It looks like we understand the potential risks of adding social features, but I don't know that the merits have sunk in.
==Don't call it a Social Network, don't think of it as a revolution== Th first thing to do is banish the word "Social Network" from the discussion. "Social Network" evokes "Myspace and Facebook", which aren't exactly popular around here, a sentiment I share. When we talk about adding social features to Wikimedia, you must delete all your preconceptions about what a 'social network' is, and break it down into the most fundamental concept-- socializing on a network. Nobody here wants us to just become 'another' Facebook, shudder at the thought. We want to learn from social networks and keep the usable bits-- we don't want to literally become one. If that sound scary, remember changes around here are either optional or gradual or both-- never dramatic, unforeseen, controversial, and imposed. We wouldn't just make a facebook host on Wikimedia Instead, we'd start by little tiny things-- Extension:Wikilove on prototype's a great example. We saw a feature of social networks that WAS consistent with our values-- the per-user "thumbs up". We wouldn't just feed that global social space straight into en.wp, we'd put it on incubator and probably start off with very boring projects like "Copy your home-project user page here and we'll help you translate it". Rules might eventually loosen, but a good starting point would be 'the kind of content projects routinely allow in user space or meta space"-- but in one single unified space, the logical extension to the single unified login. The point is, 'social features' on existing projects would be slow, gradual, with lots of talking, lots of debate, and maybe a couple referendums thrown in for good measure. We're not going to devolve overnight from our current status literally, "The most useful single collection of information on the planet" to merely a useless "innane personal trivial" overnight. We're easing into a slightly more social outlook, we aren't having a revolution or anything :) . We're mining other successful internet projects for the lessons we can learn from their-- we aren't out to blindly copy them and abandon our own mission. Terms like "A Facebook for Wikipedia" communicate an important idea in very few characters-- but it also brings a lot of misconceptions too. And we really do need these need these semi-social features. We have important work ahead of us, and we absolutely do need to increase our intercommunication/socialization abilities if we're going to do our best at that job. And it will NOT make us Facebook or Myspace. == Socializing is essential to intelligently running a Global Foundation== The community is a part of the leadership of the foundation. The community contributed in a billion ways throughout the year, but elections especially require the global community to come together intelligently make very important decisions. To help run a foundation, we need to be able to talk to each other. talk to each other, and we need to understand each others values, not just their votes, not even just their direct rationales-- we have to understand each others values. I have to intelligent collaborate with people without knowing _anything_ about their culture, their values, or their traditions. I know what my projects' missions are, but I don't automatically presume to know what their projects' purposes are just because the sign on the door says "Wikipedia". If you ask me to make a global decision, one of the first things I want to know is what editors of other projects and other languages believe. There are changes I feel comfortable supporting for my own home project, but I wouldn't want to 'impose' as a global policy unless I can hear from the people being affected. Right now, there's no permanent venue for that kind of discussion. We can't really form policy with a community that can't communicate with itself. Having a semi-social space where everyone's in the same place, can use the same templates, can see the same user pages, etc-- that alone would be good. ==Socializing promotes high-quality, NPOV articles== If I am editing the English language biography of a historical Arabic-language subject, I want to be able to communicate with the Arabic-language users and enlist their help understanding whatever it is I need help with. When I see articles on wars fought by English-speaking nations against non-English-speaking nations, I always wonder what the "other side's" article's look like, but machine translation only goes so far. Right now, it's hard for bilingual editors of corresponding articles to ever get to share notes unless the idea occurs to them on their own-- socializing would help promote the idea that cross-language collaboration is a good thing. "Spanish-American War", you should talk to the editors of the corresponding article on es! Here's a list of a some users who were recently online who speak en and es-- and here's a button to send them the top few a message asking for their advice. ==Socializing promotes innovation== Small projects are more nimble-- EnWP is now the most popular encyclopedia on the planet, it has the most users and the most global users. In contrast, DE is the second largest, but just that little extra bit of freedom has given them a lot of innovative advantageous. How many times have we heard a statement of the form "There's this awesome feature/extension/tool/policy being tried by DeWP, may EnWP should take a look at it." Just that little extra bit of freedom-- the weight of the world isn't only De's shoulders in the same way, and that freedom lets them 'out innovate' EnWP in some cases. This is a well-known effect that has long been predicted-- the more people dependent on project as it is, the harder it is to change that project. Our innovations often come from the small projects, where small groups of people can have the freedom to try new things without degrading the experience for existing users. Socializing helps promote 'cross-project pollination' of good ideas. Sometimes those ideas will be technical innovations, sometimes those will be cultural innovations, sometimes just vague intuitions. Best of all, sometimes the discussions will be two people putting half an idea together and collaborative discovering a new idea that neither could have discovered without cross-project socializing. == Socializing helps us learn about other communities' needs== New members in new regions of the world will bring their own needs very different from mine. If I'm going to intelligently make decisions affecting the global community, I need to MEET the global community-- or the best approximation possible at this point in human history. On some occasions, the global community has to come together as a global community to make a single decision-- a policy that will affect all languages alike. In these cases, it's not enough to know _my_ project's values-- the most intelligent decisions will be reached by voters who consider everyone's values, not just their own. Right now I know a few things about the values of Arabic language speakers, and I can research the values of Arabic language nations. I could look up religions across the Arabic-language and cross-reference that with the available data on the values of that religion. I could do a lot of things like that, but none of them are actually relevant. But there are no statistics to be found on the unique values of that very special subpopulation of Arabic language editors who are also Wikimedia editors-- and we can't just assume they're 'typical of their country or their religion'-- my experience is that