it would be too controversial having paid
administrators.
Controversial for who? So far nobody stepped into this conversation to say
that direct support of community members with community money is not ok for
whatever reason they might have.
Regards,
Micru
On Sat, 26 May 2018, 10:35 Anders Wennersten, <mail(a)anderswennersten.se>
wrote:
My own reflection reading this discussion is that
there is a difference
between vandalism and POV pushing.
For vandalism we have better routines in place and also tools like ORES,
and also a system of steward who can acts in cases of crosswikivandals
For Pov pushing and especially cross wiki POV pushing we have no
routines in place, and no roles like he steward who can help out for
these cases.
I also have only positive experience interacting with stewards, both in
their willingness to help and alertness. And they have a very good tone
in conversations. And they are a bit separated from the communities.
And my loose thought in the end of my starting mail, was more to be open
to having paid something like POV-stewards who can get involved in tough
POVedits. And that these can offload the burden on admin when things
getting nasty
I am not a supporter of paid editors, and think it would be too
controversial having paid administrators.
Anders
Den 2018-05-26 kl. 09:38, skrev David Cuenca Tudela:
On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 7:41 AM, James Salsman
<jsalsman(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
I'm not sure that's true. Whether it
started as a game of Nomic or
not, almost all of the admins have been elected through a certainly
established process.
That someone does an activity or that this person has been elected to
perform an activity doesn't mean that he or she is a professional. It
might
be an occupation, but not a profession. On the
en-wiki article about
"profession" there are several milestones listed as how an occupation
becomes a profession, the first one being that the occupation becomes a
full-time occupation, all the rest are related to the establishment of
professional bodies that regulate professionalization through training,
ethics regulation, and licensing.
In any case these matters are never clear-cut, they co-evolve over time
based on the needs of the people involved. At this point of time I feel
that the main need is talent retention while keeping the volunteer-driven
spirit. It is not easy to maintain the social order when implementing
changes like these, but I believe that with enough debate and
consensus-making it would be possible to reach a satisfactory solution.
From my side, I am open to more input, and more exchange of views. After
this conversation it might be interesting to ask the people involved and
see how would they feel by being more supported and appreciated by the
community, then request to the community the necessary action to make it
happen.
I think the Signpost article and the email that Anders sent to this
mailing
list are very serious and they should be
addressed efficiently and
promptly. I personally cannot choose to ignore it, because I think that
there are steps that can be taken and I would like to urge anyone reading
this message to at least join this conversation.
Regards,
Micru
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