Farsides Wiki:Privacy policy

This privacy policy is adapted from the 'Wikimedia Foundation Privacy Policy', and is available under the Creative Commons Share-Alike license.

General Scope
This policy covers personally identifiable information collected or stored by the HackIt project on its servers in relation to the Projects and their communities. We collect and retain the least amount of personally identifiable information needed to fulfill the Projects' operational needs.

The public and collaborative nature of the projects
Anyone with Internet access (and not otherwise restricted from doing so) may edit the publicly editable pages of this site with or without logging in as a registered user, and on several public tools, including a forum, mailing-lists and other public tools. By doing this, editors create published documents, and a public record of every word added, subtracted, or changed. This is a public act, and editors are identified publicly as the author of such changes. All contributions made to a Project, and all publicly available information about those contributions, are irrevocably licensed and may be freely copied, quoted, reused and adapted by third parties with few restrictions.

Activities on the HackIt project
In general, this Policy only applies to private information stored or held by the project which is not publicly available.

Interactions with the Project not covered by this Policy include, but are not limited to, aspects of browsing and editing pages, use of the "email user" function, in-game activity, subscribing and posting to project hosted email lists. These interactions may reveal a contributor's IP address, and possibly other personal information, indiscriminately to the general public, or to specific groups of volunteers acting independently of the project.

Users may also interact with one another outside of project sites, via email, IRC or other chat, or independent websites, and should assess the risks involved, and their personal need for privacy, before using these methods of communication.

User accounts and authorship
The project does not always require editors or players to register. Anyone can edit or play without logging in with a username, in which case they will be identified by network IP address. Users that do register are identified by their chosen username. Users select a password, which is confidential and used to verify the integrity of their account. Except insofar as it may be required by law, no person should disclose, or knowingly expose, either user passwords and/or cookies generated to identify a user. Once created, user accounts will not be removed. It may be possible for a username to be changed, depending on the policies of individual projects. The project does not guarantee that a username will be changed on request.

Purpose of the collection of private information
The project limits the collection of personally identifiable user data to purposes which serve the well-being of its projects, including but not limited to the following:


 * To enhance the public accountability of the projects. The project recognizes that any system that is open enough to allow the greatest possible participation of the general public will also be vulnerable to certain kinds of abuse and counterproductive behavior. The project and the project communities have established a number of mechanisms to prevent or remedy abusive activities. For example, when investigating abuse on a project, including the suspected use of malicious “sockpuppets” (duplicate accounts), vandalism, harassment of other users, or disruptive behavior, the IP addresses of users (derived either from those logs or from records in the database) may be used to identify the source(s) of the abusive behavior. This information may be shared by users with administrative authority who are charged by their communities with protecting the projects.
 * To provide site statistics. The Foundation statistically samples raw log data from users' visits. These logs are used to produce the site statistics pages; the raw log data is not made public.
 * To solve technical problems. Log data may be examined by developers in the course of solving technical problems and in tracking down badly-behaved web spiders that overwhelm the site.

IP and other technical information

 * When a visitor requests or reads a page, or sends email to a project server, no more information is collected than is typically collected by web sites. The project may keep raw logs of such transactions, but these will not be published or used to track legitimate users.


 * When a page is edited by a logged-in editor, the server confidentially stores related IP information. For editors who do not log in, the IP address used is publicly and permanently credited as the author of the edit. It may be possible for a third party to identify the author from this IP address in conjunction with other information available. Logging in with a registered username allows for better preservation of privacy.

Cookies

 * The sites set a temporary session cookie on a visitor's computer whenever a Project page is visited. Readers who do not intend to log in or edit may deny this cookie; it will be deleted at the end of the browser's session. More cookies may be set when one logs in to maintain logged-in status. If one saves a user name or password in one's browser, that information will be saved for up to 365 days, and this information will be resent to the server on every visit to the same Project. Contributors using a public machine who do not wish to show their username to future users of the machine should clear these cookies after use.

Page history

 * Actions in the game, edits or other contributions to a Project on its articles, user pages and talk pages are generally retained forever. Removing text from a project does not permanently delete it. Normally, in projects, anyone can look at a previous version of an article and see what was there. Even if an article is "deleted", a user entrusted with higher level of access may still see what was removed from public view. Information can be permanently deleted by individuals with access to project servers, but aside from the rare circumstance when the project is required to delete editing-history material in response to a court order or equivalent legal process, there is no guarantee any permanent deletion will happen.

User contribution

 * User contributions are also aggregated and publicly available. User contributions are aggregated according to their registration and login status. Data on user contributions, such as the times at which users edited and the number of edits they have made, are publicly available via user contributions lists, and in aggregated forms published by other users.

Reading projects

 * No more information on users and other visitors reading pages is collected than is typically collected in server logs by web sites. Aside from the above raw log data collected for general purposes, page visits do not expose a visitor's identity publicly. Sampled raw log data may include the IP address of any user, but it is not reproduced publicly.

Editing projects

 * Edits to Project pages and actions on actions in the game and on the different tools are identified with the username or network IP address of the editor, and editing history is aggregated by author in a contribution list. Such information will be available permanently on the projects.
 * Logged in registered users:
 * Logged in users do not expose their IP address to the public except in cases of abuse, including vandalism of a wiki page by the user or by another user with the same IP address. A user's IP address is stored on the servers, where it can be seen by server administrators and by users who have been granted CheckUser access.
 * IP address information, and its connection to any usernames that share it, may be released under certain circumstances (see below).
 * Editors using a company mail server from home or telecommuting over a DSL or cable Internet connection, are likely to be easy to identify by their IP address; in which case it may be easy to cross-identify all contributions to various Projects made by that IP. Using a username is a better way of preserving privacy in this situation.
 * Unlogged-in registered users and unregistered users:
 * Editors and players who have not logged in may be identified by network IP address. Depending on one's connection, this IP address may be traceable to a large Internet service provider or more specifically to a school, place of business or home. It may be possible to use this information in combination with other information, including editing style and preferences, to identify an author completely.

