Michael Becker wikimb at gmail.com wrote:
"Wikipedia is a wiki community foremost and an encyclopedia second."
I'm certain that Michael has the means mixed up with the ends. Just consider the role of the person who established Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales. Was his goal to create a social club? Based on what I know about him, I doubt it. I've only interacted with him by email a handful of times; but apart from finding out that he's a nice guy, which has always been my impression, from what I've been stumbling across in the media, I've also been learning that he's both a good businessman and a probing scholar. Such an individual, I suspect, is interested in making an investment in building Wikipedia as an encyclopedia, not a social club. Note the thousands of dollars he has poured into the project, and all the time he has invested, which likely translates into an investment worth many **millions** of dollars, considering the opportunity costs-- all the profitable ventures that he could have been engaged in instead of investing so much time and energy in Wikipedia. If he'd wanted to start a social club, he probably would've made his investments much more wisely. Instead of starting Wikipedia, he could have (say) patronized some sort of recreational, musical, or sports group. That would have required the investment of far fewer resources, and probably would've paid off far more in terms of building connections and positive media coverage related to his work in other areas. He probably did not chose to build a social club because he has another, more lofty end in mind: revolutionizing the distribution of knowledge online through an open source, free project.
For those who believe that Wikipedia ought to be a social club first and an encyclopedia second, perhaps they should find other outlets for socialization that are actually fun (and good for making connections). Seeing how young Wikipedia's contributors tend to be http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikipedians_by_age, perhaps many of them should join fraternities... Don't take this as condescension, just a friendly suggestion of something to consider. After all, girls and drinking would've interested me far more than editing encyclopedia articles when I was their age. BTW, I don't mean to pigeonhold all young editors. Some are indeed very well suited for the project, such Ben (Neutrality), Charles (Mirv), and Jiang (his real name I don't know or recall)-- among the most, if not the most, extremely knowledgeable and prolific young writers working for the site. (They are far weightier thinkers than I was at their age; and they will likely have gone much further than I have when they are my age.)
I urge the readers of the mailing list not to lose sight of the fact that their goal is to write an encyclopedia, not wining plaudits and status in the eyes of fellow users for their role in Wikipedia's social hierarchy... Wikipedia has thousands of important articles left as stubs or left in disarray. The users who've actually donated countless hours out of their own time to correct this problem, such as Steve Rubenstein, Jtdirl, and Adam Carr (all of whom have violated the 3RR at least once) are correcting this problem. They are far more important to the project than the users who hardly ever edit the main namespace but rather preach/rant about 3RR violations on IRC/mailing list or write 'newspaper' articles about arbcom cases. Like the entrepreneur or the worker in the marketplace, they are the productive elements of Wikipedia. The productive elements are not self-proclaimed guardians of the rules, who are as productive as (say) rent-seeking lords in pre-capitalist Europe or these days rent-seeking corrupt bureaucrats in governments everywhere. (BTW, this isn't to say that some users who make policy don't strike a proper balance between editing and policy discussions. Mav, Ambi, Neutrality, Danny, Raul, Ray, among others, certainly do. Hence they are the ones capable of making good policies.)
While I no longer have an interest in writing for Wikipedia, I will remain an active reader with a strong curiosity in following the growth and development of the project. I sincerely hope that it is a success, hence the motive behind this plea.
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