On Tue, Feb 1, 2011 at 8:02 PM, Marc Riddell michaeldavid86@comcast.net wrote:
On Tue, Feb 1, 2011 at 7:00 PM, Marc Riddell michaeldavid86@comcast.net wrote:
People agree and support the decision.
Fred, who are these people that are making these decisions and declaring that there in Community consensus, knowing that this "consensus" cannot be factually validated?
on 2/1/11 10:34 PM, George Herbert at george.herbert@gmail.com wrote:
It is in the nature of online collaborative communities that this general question has no exact answer.
This is fundamentally unsatisfying to a number of people, including those who prefer various not-yet-universally-supported changes; scientists, observers, critics, and journalists from outside the community trying to understand or quantify it; many others.
That's the way it works, though.
I appreciate your point, which is that this way of doing things is often infuriating, insane, or impossible to actually get anything done in. The reality is that we're there. That's how Wikipedia works (for whatever definition of "work" you care to apply to the state of the project here, which you and others feel are unsatisfactory).
George, it may be "how it works", but it also misleading - or worse. To state that any decision made in this manner is a "consensus of the Wikipedia Community" is fundamentally dishonest.
on 2/1/11 11:12 PM, George Herbert at george.herbert@gmail.com wrote:
Consensus is the method which was chosen for Wikipedia to determine things (in general). Raw majority voting (or supermajority voting) was intentionally not chosen.
It's entirely fine to point out that this leads to existential angst over what consensus is, means, or how anyone ever determines it. But that's what we do, every day for the last 10 years. Something worked, at least some of the time.
You're looking for a deeper meaning (fair) and a way to legitimately and concretely get approval for changes (fair to ask for) that gives you an answer you feel was unambiguously arrived at.
We have no guarantee that the last clause will ever be satisfied under the consensus system. Some issues are uncontroversial and it's not really challenged that consensus exists. Some issues are very controversial, and calling the consensus either way is ambiguous.
I understand and acknowledge that the ambiguity is a pain point for you. That is the system, for better or worse. There is no magic wand.
George, your equivocation surprises me. My assessment of the Wikipedia "consensus" process remains the same. And your implied suggestion that it works because Wikipedia is still here and going strong: you are mistaking size for strength, mass for solidity. Wikipedia's structure may be massive, but it is by no means solid. My prognosis if some basic lifestyle changes aren't made: Poor.
Marc