On Dec 16, 2007 10:01 PM, Florence Devouard Anthere9@yahoo.com wrote:
The board is consequently now back at 5 members, Kat Welsh, Frieda Brioschi, Jan-Bart de Vreede, Jimmy Wales and myself.
Thanks for the announcement. I was under the impression that Jimmy's activity on the board was nominal, is he more active then that?
In a situation where we will welcome many more staff members not from the community, I think it is doubly important that the board membership be from the community. I will personally support an increase of the membership, with a focus on members coming from the community.
Maybe it would be prudent to write something to this effect into the bylaws, to ensure proper community representation in perpetuity?
I feel there are two paths for the future. Either we keep a board mostly made of community members (elected or appointed) ... Or we get a board mostly made of big shots, famous, rich, or very skilled (all things potentially beneficial), but who just *do not get it*.
I agree with your assesment, the first option is far preferrable. Somewhere in the middle would be nice too, but we should never allow the board to become completely out of touch with the community they represent. Also, what was the killer-deal with Google? Did we miss something big?
I do not share the same optimism than Jimbo with regards to Knol. I think Knol is probably our biggest threat since the creation of Wikipedia.
Normally google's aims have been to counteract other companies, such as microsoft. It astounds me to learn that Google is trying to go head-to-head with a non-profit. I dont know that I'm afraid of the "knol" as a true competitor to us, although google's brand recognitioncould help it along. you also have to worry that perhaps there aren't enough people in the world who actually want to write an encyclopedia to fuel Wikipedia, Citizendium, and Knol (among others). Maybe this is the impetus that will drive an overhaul of Wikipedia, making it more friendly for the hard-working authors, and less friendly for the trolls. A "Wikipedia Renaissance" would do a lot for our image, and could be a PR stunt that kills Knol before it ever starts.
But the organization in its whole is currently oscillating. We can try the path of the community, at the risk of being engulfed by the big ones. We can try the path of letting our future in the hands of the big shots, at the risk of loosing what is making us unique.
If I may ask (and I certainly dont expect a good answer), what kinds of "big shots" are we talking about? Has the board been approached by such a person/people? Getting in with Google has been a financial miracle for the Mozilla people, and they seem to have kept their way without succumbing to too much corporate influence. Maybe this is the kind of issue that should be presented plainly to the community, for the community to decide.
--Andrew Whitworth