Discussions

 * On wiki discussion pages, forum and editable pages in the game or in the project tools:
 * Any editable page can theoretically be the location of a discussion. In general, discussions on the wiki occur on the forum, on user talk pages (associated with particular users), on article talk pages (associated with particular articles) or in pages specially designated to function as forums. Privacy expectations apply to discussion pages in the same way as they do elsewhere.
 * Via email:
 * Users who provide a valid email address enable other logged-in users to send email to them through the wiki and other tools. When receiving an email from other users through this system, one's email address is can be revealed to them. When choosing to send an email to other users, one's email is displayed as the sender.
 * The email address put into one's user preferences may be used by the project for communication. Users whose accounts do not have a valid email address will not be able to reset their password if it is lost. In such a situation, however, users may be able to contact one of the server administrators to enter a new e-mail address. A user can ask to remove the account's email address from his preferences at any time to prevent it from being used. Private correspondence between users may be saved at those users' discretion and is not subject to this policy.
 * On mailing lists:
 * The email addresses used to subscribe and post to Project mailing lists are exposed to other subscribers. The list archives of most such mailing lists are public, and searches of public archives may be performed on the Web. Subscribers' addresses may also be quoted in other users' messages. These email addresses and any messages sent to a mailing list may be archived and may remain available to the public permanently.
 * Via other tools:
 * Some e-mail addressesforward mail to a team of volunteers and staff members trusted by the project to use tools to respond. Mail sent to this system is not publicly visible if the author choses so, but volunteers and staff members selected by the project will have access to it. The tools team may discuss the contents of received mail with other contributors in order to respond effectively. Mail to private addresses of members of the project and to staff of the project may also be forwarded to the team. These messages and e-mail addresses may be saved by members of the team and any email service they use, and may remain available to them.
 * On IRC:
 * IRC channels are not officially part of the project and are not operated on project controlled servers. The IP address of users who chat over such a service may be exposed to other participants. IRC users' privacy on each channel can only be protected according to the policies of the respective service and channel. Different channels have different policies on whether logs may be published.

Access to and release of personally identifiable information
Access:

Projects are run by volunteer contributors and staff. Some dedicated users are chosen by the community to be given privileged access. For example, user access levels to the project can be determined by the user's presence in various 'user groups'.

Other users who may have access to private identifiable information include, but are not limited to, users who have access to different project tools, or to the CheckUser and Oversight functions, users elected by project communities to serve as stewards or Arbitrators, employees, trustees, appointees, and contractors and agents employed by the project, and developers and others with high levels of server access.

Sharing information with other privileged users is not considered "distribution."

Release: Policy on Release of Data

It is the policy of the project that personally identifiable data collected in the server logs, or through records in the database via the CheckUser feature, or through other non-publicly-available methods, may be released by project volunteers or staff, in any of the following situations:


 * 1) In response to a valid subpoena or other compulsory request from law enforcement,
 * 2) With permission of the affected user,
 * 3) When necessary for investigation of abuse complaints,
 * 4) Where the information pertains to page views generated by a spider or bot and its dissemination is necessary to illustrate or resolve technical issues,
 * 5) Where the user has been vandalizing articles or persistently behaving in a disruptive way, data may be released to a service provider, carrier, or other third-party entity to assist in the targeting of IP blocks, or to assist in the formulation of a complaint to relevant Internet Service Providers,
 * 6) Where it is reasonably necessary to protect the rights, property or safety of the Wikimedia Foundation, its users or the public.

Except as described above, the project policy does not permit distribution of personally identifiable information under any circumstances.

Third-party access and notifying registered users when receiving legal process:

As a general principle, the access to, and retention of, personally identifiable data in all projects should be minimal and should be used only internally to serve the well-being of the projects. Occasionally, however, the project may receive a subpoena or other compulsory request from a law-enforcement agency or a court or equivalent government body that requests the disclosure of information about a registered user, and may be compelled by law to comply with the request. In the event of such a legally compulsory request, the project will attempt to notify the affected user within three business days after the arrival of such subpoena by sending a notice by email to the email address (if any) that the affected user has listed in his or her user preferences.

The project cannot advise a user receiving such a notification regarding the law or an appropriate response to a subpoena. The project does note, however, that such users may have the legal right to resist or limit that information in court by filing a motion to quash the subpoena. Users who wish to oppose a subpoena or other compulsory request should seek legal advice concerning applicable rights and procedures that may be available.

If the project receives a court-filed motion to quash or otherwise limit the subpoena as a result of action by a user or their lawyer, the project will not disclose the requested information until project receives an order from the court to do so.

When an affected registered user does not provide an email address, the project will not be able to notify the affected user in private email messages when it receives requests from law enforcement to disclose personally identifiable information about the user.

Disclaimer
The project believes that maintaining and preserving the privacy of user data is an important value. This Privacy Policy, together with other policies, resolutions, and actions by the project, represents a committed effort to safeguard the security of the limited user information that is collected and retained on our servers. Nevertheless, the Foundation cannot guarantee that user information will remain private. We acknowledge that, in spite of our committed effort to protect private user information, determined individuals may still develop data-mining and other methods to uncover such information and disclose it. For this reason, the project can make no guarantee against unauthorized access to information provided in the course of participating in projects or related communities.