I like Jeff’s note about the etiquette, and agree it would be best to ask permission before using.
If we have the resources and are already monitoring the comments, seems like documenting the best ones and requesting usage might be helpful to other efforts. That said, I obviously defer to others on if that’s how to best allocate limited resources. ;)
Out of curiosity, how accessible are the collected stories and quotes? Does all WMF staff have access? Are they lurking on Meta (which sometimes feels like the best place to hide something)? Or is it sort of spread across different docs accessible to different folks depending on who was doing what when the story/quote came in?
-greg
On Oct 12, 2015, at 1:41 PM, Juliet Barbara jbarbara@wikimedia.org wrote:
Good point, Greg. We have collected community stories and donor quotes. It might be a good idea to start adding these too to have them on hand for other projects. This is a wealth of good will - and data!
On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 10:40 AM, Jeff Elder <jelder@wikimedia.org mailto:jelder@wikimedia.org> wrote: I've looked at about 2,500 comments from the past two Sundays' discussion posts, which yielded roughly 31,000 comments. The general social media etiquette for brand managers, in my experience, would be reply to the comment we're interested in following up on, and ask the Facebook fan if we can use it off-platform and publicly.
Jeff Elder Digital communications manager Wikimedia Foundation 704-650-4130 tel:704-650-4130 @jeffelder https://twitter.com/JeffElder @wikipedia https://twitter.com/wikipedia The Wikimedia blog https://blog.wikimedia.org/ On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 10:34 AM, Gregory Varnum <greg.varnum@gmail.com mailto:greg.varnum@gmail.com> wrote: Does WMF track public comments like those anywhere?
Might be interesting to be able to pull that for a public report, OpEd, or campaign in the future. Or perhaps some interesting memes around WP15.
-greg
On Oct 12, 2015, at 1:18 PM, Juliet Barbara <jbarbara@wikimedia.org mailto:jbarbara@wikimedia.org> wrote:
I just love this response:
Wikipedia will always be my best mentor, winning an argument with solid and reliable facts might have been a good way to use it, but Wikipedia taught me far beyond that, sciences and philosophies, arts and mythologies, without Wikipedia there wouldn't be me sitting here. Thank you, Wikipedia! Salute to the spirit of spreading knowledge without differences!
On Sun, Oct 11, 2015 at 7:56 AM, Joe Sutherland <jsutherland@wikimedia.org mailto:jsutherland@wikimedia.org> wrote: https://www.facebook.com/wikipedia/posts/10153583927168346 https://www.facebook.com/wikipedia/posts/10153583927168346
On 11 October 2015 at 15:54, James Alexander <jalexander@wikimedia.org mailto:jalexander@wikimedia.org> wrote: It's a common theme, every year or so there are a couple articles people write about using wikipedia to settle their trivia bets etc (similar to helping them pass their exams). Back in the day I've even had a Twitter conversation about it with people who were doing a trivia quiz.
Tldr: yeah think it'll be fun :)
Sent from my iPhone
James Alexander Legal and Community Advocacy Wikimedia Foundation +1 415-839-6885 x6716 tel:%2B1%20415-839-6885%20x6716
On Oct 11, 2015, at 07:07, Joe Sutherland <jsutherland@wikimedia.org mailto:jsutherland@wikimedia.org> wrote:
I think this looks good. :)
Joe
On Sunday, 11 October 2015, Jeff Elder <jelder@wikimedia.org mailto:jelder@wikimedia.org> wrote: Should we post this question on our Facebook page? In a recent video experiment it seemed to resonate with people.
Have you ever used Wikipedia to settle a bet or resolve an argument? Did you win?
What do you think?
-- Jeff Elder Digital communications manager Wikimedia Foundation 704-650-4130 tel:704-650-4130 @jeffelder https://twitter.com/JeffElder @wikipedia https://twitter.com/wikipedia The Wikimedia blog https://blog.wikimedia.org/
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