On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 3:28 PM, Ziko van Dijk zvandijk@gmail.com wrote:
Hello Joseph,
We must distinguish between the community, the movement and partners of the movement.
The Wikimedia movement is not a community, it consists of several communities. Such as the community of Wikipedia in French, of Wikidata or of Mediawiki.org.
Staffers of the WMF are part of the movement, as the WMF is part of the movement, as a chapter is part of the movement. Individual staff members or chapter board members can belong to communities.
Donors can be part of the movement, if they like to see themselves as such. I doubt that many people who donate 10 euros think of themselves as "community".
Staff from our GLAM partners are partners, not community, not movement.
I wonder if the WMF will say in future "we asked the community and it approved it", what will be the meaning of "the community"?
Kind regards Ziko
Reading between the lines of statements like "Knowledge as a service", "essential infrastructure", "tools for allies and partners to organize and exchange free knowledge beyond Wikimedia", etc., my sense is that the document, without saying so explicitly, is very much written from the perspective that the likes of Google, Amazon, Apple, Bing (and anyone else developing digital assistants and other types of knowledge delivery platforms) should be viewed as key partners in the exchange of free knowledge, and served accordingly, through the development of interfaces that enable them to deliver Wikimedia content to the end user.
My problem with that is that those are all for-profit companies, while the volunteers that contribute the free content on which these companies' profit-making services are based are not only unpaid, but actually incur expenses in contributing (mostly related to source access).
Given that one of the documents' stated aims is social justice, I am always amazed that there seems to be a fairly large blind spot in the Wikimedia universe when it comes to the starkly exploitative element in the free knowledge economy. The assumption seems to be that volunteers can't help contributing, that they are adequately compensated by the personal satisfaction they derive from seeing their contributions shape the knowledge landscape, and thus do not need to be given any special consideration.
Given the Wikimedia Foundation's ever-increasing revenue, I'd like to see more emphasis on reducing the costs of participation and supporting the volunteer community, to create a little more social justice within the free knowledge economy, bearing in mind who does the work, and who profits financially from it.
Speaking about the future development of the knowledge landscape in general, I would not like to see Wikimedia become the default provider of knowledge, to the point where the origin of content is obscured and knowledge becomes synonymous with Wikimedia content. If that's what's being striven for, I don't like it – monopolies are inherently unhealthy, for reasons that should be obvious. I'd like to see a more diverse and less monolithic knowledge system in our future than that implied here. Part of that is that knowledge providers basing their products on Wikimedia content should always identify the relevant Wikimedia project as a source. Knowledge is only knowledge when it is traceable to its sources, rather than arriving "ex machina".
On a related issue, we discussed in early August the fact that Amazon's use of Wikipedia content in the Amazon Echo appears to be partly in breach of that principle (and indeed in breach of Wikipedia's Creative Commons licence). We were told that Amazon would be contacted, and that we would likely be given an update in September. But apart from a brief and inconsequential flurry of posts last month, we do not seem to have made any progress on this issue. Please step up your efforts in this regard: surely it cannot be too difficult to get Amazon to state their legal rationale.
Best, Andreas