Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-05-05 Thread Jane Darnell
As more people have noticed on this list since this incident, the
problem is not with sexism, but with the way categories are managed on
Wikipedia. For example the German painter Caspar David Friedrich, who
many would argue is in a category all his own, is in both categories
German romantic painters and German landscape painters, but is no
longer in the category German painters. You really need a tool like
AWB or Catscan to find him (tip: from any English Wikipedia page, type
in WP:AWB or WP:catscan). It would be nice if we could specify flat
when accessing a category, so we could get the whole list, no matter
how many thousands of people are in there.

2013/4/30, Daniel and Elizabeth Case danc...@frontiernet.net:
Compare it to the weaknesses of the current category system. 98% of editors
 don't know what they are doing. Categories and subcategories are applied
 inconsistently all the time. Nobody has an overview of the entire tree
 structure, or even a major branch of it.

 And would this be any less truer of tags?

Something that is a subcategory of American novelists today may stop being
 one tomorrow, just by dint of a single edit, and no one would be the
 wiser (unless they keep hundreds of categories on their watchlist). The
 category tree (or weave, as categories can have several parents) changes
 daily, with categories created, renamed, recategorised, and deleted.
 There are incessant arguments about how to name, categorise and diffuse
 categories, and about perceived iniquities.[citation needed]

 In all the years I’ve been on Wikipedia I think I’ve only once been involved
 in any dispute over a category’s existence where I didn’t agree (and still
 don’t) with the outcome:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2007_August_9#Category:Vogue_editors
 (I suppose it’s only coincidental here that the category in question was
 mostly populated by articles about women). Indeed, I find it interesting
 that WP:LEW includes only one example from the category namespace, with
 everything else very well represented.

Using a defined set of basic tags in combination with something like
 CatScan – ported across to the Foundation server if you like, and given a
 friendly front-end with shortcuts to the most common searches – would do
 away with that.
 Without really solving the underlying problem, IMO, and making it harder to
 fix when it recurs.






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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-30 Thread Andreas Kolbe
On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 5:43 AM, Daniel and Elizabeth Case 
danc...@frontiernet.net wrote:

   This system keeps the categories more straightforward, and pretty well
 avoids the sort of subtle bias Wikipedia has been caught with here.
 Defining the precise intersection of interest is up to the user.

 But the corresponding weakness is that it depends on the editors hitting
 all the right categories to work properly (as well as the tool itself,
 which as heavy toolserver users know is not always the case). Someone may
 categorize in two of three but not the third (guess which one might get
 forgotten?)



Compare it to the weaknesses of the current category system. 98% of editors
don't know what they are doing. Categories and subcategories are applied
inconsistently all the time. Nobody has an overview of the entire tree
structure, or even a major branch of it. Something that is a subcategory of
American novelists today may stop being one tomorrow, just by dint of a
single edit, and no one would be the wiser (unless they keep hundreds of
categories on their watchlist). The category tree (or weave, as categories
can have several parents) changes daily, with categories created, renamed,
recategorised, and deleted. There are incessant arguments about how to
name, categorise and diffuse categories, and about perceived iniquities.
Wiki-gnomes spend days working and undoing each other's work. It's insane.

Using a defined set of basic tags in combination with something like
CatScan – ported across to the Foundation server if you like, and given a
friendly front-end with shortcuts to the most common searches – would do
away with that.
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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-30 Thread Ryan Kaldari
On the issue of using tags instead of categories (which is mentioned in 
Joseph Reagle's article), I've been involved in some discussions on this 
issue. The two major hurdles for this are how do you make tagging work 
across languages (for projects like Commons and Meta), and figuring out 
whether tags should augment or replace the categorization system. The 
first problem may be solved by Wikidata; the 2nd problem is probably 
solved by using both for a while and then eventually abandoning 
categories. There's a possibility that the multimedia development team 
that is being spun up over the next few months may try to tackle this, 
but there's nothing concrete on the agenda yet.


Ryan Kaldari

On 4/29/13 11:15 PM, Andreas Kolbe wrote:
On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 5:43 AM, Daniel and Elizabeth Case 
danc...@frontiernet.net mailto:danc...@frontiernet.net wrote:


This system keeps the categories more straightforward, and pretty
well avoids the sort of subtle bias Wikipedia has been caught
with here. Defining the precise intersection of interest is up to
the user.

