If we're going to have a conversation about
terminology, I would like to
drop the terms "active editor" and "highly active editor" and replace
them
with "5+ edits per month" and "100+ edits per month". There are
multiple
ways of measuring productivity, and I'm wary of the amount of prominence
that's given to the number of edits as the primary metric of productivity.
Also, I don't think it's clear to analytics nebwbies that "active
editor"
is a term with a specific definition rather than a general description of
people who edit "actively" (whatever that means). I'm fine with using 5+
edits per month and 100+ edits per month as measures of productivity, but I
would prefer to drop the terms "active editor" and "very active
editor".
I'd also like to see more prominence given to other metrics such as bytes
changed and logged non-edit actions.
Pine
On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 10:22 AM, Erik Zachte <ezachte(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
Aaron,
Yeah my analogy is arguably imprecise.
And for your analogy, you assume that the public astronomy database is
guarded Nupedia style, with credentials. Could be, explicit mention of this
assumption would resolve ambiguity ;-)
Our licensing asserts that they must be
attributed.
Sure these people who did one edit must be attributed whenever the page
they edited is published somewhere else.
But do we ever do that for real these days? Seems like a dead clause
from a distant past, expect for our onwiki history page.
Also giving credit is something else than counting, and publishing that
count as some meaningful metric (not saying that you want to do that, but
others will find the factoid and run with it)
We can discuss semantics. But when a person writes one word a year we
wouldn't call that person a 'writer', do we?
Words lose their meaning if their definition is stretched in extremo,
beyond common sense, beyond what any audience assumes those words mean.
Long ago we found that a huge amount of registered users made not even
one edit.
One explanation might be that many people habitually sign up, just out
of habit. Or that they want to tweak the UI (e.g. red links in
preferences).
My point: count as you like, but could we avoid using a term with so
many connotations for these edge cases, so as not to confuse people even
more about our metrics?
Erik
*From:* Analytics [mailto:analytics-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] *On
Behalf Of *Aaron Halfaker
*Sent:* Tuesday, April 11, 2017 16:55
*To:* A mailing list for the Analytics Team at WMF and everybody who
has an interest in Wikipedia and analytics.
*Subject:* Re: [Analytics] Fwd: follow-up on editors
Erik,
I appreciate pushing back on just looking for bigger metrics, but
there's something more important when it comes to measuring people who
contribute at least a little bit. Our licensing asserts that they must be
attributed. After all, they have contributed something.
Also, for your astronomy comparison, this would be more like saying that
anyone who contributes to publicly recorded astronomy observations is an
astronomer -- even if they have only done so once. In my estimation, that
doesn't sound crazy. Your comparison to "looking at the night sky" is a
lot more like reading Wikipedia.
-Aaron
On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 6:35 AM, Erik Zachte <ezachte(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
About 'Number of editors who contribute 1 edit per month?'
I'm hoping we're not going that use that number for our next fundraiser
;-)
The more inclusive our numbers are, the less meaningful, bordering on
alternative facts.
A person with one edit in any given month is as much an editor as a
person who looks at the night sky a few times a year is an astronomer.
We have billions of those on this planet!
Erik
*From:* Analytics [mailto:analytics-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] *On
Behalf Of *Neil Patel Quinn
*Sent:* Friday, March 31, 2017 23:06
*To:* A mailing list for the Analytics Team at WMF and everybody who
has an interest in Wikipedia and analytics.
*Subject:* Re: [Analytics] Fwd: follow-up on editors
Funny story: I noticed that Aaron's graph has the 1-month new editor
retention on enwiki at about 7%, while I had recently done some queries
<https://github.com/wikimedia-research/2017-New-Editor-Experiences/blob/master/analysis.ipynb>
that put it a little under 4%.
It turns out I made an error in my Unix timestamp math, and I was
looking at the *12 hour *new editor retention rate. It'll be
interesting to see if the ranking of wikis by retention changes
significantly when I correct that.
On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 2:15 PM, Aaron Halfaker <ahalfaker(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
*https://commons.wikimedia.org/
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/>wiki/File:Enwiki.monthly_user_retention.survival_proportion.svg*
On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 4:14 PM, Aaron Halfaker <ahalfaker(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
Here's a graph of the retention rates of new editors in English
Wikipedia.
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<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Neil_P._Quinn-WMF>, product
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Wikimedia Foundation
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