[offlist]
On Dec 16, 2007 10:01 PM, Florence Devouard Anthere9@yahoo.com wrote: [snip]
I feel there are two paths for the future. Either we keep a board mostly made of community members (elected or appointed), who may not be top-notch professionals, who can do mistakes, such as forgetting to do a background check, such as not being able to do an audit in 1 week, such as not signing the killer-deal with Google, but who can breath and pee wikimedia projects, dedicate their full energy to a project they love, without trying to put their own interest in front. A decentralized organization where chapters will have more room, authority and leadership.
[snip]
I think it's important to note that *everyone* makes mistakes. So there is far less of a trade-off then you might fear.
Florence at times you are too humble, but I believe that this is a quality in an organization which is at times afflicted with excessive hubris. When I think about the current controversies, I find myself coming back to things you wanted to do in the past which would have avoided them. I think we all would do well to listen more to you.
I have a lot of thoughts about the advisory board, and how little they seem to have done for us. The whole concept of appointing big names seems more like payoff and less like wisdom as time goes on. Finding good people with the right interests, skills, and without huge conflicts of interest is just hard no matter how you cut it.. At least when you pull from the community you are sure to get people who love and understand the internals of the projects. Your vision of simply keeping a majority is simply a good one, and it's the only thing that gives me hope. There *are* many good outsiders we can choose from to fill the balance, but it will take time and introspection to make the right decisions.
Your message was good, in general, I think.. but it may have left people thinking that Erik was leaving Wikimedia, and not really moving on to a position of even more power. So that might create some confusion, but I understand that not everything can be announced at once and that stuff isn't final.
I'm sorry that it's been so long since I've written to you. Honestly, I'd lost some faith in the organization. I'm glad to see that you are still shaking things up and doing you best to keep moving in the interest of the public and the community. Please, keep in touch even if I forget.
Thank you for all your hard work! -- Greg