User:Moonriddengirl#What I do elsewhere

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|'''If you want to [{{fullurl:User talk:Moonriddengirl|action=edit§ion=new}} leave me a message], please use my talk page. Remember to sign your message with ~~~~. I will respond to all civil comments there, unless you specify that you would rather I respond on yours.

{{divbox|orange|Notice|I work for or provide services to the Wikimedia Foundation, but this is my personal account. Edits, statements, or other contributions made from this account are my own, and may not reflect the views of the Foundation.

To contact me in my role at the Wikimedia Foundation, please find contact details at User:Mdennis (WMF). To speak to me as a volunteer on Wikipedia, please leave your message at User talk:Moonriddengirl. Please note, however, that I am almost entirely inactive as a volunteer, something I fully expect will change in years to come.}}

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{{User time zone|North American Eastern Time Zone{{!}}EDT|watch}}

{{User Wikipedian For|year=2007|month=4|day=8}}

{{User Custom Articles Started|413|January 6 2019|Lindy Lee}}

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What I do here

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| info = This user regularly helps conduct Multiple copyright infringement Investigations.

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{{User WikiProject Copyright Cleanup}}

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{{User:Bibliomaniac15/Today/Happy Me Day!|month=April|day=21|year=2009}}

{{User:SteveBaker/Userboxes/AwesomeWikipedianDay|Moonriddengirl|7 June 2009}}

{{User:SteveBaker/Userboxes/AwesomeWikipedianDay|Moonriddengirl|20 January 2011}}

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Although I don't show up often to volunteer (such an understatement it deserves a gigglesnort), my current primary focus on Wikipedia when I do remains addressing copyright concerns. I really enjoy article work, but don't get to write much. There's just so much mopping up to do.

I emphasize collaboration and courtesy. Working on an encyclopedia can be very stressful; Assuming good faith sometimes requires active effort, but it's worth it. :Misanthropy does not make a happy Moonriddengirl. Like many people, I sometimes get tunnel vision while working. While I hope I am never rude as a result, I know that sometimes I am more businesslike than others. While occasionally adminship may also require a businesslike approach, I generally prefer to be amiable. If I have seemed unduly brusque with you, please excuse me.

I possess one other sometimes active account on Wikipedia, User:Moonriddengirl2, created for use while traveling so as not to risk compromising the log-in information of my primary account. I have also created two doppelgänger accounts, User:Moonriddengir! and User:MRG, by which abbreviated name I am often called.

==When summary isn't acceptable==

The US government utilizes a "substantial similarity" test intended to determine if infringement exists. Melville Nimmer produced subcategories of "substantial similarity" for which the courts search. In the first, they look for "fragmented literal similarity", checking for phrases and passages copied or closely paraphrased from the original text. Unless such phrases are defensible as fair use, their presence is a strong indicator of infringement. (Note that on Wikipedia, such phrases must always conform to our non-free content guideline.) This is a definition of copyright with which most contributors are familiar.

But in the second, courts look for "comprehensive non-literal similarity." Even if there is no verbatim duplication of the copyrighted original, infringement can be found if the new version follows so closely on the structure of the original that copying is clear. As the US Court of Appeals noted in discussing Artica v. Palmer, et al. (970 F.2d 106, 1992): "A plaintiff succeeds under this doctrine when it shows that the pattern or sequence of the two works is similar."[http://floridalawfirm.com/arica.html] Wikipedia's contributors are cautioned here against utilizing great detail in summarizing or analyzing, to avoid creating a derivative work, as only the original copyright holder has the legal right to license derivative works.

This can be a challenge in practice, but we do need to be careful to comply, since word-for-word duplication is not the limit of copyright infringement. Basically, what this means is that you can't read an article in The Fabulous Encyclopedia of Everything and reproduce it here, not even if you tweak the language a bit so that there is no "literal similarity." A close paraphrase of another source (whether comprehensive or fragmented) may be a derivative work, which is actionable unless it meets the fair use doctrine. If substantial similarity exists, you (yes, you, if you added it here) could be in trouble. Wikipedia could potentially be in trouble along with you. The best way to avoid this is to not only substantially restructure the article, but also to incorporate additional sources. If you're drawing on multiple sources, you're less likely to be taking too much from one.

