There is now. There wasn't originally, or if there was, it didn't show up for me. That was one of the main initial problems, and that's pretty basic stuff. I already figured out how to get rid of it, but it took a good deal of digging at the time to even find out that I could.
So, yes, it's good there's a disable button there. That restores my workflow personally. That doesn't, however, help the concern that millions of users are pulling up the images without immediately seeing the license requirements and author information. The majority of our images require attribution. Some are even nonfree, and which ones may not be clear at first glance. It also doesn't solve the concern that the tool is not yet ready for prime time and shouldn't be the default user experience.
On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 12:48 AM, Risker risker.wp@gmail.com wrote:
There's a easy, clearly accessible, one-click option for disabling MediaViewer, Todd. Scroll to the bottom of the screen. Click "disable". Done - it automatically changes your preference.
Risker/Anne
On 11 July 2014 02:44, Todd Allen toddmallen@gmail.com wrote:
Risker,
I'm actually not going to disagree with you in principle. I ultimately
see
Media Viewer being used by a good number of users, and said as much from the start. But I also warned that a bulldozer approach was going to cause massive blowback, especially after the previous debacles (VE and ACTRIAL come to mind for me). And well, here we are, with another repeat of the
VE
situation. That greatly eroded trust in WMF, especially its dev teams and PMs, and that's nowhere even close to rebuilt yet. Now that lack of trust is being confirmed and entrenched.
WMF needs to step very lightly with deployments that will affect editors, and treat the volunteer community as an ally rather than adversary. If
that
doesn't happen, these showdowns will keep happening.
Part of that is pure arrogance. A significant part of the reason the
Vector
switch worked is because there was an easy, clearly accessible, one-click option that said "Do not want, disable this!". If that'd been the case here, I would have clicked that and forgotten about it. Instead, I had to dig for an hour to find how to disable the thing, after being surprised
by
a totally unexpected change. But now we hear things like "We made Vector opt-out too easy!"
Media Viewer probably does have its place, once it is fully functional
and
free of major bugs. I might even turn it on at that point. But shoving it down people's throats will only serve to further place the WMF's flagship project and the WMF at odds. That is not, I can't imagine, a desirable situation by anyone's estimation. WMF needs a far better deployment strategy than "YOU ARE GETTING IT, LIKE IT OR NOT, AND THAT IS FINAL!!!!!!!!!!!!!" If the WMF's strategy for when the core community and dev team disagree is "We're right, you're wrong, pipe down", these situations will increase in frequency and intensity. I want to stop that before it reaches a real boiling point, and it could've this time if someone had actually gotten desysopped.
On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 12:21 AM, Risker risker.wp@gmail.com wrote:
While I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you, Todd, there were 14,681 users on English Wikipedia alone who had enabled MediaViewer using the
Beta
Features preference before it became the default. That's a huge number
of
people who were all using it every time they clicked on an image in the weeks and months beforehand, and every one of them had to make a
conscious
decision to turn it on. The 64 users who want it disabled as default
pale
in comparison to the number of people who were actively using it beforehand.
I've asked for some better statistical information because I don't
think
the Limn graphs that have been referred to in the discussion of the RFC
are
really accurate; it's my understanding that about 1600 registered
accounts
have opted out of MV in total (this should be a linear graph of the cumulative total, not a "daily number of people who opted out" graph
which
is what we seem to see now). As well, somewhere in the neighbourhood
of
500 "logged out" users a day are disabling it - this needs to be a
daily
number, not a cumulative one, because logged-out disabling is linked to
the
individual browser session; those who aren't logged in don't have the chance to set preferences. There are between 4 and 5 *million* clicks
on
image thumbnails every day on enwiki, with only around 500 of those
viewing
the images disabling the MediaViewer (excluding logged-in users who
have
turned it off in their preferences).
I suspect that at the end of the day, MediaViewer is going to be more
like
the switch to Vector skin: there will be plenty of people who choose to disable for reasons that work for them, but the overwhelming majority
of
users will be entirely fine with the default. It's having nowhere
near
the impact that VisualEditor had when first enabled as default; in the first 48 hours there were hundreds of "how do you turn this off"
queries
and complaints about functionality, not to mention pretty much
automatic
reverting of edits done by IPs because there were so many VE-related problems associated with them. We're not at that level at all here. I agree with John Vandenberg's comments that a clear roadmap and
prioritized
list of next steps is probably required for MediaViewer.
Risker/Anne
On 11 July 2014 00:56, Todd Allen toddmallen@gmail.com wrote:
If you don't want to do small opt-in trials, release software in a
fully
production-ready and usable state. What's getting released here is
barely
ready for beta. It's buggy, it's full of unexpected UX issues, it's
not
ready to go live on one of the top 10 websites in the world. It's got
to
be
in really good shape to get there.
Until software is actually ready for widescale use, small and very
limited
beta tests are exactly the way to go, followed by maybe slightly
larger
UAT
pools. Yeah, that takes longer and requires actual work to find
willing
testers. Quit taking shortcuts through your volunteers.
On Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 10:40 PM, Sue Gardner <
sgardner@wikimedia.org>
wrote:
Hey guys,
I use MediaViewer, I like it, and I am happy to trust the WMF
product
team
to build stuff. I didn't know about the RFC, but even if I had I
would've
been unlikely to have participated, because I don't think small
opt-in
discussions are the best way to do product development -- certainly
not
at
the scale of Wikipedia.
I think we should aim on this list to be modest rather than
overreaching
in
terms of what we claim to know, and who we imply we're
representing.
It's
probably best to be clear --both in the mails we write and in our
own
heads
privately-- that what's happening here is a handful of people
talking
on
a
mailing list. We can represent our own opinions, and like David
Gerard
we
can talk anecdotally about what our friends tell us. But I don't
like
it
when people here seem to claim to speak on behalf of editors, or
users,
or
readers, or the community. It strikes me as hubristic.
Thanks, Sue On 10 Jul 2014 16:13, "MZMcBride" z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
Erik Moeller wrote: >In this case, we will keep the feature enabled by default (it's
easy
>to turn off, both for readers and editors), but we'll continue
to
>improve it based on community feedback (as has already happened
in
the
>last few weeks).
Thanks for the reply. :-)
If your feature development model seemingly requires forcing
features
on
users, it's probably safe to say that it's broken. If you're
building
cool
new features, they will ideally be uncontroversial and users will
actively
want to enable them and eventually have them enabled by default.
Many
new
features (e.g., the improved search backend) are deployed fairly
regularly
without fanfare or objection. But I see a common thread among
unsuccessful
deployments of features such as ArticleFeedbackv5, VisualEditor,
and
MediaViewer. Some of it is the people involved, of course, but
the
larger
pattern is a fault in the process, I think. I wonder how we
address
this.
MZMcBride
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