzzell is asking #WhoTellsYourStory (@janeenuzzell) February 2, 2021
this is great news, and then this: today Wikipedia released its very first universal code of conduct, which bans harassment on & off the site, and the deliberate introduction of false or biased info. And it's only 1600 words! > https://t.co/vFue0FshEb https://t.co/isGCVc77nW
— alex pasternack (@pasternack) February 2, 2021