But the corresponding weakness is that it depends on the editors
hitting all the right categories to work properly (as well as the
tool itself, which as heavy toolserver users know is not always
the case). Someone may categorize in two of three but not the
third (guess which one might get forgotten?)



Compare it to the weaknesses of the current category system. 98% of 
editors don't know what they are doing. Categories and subcategories 
are applied inconsistently all the time. Nobody has an overview of the 
entire tree structure, or even a major branch of it. Something that is 
a subcategory of American novelists today may stop being one tomorrow, 
just by dint of a single edit, and no one would be the wiser (unless 
they keep hundreds of categories on their watchlist). The category 
tree (or weave, as categories can have several parents) changes daily, 
with categories created, renamed, recategorised, and deleted. There 
are incessant arguments about how to name, categorise and diffuse 
categories, and about perceived iniquities. Wiki-gnomes spend days 
working and undoing each other's work. It's insane.


Using a defined set of basic tags in combination with something like 
CatScan – ported across to the Foundation server if you like, and 
given a friendly front-end with shortcuts to the most common searches 
– would do away with that.



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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-30 Thread Joseph Reagle

On 04/30/2013 12:03 AM, Risker wrote:

Michael, you miss my point entirely.  This is exactly the kind of
nastiness - trashing someone who takes umbrage at the way Wikipedia does
something that directly relates to her own real life - that brings the
project into disrepute, and that women in particular find hostile.


Agreed.

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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-30 Thread Nepenthe
Indeed Mike, how dare you accuse the august NYT of being influenced by
so-called class privilege. That's ridiculous. The New York Times is not
biased and publishes op-eds solely based on their individual merits. The
opinions contained within have nothing to do with the privileges their
authors may have or not have.

Pff. Pretty soon you'll be suggesting that the fact that 83% of their
columnists are men and that 92% are white has something to do with gender
and race privilege. And after that, what. Are you going to suggest that
gender and race affect viewpoint as well? Are you going to suggest that
there's some sort of class gap on Wikipedia too? Utter tosh. I hope you
don't intend on editing any Wikipedia articles based on these ridiculous
assertions.

Nepenthe


On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 4:12 AM, Joseph Reagle joseph.2...@reagle.orgwrote:

 On 04/30/2013 12:03 AM, Risker wrote:

 Michael, you miss my point entirely.  This is exactly the kind of
 nastiness - trashing someone who takes umbrage at the way Wikipedia does
 something that directly relates to her own real life - that brings the
 project into disrepute, and that women in particular find hostile.


 Agreed.


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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-30 Thread Daniel and Elizabeth Case
Compare it to the weaknesses of the current category system. 98% of editors 
don't know what they are doing. Categories and subcategories are applied 
inconsistently all the time. Nobody has an overview of the entire tree 
structure, or even a major branch of it.

And would this be any less truer of tags?

Something that is a subcategory of American novelists today may stop being one 
tomorrow, just by dint of a single edit, and no one would be the wiser 
(unless they keep hundreds of categories on their watchlist). The category 
tree (or weave, as categories can have several parents) changes daily, with 
categories created, renamed, recategorised, and deleted. There are incessant 
arguments about how to name, categorise and diffuse categories, and about 
perceived iniquities.[citation needed]

In all the years I’ve been on Wikipedia I think I’ve only once been involved in 
any dispute over a category’s existence where I didn’t agree (and still don’t) 
with the outcome: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2007_August_9#Category:Vogue_editors
 (I suppose it’s only coincidental here that the category in question was 
mostly populated by articles about women). Indeed, I find it interesting that 
WP:LEW includes only one example from the category namespace, with everything 
else very well represented.

Using a defined set of basic tags in combination with something like CatScan – 
ported across to the Foundation server if you like, and given a friendly 
front-end with shortcuts to the most common searches – would do away with 
that.
Without really solving the underlying problem, IMO, and making it harder to fix 
when it recurs. 

 


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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Lady of Shalott
Interesting commentary as far as it went. I wish he'd delved a little
further into what he was saying.

Perception is important. I think people can act in good faith (for
instance to reduce the size of a massive category) without realizing
the effect of how the result looks. It may not be meant in a sexist
way, but if the effect is ghettoization, it looks sexist, and that
does matter. There is the real need though to find women novelists,
male nurses, etc. for studies. Apparently German WP has a system
whereby one can query category intersections that are defined by the
end user. ?This souns like a plausible solution, but I haven't used it
myself (and do't speak German).

