OnlineSystemUsersRights
- . Informed Consent
- . Freedom from Harm
- . Confidentiality, Anonymity
- . Privacy
- . Freedom from Coercion
- . Maintenance of Dignity and Self Respect
- . Joint ownership of personal information provided voluntarily or aquired from any source.
These are derived from the rights of human subjects in research act to assure a reasonable right to privacy for SovereignIndividuals.. Since online system users are monitored in log files which may be used for research or other purposes their usage of online systems should be reasonable safe from unexpected and undesired disclosure or other abuse allowed by the information system operators.
This is good. One question, i've looked at the login procedure, how do you protect users and implcitly AnewGo citizens from identity theft?
- You can't. PhpWiki is based entirely on trust (ex-The ability to freely edit or create any page by any name). You decision, it's a sort of "take your chances" thing. --KenSchry
'''''Um... You can configure PhpWiki to enforce logins. Or it seems so anyhow. In any case, I have modified versions of Phpwiki used for intranets that enforce logins. TikiWiki is a better tools for AnewGo and it allows full control over logins and permissions plus a lot more collaboration and publishing features. We can move to a TikiWiki when we are ready. WikiWorld, like most wikis, has loosey goosey authentication to encourage open communication by providing a plausable denyablity option.' '*PhpWiki doesn't enforce passwords, as far as I know. When I login, I just put username because password is for admin. For all you know, someone could login as StarPilot, me, AnewGo, and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference (well maybe by the way we write...). Is There a way to assign passwords with PhpWiki, or is waiting for TikiWiki better? --KenSchry
yeah- your right. You have to login for TikiWiki, so No identity theft there. That's what makes tiki soooooo good.
This section should have been named InformationSystemHumanRights and be applied a bit more broadly.
Ok TikiWiki is the future. From my limited experimentation i find it very unstable at the moment.
- Unstable? ok, yeah that's true, but if we do get it working, imagine the endless possibilities.....