Folks (WMF board, and those closely related), do we really have to hold a vote of no confidence to get your attention? Do you have any doubt that it'd pass?
Absent that, please start listening to the volunteers. Listening, as in doing what they'd like you to do. Otherwise, I'll be putting forth that no-confidence vote shortly.
On Sat, Jan 16, 2016 at 1:06 PM, Vituzzu vituzzu.wiki@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you for sharing this but, above all, to focus on digging real data.
IMHO we shouldn't forget our mission, so licenses must be as free as possible. Turning into something "more closed" would definitely deplete one of the most valuable source (the open source world) of volunteering we have.
Crawlers' owner should definitely share our increasing expenses but any kind of agreement with them should include ways to improve our userbase. I'm wondering about an agreement with Google (or any other player) to add an "edit" button to knowledge graph. Sort of a "knowledge vs. users" agreement.
So, we definitely need a long term strategy which the Foundation will pursue in *negotiating* with anyone who wants a big scale access to *our resources* (while access to our knowledge will have no limits, as usual).
Vito
Il 16/01/2016 19:21, Lila Tretikov ha scritto:
To share some context of the discussion the board had around this -- I don't think the minutes give enough detail. APIs -- as we are freely and rapidly creating them today are important, but are not quite at the core of the issue we are facing.
Today Wikimedia is the largest internet channel for open free knowledge in the world. But the trends are against us. We have to face them together. We have to have the answers on how. The strategic discussion next week will help guide us.
Over the last year we looked at the trends in Wikimedia traffic, internet as a whole and user behaviors. It took a lot of research. When we started the process we have not had solid internal data about unique visitors or human vs. crawler usage on the site. For a top 10 website this is a big issue; it hurts our ability to make smart decisions. We've learned a lot.
We found data that supports Leigh's point -- our permissive license supports our core value, we are (I know I am) here for free knowledge. Yet it allows others to use the content in ways that truncates, simplifies and reduces it. More importantly this type of reuse separates our readers from our site, disconnecting readers from our contributors (no edit buttons) and ultimately reduces traffic. Is this a problem? I'd like to hear if people on this list see it as such. And how we sustain contributions over time.
Meanwhile estimated half of our hosting is used to support crawlers that scan our content. This has an associated cost in infrastructure, power, servers, employees to support some well-funded organizations. The content is used for a variety of commercial purposes, sometimes having nothing to do with putting our contributor's work in front of more readers. Still, we can say this is tangentially supportive of our mission.
As these two trends increase without our intervention, our traffic decline will accelerate, our ability to grow editors, content and cover costs will decline as well.
The first question on the upcoming consultation next week will be squarely on this. Please help us. API conversation is a consequence of this challenge. If we were to build more for reuse: APIs are a good way to do so. If we are to somehow incentivize users of SIri to come back to Wikipedia, what would we need to do? Should we improve our site so more people come to us directly as the first stop? How do we bring people into our world vs. the world of commercial knowledge out there? How do we fund this if the people moved to access our content through other interfaces (a trend that has been accelerating)?
Those are the core questions we need to face. We will have to have some uncomfortable, honest discussions as we test our hypothesis this year. The conversation next week is a good start to prioritize those. Please join it.
Lila
On Sat, Jan 16, 2016 at 6:11 AM, Leigh Thelmadatter <osamadre@hotmail.com
wrote:
If we are concerned about Google taking unfair advantage of Wikipedia, one
simple solution is to allow content donations with a non-commercial restriction. Right now, the concept of "free" include commercial use. An added bonus to this is that we would get a lot more institutional donations of content if we allowed an non-commercial option. My problem with allowing for paying for "premium access" is that we are allowing Google to have a priviledged position. There is no way around that. What is the impetus behind this proposal? Its not like we are lacking money. And limiting growth of the Foundation is not a bad thing... at least not to the community.
To: wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
From: ricordisamoa@openmailbox.org Date: Sat, 16 Jan 2016 14:13:06 +0100 Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Monetizing Wikimedia APIs
"Imagine a world in which every single human being can freemiumly share in the sum of all knowledge." XD
Il 16/01/2016 10:23, Pete Forsyth ha scritto:
I'm interested to hear some perspectives on the following line of
thinking:
Lisa presented some alternative strategies for revenue needs for the
Foundation, including the possibility of charging for premium access
to the
services and APIs, expanding major donor and foundation fundraising,
providing specific services for a fee, or limiting the Wikimedia Foundation's growth. The Board emphasized the importance of keeping
free
access to the existing APIs and services, keeping operational growth in
line with the organization's effectiveness, providing room for
innovation
in the Foundation's activities, and other potential fundraising
strategies.
The Board asked Lila to analyze and develop some of these potential
strategies for further discussion at a Board meeting in 2016. Source: https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Minutes/2015-11-07 -Pete[[User:Peteforsyth]] _______________________________________________ Wikimedia-l mailing list, guidelines at:
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