Just thinking out loud here...
Lady

On 4/29/13, Sarah Stierch sarah.stie...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sparked by the recent...situation..

 http://reagle.org/joseph/pelican/social/wikipedia-and-gendered-categories.html

 Sar


 --
 *Sarah Stierch*
 */Museumist and open culture advocate/*
  Visit sarahstierch.com http://sarahstierch.com


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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Joseph Reagle

On 04/29/2013 10:03 PM, Lady of Shalott wrote:

Interesting commentary as far as it went. I wish he'd delved a little
further into what he was saying.
 ...
Just thinking out loud here...


I'm actually on this list :) and was just thinking out loud as well to 
see if I could understand the incident since I was seeing pretty strong 
claims (both Wikipedia is sexist and this is journalism run amok.) 
For instance, people continue to report that Filipacchi is a reporter 
for NYT when these were op-eds.


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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Lady of Shalott
Thanks for your reply, Joseph - fair enough!  :)  I agree with you - I
think there have been some major lapses of assumption of good faith
from both (all?) sides.

(Ouch looking back at my post, I'm wishing I could hit edit. The edit
summary would be something along the lines of typo fixing.)


On 4/29/13, Joseph Reagle joseph.2...@reagle.org wrote:
 On 04/29/2013 10:03 PM, Lady of Shalott wrote:
 Interesting commentary as far as it went. I wish he'd delved a little
 further into what he was saying.
  ...
 Just thinking out loud here...

 I'm actually on this list :) and was just thinking out loud as well to
 see if I could understand the incident since I was seeing pretty strong
 claims (both Wikipedia is sexist and this is journalism run amok.)
 For instance, people continue to report that Filipacchi is a reporter
 for NYT when these were op-eds.


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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Risker
Michael, I have to say that I find your comment offensive.  NOBODY expects
to be denigrated on Wikipedia, and being privileged is no excuse for
doing so.  This is EXACTLY the kind of behaviour this list was created to
try to modify.

Risker/Anne


On 29 April 2013 22:35, Michael J. Lowrey orangem...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 9:15 PM, Joseph Reagle joseph.2...@reagle.orgwrote:

 On 04/29/2013 10:03 PM, Lady of Shalott wrote:

 Interesting commentary as far as it went. I wish he'd delved a little
 further into what he was saying.
  ...

 Just thinking out loud here...


 I'm actually on this list :) and was just thinking out loud as well to
 see if I could understand the incident since I was seeing pretty strong
 claims (both Wikipedia is sexist and this is journalism run amok.) For
 instance, people continue to report that Filipacchi is a reporter for NYT
 when these were op-eds.


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 And nobody, of course, addresses the class issue: that Filipacchi is a
 privileged scion of one of the largest global publishing companies, and is
 not accustomed to having her own self-interest questioned in a classic
 WP:BOOMERANG fashion by vulgar Wikipedians nobody who MATTERS ever heard
 of.

 --
 Michael J. Orange Mike Lowrey

 When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and
 clothes.
  --  Desiderius Erasmus
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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Sarah Stierch
I agree with Risker. O_o - it's the whole asking for it mentality.

-Sarah

On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 8:07 PM, Risker risker...@gmail.com wrote:

 Michael, I have to say that I find your comment offensive.  NOBODY expects
 to be denigrated on Wikipedia, and being privileged is no excuse for
 doing so.  This is EXACTLY the kind of behaviour this list was created to
 try to modify.

 Risker/Anne


 On 29 April 2013 22:35, Michael J. Lowrey orangem...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 9:15 PM, Joseph Reagle joseph.2...@reagle.orgwrote:

 On 04/29/2013 10:03 PM, Lady of Shalott wrote:

 Interesting commentary as far as it went. I wish he'd delved a little
 further into what he was saying.
  ...

 Just thinking out loud here...


 I'm actually on this list :) and was just thinking out loud as well to
 see if I could understand the incident since I was seeing pretty strong
 claims (both Wikipedia is sexist and this is journalism run amok.) For
 instance, people continue to report that Filipacchi is a reporter for NYT
 when these were op-eds.


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 And nobody, of course, addresses the class issue: that Filipacchi is a
 privileged scion of one of the largest global publishing companies, and is
 not accustomed to having her own self-interest questioned in a classic
 WP:BOOMERANG fashion by vulgar Wikipedians nobody who MATTERS ever heard
 of.

