Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-04-01 Thread Mathieu Stumpf

Le 2013-03-30 09:54, Craig Franklin a écrit :
It comes down to asking what the purpose of the Foundation and a 
project
like Wikipedia is.  Is it to produce a free source of knowledge, or 
is to
promote volunteerism?  If it's possible to build a better 
encyclopædia by

encouraging paid editing or allowing for-profit entities to sponsor a
particular page, then that's a possibility that we ought to make 
ourselves
open to.  Volunteerism, of course, has served the movement well and 
got us

to where we find ourselves today, but it is not and should not be
considered an end unto itself.

Of course, as has been pointed out, there are potential pitfalls with 
this
model that have been discussed many times - there are many potential 
COI
issues, and paid editing in some areas may discourage unpaid editing 
in
others.  However, I think it would be unwise simply to dismiss those 
sort

of possibilities out of hand.


How do you measure risk? Because, as I percieve it, once you lost 
unpaid editors confidence, it will be at least as difficult to make them 
come back as to go from scratch again. So you better have to be 
absolutely sure it won't break the community before you go in such major 
political change.


--
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http://www.culture-libre.org/

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-04-01 Thread Mathieu Stumpf

Le 2013-03-30 20:51, Steven Walling a écrit :
There's actually plenty of even more neutral ways to do this IMO, and 
none
of them have anything to do with promoting the donor or paid editing. 
For
example: a simple count of how many readers donated in support of 
this

article. This article sponsored by 70 Wikipedia readers like you.
Contribute today by editing or donating. Or something like that.


No. First, you'll also need to put how many person edited the article, 
how many times it was edited, and blablabla numbers. Not only could it 
prevent new useful edits (oh it was already so much raffined, how could 
I dare edit it), but it would probably encourage let's make this 
article have a big edit count useless contributions.


Now I don't understand, do we have suddely so much need for paid edit? 
I mean, sure I would love spending my days improving wikipedia and 
other wikimedia projects, being paid for that. Give me a median salary, 
and I sign right now, and I'm sure I won't be alone here. But I also 
would be serriously affraid that it could harm the movement, which I 
thing is far more important than my personal pleasure of being a full 
time editor.


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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-31 Thread WereSpielChequers
I see several issues/concerns re sponsoring pages.

Firstly it is a form of advertising, even if we don't name the sponsor on
the page (and there will be pressure to do so) then we will have headlines
along the lines of car maker x launches new peregrine car - sponsors
Wikipedia page on Peregine Falcon. A large enough part of the community
don't want to accept advertising, such a large part that any advertising
however disguised as sponsorship is going to be more trouble than its
worth.

Secondly there is the argument that sponsorship could help by funding the
buying of sources. We already have microgrants available to help here, why
do we also need sponsorship?

Thirdly there is the vexed issue of paid editing, here the important thing
is to avoid COI. At Wikimania in Gdansk Google's charity arm presented a
relatively uncontentious program they had run to translate medical articles
from English into various South Asian languages.

Fourthly you can expect news stories along the lines of travel company Y
stops sponsoring Wikipedia articles on resorts X and Z, starts sponsoring
articles on resorts A and B  as it moves out of Country Q and expands offer
in Country C.

My concern if you approach these via sponsorship is that you then have to
have a whole new bureaucracy around who is an acceptable sponsor, and
whoever seeks to control that has an impossible task as the sponsors may
not disclose their plans in advance (hypothetical example, a computer game
manufacturer known for science fiction themed games sponsors some unrelated
articles re Roman history and the Magonid dynasty, they then get a lot of
free publicity as the games press correctly speculates that they are going
to launch a swords and sandals type game based on the Punic Wars.

So in my opinion best to not allow sponsorship of articles.

WSC

--

 Message: 1
 Date: Fri, 29 Mar 2013 18:04:35 -0700
 From: Mono monom...@gmail.com
 To: Wikimedia Mailing List wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page
 Message-ID:
 
 cad6thru9dqs4bykofq6gniwec3d2uzn1bj1b2kcom+mvvsr...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

 How so?


