Hey All,
This new feature has caused a bit of flack on English Wikipedia; which gives
me a bit of a platform to bring up some issues that have been rolling round
in my brain recently. A lot of the criticism on Wiki has been overly harsh -
so I want to try some constructive feedback here on the mailing list :)
Firstly, congrats to the developers on putting together a nice, easy to use
tool. It's not to my taste (FWIW) but there is effort and care put into the
tool - and whatever anyone says or moans; kudos for that. I'd *love *to see
those involved consider tweaking and improving the Wiki interface/theme/UI
to make it more modern and nice :)
The second point to make is that this is also a somewhat "misguided" tool.
It has been pitched as a way to promote inter-editor friendship and increase
editor retention. The issue here, of course, is that WikiLove does not
really address the problem that affects new editors (or experienced editors)
and drives them away. Those problems are to do with editor interaction,
poisonous atmosphere, lack of communication - but not the sort that can be
solved by slapping a "template" on the page. No, that problem is really only
solvable by going the other way - to make a determined effort to leave
personal and thoughtful messages (I hope I am not preaching here; I make a
huge effort to do this myself).
The way that this ended up appearing to be pitched as a "golden solution"
has not gone down too well because it appears as if the developers are not
"getting" the problem (when actually I am certain they are doing so; and
realise this is just one small part in the whole picture).
The other problem is that it somewhat undermines and trivialises what a
barnstar is. Sure they can be handed out freely as it is - but it does take
a small modicum of effort. In my year back editing Wikipedia I
have received 7 barnstars from editors for my activities. I specifically
recall what they were all for - and behind each is a piece of effort, time
or trial that I am extremely proud of. Not least because someone else out
there thought "yep, this guy has done a good job here".
The point of that somewhat lengthy paragraph is this: trivialising Barnstars
removes their current purpose (a relatively difficult to obtain piece of
quiet pride). This would be fine if their new "purpose" was as-or-more
important. But as mentioned above I don't think it is.
From a personal perspective, then, it is disappointing
to see WikiLove using
Barnstars. But I am getting off topic.
The other thing that has grated is this: for the most part us editors
appreciate developer attention (and we do not show that enough, sorry).
However English Wikipedia is also strongly *independent *and makes its own
decisions. Major changes to how the software works, or to the UI (especially
if it affects the social infrastructure too) is instantly controversial and
should be discussed with the community.
Very little discussion ocurrred r.e. rolling this out. For example no trial
was offered, no "Request for Comment" was taken to guage community opinion.
I know these are our processes and a significant part of the blame lies with
the editors - but even so announcement of the feature suddenly seemed to
"appear"on-wiki the day before :) (that may not be an accurate picture - but
for most that is how it appeared).
It was only *after* deployment that is was explained that the extension is
amazing customisable on-wiki (a really thoughtful idea. You guys need to
write more extensions like this, awesome stuff). So, more miscommunication.
This comes to the crux of the issue; I think the feature probably will be
accepted by the community, with some tweaking. But communication issues have
turned some people heavily against it (mostly, I suspect, because they
genuinely feel no one was able to give feedback prior to roll out).
I've seen this happen before numerous times - Wiki does something. Or a dev
does something. There is miscommunication and people who would probably see
eye-to-eye are growling at each other across tables. The established Wiki
editors feel put out and the developers feel under-appreciated (did I
mention: WikiLove guys!). [Ironically *the same problem* is a big part of
the editor retention issue on-wiki]
It comes down to a lack of understanding of the processes, attitudes and
"languages" involved in both the developer and wiki communities.
So the question that this leads me to is this: what can we do to improve
communication between these two groups. How can we vocalize the communities
thoughts, ideas and independence. How do we get the creativity and
versatility of the developers in front of the community.
Do we need some sort of group to cross this boundary and focus on smoothing
out these hiccups?
Fire away :)
Tom
On 1 July 2011 03:45, Howie Fung <hfung(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Everyone,
Earlier today, we deployed WikiLove Extension [1] to the English Wikipedia.
We also made some minor changes to the Article Feedback Tool as well.
For those who are interested, the following url may be used to view how
Wikilove is being used:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:AbuseLog&limit=500&am…
Please provide feedback on the Wikilove talk page [2].
Thanks!
Howie
[1]
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:WikiLove
[2]
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Talk:WikiLove<
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/WikiLove_1.0>
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