Hoi, Sources may take sides. Absolutely. It is exactly by producing "alternative" facts that some sources define themselves. Once it has been established that a sourced statement is actually a lie, it becomes clear cut. We do not write articles to accommodate whoever, when they lie and it is clear, it is what we are to report. When people have an opinion where you can disagree but where there is no established absence of truth it follows that we should provide a NPOV, a neutral point of view.
We may indicate given positions but to deny the truth is to deny for instance that slavery was at the basis of many US universities, and and and.
When 25% of our public are students learning about the world, we have to have our facts straight. We know many things for instance that measles can kill and we should never say otherwise. To accommodate that point of view is being complicit in the consequences. Thanks, GerardM
On 2 March 2017 at 23:37, Leila Zia leila@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi Gerard,
On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 12:37 PM, Gerard Meijssen < gerard.meijssen@gmail.com> wrote:
Hoi, Facts, sources do not take sides. When Wikipedia has to write articles differently to accomodate alternative facts we have a serious problem.
It's not as clear cut as you say it here. :) A couple of things to share:
- Sources/references may take sides. In Wikipedia, many editors have
decided that they want to express all "claims" as long as they are supported by references/sources (with some constraints on the references). This is true in at least one other project: in Wikidata, you have the notion of provenance which means potentially contradicting statements can exist at the same time. This is a good thing, for many reasons, one of which is that it empowers people to see many sides and educate themselves.
- In a world in which many of your questions have a clear and direct answer
(at least on the surface) offered to you by a quick search, a project such as Wikipedia is admired by at least some of our readers as a place to explore, learn, dig deeper. What we have learned is that 25% of English Wikipedia readers read Wikipedia for intrinsic learning, 20% read it because they are bored (some percentage can be common between these two categories). These people spend more time on each page than the other motivation groups, they seem to be reading more than just a few sentences.[1] Wikipedia is one of the very few places left on the web for deep learning, thinking, seeing all sides and all views, and forming an opinion the way /you/ as an individual see things, after learning about all sides. This is very empowering and something to protect.[2]
Leila
[1] https://arxiv.org/abs/1702.05379 [2] As you may know, as an Iranian living in the U.S., me and my family are heavily affected by the recent political changes. I sympathize with all of you, who like me, are affected, but that's outside of the scope of this thread and maybe something to chat more about in an upcoming event when we meet in person. :)
Thanks, GerardM
Op do 2 mrt. 2017 om 16:17 schreef Mz7 Wikipedia <
mz7.wikipedia@gmail.com>
I don’t think any of us are arguing we should “ignore politics” (that
is
to say, try to avoid mentioning it or referring to it whenever
possible).
One of our values as a movement is recognizing that there are many different perspectives on many different issues (which is one of the
things
I think <https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Values/2016_discussion/
Synthesis>
is trying to get at). Our goal is neither to ignore nor to engage in politics, or even to declare what the “truth” is, but to *explain* the politics and to explain what different people think the truth is.
The Annual Report fails to capitalize on this idea. It attempts to do
so,
I think, with headings like “Providing Context Amid Complexity”, and
the
letters from Katherine Maher and Jimmy Wales. But one-liners like “2016
was
the hottest year on record” are exactly the kind of things that may
sound
good on the surface, but they do not nearly capture the “context amid complexity" of the issue at hand. For example, “half of refugees are school-age” isn’t significant to someone who already recognizes the
refugee
crisis’s impact on families, but is concerned about, say, the effects
of
taking in refugees on a nation’s economy.
We need a change in tone. Instead of selecting one-liner facts, we need
to
find a way to convey the idea that the Wikimedia movement values the diversity of opinions, that we value working together to understand
each
others’ opinions and present them fairly. One thing that comes to mind
for
me is linking directly to the Wikipedia articles about these issues. If Wikipedia is truly the place that is "there when you need factual information, not opinion or advocacy” [1], why not show it off?
In any case, it helps to reiterate that “Articles must not take sides,
but
should explain the sides, fairly and without editorial bias. This
applies
to both what you say and how you say it.” [2]
Mz7
[1] https://annual.wikimedia.org/2016/jimmy-wales-letter.html [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view
(“this
page in a nutshell”)
On Mar 2, 2017, at 8:30 AM, Peter Southwood <
peter.southwood@telkomsa.net> wrote:
It is not possible to get away from politics while remaining in
contact
with civilisation. Politics follows you around. It is possible to
ignore
politics only until they affect you directly.
