Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-31 Thread Samuel Klein
   Wikipedia has no management style because there are no managers. We
   should not be a bureaucracy in any sense of the word.


Right.


  That is the point of WP:BURO. It's not that We are a bureaucracy, but
   if you cut some corners we'll look the other way. That's not what it
   says at all. It says We are NOT a bureaucracy and so Knowing where
   to go should be much, MUCH less than half the battle of
   contributing to Wikipedia.


Absolutely.  And for 90% of contributors, that is happily the case.

However, on the fringes; somewhat active pages, pages with at least one
editor conflict, new pages, anon and newbie contributions, policy pages,
pages somehow turned up for deletion : lots of different policies,
aggregated over many years, come into play.


 face every now and again. The way we operate is a hybrid of pure wiki
 editing with other stuff.

Yes.

 And being in denial about the scale issue
 seems head-in-the-sand to me. A wiki with 10,000 pages is a big wiki.
 And we have 1000 times that, one way and another.

This argument isn't so simple.  90% of editors of our 10 million pages
manage with fully distributed groups of 1-2 editors, wikiprojects of a dozen
people, and a hundred automated bots and scripts.  They dont need to know
more than a couple of policies and guidelines, and can basically just look
at a similar page elsewhere to figure out how to contribute.

10% of a project this size is still a lot, and that produces all of the
light and noise.  but it's not 'in denial' to say that our core policies of
not being bureaucratic, ignoring rules where necessary, and being rightfully
indignant when it seems bureaucracy rules the day in some corner of the
project*, are what should guide 90% if not 100% of work on the Projects.

SJ

* even to the point of getting together and fixing that as an acknowledged
problem :)
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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-23 Thread quiddity
There are 2 things wrong with this discussion.

1) someone replied to the proposal:
 Isn't it time to be honest with ourselves ...

Perhaps next time, consider the phrase: It only takes one (1) reply,
to turn a rant (1) into an argument (2).

2) That page, [[WP:NOT]], is an abstraction of the workings of a
community of 20,000+ participants.
If you encounter Different individuals, you'll get Different results.

It is difficult to discuss Zen writings with Literal-mindedness, or to
understand them in isolation: below the section WP:BURO is WP:ANARCHY.
Any step away from Anarchy, begins Bureaucracy.



 (there is only wiki).'  (Note: The geekword wiki does not suffice in
 describing the Wikipedia's actual purpose, scope, or processes, let
 alone its systems).

exactly.

Quiddity

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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-23 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 11:14 PM, Charles Matthews 
charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com wrote:

 Ryan Delaney wrote:
 
  That's the point made in the OP. Apoc2400 thinks that, since the
  reality is that Wikipedia has become greatly bureaucratized (he and I
  think that's a bad thing, you think it's a good thing, but that's
  beside the point) then we should stop kidding ourselves and get rid of
  WP:BURO.
 No, I do not think it is a good thing - where did I say that? I think
 it is important not to be confused between discussions of what is really
 going on, within Wikipedia as it actually operates, and discussions at
 an idealised level (normally only backed up with some anecdotal if
 slight evidence). The other point I would like to make is that the
 problem really comes with people who think you make a bureaucracy work
 by being bureaucratic, when the opposite is true. WP:BURO is basically
 prescriptive, not descriptive (I'm against people who weasel by saying
 policy is basically descriptive not prescriptive whenever that suits
 them), and it tells us not to do that bureaucratic thing of using
 sensible procedural features in an obstructive fashion.

 Charles


It sounds to me like you're both making a similar point: that is, there's no
reason to deny the reality that Wikipedia does have some bureaucratic
elements. In the worst case, this leads to a rather Kafkaesque situation
where people who are actually obstructed by bureaucracy being told by a
bureaucrat that Well, as you can see from our policies, this is not a
bureaucracy. In this case it helps to have 20/20 vision about the fact that
Wikipedia is, in fact, bureaucratic, because recognizing the problem is half
of solving it.

