Logo de OpenStreetMap OpenStreetMap

are we becoming a victim of our own success?

Publicado por maning el 19 abril 2010 en English.

In the next few hours (or minutes), we will have our 250k user signing-up. In our side of the patch (PH), we are getting more contributors as well. However, this comes with price. Very recently, we are seeing more "suspicious edits". As good OSM citizen we "politely" send them messages.

Some of these suspicious edits are then removed as soon as possible.

Just a few hours ago, someone sent me a message that on another mapping project, the user is copying OSM data. We have proven that the data indeed came from OSM. Thankfully, the maintainers quickly discarded these contributions.

As OSM becomes more of a force here in the Philippines, I foresee that we will be getting more of this kind of contributions. We can't monitor everything. We need more tools to monitor this behavior.

Ícono de correo electrónico Icono de Bluesky Ícono de Facebook Ícono de LinkedIn Ícono de Mastodon Ícono de Telegram Ícono X

Discusión

Comentario de iandees el 19 de abril de 2010 a las 16:18

Can you describe what you would be looking for in such a tool?

Comentario de mcwetboy el 19 de abril de 2010 a las 17:59

I'm curious: what would be an example of a suspicious edit?

Comentario de maning el 20 de abril de 2010 a las 01:18

@yellowbkpk,
Some way we can easily look and compare whether the source is legitimate. We request contributors to add a source tag, but this is optional. We ask them to upload traces but again, this is optional. It's difficult to determine whether a contribution is legit or not. You have to be very "suspicious" and then turn around and say we respect each and every contribution.

@mcwetboy, copying for copyrighted material without explicit permission

Iniciar sesión para dejar un comentario