There certainly is a lot to reflect on, isn't there?
Maybe you can do some reflecting on the fact that those "long-time contributors" were, in many cases, working on Wikipedia before most people had ever even heard of it (when I first started working on it, "What's Wikipedia?" would be a question I was often asked if I'd mention it; haven't heard that for a while though), and have been working to build, maintain, and improve it ever since. So maybe there's a reason we care a great deal about it.
And maybe there's a good reason to listen to the people who literally built the thing, made it into what it is, and still day to day keep it going. Maybe we know what we're doing. I think we rather proved it.
Todd
On Wed, Apr 15, 2020 at 2:00 PM Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi, When I read something like this, it takes me aback. Yes, people may have an opinion, they may even express it and they even may be wrong. Who cares really. There is enough to dislike in branding, we are not cattle. From a marketing perspective there may be a point. The point would be to bring all that we do together, bring it together so that what it is we are and what is we do better understood by an audience, an audience that we want to entice to like us enough to become part of our Wikimedia movement.
The problem is that the "long time contributors" don't like change. They have invested so much in whatever it is they think makes our projects work that they do not see the forest from the trees. They forget what our primary aim, is and fail to appreciate that all conventions are there to support the aim of sharing in the sum of all knowledge. This week Wikipedia administrators killed off the ListeriaBot because it defied a convention. A convention that they could not explain to me does harm to our public. A convention that exists because it was conceded to English Wikipedia that they could have non free images exclusive to its project. When challenged that they do not care about Wikipedia's quality, that manually maintained lists average out to be not as well maintained as Listeria list there was silence. They did not care because it did not address their need that their convention had to prevail.
"Long time contributors", administrators are the ones expecting others to share their sentiment about everything what is bad. I don't. Katherine Maher brought an end to a period of stagnation. My impression is that at the Wikimedia Foundation things look up. I love it that the WMF wants to expand and I totally agree that English Wikipedia, its best known product, the brand that is known by many is exactly what is not bringing us together.
I prefer people like Mackenzie Lemieux or Jess Wade any time over the "long time contributors".. PS with a blog going back 15 years, with 2,606,298 edits I qualify as a long time contributor..
So if your opinions are as good as the reflections you have on the quality of Wikipedia, I do not care about your opinions. By my calculations there is on average error rate of 4% in lists because of false friends. Magnus blogged how manually maintained list are anything but well maintained lists. The key point of branding in the marketing sense is that it is to bring out the best of what is on offer.
The basis of what we have on offer is in what we aim to achieve and, for me our aim is to share in the sum of the knowledge that is available to us. Everything that is in its way of achieving this needs reflection and imho there is a lot to reflect. Thanks, GerardM
On Wed, 15 Apr 2020 at 18:59, MZMcBride z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
David Gerard wrote:
https://foundation.wikimedia.org/wiki/Minutes/2018-11-9,10,11#Branding
So this has been dictated from above - the "community consultation" is window dressing for a decision that's long been made.
Hence the nonsensical claims of massive community support by fiddling the numbers, employing literal wiki spammers to do the consulting, etc.
Wikimedia Foundation Inc. is bad. There are dozens of examples illustrating why this is true, but this forcible rebranding is a particularly good demonstration of the rot.
The people most directly responsible here are Katherine Maher and Heather Walls. They're both subscribed to this mailing list, they both understand that this decision would upset long-time contributors, and they both simply decided to ignore any complaints in favor of attempting to siphon more money from donors and force their "vision" on the broader movement. You don't see either of them defending themselves or their actions here for a reason. They didn't both forget how e-mail works or how the wikis work, they've intentionally chosen to plug their ears and march forward.
What's more offensive, in my opinion, than this forcible rebranding
effort
is that they've spent and will continue to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on it. It would be bad enough to make this unilateral decision
and
implement it with the existing bloated staff, but instead they've hired agencies and consultants and wasted additional hundreds of thousands of dollars in donor money on this sham exercise.
But don't worry, highly deceptive advertising is back on the projects, in mid-April, to ensure continued funding of this and other charades.
MZMcBride
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