On Fri, Oct 18, 2013 at 12:16 AM, Steven Walling swalling@wikimedia.org wrote:
Statements aren't, generally speaking, used in other Wikimedia projects hardly (such as in most Wikipedia infoxboxes) and thus aren't really visible to most Wikimedia readers. It doesn't seem like there's much incentive to improve verifiability of statements in Wikidata when they're not useful to anybody except maybe Google's Knowledge Graph. :P
A much more useful visualization would be the proportion of statements and other data from Wikidata actually referenced in places visible to users. Wikidata is not a project that is useful by itself, even if it was 100% perfectly verified by references. It only becomes useful through visibility to information consumers.
I think everyone agrees that the next step for Wikidata is expansion into greater use in Wikipedia. As far as I can tell, the biggest reason this hasn't happened yet isn't community reluctance, but simply lack of support for critical data types (especially numbers) that are needed for mapping entire infoboxes against Wikidata items. Given that those types are still missing, tracking the current usage would likely not be hugely revelatory yet. That said, it'd be good for Wikidata to provide a mechanism for tracking usage automatically -- there are some manually maintained categories in different languages, but I doubt they paint a complete picture:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Templates_using_data_from_Wikidata
If an automatic tracking mechanism existed, I agree that this would be one of the most valuable things to report as a key performance indicator for the project as a whole. In the absence of automatic tracking, an Erik Zachte style approach of parsing the dumps might at least be used to generate some interim reports.
I don't, however, agree with parts of your characterization, as 1) the growth of the Wikidata project itself does depend on metrics that reflects its internal characteristics, 2) Wikidata's growth is useful even if we don't yet see adoption at the level of templates, as it leads to the development of applications like http://tools.wmflabs.org/wikidata-todo/tempo_spatial_display.html , which with not a huge amount of effort could be turned into Wikipedia-embeddable content (and are also independently useful).
Erik