If this is your view, then you probably would agree with a less polemical
version of what I took the OP to be saying: Wikipedia *is* bureaucratic, and
we ought to be honest about that.

- causa sui
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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-22 Thread Charles Matthews
Ryan Delaney wrote:

 That's the point made in the OP. Apoc2400 thinks that, since the 
 reality is that Wikipedia has become greatly bureaucratized (he and I 
 think that's a bad thing, you think it's a good thing, but that's 
 beside the point) then we should stop kidding ourselves and get rid of 
 WP:BURO.
No, I do not think it is a good thing - where did I say that? I think 
it is important not to be confused between discussions of what is really 
going on, within Wikipedia as it actually operates, and discussions at 
an idealised level (normally only backed up with some anecdotal if 
slight evidence). The other point I would like to make is that the 
problem really comes with people who think you make a bureaucracy work 
by being bureaucratic, when the opposite is true. WP:BURO is basically 
prescriptive, not descriptive (I'm against people who weasel by saying 
policy is basically descriptive not prescriptive whenever that suits 
them), and it tells us not to do that bureaucratic thing of using 
sensible procedural features in an obstructive fashion.

Charles


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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-22 Thread stevertigo
Ryan Delaney ryan.dela...@gmail.com wrote:
 Wikipedia has no management style because there are no managers. We should
 not be a bureaucracy in any sense of the word.
 That is the point of WP:BURO. It's not that We are a bureaucracy, but if
 you cut some corners we'll look the other way. That's not what it says at
 all. It says We are NOT a bureaucracy and so Knowing where to go should
 be much, MUCH less than half the battle of contributing to Wikipedia.

If you are right, that would mean that 1) Jimbo, 2) a Foundation that
implements and prioritizes all new development, 3) a Board that
does... something, 4) an Arbcom that tries hard (to tar and feather
only the right people), 5) OFFICE, 5) and 6) a small army of
sdorks/s administrators (empowered, apparently to make
un-reviewable 2-week blocks)... 'do not necessarily qualify as
managers.' On that basis its just simple logic that 'WP does not
have' a 'management style' and 'WP is not a bureaucracy'.

But we see cases all the time, though, where an entity says it is not
something that it is, or is something that its not - North Korea for
example. And that's to say nothing of the fact that *any entity that
has *some notion of 'getting things done' likewise has some notion of
'managing things,' and thus has some certain concepts of management.
Hence anything with 'some concept of management' will likewise have a
management style. This is true regardless of how how chic (geek
variation) it is to just say something 'there is no management style
(there is only wiki).'  (Note: The geekword wiki does not suffice in
describing the Wikipedia's actual purpose, scope, or processes, let
alone its systems).

So while WP may not have any managers, nor does it implement a
management style, it still has elements that at least very very
strongly resemble each, though perhaps badly. And of course even a
taco stand with one employee can develop some kind of bureaucracy
issues, so I don't see the point in continuing any pretense that
suggests otherwise here. In fact, according to the traditional
canonical terminology, Wikipedia doesn't even have editors - it
only has users.

-Stevertigo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-20 Thread Charles Matthews
Ryan Delaney wrote:


 On Sat, Oct 17, 2009 at 3:15 AM, Charles Matthews 
 charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com 
 mailto:charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com wrote:

 Apoc 2400 wrote:
  Isn't it time to be honest with ourselves and nominate
 Wikipedia is not a
  bureaucracy for deletion?
 
 Bureaucracy is a fairly helpful description of how Wikipedia
 actually
 functions, as far as management style is concerned. Decisions are
 taken
 according to practice that has been codified to some extent (in some
 areas, to a large extent). If you want to get something done, knowing
 where to go and how to apply is at least half the battle. But my
 reading
 of WP:BURO would make the comment A procedural error made in posting
 anything, such as a proposal or nomination, is not grounds for
 invalidating that post central to its intention. I say we don't
 delete
 that.

