Transparency guidance: Difference between revisions
(+ category "Open Food Facts policies and guidelines") |
(+ Privacy guidance) |
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Privacy guidance]] | |||
* See "[https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Resolution:Wikimedia_Foundation_Guiding_Principles#Transparency Transparency section]" of Wikimedia Foundation Guiding Principles | * See "[https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Resolution:Wikimedia_Foundation_Guiding_Principles#Transparency Transparency section]" of Wikimedia Foundation Guiding Principles | ||
* See Wikipedia "[https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Transparency/Practices Transparency practices]" | * See Wikipedia "[https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Transparency/Practices Transparency practices]" | ||
[[Category:Open Food Facts policies and guidelines]] | [[Category:Open Food Facts policies and guidelines]] |
Latest revision as of 17:36, 23 August 2022
[draft to be discussed]
Open Food Facts is a public project, promoting food transparency and open data. As other projects such as Wikipedia or OpenStreetMap, it should also provide transparency for itself.
- By default, every document or conversation HAVE TO be public, excepting ones related to private life, see next point.
- Conversations or documents related to private life or private conversation HAVE TO stay private. E.g.:
- emails written by people to “contact” or members of the organization or community — the secrecy of correspondence is considered as a fundamental right in many countries,
- private chats or conversations,
- personal data, such as address, dietary information, disability information, T-Shirt size, pregnancy, etc.
- Human Resources facts dealing with privacy: salaries, personal data, etc.
- Few exceptions CAN occur:
- Conversations or documents shared by organizations which are related to a non-public project MIGHT stay private.
- Conversations or documents under a clear restricted disclosure HAVE TO stay private.
- Funding brief, application forms, candidature files MIGHT stay private, in order to keep some original ideas.
- Negotiating positions (you don't want the person you are negotiating with to know the maximum you can afford to pay).
- Legal issues until cases are closed (?) [not sure; to be rewritten].
See also
- Privacy guidance
- See "Transparency section" of Wikimedia Foundation Guiding Principles
- See Wikipedia "Transparency practices"