 --
 Michael J. Orange Mike Lowrey

 When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food
 and clothes.
  --  Desiderius Erasmus
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-- 
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*Museumist, open culture advocate, and Wikimedian*
*www.sarahstierch.com*
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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Michael J. Lowrey
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 10:07 PM, Risker risker...@gmail.com wrote:

 Michael, I have to say that I find your comment offensive.  NOBODY expects
 to be denigrated on Wikipedia, and being privileged is no excuse for
 doing so.  This is EXACTLY the kind of behaviour this list was created to
 try to modify.

 Risker/Anne


How so? I would have said the same thing, for the same reason, if the
author had been male.  The evidence is that a lot of what she complains
about is the EXACT SAME THING that happens to anybody who comes into
Wikipedia and
attacks editors: some morons act like morons, and a few other cynics start
looking to see whether the complainant's hands are clean. Sadly, our morons
acted like sexist morons, thus confirming all the worst assumptions of
those who don't know how a wiki works. That doesn't give her a free pass
from the same constant attention to which all of us, editors and outside
critics alike, are subject.

And damned if I'll be told to shut up when I point out that an ordinary
working writer would be less likely to get an op-ed in the N.Y. Times than
one of the heirs to a profitable publishing company which might easily be
viewed as an obvious purchaser of the moribund N.Y. Times company, for what
amounts to Hachette's pocket change.

But of course, it's vulgar (meaning of the common people) to point out
when class privilege takes place. How offensive of me.

Now could we go back to working on substantive matters instead of slanging
at each other?

-- 
Michael J. Orange Mike Lowrey
vulgar common peasant with dirt farmers in his close family

When I get a little money I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and
clothes.
 --  Desiderius Erasmus
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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Risker
On 29 April 2013 23:34, Michael J. Lowrey orangem...@gmail.com wrote:


 On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 10:07 PM, Risker risker...@gmail.com wrote:

 Michael, I have to say that I find your comment offensive.  NOBODY
 expects to be denigrated on Wikipedia, and being privileged is no excuse
 for doing so.  This is EXACTLY the kind of behaviour this list was created
 to try to modify.

 Risker/Anne


 How so? I would have said the same thing, for the same reason, if the
 author had been male.  The evidence is that a lot of what she complains
 about is the EXACT SAME THING that happens to anybody who comes into
 Wikipedia and
 attacks editors: some morons act like morons, and a few other cynics start
 looking to see whether the complainant's hands are clean. Sadly, our morons
 acted like sexist morons, thus confirming all the worst assumptions of
 those who don't know how a wiki works. That doesn't give her a free pass
 from the same constant attention to which all of us, editors and outside
 critics alike, are subject.

 And damned if I'll be told to shut up when I point out that an ordinary
 working writer would be less likely to get an op-ed in the N.Y. Times than
 one of the heirs to a profitable publishing company which might easily be
 viewed as an obvious purchaser of the moribund N.Y. Times company, for what
 amounts to Hachette's pocket change.

 But of course, it's vulgar (meaning of the common people) to point out
 when class privilege takes place. How offensive of me.

 Now could we go back to working on substantive matters instead of slanging
 at each other?



Michael, you miss my point entirely.  This is exactly the kind of nastiness
- trashing someone who takes umbrage at the way Wikipedia does something
that directly relates to her own real life - that brings the project into
disrepute, and that women in particular find hostile.

This entire story is about how truly absurd our categorizations are, and
how it relegates subjects into niches that make it even more difficult to
find them.  Yes, it's inherently sexist, and it's inappropriate; however,
it's also deeply entrenched and seems to be almost impossible to break
through.

What it isn't about is what privilege the subject of the article may or
may not have had anywhere in her life.  That she got an op-ed in the NYT is
because the NYT is interested in what she wrote about; they don't publish
op-eds just because of who the author is, they publish it because they
think there is something interesting about the article.  It is a major BLP
violation for you to allege otherwise.  I hope you're not going anywhere
near any of the affected articles, or the editors who have had anything to
do with any of the related articles.

Risker/Anne
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Re: [Gendergap] Joseph Reagle on Wikipedia's category taxonomy

2013-04-29 Thread Daniel and Elizabeth Case
This system keeps the categories more straightforward, and pretty well avoids 
the sort of subtle bias Wikipedia has been caught with here. Defining the 
precise intersection of interest is up to the user.

But the corresponding weakness is that it depends on the editors hitting all 
the right categories to work properly (as well as the tool itself, which as 
heavy toolserver users know is not always the case). Someone may categorize in 
two of three but not the third (guess which one might get forgotten?)

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