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Loidhne 60:
"At times, our contributor communities and projects have suffered from a lack of guidelines that can help us together create an environment where free knowledge can be shared safely without fear.There has been talk about the need for a global set of conduct rules in different communities over time. Recently, Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees announced a Community Culture Statement, asking for new standards to address harassment and promote inclusivity across projects. The universal code of conduct will be a binding minimum set of standards across all Wikimedia projects, and will apply to all of us, staff and volunteers alike, all around the globe."
 
I saw this piece you posted elsewhere. It is very cute, but unfortunately it doesn't reflect the fact that the real threat to editors comes from governments such as China's or Iran's, where people can be imprisoned, tortured or even executed for saying the wrong thing. If you want "fear", then it should refer to that, not to someone disagreeing with someone else online.

Words like "community" and "inclusivity" are frequently used these days to mean the opposite of what they actually mean, and instead to pander to a narrow authoritarian mindset, which represents neither diversity of opinion nor genuine inclusivity, but usually the wishes of a small group of self-selected individuals. Wikipedia has gone rapidly downhill since its beginnings and this does not reflect its original ideals. It is written to sound appealing, but it will result in the opposite of what it claims.-[[Sònraichte:Contributions/86.184.193.152|86.184.193.152]] 22:06, 17 dhen Dùbhlachd 2020 (UTC)