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The Foundation holds that [[:en:Censorship|censorship]] is incompatible with its mission. In recent months, it has reaffirmed its opposition to censorship several times. Most recently, in November 2011, the Wikimedia Foundation took part in [http://americancensorship.org/ American Censorship Day], a protest against [[:en:Stop Online Piracy Act|the United States House of Representative Bill 3261]]. You can read the blog post about it by [[Head of Communications]] [[User:JayWalsh|Jay Walsh]] [http://blog.wikimedia.org/2011/11/15/wikimedia-supports-american-censorship-day/ here]. In May 2011, when the [[Board of Trustees]] passed its [[Resolution:Controversial_content|resolution on dealing with controversial content]], it affirmed that "Wikimedia projects are not censored." Curating knowledge for an international community of all ages will certainly mean the display of materials that some may find offensive or upsetting. The Board supported the principle that users should be able to choose what content to access and encouraged the responsible curating of content so users might reasonably expect what they will encounter when viewing a page or using a feature, but continued in its explicit support of access to information for all. --[[User:Mdennis|Maggie Dennis]] 15:38, 16 November 2011 (UTC)
The Foundation holds that [[:en:Censorship|censorship]] is incompatible with its mission. In recent months, it has reaffirmed its opposition to censorship several times. Most recently, in November 2011, the Wikimedia Foundation took part in [http://americancensorship.org/ American Censorship Day], a protest against [[:en:Stop Online Piracy Act|the United States House of Representative Bill 3261]]. You can read the blog post about it by [[Head of Communications]] [[User:JayWalsh|Jay Walsh]] [http://blog.wikimedia.org/2011/11/15/wikimedia-supports-american-censorship-day/ here]. In May 2011, when the [[Board of Trustees]] passed its [[Resolution:Controversial_content|resolution on dealing with controversial content]], it affirmed that "Wikimedia projects are not censored." Curating knowledge for an international community of all ages will certainly mean the display of materials that some may find offensive or upsetting. The Board supported the principle that users should be able to choose what content to access and encouraged the responsible curating of content so users might reasonably expect what they will encounter when viewing a page or using a feature, but continued in its explicit support of access to information for all. --[[User:Mdennis|Maggie Dennis]] 15:38, 16 November 2011 (UTC)


==Finance: How much of the money raised by the Wikimedia Foundation goes to the mission?==
Probably in response to the launch of the Wikimedia Foundation Fundraiser, several people have asked questions related to the way money donated to the Wikimedia Foundation is divided. While specific details about spending were answered in September (see [[Answers_archive/September_2011#Finance:_Where_does_the_money_come_from.2C_and_where_does_it_go.3F|Where does the money come from, and where does it go?]]), there is a breakdown of the Wikimedia Foundation's financial performance at [[:en:Charity Navigator|Charity Navigator]]:
::*Program Expenses: 75.4%
::*Administrative Expenses: 10.8%
::*Fundraising Expenses: 13.6%

I'm very proud to say that Charity Navigator awards the Wikimedia Foundation 4 stars out of a possible 4 in reviews of both its financial practices ''and'' its practices related to accountability and transparency: see [http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=11212 their summary] for these figures and more. --[[User:Mdennis|Maggie Dennis]] 20:07, 16 November 2011 (UTC)

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