On 23/07/06, stevertigo vertigosteve@yahoo.com wrote:
--- Peter Ansell ansell.peter@gmail.com wrote:
Why don't more people focus on the core policies like verfiability more when they attempt to address so called "notability" issues? :)
Because Wikipedia has no leadership. It has 1000 sysops who are just "janitors" according to the dominant view, no editorial core, and a founder who has had argued enough with trolls and has gone wandering off into the land of politics.
SV
No management expert will ever tell you that a group of 1000 people will ever get anywhere in strategy terms very fast. It is simply too large to facilitate effective communication and quick agreement on issues. As you say, there is a core community group missing. There is the board and related personnel at the top (aka, OFFICE) , followed by a small group of judges(aka, bcrats) who dont make policy so much as rule on it, and then there are the so called "janitors" (aka, sysops).
Following the highly successful national model with Cabinet, Courts, and Parliament, it is the parliament that is missing. Right now, and possibly from the wiki culture, the parliament is traditionally the whole community with anyone who wants to have a say being able to do so. I would contend that the size of such a parliament is limited in its ability to make effective decisions.
The current heirarchy does not place any special policy related privileges on the sysop layer, and I am not about to say that it should, but in ignoring the Parliament layer it is missing an essential branch in the proven three prong, "separation of powers" model.
Peter Ansell