 On Fri, Mar 29, 2013 at 5:58 PM, Thomas Dalton thomas.dal...@gmail.com
 wrote:

  On Mar 30, 2013 12:55 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com wrote:
  
   Yes, but it might be nice if we could let people pay trusted editors to
   improve articles (without a COI and with a NPOV) that normally wouldn't
  get
   attention.
 
  Would that be nice? I think that would be very harmful...
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 --

 Message: 2
 Date: Sat, 30 Mar 2013 02:08:45 +0100
 From: Thomas Dalton thomas.dal...@gmail.com
 To: Wikimedia Mailing List wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page
 Message-ID:
 CALTQccfVk7ABPZmeAC5K23XFa_kmO==
 dh1h5o1ijfu4++yt...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

 On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  How so?

 It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
 written encyclopedia.

 You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid editors.
 There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The whole
 concept would be extremely divisive.



 Message: 4
 Date: Sat, 30 Mar 2013 01:29:33 +
 From: Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com
 To: Wikimedia Mailing List wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page
 Message-ID:
 CAKO2H7_PR2CKzF=
 zvay7_fslhuhz-d19q8kuyfx3p6sc0hd...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

 It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

  On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
 wrote:
  
   How so?
 
  It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
  written encyclopedia.
 
  You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
 editors.
  There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
 whole

Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-31 Thread ENWP Pine
Hmm. Once again, I largely agree with WSC. Unless I'm missing something, this 
idea is largely about fundraising, and I think it could introduce more problems 
than it solves.

The evidence that I've seen suggest that WMF is very successful at fundraising, 
but has ongoing difficulties with making progress toward the goal to get 
200,000 active editors by 2015. So, I see little reason to implement page 
adoption if the goal is to fundraise, but if there is something about the 
proposal that's relevant to improving the active editor count from the current 
85,000, I'd be interested in at least learning more about that.

Pine
  
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-31 Thread John Vandenberg
On Sat, Mar 30, 2013 at 9:36 AM, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi,

 I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
 pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
 on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
 donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
 discussed/considered before.

fwiw, this model was discussed on the private fundraising mailing list
in November 2010, with similar results IMO.

--
John Vandenberg

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-31 Thread Brad Jorsch
On Sun, Mar 31, 2013 at 2:46 AM, WereSpielChequers 
werespielchequ...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thirdly there is the vexed issue of paid editing, here the important thing
 is to avoid COI.

In my personal opinion it's as important to avoid even the *appearance* of
COI, as that can be just as damaging to Wikipedia's credibility.

And given the propensity of some people to find a conspiracy in everything,
I'm not sure that's even possible.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Strainu
Guys, I think you're reading more into it than it is. When you're adopting
an animal you don't  get to decide what and how much it gets to eat.
Similarly adopting a wiki page wouldn't mean you pay for having a say on
the content. At the bottom end of the reward scale you could get a badge
you could put on YOUR website, without having your name on Wikipedia at all.

I'm not necessarely in favour of this idea but i wanted to see if it's been
discussed before. I guess that if it has, people havebeen confusing this
idea with paid editing.


Pe sâmbătă, 30 martie 2013, Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com a
scris:
 It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering
this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
wrote:
 
  How so?

 It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
 written encyclopedia.

 You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
editors.
 There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
whole
 concept would be extremely divisive.
 ___
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 Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org javascript:;
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Craig Franklin
It comes down to asking what the purpose of the Foundation and a project
like Wikipedia is.  Is it to produce a free source of knowledge, or is to
promote volunteerism?  If it's possible to build a better encyclopædia by
encouraging paid editing or allowing for-profit entities to sponsor a
particular page, then that's a possibility that we ought to make ourselves
open to.  Volunteerism, of course, has served the movement well and got us
to where we find ourselves today, but it is not and should not be
considered an end unto itself.

Of course, as has been pointed out, there are potential pitfalls with this
model that have been discussed many times - there are many potential COI
issues, and paid editing in some areas may discourage unpaid editing in
others.  However, I think it would be unwise simply to dismiss those sort
of possibilities out of hand.