To read more about summary, I heartily recommend the following:

=== Importing PD or "Free" license ===

Sometimes, material may be already free for use, and it can be a simple matter of providing evidence of that (for one example, by providing a link to show where on the site the material is already placed in public domain). If it is released under free license, it may come down to a question of whether the licenses are compatible with CC-By-SA. (Source: [http://wiki.creativecommons.org/FAQ#Can_I_combine_two_different_Creative_Commons_licensed_works.3F_Can_I_combine_a_Creative_Commons_licensed_work_with_another_non-CC_licensed_work.3F])

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colspan="4" style="background-color: orange; color: white;" | License Compatibility
colspan="4" | Creative Commons Licenses
colspan="2" | License/Compatiblecolspan="2" | License/Compatible
CC-By-NC{{n}}CC-By 2.0{{y}}
CC-By-NC-ND{{n}}CC-By 2.5{{y}}
CC-By-ND{{n}}CC-By 3.0{{y}}
CC-By-NC-SA{{n}}CC-By-SA 1.0, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0{{y}}
CC-By-NC-SA{{n}}CC-By-US 3.0{{y}}
colspan="4" | Other Licenses
Any GNU only license{{n}}GFDL & CC-By or CC-By-SA{{y}}

If there is no indication of free license at the source page, you will need to verify permission. See the next section.

=Deletions=

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I am not currently heavily involved in deletions aside from those related to copyright, but considering that I dedicated almost the first full year of my adminship to tool use in the speedy deletion queue, contributors might be interested in knowing more about my work there. For specifics on copyright deletions, please see above.

=Adminship=

I am completely open to civil, good faith discussions about my admin actions. If I'm doing something wrong, I really want you to tell me, so that I can start doing it correctly. If I see you making a mistake, I'm going to point it out to you as diplomatically as I can and consider that I'm doing you a favor. So, please, do me the favor, too. Admins, if you see that I've made a mistake, please fix it. If you reverse my admin actions, I would be grateful if you'd leave me a nice note telling me what you've done and why and if you would be open to discussion with me should I disagree. (See "Grievances by users" for other steps & options for dealing with tool misuse.)

I think adminship is a job that needs to be taken seriously and used with responsibility. Admins are in a unique position to alienate other editors, if they misuse the tools. Certainly, I can't think of much that would have more discouraged me as a newcomer than being unjustly blocked or having an article unfairly deleted. This is one of the reasons why I support process. As experienced editors, we may be able to look at that article on that piece of software and just know that it cannot possibly survive AfD because it simply is not notable, but deleting it out of process can only undermine the creator's sense of trust in the community. We want them to follow procedure; we should be willing to demonstrate that we will, too.

When I evaluate adminship requests (which I don't do often, unless I see a situation where I believe my input may have value, because it can take me hours), I am looking particularly for what I perceive to be a risk of misuse of the tools in a way that might seriously harm the project. Since admins are often perceived as authorities (correctly in ways involving the tools, incorrectly in matters of ordinary content disputes), I believe that incivility is likely to cause serious harm to the project. Civility is not a suggestion; it's policy, #4 of the five pillars. (You'll remember that note above: if we want other users to follow procedure, we certainly should demonstrate that we will.) I am also highly concerned when I fear a tendency to misapply speedy deletion criteria. Speedy deletions are often unevaluated. Since content is hidden from ordinary editors, it is one of the least transparent uses of the admin tools. There is always deletion review, but new contributors in particular are unlikely to pursue that avenue. Wikipedia relies on admins to use good judgment here and to know and follow community consensus as set out at WP:CSD. I look meticulously for evidence that admin candidates do not, as this is one area where mistakes may go undiscovered and damage the project for a very long time.

What I do elsewhere

File:Chang'e_flies_to_the_moon_-_Project_Gutenberg_eText_15250.jpg]]

I have a wide variety of interests—including videogames, music, movies, and books. I have an advanced degree in a liberal arts field and have spent many, many hours studying languages that nobody living speaks. (In other words, I have what some describe as a high tolerance for pointless activity.) My work off wiki is nowhere near as diverse and varied as what I do here. I have loved being exposed to so many different subjects. I write fiction in my spare time and sometimes argue with my husband over control of the remote. You may occasionally find me playing Rock Band with my teenage son.

My username comes from a poem by Denise Levertov, "In Mind", but the name is significant to me on a number of metaphoric levels.

I am, in my own opinion, the queen of malapropisms and unintended puns. On Wikipedia, preview sometimes helps me catch these; often it does not. I generally notice them seconds after I've hit "save page." I suspect there are many I've never noticed. No mistake I've ever made on Wikipedia, though, has amused me more than [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Khwaja_Salimullah&diff=prev&oldid=233156224 this one]. (No, not even including [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=14th_Street_%28Hoboken%29&action=historysubmit&diff=330236919&oldid=330235365 this]. But I note that I am not only now rewarding copyvios, but evidently preparing them. I need to be stopped. 25px)

Barnstars

Barnstars are a way of saying "Good work" to another editor. Appreciation can also be conveyed more informally (but just as meaningfully!) with a note. A lot of solitary hours go into building the project, and community support = a good thing. I appreciate those people who've taken the time to offer encouragement in any way. And since Barnstars are pretty, I'm displaying mine proudly here. Thanks. It's nice working with you.

See also