On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 9:33 PM, Federico Leva (Nemo)
<nemowiki(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Despite repeated assurances at Wikimania, on lists and
on strategywiki,
that the strategic plan was going to consider all Wikimedia projects as
important, now at
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolution:Five-year_targets the
second target, «Increase the amount of information we offer» considers
only the number of Wikipedia articles.
«We're aware of the challenges around bot-created articles, articles of
low quality, etc., and the limited focus on Wikipedia, so this metric
shouldn't be seen in isolation, but is an important indicator.» Yes, but
a wrong one.
I'm, very, very disappointed: I have to conclude that all the words on
community participation etc. were only empty rhetoric.
I am likewise disappointed. The five year plan _should_ have seen the
other projects as the most likely source of new talent, contributors
and innovation, and should have focused on developing them.
Even worse is the third target, which is _wrong_ because the
Foundation hasn't included other projects in its considerations. It
says we don't have baselines for quality. On Wikisource, we _do_ have
empirical data on quality built into in the Proofreading system.
http://wikisource.org/wiki/Wikisource:ProofreadPage_Statistics
Also, how was the 100,000 contributors per month with 5+ edits
calculated? Using simple addition of monthly counts for each project,
I can only see 90,000 contributors with >=5 edits. The figure would
be lower as the contributors to smaller projects usually intersects
the contributors to the larger projects.
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/File:Wikimedia_Five-Year_Targets.ods
--
John Vandenberg