Cheers,
Craig Franklin

On 30 March 2013 11:29, Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com wrote:

 It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

  On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
 wrote:
  
   How so?
 
  It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
  written encyclopedia.
 
  You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
 editors.
  There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
 whole
  concept would be extremely divisive.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Jane Darnell
As a fundraising tactic, I think this is a good idea, but it is hard
to define and put a price on it. I would guess you would charge more
to sponsor high-profile articles, the way a parks commission can
advertise donor names on park benches, where the more prominently
placed ones get a higher price. That said, does the sponsorship only
apply to the page in one language? And how long does the sponsorship
stay with the page? Forever? That doesn't seem right. Putting the
sponsor's name visibly on the page can also be confusing, because most
readers will assume sponsor=writer, and this is incorrect. You could
create a donor's list though that links to the pages and have the
sponsor names listed there with the year of their sponsorship, with
each year an update possible with the amount paid (or amount block in
a scheme of bronze, silver, gold). This way high profile pages could
have more sponsors. With the sponsor amounts as a guide, individual
Wikipedia contributors may apply for a mini-grant to cover costs of
source books, etc for future work based on past work in these pages.

2013/3/30, Craig Franklin cfrank...@halonetwork.net:
 It comes down to asking what the purpose of the Foundation and a project
 like Wikipedia is.  Is it to produce a free source of knowledge, or is to
 promote volunteerism?  If it's possible to build a better encyclopædia by
 encouraging paid editing or allowing for-profit entities to sponsor a
 particular page, then that's a possibility that we ought to make ourselves
 open to.  Volunteerism, of course, has served the movement well and got us
 to where we find ourselves today, but it is not and should not be
 considered an end unto itself.

 Of course, as has been pointed out, there are potential pitfalls with this
 model that have been discussed many times - there are many potential COI
 issues, and paid editing in some areas may discourage unpaid editing in
 others.  However, I think it would be unwise simply to dismiss those sort
 of possibilities out of hand.

 Cheers,
 Craig Franklin

 On 30 March 2013 11:29, Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com wrote:

 It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering
 this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

  On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
 wrote:
  
   How so?
 
  It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
  written encyclopedia.
 
  You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
 editors.
  There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
 whole
  concept would be extremely divisive.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Thomas Dalton
On Mar 30, 2013 9:46 AM, Jane Darnell jane...@gmail.com wrote:

 As a fundraising tactic, I think this is a good idea,

It is worth remembering that we don't actually have a problem with
fundraising. We can raise enormous amounts of money incredibly easily by
putting banners on the fifth most visited website on the world. (I don't
want to diminish the work of the foundation and chapter fundraising teams,
but they only have to work really hard because we have so few people
working on fundraising compared to other charities with similar budgets.)

The kind of people that would sponsor a page probably donate anyway because
of the banners. You might manage to increase their donation size, but
that's not really important. If you want to come up with new fundraising
strategies, try and think of ones that attract donors we wouldn't otherwise
get. For example, legacies (donations left in people's wills) would be a
great way to diversify our revenue.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Peter Southwood

Why would anyone want to sponsor a page?
What would they get out of it?
Cheers,
Peter
- Original Message - 
From: Jane Darnell jane...@gmail.com
To: cfrank...@halonetwork.net; Wikimedia Mailing List 
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org

Sent: Saturday, March 30, 2013 11:46 AM
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page



As a fundraising tactic, I think this is a good idea, but it is hard
to define and put a price on it. I would guess you would charge more
to sponsor high-profile articles, the way a parks commission can
advertise donor names on park benches, where the more prominently
placed ones get a higher price. That said, does the sponsorship only
apply to the page in one language? And how long does the sponsorship
stay with the page? Forever? That doesn't seem right. Putting the
sponsor's name visibly on the page can also be confusing, because most
readers will assume sponsor=writer, and this is incorrect. You could
create a donor's list though that links to the pages and have the
sponsor names listed there with the year of their sponsorship, with
each year an update possible with the amount paid (or amount block in
a scheme of bronze, silver, gold). This way high profile pages could
have more sponsors. With the sponsor amounts as a guide, individual
Wikipedia contributors may apply for a mini-grant to cover costs of
source books, etc for future work based on past work in these pages.

