Hi Milos
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 9:18 PM, Milos Rancic millosh@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 16:17, Theo10011 de10011@gmail.com wrote:
My main point (although I *did* make it clear), was that volunteer-work
is
what this movement is built on. Tell me a single content project that was built by paid employees? If we abandon our identity, then how would we
still
be volunteer-driven and open. I can argue volunteers do inherently better work than paid staff, because they believe in what they do and are passionate about it. It is however, just a job for most people who get
paid
to do the same. You can not pay someone to care, is what my point was.
Theo, volunteers do not care about things which require to be accurate. Besides that, more and more volunteer positions were replaced by paid staff, beginning with Brion. And that's not the problem of principle, but the problem of having job done.
You are arguing that volunteers do not care about accuracy, I think that's a sweeping assessment for a very wide spectrum of volunteers. What about the hundred of editors covering breaking news stories on enwp by the minute? Would you like to dispute that they don't care or strive for accuracy as a story develops?
Yes, more volunteer position were replaced by paid staff, that did not necessarily make things any efficient. I can instead argue it created un-necessary bureaucracy and hierarchy where it didn't exist before and made things more inefficient. A lot of people would dispute if there is wisdom in replacing tasks that are handled by volunteers with staff- OTRS, IRC, certain Elections come to mind. For example, there is the recent case of the upcoming steward election which was previously handled by Cary as a Volunteer Coordinator (among several dozen things Cary did) but since his departure, those tasks have been handed back to volunteers.[1] In the mean time, there is an entire community department with more than a dozen staff members yet the appearance is, it is still preferable that the community handle it.
For example, I am not interested to be paid for writing bots for Wikinews. As nobody with sufficient knowledge of Python answered on many of my calls, the product is that nobody is doing that, as I don't have enough of free time to program that bot. Although all Wikinews editions could benefit from that (there are many programmable things for a news service). I even remember that for a short period of time the bot boosted English Wikinews itself, as editors got news and just had to fix the text (quality, NPOV). Would it be better to find someone who would program that bot?
That is not exactly what I talked about. I referred to regular editors. Bot-writing is not a common task everyone can do, or do well at least, I never disputed anything about providing more tech help to any project. I am all for it, in fact, I think we should look at ways of motivating more bot-work from the community. However this in no way means hire non-community members and then explain to them how wikis work, what we need and how they should go about writing a bot. They might perform the task but not care about what happens next.
The other issue is that I want to contribute to Wikinews just if I have news. In the mean time, someone has to make things to flow without problems. Who can guarantee ~50 news/day on one Wikinews edition to be almost as attractive as other news services are? News services regularly have more than 100 news per day.
I think Wikinews needs to find its own identity first. There is no way it can compete with large news sites you are thinking of, but there are plenty of other ways it can have its own identity. In the age of news aggregators, micro-blogging and smartphones, getting constant feed of information is not hard if you know how to tap into it.
I agree that there are some structural problems with the rules which English Wikinews community imposed (while I understand that reviewing articles is good idea; having very high standards without relevant community is irrational), but that just catalyzed the inevitable: news service is not a news service without constant care, which could be done just by paid staff or extremely large community: 5 edits per month is not enough to be counted as Wikinews contributor if it is not at least about one new article; and 5 edits per month is usually not one article on Wikipedia.
My point still stands, you can not sustain a project on paid staff. If you do, it is not a wiki, or a community, just office work.
Theo
[1] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Stewards/elections_2011-2#Election_Committee