On Sun, May 16, 2021 at 6:21 AM Risker <risker.wp(a)gmail.com> wrote:
The overwhelming majority of Wikimedians work only on
one or two projects.
I don't think Meta is a good place to memorialize them; in many cases, Meta
is a project they have never gone to, where they are mostly unknown, and it
is disconnected in almost all cases from the project where the deceased
editor worked and called home. Their home project(s) or projects where they
have made significant contributions are the best place to recognize them.
There are a few Wikimedians who have worked at what may be considered the
"global" level - which includes many people on this list - who might be
recognized, in addition, on Meta or through a blog post or similar.
Certainly, most of the contributions of our deceased colleagues are, in
fact, preserved forever in the edit histories of the content areas in which
they have worked. Those who do not participate in content
creation/management or on any of the projects...I really don't know where
they would best be memorialized.
I do know that the memorial messages on SlimVirgin/SarahSV's English
Wikipedia user talk page
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:SlimVirgin> have been a great
comfort to her family, and I'd encourage anyone who would like to leave a
message of condolence to do so there.
Risker/Anne
I hear you. Excellent point. Maybe there is a way to do both, but in
different ways. One place as you suggested in most direct context specific,
community tied and original language of person, with one that maybe
connects the movement's wide losses and serves as appreciation to all of
them? If Meta still sounds as wrong (understanding that some experience it
also as toxic) maybe a new space can be established as part of
WikiSpore.org? (maybe with subdomain RiP)
It is not an easy topic to discuss at the time at all and let alone at the
time of loss, so I would hope this can be considered as a mid-term
incentive.
Best Z. Blace
On Wed, 12 May 2021 at 05:21, Željko Blaće <zblace(a)mi2.hr> wrote:
Hey Folx -
I am new to the list and relatively new to organizing in this spectrum
and context. My work is mainly in bringing queer, but also feminist, green
and
other progressive practices (mostly to troubled Croatian Wikipedia,
but also in the region and trans-locally to peers elsewhere).
Leigh thanks for the honest update and I am sorry to hear of email
losses,
as well as happy to hear of recovery of control due to tech update :-)
Dysfunctional Croatian language mailing list still needs to recover
control.
I am very sorry to hear of losses of so many Wikimedians and though I did
not know them, their work as volunteers should maybe at least
systematically saved and presented for the collective memory of the
movement.
I feel that corporate social media silos do not support that well (as
there is little value to extract there), so self hosting and preserving
information, knowledge, expressions and impressions should be organized in
some way.
I wonder if there is already an established way on META or elsewhere to
keep track of people who contributed to the movement and specifically to
causes like the people you mentioned here. If not maybe it makes sense to
start something.
Best Z. Blace
On Tue, May 11, 2021 at 10:45 AM Marielle Volz <marielle.volz(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Welcome back!
Just to piggyback on this post, I'd also like to let people know that
we've recently lost two editors who were a significant part of working on
content gaps.
Flyer22, who made significant contributions to articles on women's
health, died in January:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2021-01-31/Obitu…
And just recently, SlimVirgin (Sarah), who among her many significant
contributions overall, also founded the Gender Gap Task Force in 2013 and
wrote an essay on how to write about women on Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Deceased_Wikipedians/2021#SlimVirgin
On Mon, May 10, 2021 at 9:34 PM Leigh Honeywell <leigh(a)hypatia.ca>
wrote:
Hey folks! it's been a while.
The Gendergap mailing list just got migrated to Mailman 3, which means
I now have my admin access back (I'd lost access to the previous system and
hadn't had a chance to restore it for... several years.)
The list had been set to new posters being moderated, which resulted in
a number of messages being caught and I wasn't able to release them.
Unfortunately those messages didn't survive the migration, but I've
adjusted the moderation settings and going forward new messages should go
through.
I've adjusted the list description to be a bit more concise: it is now
"Addressing gender equity and exploring ways to increase gender diversity
in Wikimedia projects."
This part is sad, but as a heads up and for transparency's sake:
I also went ahead and removed Kevin as an Owner/Moderator of the list
as I don't know who now controls his former email accounts. For those who
had missed his passing, there is a lovely tribute to his life and work on
the Signpost:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2016-08-04/Obitu…
Hope that everyone has been keeping well through this difficult time,
and I look forward to seeing more activity on this list in the future with
the new Mailman migration.
All the best,
-Leigh
--
Leigh Honeywell
http://hypatia.ca
@hypatiadotca
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