2013/3/30, Craig Franklin cfrank...@halonetwork.net:

It comes down to asking what the purpose of the Foundation and a project
like Wikipedia is.  Is it to produce a free source of knowledge, or is to
promote volunteerism?  If it's possible to build a better encyclopædia by
encouraging paid editing or allowing for-profit entities to sponsor a
particular page, then that's a possibility that we ought to make 
ourselves
open to.  Volunteerism, of course, has served the movement well and got 
us

to where we find ourselves today, but it is not and should not be
considered an end unto itself.

Of course, as has been pointed out, there are potential pitfalls with 
this

model that have been discussed many times - there are many potential COI
issues, and paid editing in some areas may discourage unpaid editing in
others.  However, I think it would be unwise simply to dismiss those sort
of possibilities out of hand.

Cheers,
Craig Franklin

On 30 March 2013 11:29, Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com 
wrote:



It's a weird dichotomy.

I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
area. I could easily have spent several grand.

Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
benefit.

And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering
this
entire field in GAs in a year.

Without that it will take me a good five years

I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

Tom

On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
wrote:
 
  How so?

 It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
 written encyclopedia.

 You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
editors.
 There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
whole
 concept would be extremely divisive.
 ___
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 Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org javascript:;
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Strainu
What do they get when they donate? What do they get when they adopt
wildlife?

Still, some people are donating and/or are adopting wildlife.

Strainu


2013/3/30 Peter Southwood peter.southw...@telkomsa.net

 Why would anyone want to sponsor a page?
 What would they get out of it?
 Cheers,
 Peter
 - Original Message - From: Jane Darnell jane...@gmail.com
 To: cfrank...@halonetwork.net; Wikimedia Mailing List 
 wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.**org wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Sent: Saturday, March 30, 2013 11:46 AM
 Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page


  As a fundraising tactic, I think this is a good idea, but it is hard
 to define and put a price on it. I would guess you would charge more
 to sponsor high-profile articles, the way a parks commission can
 advertise donor names on park benches, where the more prominently
 placed ones get a higher price. That said, does the sponsorship only
 apply to the page in one language? And how long does the sponsorship
 stay with the page? Forever? That doesn't seem right. Putting the
 sponsor's name visibly on the page can also be confusing, because most
 readers will assume sponsor=writer, and this is incorrect. You could
 create a donor's list though that links to the pages and have the
 sponsor names listed there with the year of their sponsorship, with
 each year an update possible with the amount paid (or amount block in
 a scheme of bronze, silver, gold). This way high profile pages could
 have more sponsors. With the sponsor amounts as a guide, individual
 Wikipedia contributors may apply for a mini-grant to cover costs of
 source books, etc for future work based on past work in these pages.

 2013/3/30, Craig Franklin cfrank...@halonetwork.net:

 It comes down to asking what the purpose of the Foundation and a project
 like Wikipedia is.  Is it to produce a free source of knowledge, or is to
 promote volunteerism?  If it's possible to build a better encyclopædia by
 encouraging paid editing or allowing for-profit entities to sponsor a
 particular page, then that's a possibility that we ought to make
 ourselves
 open to.  Volunteerism, of course, has served the movement well and got
 us
 to where we find ourselves today, but it is not and should not be
 considered an end unto itself.

 Of course, as has been pointed out, there are potential pitfalls with
 this
 model that have been discussed many times - there are many potential COI
 issues, and paid editing in some areas may discourage unpaid editing in
 others.  However, I think it would be unwise simply to dismiss those sort
 of possibilities out of hand.

 Cheers,
 Craig Franklin

 On 30 March 2013 11:29, Thomas Morton morton.tho...@googlemail.com
 wrote:

  It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering
 this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

  On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:;
 wrote:
  
   How so?
 