 Charles



 Wikipedia has no management style because there are no managers. We 
 should not be a bureaucracy in any sense of the word.

 That is the point of WP:BURO. It's not that We are a bureaucracy, but 
 if you cut some corners we'll look the other way. That's not what it 
 says at all. It says We are NOT a bureaucracy and so Knowing where 
 to go should be much, MUCH less than half the battle of 
 contributing to Wikipedia.

 - causa sui

I'm sure that styles without central managers feature in management 
books, though. In fact I know they do. The question is whether it is 
more helpful to insist that the reality is a purist wiki/collaborative 
style of work with everything freeform, or to look the actuality in the 
face every now and again. The way we operate is a hybrid of pure wiki 
editing with other stuff. And being in denial about the scale issue 
seems head-in-the-sand to me. A wiki with 10,000 pages is a big wiki. 
And we have 1000 times that, one way and another.

Charles



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Re: [WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-20 Thread Ryan Delaney
On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 1:00 PM, Charles Matthews 
charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com wrote:

 Ryan Delaney wrote:
 
 
  On Sat, Oct 17, 2009 at 3:15 AM, Charles Matthews
  charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com
  mailto:charles.r.matth...@ntlworld.com wrote:
 
  Apoc 2400 wrote:
   Isn't it time to be honest with ourselves and nominate
  Wikipedia is not a
   bureaucracy for deletion?
  
  Bureaucracy is a fairly helpful description of how Wikipedia
  actually
  functions, as far as management style is concerned. Decisions are
  taken
  according to practice that has been codified to some extent (in some
  areas, to a large extent). If you want to get something done, knowing
  where to go and how to apply is at least half the battle. But my
  reading
  of WP:BURO would make the comment A procedural error made in posting
  anything, such as a proposal or nomination, is not grounds for
  invalidating that post central to its intention. I say we don't
  delete
  that.
 
  Charles
 
 
 
  Wikipedia has no management style because there are no managers. We
  should not be a bureaucracy in any sense of the word.
 
  That is the point of WP:BURO. It's not that We are a bureaucracy, but
  if you cut some corners we'll look the other way. That's not what it
  says at all. It says We are NOT a bureaucracy and so Knowing where
  to go should be much, MUCH less than half the battle of
  contributing to Wikipedia.
 
  - causa sui
 
 I'm sure that styles without central managers feature in management
 books, though. In fact I know they do. The question is whether it is
 more helpful to insist that the reality is a purist wiki/collaborative
 style of work with everything freeform, or to look the actuality in the
 face every now and again. The way we operate is a hybrid of pure wiki
 editing with other stuff. And being in denial about the scale issue
 seems head-in-the-sand to me. A wiki with 10,000 pages is a big wiki.
 And we have 1000 times that, one way and another.

 Charles


That's the point made in the OP. Apoc2400 thinks that, since the reality is
that Wikipedia has become greatly bureaucratized (he and I think that's a
bad thing, you think it's a good thing, but that's beside the point) then we
should stop kidding ourselves and get rid of WP:BURO. I want WP:BURO to stay
because I want to have strong resistance to instruction creep and any
complications of the editing process that make content contribution more and
not less difficult for new users.

- causa sui
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[WikiEN-l] New way to discourage newcomers invented

2009-10-16 Thread Apoc 2400
Checking the Village Pump today I discovered
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Village_pump_%28proposals%29#autoconfirmed_for_unassisted_article_creation

This is an ingenious new way of getting rid of newcomers while officially
welcoming them to contribute. A newcomer who wants to create a new article
would be sent through a 7+ page procedure with no less than 21 buttons, a
number of dead ends and trap doors and about 2500 words of instructions for
a typical path from start to end.

Isn't it time to be honest with ourselves and nominate Wikipedia is not a
bureaucracy for deletion?

This email describes my impression. See for yourself:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WIZ2
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