Wikimedia editors are a tribe unto themselves that radically transcends differences of language or culture. ==Socializing promotes translation== You're editing an article that involves a nation / language / community you're unfamiliar with. Other communities have large groups of people who know about the subject and could help you with your article. If only it were easier for you to communicate with bilingual speakers who have that knowledge. IF I want to ask a question of "Arabic language users of Commons and its projects", I don't speak Arabic, it's fairly tricky to communicate with them-- figure out how to get there, look up the lang code, change the url or notice the sidebar, As it is, if I want to send a message from one-language to one language, I have do a lot of work. I have to look up the language code if I don't know it, I have to figure out how to get there (remember how many people _still_ can't handle manually typing in a url), I have to find the appropriate venue, which isn't standardized across projects, I have to leave a message, and then i have to hope someone show up to notice the message who also speaks my language. That is a big barrier, and an unneeded one. If I want to communicate from one project to all projects, it seems to be impossible, as a community member, to do that. We need to build a space where that action is absolutely one-click trivial, not arduous. We could use copy bots, but creating a global semi-social space is infinitely easier. A pre-existing global semi-social space would have been so useful in the elections-- There were a lot of people who appeared to be 'qualified' candidates, but since they spoke a wide variety of languages, I couldn't communicate with people on their home projects to get endorsements from their fellow editors. A social space would lower the barriers-- if "I" active in a global social space, it would have been very different-- "I" might not know someone who knows the candidate, but chances are I'll have worked with someone who speaks the same language as the candidate, and thus I can have a channel to enlist cross-language. ==Socializing is good for morale and participation== People like friends. People like being part of communities. This aspect can never ever 'eclipse' the main focus on the movement and its mission, but a little socialization, now and then, is a good thing. For some editors, it's easier to start off with a nice neutral conversation about the weather, rather than jumping straight into an edit war. ==Socializing is educational #1-- Socializing as a Wikitext Tutorial== Wikitext has gotten pretty intense over the years as our templating skills have grown, I bet it must be kinda impenetrable to a novice. Learning new technology and new rules and reviewing the existing debate, making mistakes, feeling confused, and sometimes not getting a nice response to your early contributions-- this is an identified problem. Socializing, or some other 'low stress, low conflict' space would be a useful tutorial to have a meaningful sandbox experience in a place devoid of a need for rigid editorial control of the sort our encyclopedia articles have to have. ==Socializing is educational #2-- Socializing itself IS educational, I promise!!== >well wikipedia is about to create value for long term - social >networks are about to create worthless things for the moment. Somewhere along the line, western society came up with the funny idea that socializing is 'wasted time', idle and pointless recreational chatter. Some claim this is a vestige of a patriarchal past where socializing was seen as female idle banter and thus 'uneducational'. I tend to think the problem goes back to Descartes, who was very big on the idea that "intelligence" was inherently 'rational not emotional, explicit not intuitive'. Regardless of its origin, our 'canonical educational experience' involves sharing objectively verifiable facts. Wikisource and Commons, on the other hand, education through less-explicit methods-- art, music, media, fiction, and poetry. People for nearly a century have been finding some great but intangible meaning in the Robert Frost's verse "I took the road less traveled by, and that has made all the difference". What are people learning from this? I don't know, and I can't put it into words-- but clearly, poetry and art DO educate in ways that are very difficult for outsiders to quantify or comprehend. Socializing is, in fact, educational. Humans are wired to do it, we're doing it for a reason, we're mean to socialize, and people who are socializing are actively educating themselves about human psychology and human dynamics. Indeed, the #1 concerned raised about homeschoolers is that the students will miss out on the socializing aspect of the educational experience. Psychologist and neuroscientists have studied minds and brains extensively-- and socializing is DEFINITELY learning, it's definitely educational, and people definitely need a certain amount of it. I can't tell you exactly what all they're learning when they socialize-- but we know the behavior is important and it's educational and it continues throughout adulthood. Socializing is 100% "in scope"-- global multilingual socialization is 150% in scope. Fostering global communication is essential to our mission to share knowledge-- socializing is part of our "great mission". It may not be a top priority right now, but never let it be said that socializing is just wasted brain cycles-- it's not. It's important-- not just because it will make us more efficient but also because it is, in fact, a goal unto itself, though admittedly a relatively low-priority goal. I too don't want our socializing outreach to 'unbalance' our system in any way-- but the benefits keep stacking up, and Fred keeps making very thought-provoking points. I sense a sort of critical mass forming where it makes sense to start experimenting in this direction. ==The final point: What do you at Wikimania before and after the lectures?== Do you go to Wikimania or one of the other many such meetups? Do you travel a long distance to get there, do you spend lots of resources, time and money, to attend? If you still have doubts about the value of increased socializing for our community, notice what people do whenever there is a break, or whenever people arrive early or hang out together afterwards. They are 'socializing'... And in the end, it's that the whole point of Wikimania? So that our very best minds can get together for formal face to face conversations, but also for informal socialization and community formation? In all the meetups and conferences we hold, how often do productive conversations happen around a restaurant table or a cafe or a hotel suite or wherever? How many social interaction of the form "What are your interests, here are mine" have led to productive collaboration? We know socializing is both education and productive to our projects. We hold elaborate events because those social benefits are so great. All we have to do is to help the global community have the same kinds of social experiences that Wikimaniacs enjoy, or our best approximation to them. The only trick is-- socializing has to be a secondary priority-- if people are coming here literally just to socialize and truly not to edit or discuss the issues, then that would a problem. But to be honest, Facebook's so good for pure socialization, I don't think we could get the 'non-wikimedian' audience to use our socialization feature unless we really really really consciously work a 'facebook killer'-- and THAT truly isn't us. Alec "The Manifesto King" Conroy _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l