Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-28 Thread Samuel Klein
Hello Ram,

This is the right list, to the extent that one exists.

It is hard to answer a question this abstract.  In general, Wikimedia
hosts Projects that help people collaborate on free knowledge, and
software, scripts and other tools related to those Projects (say, on
our toolservers).  We are not a generic project host.  In what sense
does this service have 'a spirit similar to  Wikimedia's projects'?

Cheers,
SJ

On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 8:20 PM, cool-RR  wrote:
> Hello all!
>
> This is my first time on any Wikimedia mailing list, so please forgive me if
> I'm actually posting on the wrong list or something.
>
> I'm a programmer, and recently I've been using a nice little service, which
> is run by a few independent programmers. The trouble is that it's a kind of
> service which potential users would like to know that it will be maintained
> well for a few years in the future, and these independent programmers can't
> guarantee something like that. Then I thought, this project has a spirit
> similar to Wikimedia's projects, so maybe Wikimedia would want to adopt it
> or sponsor it? I think it will require little maintenance effort.
>
> Do note that this project is not a wiki exactly.
>
> I have not yet said what this project it, cause I'm not even sure I'm on the
> right mailing list. Is this a good place to discuss this matter?
>
> (Also, please 'cc' me in any replies, because I don't get mail delivered
> from this list.)
>
> Best Wishes,
> Ram Rachum.
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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread cool-RR
Hello Samuel,

I'm glad I got the right list.

According to your definition, the project fits Wikimedia's goal. I will now
introduce it.

The project is called Librelist. The official website introduces it quite
well, so I'll just quote it:

###

Librelist is a free as in freedom mailing list site for open source
projects. It is a place for FOSS communities to discuss all the things they
want without ads, censorship, signup requirements, bundled apps, or
requirements that you use any particular email client or service.

Anyone Can Make A List

You can make a mailing list by simply sending an email to l...@librelist.com,
and if it doesn’t exist, it will make it for you and subscribe you. That’s
all there is to it, and no restrictions on making the lists.

Anyone Can Subscribe To A List

You also subscribe to a list by simply sending your first message to
l...@librelist.com. That’s it. It ditches your original message and sends
you a confirmation you reply to. No signup or web forms involved.

Spam And Bounce Blocking

Spam is heavily blocked on all lists to keep things clean. We will also
periodically ban anonymous email services if they become a vector for abuse.

Bounced emails are caught and anyone who bounces has all of their
subscriptions paused until they can fix the problem and reinstate
themselves.

 End quote
Website address: http://librelist.org

I would like to add that Librelist is a much need alternative to existing
mailing list solutions. Let's say that a group of people, as you said, are
trying to collaborate over free knowledge. These people usually need a
mailing list. What options do they have?

There are two sets of options: (1) commercial solutions and (2) self-hosted
open-source solution.

Commercial mailing list providers, such as Google and Yahoo, have a lot of
resources in their disposal that could in principle be used for providing a
great mailing list service. But that's not what happens in practice. To
paraphrase a comment from Librelist's founder Zed Shaw, Google and Yahoo
optimize their services to give the best experience for the user; Problem
is, from their perspective, the "user" is not the person trying to
communicate on the mailing list, but the advertiser paying Google/Yahoo for
advertising on the mailing list.

Needless to say, this does not result in a very good experience for the
actual user. I know personally some people who manage a mailing list hosted
by Google, and I was told there are many problems with it, specifically an
abundance of spam and lack of good tools for dealing with it.

The second approach is to use mailing list software such as mailman or
piper. This has two problems:

(1) It requires a server for hosting the list, and a system administrator to
configure and maintain the mailing list. For some project this is a big
barrier, for others it's merely a waste of time and resources.

(2) The popular mailing list programs are not very good. Take mailman for
example, which is used for this mailing list. It does many things which may
have been considered acceptable 10 years ago, but not today. The
subscription process is cumbersome, the program sends the user his password
in plain text, and generally its interface looks like a 1995 website.

So there aren't very good options for a group that needs a mailing list. I
would like to note that I have been in this exact situation recently, as I
needed to make mailing lists for my open source projects. I just couldn't
find a good solution. This is how I found Librelist.

I believe that Librelist is a good solution, and I think of it as the
Wikipedia of mailing lists. Every user can start a new mailing list, and
post on any mailing list he wishes.

And I would say, that the biggest disadvantage Librelist currently has is
this: Since it is a relatively new community project, it's hard to trust
that it will stay operating and well-maintained for years. People don't want
to start a mailing list on a service that might get closed 6 months from
now. The founder of Librelist seems enthusiastic enough, but this is a
non-profit project for him, so it's impossible to be certain that he will
not become too busy for the project in the future.

I think that the Wikimedia foundation should sponsor this project. I think
it wouldn't require a big amount of resources, but it will require the
persistence and reliability over time that Wikimedia has shown with
Wikipedia and its other projects.

This will solve the concern I mentioned above, and will make Librelist a
very attractive choice for people who want to collaborate.

I'd be happy to hear any comments.

