- Joined
- 27 Jan 2008
- Messages
- 25,068
- Reaction score
- 2,909
- Location
- Llanfair Caereinion, Nr Welshpool
- Country
That is a good point but although there is no good Samaritan act in the UK there have been moves so that people trying to help are not taken to court to defend there action unless grossly disproportionation.Indeed. However, another issue is that the moment one starts offering advice on safety, one acquires certainly a moral, and possibly/probably also a legal, duty to give adequate advice - so it may sometimes be 'safer' to offer no such advice all than to offer a little, which could be possibly be regarded as 'inadequate'. It's like the snow on the pavement outside your house - leave it there, then if anyone falls over, it's "their problem". Sweep it up, but not 'adequately', and you could end up getting sued if they fall and injure themselves!
BAS makes a good point about people reading Wiki however I will admit I rarely review what I have written and when changes occur any sticky or Wiki can end up out of date without anyone picking up the fact.
But the idea of wiki must be better than a sticky I was banned from a forum for giving unsafe advice. Basic problem was my English could be miss read too easy resulting in errors. I was explaining how to test wires in a ceiling rose to find the switch return wire. Although an electrician would have followed it without a problem it would seem a DIY person was likely to make errors following the step by step instructions.
So maybe we need someone like a Plumber to proof read the Wiki?