IIRC, a lot of the non-junk that ended up coming in via MobileFeedback
actually was article error reports – but since these were being sent to our
mailing list rather than put onwiki for editors to act on, they just died
quietly.
I think this is a nifty feature! As Kaldari says, it's already a sidebar
item on desktop Spanish and Russian wiki, and it looks like on Russian it's
getting a bit of use:
http://bitly.com/1tXjH9n (that's a special page with
all the open error reports, and there are over 80 from the last 20 days).
One cool thing about this feature on desktop is that there's a character
limit – you can't submit reports that are too short. That's one thing you
might consider adding to make this more useful/effective.
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 3:39 PM, Ryan Kaldari <rkaldari(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
No, there is no reliable test interface for it until
(if) the code is
merged.
Max asked how this is different than the old MobileFeedback feature that
was killed last year. My understanding is that that feature was killed
because the signal to noise ratio was too high. MobileFeedback asked users
for any kind of feedback and included options such as 'Technical problem',
'Article feedback', and 'General'. This feature is ONLY for submitting
reports of errors in articles. I think that having a very specific purpose
assigned to the feature will improve the signal to noise ratio, as well as
having an interstitial that encourages the user to fix the error themselves
rather than reporting it.
Kaldari
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 3:10 PM, Dan Garry <dgarry(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Is there a test instance anywhere for us to test
this?
Thanks,
Dan
On 29 December 2014 at 15:00, Ryan Kaldari <rkaldari(a)wikimedia.org>
wrote:
Thanks to finally having some time to write code
during the holiday
slow-down, I put together a little feature prototype as a research project:
https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/r/#/c/182082
The feature is just a simple interface for reporting errors on article
pages (similar to what exists on the Spanish and Russian desktop
Wikipedias). It adds a 'Report an error' button to the bottom of article
pages. When they click the button it encourages them to fix the error
themselves by editing the page. If they still want to submit the error, it
gives them a text input for doing so. The error report is then posted on
the article Talk Page, the overlay is closed, and the user is shown a toast
notification thanking them for their feedback.
This is intended to be a lightwight form of microcontribution, but
without all the extra overhead of ArticleFeedback and without the
complexity of real talk pages (or Flow). Unfortunately, it can only be used
if the user is allowed to edit, so it will be of limited value on
non-Italian Wikipedias.
Try it out and let me know what you think.
Kaldari
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