Best Wishes,
Ram Rachum.


On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 8:51 AM, Samuel Klein  wrote:

> Hello Ram,
>
> This is the right list, to the extent that one exists.
>
> It is hard to answer a question this abstract.  In general, Wikimedia
> hosts Projects that help people collaborate on free knowledge, and
> software, scripts and other tools

Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread Platonides
cool-RR wrote:
> Hello Samuel,
> 
> I'm glad I got the right list.
> 
> According to your definition, the project fits Wikimedia's goal. I will now
> introduce it.
> 
> The project is called Librelist. The official website introduces it quite
> well, so I'll just quote it:


> Librelist is a free as in freedom mailing list site for open source
> projects. It is a place for FOSS communities to discuss all the things they
> want without ads, censorship, signup requirements, bundled apps, or
> requirements that you use any particular email client or service.


> Anyone Can Make A List
> 
> You can make a mailing list by simply sending an email to l...@librelist.com,
> and if it doesn’t exist, it will make it for you and subscribe you. That’s
> all there is to it, and no restrictions on making the lists.

Some steps shuld be a little harder. How do you difference a typo from a
request for a new list? Who is set as admin? Etc.


> Anyone Can Subscribe To A List
> 
> You also subscribe to a list by simply sending your first message to
> l...@librelist.com. That’s it. It ditches your original message and sends
> you a confirmation you reply to. No signup or web forms involved.

>From http://librelist.com/help.html it looks like you don't need to
answer a payload to be subscribed. That will produce lots of problems
when its mailing lists gets sent spam messages with faked from headers.
It could even be abused as a remailer.
I'm pretty sure it is mentioned in some RFC, but it's proper netiquette
anyway.



> And I would say, that the biggest disadvantage Librelist currently has is
> this: Since it is a relatively new community project, it's hard to trust
> that it will stay operating and well-maintained for years. People don't want
> to start a mailing list on a service that might get closed 6 months from
> now. The founder of Librelist seems enthusiastic enough, but this is a
> non-profit project for him, so it's impossible to be certain that he will
> not become too busy for the project in the future.

That can be solved to some extent by making it easy to fork. I see that
the mailing lists are rsyncable which is very nice.
If the mailing list admin can download with a click a mailing list
backup that can be installed on a server with a couple of clicks should
librelist go down. (Note that these contain email addresses so they must
not be public)



> I think that the Wikimedia foundation should sponsor this project. I think
> it wouldn't require a big amount of resources, but it will require the
> persistence and reliability over time that Wikimedia has shown with
> Wikipedia and its other projects.

I don't think that fits cleanly into the Mission, but the decision is up
to the board.


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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread Samuel Klein
Ram, thanks for sharing your interesting project.

On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 7:15 PM, Platonides  wrote:
>
>> Librelist is a free as in freedom mailing list site for open source
>> projects. It is a place for FOSS communities to discuss all the things they
>> want without ads, censorship, signup requirements, bundled apps, or
>> requirements that you use any particular email client or service.

Limited to FOSS communities?

>> People don't want
>> to start a mailing list on a service that might get closed 6 months from
>> now. The founder of Librelist seems enthusiastic enough, but this is a
>> non-profit project for him, so it's impossible to be certain that he will
>> not become too busy for the project in the future.
>
> That can be solved to some extent by making it easy to fork. I see that
> the mailing lists are rsyncable which is very nice.

+1

> I don't think that fits cleanly into the Mission, but the decision is up
> to the board.

Platonides is right, it's not clearly part of our current mission -
though it does facilitate some types of collaboration, mail threads
are parallel to our notion of talk pages.  There's certainly something
to be gained from thinking about what our mailing lists provide that
LiquidThreads* does not, and identifying/supporting efforts to improve
that channel for conversations.
(*This is our current concept of threaded discussion in the context of
directly collaborating on some sort of lasting  knowledge)

But just as we don't support multiple wiki platforms or mailman
itself, we aren't generally a project host. Have you talked to the FSF
about hosting such a service, considering your FOSS focus?

SJ

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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread Chad
On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Samuel Klein  wrote:
> But just as we don't support multiple wiki platforms or mailman
> itself, we aren't generally a project host. Have you talked to the FSF
> about hosting such a service, considering your FOSS focus?
>

Over the years, I've seen two general approaches to trying to launch
a new Wikimedia site. The first is trying to come up with a *new* idea
for a wiki. They start discussion on here or meta and typically it dies
out because people lose interest in trying to flesh out a new project.
The second approach that I've seen used is trying to get the Foundation
to "adopt" some existing project. This also tends to fail as people get
caught up over specifics (licensing, etc) and then lose interest. Or
it gets said that Wikimedia is not a "host*" for projects.

I'm curious to know, how does one start a new project in Wikimedia
anymore?