Cheers, Peter
-----Original Message----- From: Wikimedia-l [mailto:wikimedia-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org]
On
Behalf Of WereSpielChequers
Sent: Thursday, March 2, 2017 2:33 PM To: Wikimedia Mailing List Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] More politics: "WMF Annual Report"
Like SJ I love the imagery and and style. As for the rest, I come
here
to get away from politics, so it is a little unsettling to see the WMF
get
so overtly political even though part of me revels in the sentiments. I
too
worry how unsettling that would be for those who don't share the
politics
presented.
I care about visa and migration rules, I cared about the subject
before
I wound up with an 18 month delay from my wedding to when I was able to
get
my wife a visa to join me in London, but that's irrelevant to this movement. The concern about the Trump travel ban is a stark contrast to
the
level of fuss the WMF has made in the past about the many people who
have
been unable to get visas to attend Wikimania. I don't know how many WMF staff were caught by the travel ban, but several dozen Wikimedians have been unable to attend Wikimanias in the last few years due to visa restrictions. It wouldn't surprise me if more Wikimedians were refused visas to attend Wikimania in DC whilst Obama was President than are
known
to have been caught by the Trump ban. If so it either looks like the
WMF
is
being political, or that it cares more about staff than volunteers;
neither
would be a good message. One of the good things about South Africa as
the
2018 venue is that it is possibly our most visa friendly venue since
Buenos Aires. If as a movement we are going to make a fuss about
travel,
I
would like to see that lead by a commitment to at least host every
other
Wikimania in countries where almost any Wikimedian could get a visa.
Otherwise, I haven't fact checked the whole thing, but one problem
with
the second sentence:
*Across the world, mobile pageviews to our free knowledge websites
increased by 170 million http://reportcard.wmflabs.org/.*
This needs a time element, otherwise it comes across as not really in
the same league as most stats about Wikipedia. The previous sentence
was
about a whole year's activity and the following one about monthly
activity.
So it reads like an annual figure or an increase on an annual figure.
But
the stats it links to imply something closer to a weekly figure. From
my
knowledge of the stats I suspect it could be an increase in raw
downloads
of 170m a day or week or unique downloaders of 170m a week. Any of
those
would actually be rather impressive.
Can I suggest that for next year there be a more community based
process
to write the next version of this.
WereSpielChequers
Message: 3 Date: Thu, 2 Mar 2017 00:51:04 -0500 From: Risker risker.wp@gmail.com To: Wikimedia Mailing List wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] More politics: "WMF Annual Report" Message-ID: <CAPXs8yQdJ+X+QwE3LB2XRuuKerSgMD5OKKhJJn1opLA9yyFj+w@mail. gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Okay, so I'll say what Sam said, except in stronger language, and
with
some additional emphasis.
This is a very obviously liberally biased document -- and I say
that
as someone who lives in a country so liberal that it makes Californians look like they're still back in the early 1960s. Maybe
it
takes an outsider to see this.
If you're going to try to play the "facts" game, you have to have
your
facts bang on - and you have to admit that there is more than one
side
to the story. This "report" reads as though the authors chose their favourite advocacy positions and then twisted and turned and did
some
more contortions to make it look as though it had something to do
with
the Wikimedia family of projects. (Seriously. Refugees and global warming don't have anything to do with the WMF.) It is so biased
that
most of those "fact" pages would have to be massively rewritten in order to meet the neutrality expectations of just about every Wikipedia regardless of the language.
And that is my biggest concern. It is not neutral by any stretch of the imagination. And if the WMF can't write neutrally about these topics in its annual report, there is no reason for the average
reader
to think that Wikipedia and other projects will be written
neutrally,
fairly, based on references, and including the significant other opinions. This document is a weapon that can be used against Wikimedia projects by any tinpot dictator or other suppressive government because it "proves" that WMF projects are biased. It
gives
ammunition to the very movements that create "alternative facts" -
it
sure doesn't help when the WMF is coming up with a few of its own.
That does a huge disservice to the hundreds of thousands of editors who have worked for years to create accurate, neutral,
well-referenced
educational material and information. It doesn't do any good to
those
editors contributing from countries where participation in an international web-based information project is already viewed with a jaundiced eye. And for those editors who don't adhere to the
political
advocacy positions being put forward in this "annual report", or simply believe that the WMF should not be producing political
advocacy
documents, it may well cause them to reflect whether or not they
want
to keep contributing.
I really hope that Craig is wrong, that this can be pulled back and edited properly, preferably by a bunch of actual Wikipedia editors
who
know how to write neutrally on controversial topics. I've
volunteered
in the Wikimedia movement for more than a decade at least in part because it was not a political advocacy organization, so I find this annual report to be very disturbing.
Risker/Anne
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