Context: reduced traffic on wikimedia-l. Is this a sign of poor community health? To what extent has community energy and activity moved to other fora? Is list activity (for certain lists) a useful measure of activity and enthusiasm (about certain parts of the projects)?
On Thu, Jun 4, 2015 at 7:18 AM, Aaron Halfaker aaron.halfaker@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Pine,
Can you provide us with a quick summary of the start of this conversation and what the " these kinds of questions " might be?
Thanks! -Aaron
On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 10:04 AM, Pine W wiki.pine@gmail.com wrote:
Speaking of specialized lists, I'd like to suggest that this discussion would be well suited to Research-l, where many people who are interested in these kinds of questions read and write about them more frequently than they do on Wikimedia-l. I'm boldly adding that list to the recipients for this thread.
I have some thoughts about the substance of this discussion but they're a bit rushed at the moment. I may write more later.
Regards, Pine On Jun 2, 2015 4:32 AM, "Milos Rancic" millosh@gmail.com wrote:
Luis, I have to say that you are the first person on WMF side who has substantially engaged into this issue and I am very glad to see that :)
The products of your work are of the highest importance, as the community is the most important part of our movement, not to say that it's the movement itself.
I am finally relieved to know that we are on the path to rationally understand what's going on inside of the community after short 14.5 years.
It would be good if you'd share your results with the rest of us.
As for this list: As MZ said, this list is important. However, there is no doubt that it's far from being the only or even the most important indicator of community health. It is just about one of the rare publicly accessible data which could give a clue of what's going on inside of the community, but could mislead, as well. On Jun 2, 2015 04:39, "Luis Villa" lvilla@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 10:57 AM, Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com
wrote:
On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 7:51 PM, Luis Villa lvilla@wikimedia.org
wrote:
On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 9:26 AM, Andrew Lih andrew.lih@gmail.com
wrote:
> 3. Participation in the mailing list may be a misleading
indicator of
> activity or interest, as other regional or specialized forums (eg. > Facebook, GLAM-oriented lists, etc) have emerged in recent years. >
Let me second this. My department is thinking about community
health
metrics (constructive suggestions welcome!), but I would not
personally
propose mailing list participation (especially this list) as a good
metric
- decreased participation here may reflect many, many things, only
some
of
which are actually negative.
This is not the only one indicator, but it's pretty consistent since 2011 (take a look into [1]). In other words, something happened in May. Maybe it's actually about the elections because people used
other
means of communication for that.
Looking briefly at some of the highest-traffic months, it could simply
be
that people got tired of discussing high-controversy topics here. (Flamewars are good for traffic volume; not so great for community
health.)
I'm sure Facebook's increased acceptance also has a role. I suspect
also
that some announcements that used to come here now go to other, more specialized mailing lists.
That last one points to a key thing: as MZ says, many people are
subscribed
to this list, but many don't read and don't participate, because this mailing list has an *awful* reputation, and people who want to get
things
done are going elsewhere. So "the decline of wikimedia-l" may be a
sign of
bad health of the overall community, or it may simply mean that the
healthy
and constructive parts of the community has moved elsewhere.
To re-iterate what I said in the last email, I'm all ears for
suggestions
on creative community metrics. I'll add here that I'm also very open to suggestions on what a new wikimedia-l might look like. (I know some
FOSS
communities are having good experiences with discourse.org, for
example.)
No commitment that WMF can act on either immediately, of course, but I think it is worth starting both of those discussions.
Luis
-- Luis Villa Sr. Director of Community Engagement Wikimedia Foundation *Working towards a world in which every single human being can freely
share
in the sum of all knowledge.* _______________________________________________ Wikimedia-l mailing list, guidelines at: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Mailing_lists/Guidelines Wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-l, mailto:wikimedia-l-request@lists.wikimedia.org?subject=unsubscribe
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