@merill@xenappblog Man... assuming no hybrid identity, I would assume you'd have to piece together activities across interactive and non-interactive sign-ins, etc. Would lastSuccessfulSignInDateTime show it?
Then explain it. You say you have bargaining power because it is 1000 editors... ok great. How does that 1000 editors factor into the 200k+ active editors? What makes these editors so special?
Feel free to counter any argument with something of substance if I don't know what I'm talking about.
The point is I think you vastly overestimate the worth of 1000 editors on a site that is criticized with biased editing. Sometimes valid, sometimes not. The English site has what 270k plus active editors, untold millions of other registered users who made editors. Those numbers are even higher if we look at the global site.
It wasn't too long ago when redditor mods went on strike and what happened there? In the end, nothing. Mods were replaced, subs were reopened, several alternatives came and went... Yet, nothing changed.
The same will happen here if those 1000 editors go on strike.
The critical part of being able to negotiate is coming from a position of power. I don't see what the editors have. Enlighten me.
@stephen_richer@DeidreHenderson They also scrub rolls every year, and verify everyone against the SAVE databases, monitor change of addresses before mailing ballots. Utah and Arizona are good examples of how it should be done... other states not so much. given what barely half of states use the SAVE program...
And? I think you overvalue that. Especially when you add on the reports of manipulation around a handful of editors controlling the narrative around I/P issues, paid editing, et al. There has to be strong public trust that these specific editors leaving would not be able to be replaced, and that it would make Wikipedia better with them. That last one is entirely subjective.
On what planet do volunteers who make unpaid changes to a website that anyone can sign up to and start changing, anywhere on the same level as an employee?
I don't understand what bargaining power you hjave here. Volunteers don't own the site; they don't have no legal protections, and any attempt to lock pages can be undone.
@IAMERICAbooted No shit. After two months of four teams trying to trouble shoot slow reboots on a ztna solution, I decided to bring them into a room together next week. Invites are out, their leaders told them to do it, today they decided to solve the problem. Silos kill corporate america
@tanpukunokami Depends on the family and the state. You see far more in rural communities and areas where you are dependent on natural resource extraction. My high school had a shooting team, in a suburban area, but the state I grew up in is considered rural by most definitions
@TunoiV@Zax90@RealBrittHughes In the words of the Virgin Mary, come again? Last time I read 1 Samuel 15:3, Numbers 31, and Exodus 12, a moral code commanded the death of children in the name of vengeance.
@ironmatto3@Zax90 There are over 4,000 different belief systems on this planet, each with its own variations in moral codes. All of them think they are true.
That quite literally is how it works bro. But for your scenario to apply, we'd have to assume that a group of masked thugs broke into the couples house, held her down, stuffed their arms up into her vagina, and pull the fetus out of her uterus against her will, and took it on a joyride before leaving it in a random parking lot somewhere, or scrapped it for stem cells or some shit.
@MikeTalonNYC@IAMERICAbooted Yes it did, but it was only for a year. Then they asked what we would move to, and I had to explain that they did not approve this year's demand to evaluate a new platform and will have to create an emergency project to do it now.