  It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
  written encyclopedia.
 
  You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
 editors.
  There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
 whole
  concept would be extremely divisive.
  __**_
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  Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.**org 
  Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.orgjavascript:;
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Mark
There's a little of that which goes on currently (I mean above-board, 
not counting anything that may happen unofficially). The most common 
case is that a cultural organization, such as a museum, provides funds 
for a Wikipedian in residence who is brought in to do a mixture of 
training other people, and paying special attention to articles in a 
particular area of interest.


I imagine this avoids trouble in most cases mainly because the goals are 
aligned: if we believe the cultural organization is, like us, only 
aiming at high-quality, accurate, NPOV coverage of their subject area, 
rather than any kind of self-aggrandizement or POV-pushing, then we have 
much in common.


-Mark


On 3/30/13 1:55 AM, Mono wrote:

Yes, but it might be nice if we could let people pay trusted editors to
improve articles (without a COI and with a NPOV) that normally wouldn't get
attention.


On Fri, Mar 29, 2013 at 4:10 PM, Deryck Chan deryckc...@wikimedia.hkwrote:


Because we've decided that [[WP:Ownership of articles]] is wrong, and
wronger if there's financial sponsorship involved.

On 29 March 2013 22:36, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:


Hi,

I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
discussed/considered before.

Thanks,
Strainu

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Thomas Dalton
On Mar 30, 2013 10:28 PM, Mark delir...@hackish.org wrote:

 There's a little of that which goes on currently (I mean above-board, not
counting anything that may happen unofficially). The most common case is
that a cultural organization, such as a museum, provides funds for a
Wikipedian in residence who is brought in to do a mixture of training
other people, and paying special attention to articles in a particular area
of interest.

I believe Wikipedians in Residence generally avoid actually editing
articles where they have a conflict of interest. They just provide support
to others, that aren't conflicted, to edit them.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Peter Southwood
How would sponsorship money for a page be spent to make the sponsorship 
meaningful?

Cheers,
Peter
- Original Message - 
From: Steven Walling steven.wall...@gmail.com

To: Wikimedia Mailing List wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Saturday, March 30, 2013 9:51 PM
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page



On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Strainu wrote:

Guys, I think you're reading more into it than it is. When you're 
adopting

an animal you don't  get to decide what and how much it gets to eat.
Similarly adopting a wiki page wouldn't mean you pay for having a say on
the content. At the bottom end of the reward scale you could get a badge
you could put on YOUR website, without having your name on Wikipedia at
all.

I'm not necessarely in favour of this idea but i wanted to see if it's 
been

discussed before. I guess that if it has, people havebeen confusing this
idea with paid editing.



Big +1 to this comment.

There's actually plenty of even more neutral ways to do this IMO, and none
of them have anything to do with promoting the donor or paid editing. For
example: a simple count of how many readers donated in support of this
article. This article sponsored by 70 Wikipedia readers like you.
Contribute today by editing or donating. Or something like that.

Anyway this discussion should be on a public wiki, ideally Meta, and we
should invite Megan, Zack, and the rest of the fundraising team, not to
mention the wider community.





Pe sâmbătă, 30 martie 2013, Thomas Morton 
morton.tho...@googlemail.comjavascript:;

a
scris:
 It's a weird dichotomy.

 I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
 area. I could easily have spent several grand.

 Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

 But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
 benefit.

 And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
 these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering
this
 entire field in GAs in a year.

 Without that it will take me a good five years

 I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently 
 an

 awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
 ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

 Tom

 On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com 
 javascript:;javascript:;

wrote:
 
  How so?

 It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
 written encyclopedia.

 You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid
editors.
 There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The
whole
 concept would be extremely divisive.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-30 Thread Richard Symonds
Replying off my phone here, so no signature or lengthy response...

