Hello, I repeat my proposal that every wiki-website ("project") should install a (international) contact person, and these contact persons should be following a mailing list with specified information for them. They inform the wiki-website-community about important issues on the village pump or via another way. We have seen that purely informal positions (the self-appointed "ambassadors") don't work. Kind regards Ziko
2012/8/4 Tilman Bayer tbayer@wikimedia.org:
On Sun, Jul 29, 2012 at 11:27 AM, Amir E. Aharoni amir.aharoni@mail.huji.ac.il wrote:
Hi,
In the 2012-13 WMF plan document I saw an interesting thing: "We’ve hosted key community stakeholders such as English Wikipedia’s ArbCom and Portuguese Wikipedia’s top contributors, in an effort to better understand and respond to issues they're facing." (page 41).
I was very happy to read this. In general, I hope that such focused meetings will be held with more language communities. I don't think that I need to explain why :)
I don't know how did the meeting with the Portuguese Wikipedians go; I suppose that it was good. I don't remember that I read anything about it in blogs or mailing lists, but I may have missed it.
Apart from the one post linked by Steven (https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/03/22/brazil-meetups-march/ ), the Wikimedia blog has seen several other posts about other meetings of WMF with Portuguese Wikipedia contributors in Brasil:
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/02/20/brazil-campus-party/
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/01/11/brazil-recruiting-and-partnership-with...
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2011/10/19/brazil-trip-3/
See also the recurring Brazil Catalyst section in the monthly WMF reports.
Maybe what I'm about to write is known already, but I'll say it anyway.
An important thing in such meetings is to have a community member who contributes to the Wikipedia in that language AND to the English Wikipedia. This is needed because the Foundation people are probably familiar with policies, customs and jargon in the English Wikipedia. Even simple terms, like "Village Pump", are not necessarily familiar to people who primarily edit in other languages; not all Wikipedias have ArbComs; not all Wikipedias prohibit voting; etc. Such a person will be able to "translate" between the English Wikipedia terms and the local Wikipedia terms. Without such a person misunderstandings will definitely happen, even if everybody knows the English language well.
You are of course right that it is important to be aware of the differences between the many language versions of Wikipedia. But it might be worth knowing that the WMF's Brazil Catalyst project (https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Programa_Catalisador_do_Brasil ) has been run out of Brazil by a native speaker of Portuguese for quite some time now, with a WMF contractor who has been editing on the Portuguese Wikipedia and (less frequently) the English Wikipedia since 2006. I'm not sure about the validity of your conjectures with regard to them.
And even before that, there had been in-depth efforts by WMF to understand the local community, see e.g. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Brazil_Catalyst_Project/Community_Interviews
-- Tilman Bayer Senior Operations Analyst (Movement Communications) Wikimedia Foundation IRC (Freenode): HaeB
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