Hoi, Gregory, Domas and myself life in Europe. For us the interview was in the middle of the night and yes, I am not pleased that the Wikivoices interview was not published. I have been involved with the Wikivoices in the past and it saddens me that Wikivoices is not able to publish its recordings reliably.
It surprises me that you are so ill informed that you are not aware how things are organised. In my opinion you should be pleased that there is an initiative intended to inform our community about the persons that may be elected as a board member of the Wikimedia Foundation. You may be sad that the results did not materialise but that is about it. Thanks. Gerard
2009/8/17 Gregory Kohs thekohser@gmail.com
At some time into the WMF Board candidates campaigning season, the Wikivoices project undertook a sort of "candidates debate", where a Skype conference served as a central meeting point for at least eight of the candidates to orally respond to questions posed them. This debate transpired about two hours of time, and I found it very informative of the critical issues facing the Wikimedia Foundation.
I was a bit concerned with several things:
(1) That the role of "campaign debate" was filtered into one available time slot -- if you were not able to participate, you had no voice.
(2) That the English Wikipedia service (and not Meta, or Foundation) was the "proprietor" of the content.
(3) That the Foundation itself had no representative helping to coordinate and assure professionalism in the volunteer execution of this effort.
On that last concern, my worry seems to have come true. On July 26th, we were promised that an audio file of the Skype cast would be posted soon, as episode # 45:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Wikivoices&diff=next...
On August 5th, I made a worried complaint that the audio still had not been posted. Through the close of the election period (August 10th), I communicated via private e-mails about what had happened. Now, August 17th, we are even past congratulating the winners of this election (where 67% of the available seats are represented by candidates who offer no changes over the status quo -- huzzah!), and there is STILL NO AUDIO FILE POSTED.
Along with others sharing my view, I find this to be disgraceful. It is an insult to the participants in the debate, and it reflects on just how little the Foundation actually cares about who gets seated on the Board, so long as they are a community rubber-stamp of the editors who hold sway over the English Wikipedia project, which is really most of what this represents. I apologize for sounding bitter, but the delay seems to have been in one audio editor abdicating his responsibility and dumping it in the lap of an unsuspecting back-up, then trying to "edit" the audio so that it was fair to those who had had communications problems during taping. I say, at some point, it would have been far better to simply post the unedited audio, so that voters still making decisions could have listened for themselves, before it was too late. As it stands, the audio is practically worthless now, and the Foundation should be ashamed that they let this happen under their noses, without so much as a public apology.
Good luck to the new Board member and the returned two Board members to their warm seats. Will you be making use of the familiar rubber stamps, or will something actually be learned from this recent disgrace?
P.S. Five days after the election results were announced, we are also still waiting for the requested data feed of the anonymized votes: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Board_elections/2009/Votes
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