For Wikipedians in Residence, it varies I believe. I've seen some WiRs edit
articles directly, whereas others, including WMUK's WiRs, don't edit
articles about their institution at all, instead focussing on training,
digitisation, or making sources easily available.
On Mar 30, 2013 10:36 PM, Thomas Dalton thomas.dal...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 10:28 PM, Mark delir...@hackish.org wrote:
 
  There's a little of that which goes on currently (I mean above-board, not
 counting anything that may happen unofficially). The most common case is
 that a cultural organization, such as a museum, provides funds for a
 Wikipedian in residence who is brought in to do a mixture of training
 other people, and paying special attention to articles in a particular area
 of interest.

 I believe Wikipedians in Residence generally avoid actually editing
 articles where they have a conflict of interest. They just provide support
 to others, that aren't conflicted, to edit them.
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[Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Strainu
Hi,

I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
discussed/considered before.

Thanks,
   Strainu

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Thomas Dalton
Where would their name go? If it's anywhere more prominent than the names
of the volunteers that wrote the article (which anything on the article
page itself would be) then it doesn't really seem fair...
On Mar 29, 2013 10:37 PM, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi,

 I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
 pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
 on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
 donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
 discussed/considered before.

 Thanks,
Strainu

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Deryck Chan
Because we've decided that [[WP:Ownership of articles]] is wrong, and
wronger if there's financial sponsorship involved.

On 29 March 2013 22:36, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi,

 I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
 pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
 on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
 donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
 discussed/considered before.

 Thanks,
Strainu

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Mono
Yes, but it might be nice if we could let people pay trusted editors to
improve articles (without a COI and with a NPOV) that normally wouldn't get
attention.


On Fri, Mar 29, 2013 at 4:10 PM, Deryck Chan deryckc...@wikimedia.hkwrote:

 Because we've decided that [[WP:Ownership of articles]] is wrong, and
 wronger if there's financial sponsorship involved.

 On 29 March 2013 22:36, Strainu strain...@gmail.com wrote:

  Hi,
 
  I've just seen an OTRS ticket asking why isn't Wikipedia giving its
  pages for adoption (like when you adopt a page and your name ends up
  on its cage or something like that). I've moved the ticket to the
  donations queue, but I was wondering if this has ever been
  discussed/considered before.
 
  Thanks,
 Strainu
 
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Thomas Dalton
On Mar 30, 2013 12:55 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com wrote:

 Yes, but it might be nice if we could let people pay trusted editors to
 improve articles (without a COI and with a NPOV) that normally wouldn't
get
 attention.

Would that be nice? I think that would be very harmful...
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Mono
How so?


On Fri, Mar 29, 2013 at 5:58 PM, Thomas Dalton thomas.dal...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 12:55 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  Yes, but it might be nice if we could let people pay trusted editors to
  improve articles (without a COI and with a NPOV) that normally wouldn't
 get
  attention.

 Would that be nice? I think that would be very harmful...
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Thomas Dalton
On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com wrote:

 How so?

It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
written encyclopedia.

You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid editors.
There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The whole
concept would be extremely divisive.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Adopt a page

2013-03-29 Thread Thomas Morton
It's a weird dichotomy.

I've spent several hundred quid on source material for my current topic
area. I could easily have spent several grand.

Paid editing is a major issue, because it conflicts with our culture

But if someone were able to buy my sources then it would be of huge
benefit.

And, controversially, if someone could fund me one day a week to write
these articles I could likely expand from one GA per month to covering this
entire field in GAs in a year.

Without that it will take me a good five years

I've come recently to see that funding article work is not inherently an
awful thing. But it needs to be done with extreme care to protect our
ideals and neutrality. And that is a HARD problem.

Tom

On Saturday, March 30, 2013, Thomas Dalton wrote:

 On Mar 30, 2013 1:04 AM, Mono monom...@gmail.com javascript:; wrote:
 
  How so?

 It would be completely against our culture. Wikipedia is a volunteer
 written encyclopedia.

 You would end up with a two-tier system of paid editors and unpaid editors.
 There would inevitably be a lot of conflict between those groups. The whole
 concept would be extremely divisive.
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