Thanks, Jonathan. Do you think we can convince Katherine Maher to
agree to enforce the Creative Commons Attribution requirements? There
is no doubt it would aid both editor recruitment, and as you point
out, morale too.
I also want to ask her about:
(2) survey metrics:
https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikimedia_2030/Process_plannin…
(3) benchmarking investment performance against institutional
endowment-grade mutual funds and studies of endowment performance:
https://sites.hks.harvard.edu/fs/rzeckhau/EndowmentsPaperPartII.pdf
and e.g.,
https://institutional.vanguard.com/iam/pdf/EndowmentPerformanceResearch.pdf
Related: endowment size required for full sustainability;
(4) testing replacing the pencil icon with the word "[edit]" on mobile;
(5) intelligibility remediation on Wiktionary as a Foundation
technology development project;
(6) systemic review of bias in economics articles; and
(7) an ongoing top performers' invitational essay contest for the
Education Program.
Katherine, what are your opinions on those recommendations?
Can (6) and (7) be combined?
Best regards,
Jim
On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 10:50 PM, Jonathan Cardy
<werespielchequers(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I wouldn't express it quite so bluntly, but agreed
at a time when editing seems to have stabilised again after the 2015/16 rally, shifting
the Foundation to a strategy of promoting compliance with both BY and SA would address a
lot of problems. It is probably demotivating for editors to see their work used without
attribution, and whilst a link back to Wikipedia is not as going to be as good as an edit
button, we are greatly limiting ourselves if we rely on people coming directly to our
sites and treat every extract from our sites as CC0 or Fair Use.
A few legal letters and maybe a court case a year should be easily affordable for the WMF
and an excellent investment.
Regards
Jonathan
Message: 2
Date: Sun, 28 Jan 2018 00:12:43 +0000
From: James Salsman <jsalsman(a)gmail.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Copyright enforcement?
Message-ID:
<CAD4=uZatXxeaxuod9R_sMsEujROG9s-XdhjyNpD9BvR6B5OC9g(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Attribution is often considered impractical, but providing the source
date along with e.g. the article name can be used to derive the
attribution, so it should be required. It's not just a good idea to
require this information from content re-users like Amazon, Apple, and
Google, but doing so will help encourage those who find issues to
edit.
If the Foundation doesn't make attribution or at least article date a
requirement, then they are actively opposing editor recruitment.
> On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 7:34 PM, The Cunctator <cunctator(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> The copyright requirement isn't attribution; it's attribution and copyleft
> retention for derived works.
>
>>
>> --
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