-Chad

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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread Philippe Beaudette


On Apr 29, 2010, at 9:08 PM, Chad wrote:

> On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Samuel Klein   
> wrote:
>> But just as we don't support multiple wiki platforms or mailman
>> itself, we aren't generally a project host. Have you talked to the  
>> FSF
>> about hosting such a service, considering your FOSS focus?
>>
>
> Over the years, I've seen two general approaches to trying to launch
> a new Wikimedia site. The first is trying to come up with a *new* idea
> for a wiki. They start discussion on here or meta and typically it  
> dies
> out because people lose interest in trying to flesh out a new project.
> The second approach that I've seen used is trying to get the  
> Foundation
> to "adopt" some existing project. This also tends to fail as people  
> get
> caught up over specifics (licensing, etc) and then lose interest. Or
> it gets said that Wikimedia is not a "host*" for projects.
>
> I'm curious to know, how does one start a new project in Wikimedia
> anymore?
>
> -Chad

Unashamed plug:  there's a task force on the strategy wiki to discuss  
exactly these issues:  
http://strategy.wikimedia.org/wiki/Task_force/Content_scope

Participation is welcomed.

Philippe




Philippe Beaudette  
Facilitator, Strategy Project and
Head of Reader Relations
Wikimedia Foundation

phili...@wikimedia.org

Imagine a world in which every human being can freely share in
the sum of all knowledge.  Help us make it a reality!

http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate


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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-29 Thread Samuel Klein
On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 10:08 PM, Chad  wrote:
>
> Over the years, I've seen two general approaches to trying to launch
> a new Wikimedia site. The first is trying to come up with a *new* idea
> for a wiki. They start discussion on here or meta and typically it dies
> out because people lose interest in trying to flesh out a new project.

That's one good approach.  It often involves setting up a trial
project; as with the genealogy projects discussed on Meta's new
project proposals page.

> The second approach that I've seen used is trying to get the Foundation
> to "adopt" some existing project. This also tends to fail as people get
> caught up over specifics (licensing, etc) and then lose interest.

Adoption is a bit trickier -- we haven't had very good test cases to
see what makes sense and what doesn't.  There are a number of
interesting educational collaboration projects out there, but those of
general widespread interest haven't been the ones looking for
adoption.

Niche projects that are far more specific than our current Projects
can be hard to consider for adoption.  Unlike projects such as Wikia,
we encourage unified namespaces so that there is one Project for a
given type of knowledge or collaboration.  So ParliamentWiki and
CongressCMS would ideally make peace with becoming portals within a
larger existing Project.  This has not happened yet, save perhaps for
some adopted dictionaries.


> Or it gets said that Wikimedia is not a "host*" for projects.

That was poor phrasing on my part - Wikimedia is prominently a host
for global multilingual collaborative-knowledge projects.

But Wikimedia is not at present a host or explicit supporter of any
satellite services that might be useful to such collaborations -- say,
public scratchpad providers (etherpad), public wiki providers, or
public mailing list providers (librelist?).   It is not even a host or
explicit supporter of services that provide part of a toolchain for
frequent contributions to existing Wikimedia projects  -- such as
Distributed Proofreaders or Librivox.

I would expect to see us start recognizing and supporting the latter
class of projects before the more abstract former set, though both are
important to the larger task of facilitating knowledgework.  And in
many cases, the best way that we could support a project may not be
through hosting, but instead through directing traffic and attention;
or sponsoring current work.  [we do occasionally give explicit support
and recognition to projects such as Freenode without which our
community would be much poorer]

The questions of what projects are important to free collaboration,
and how we can support them, are quite important.  As Philippe
mentioned, this is being discussed currently at
http://strategy.wikimedia.org/wiki/Task_force/Content_scope

SJ

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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-04-30 Thread Ram Rachum
Samuel Klein  writes:

> Ram, thanks for sharing your interesting project.
| 
| On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 7:15 PM, Platonides  wrote:
| >
| >> Librelist is a free as in freedom mailing list site for open source
| >> projects. It is a place for FOSS communities to discuss all the things they
| >> want without ads, censorship, signup requirements, bundled apps, or
| >> requirements that you use any particular email client or service.
| 
| Limited to FOSS communities?

I don't think so.



> Platonides is right, it's not clearly part of our current mission -
> though it does facilitate some types of collaboration, mail threads
> are parallel to our notion of talk pages.  There's certainly something
> to be gained from thinking about what our mailing lists provide that
> LiquidThreads* does not, and identifying/supporting efforts to improve
> that channel for conversations.
> (*This is our current concept of threaded discussion in the context of
> directly collaborating on some sort of lasting  knowledge)
> 
> But just as we don't support multiple wiki platforms or mailman
> itself, we aren't generally a project host. Have you talked to the FSF
> about hosting such a service, considering your FOSS focus?
> 
> SJ

Thanks for your opinion. I did not think about the FSF, that's a good idea and 
I 
will contact them.

Ram.


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Re: [Foundation-l] Possible project

2010-05-01 Thread Platonides
Chad wrote:
> I'm curious to know, how does one start a new project in Wikimedia
> anymore?
> 
> -Chad

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proposals_for_new_projects

Creating a new language for an existing project is easier:
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages

Before getting its own wiki, the proposal will probably go by the
incubator first.


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