I agree with both views expressed (the desirability of, and concerns about, the Foundation name/brand), and I suggest a solution that might work for both problems.
One the one hand, Wikimedia vs Wikipedia is confusing and Wikimedia is little recognized. I'm not actually sure if that's a problem, because the Foundation is only public facing in contexts where people will be fine with that name (donations campaign, approaching 3rd parties for projects).
So do we actually have a problem? For example, do we really believe that renaming the Foundation will actually increase donations or add to any joint projects in a material way, or is this just that the Foundation should have a widely recognised name but not a real problem if not?
Calling the entire foundation "The Wikipedia Foundation" enhances one (best known) project but at the cost of marginalizing all others. Most of my work is at Wikipedia but even so, I don't think that's a good thing at all, other projects need a higher profile if anything, not more in Wikipedia's shadow. Also it narrows our focus as a project because now our entire project name is just limited to Wikipedia, hampering our efforts to place other projects at the "front of the stage" or make them big things. I don't like that outcome at all. Also it would be much harder to keep foundation and community with their separate roles and identities, too much risk of "blurring". Those are real harms.
I agree a name change could have benefits, but if done, it must build on (and "cap") all projects, not just "step into Wikipedia's shoes" only.
How about "The Wiki Knowledge Foundation"? Perhaps styled as "The WikiKnowledge Foundation"?
- It follows the naming pattern of * all * projects (Wikipedia, WikiNews, WikiCommons, WikiSource ... WikiKnowledge?) - It reflects the common aim of * all * projects - It keeps the "Wiki" part which is what has recognition beyond all, and is clearly distinct from "Wikipedia", but is not confusing, because it's clear what it means. - "Knowledge" is sufficiently broad that we would probably never have a project with that name. - There doesn't seem to be an active website with "wikiknowledge", so perhaps there's no risk of complaint is the name is used. As a domain, " wikiknowledge-foundation.org" seems to be OK.
If that doesn't work , there are countless variants that might work - wiki learning foundation, wiki information foundation, wiki projects foundation for example.
FT2
On Tue, 16 Apr 2019 at 19:54, Pharos pharosofalexandria@gmail.com wrote:
I concur with Phoebe and others that the time for such a change was 10 or 15 years ago, and would not be appropriate or productive now.
One thing that this corporate rebranding after our most popular product would erase is the "Wikimedia movement" - a social movement that is the leading modern manifestation of the Free Culture movement that attracted me as a member of Student For Free Culture a decade ago. Rebranding ourselves after a mere product is in some ways an erasure of the underlying social movement. When one is part of the "Wikipedia movement", one is just a user of a specific website, and it sounds as empty as the "Facebook movement".
That said, I do agree with common-sense changes like WikiCommons and perhaps others. But I don't think that just because we have more money now, and maybe it would have been a good idea 10 years ago, that corporate rebranding around our most popular product is a good thing to do at this stage in the evolution of our movement.
Thanks, Pharos
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 2:01 PM Paulo Santos Perneta < paulosperneta@gmail.com> wrote:
When I joined Wikimedia in 2009 I also tried WikiNews, which looked yet another fantastic Wikimedia project. I soon realized, however, that it
was
just a repeater of CC-BY sources of news, with very residual (if any) proper production. When an handcrafted news-piece I've made was merged
with
one of those automatic repeaters, I left that project and never looked back. As far as I now it never was attractive, it never managed to congregate any proper community worth of that name (at least the
Portuguese
version) - It was kind of a failed project already 10 years ago. And that was one of the reasons and motivations for Jimbo trying to reshuffle the thing as his new child WikiTribune. Personally, I do not need that
project
at all. When some news is notable enough (like the tragic Notre-Dame fire yesterday) I create the article for it and build it as an encyclopedic article, which is much more motivating and permanent than whatever is
made
in WikiNews.
Personally, I see this branding project as a two headed beast: In one
head,
WMF trying to take undue credit from the Wikipedia brand; on another
head,
some incipient Wikipedia dream of colonization towards other projects. As many, I started my contributions in the Wikimedia projects in Wikipedia, but very soon found Commons and the whole Wikipedia-free oasis that
thrives
there. I always looked at Commons as a kind of small paradise, precisely for not being necessarily associated with Wikipedia. So, 10 years ago, I would be as against the idea of placing Commons under the Wikipedia umbrella as I am today. (no opinion about WikiCommons, though, as we can continue shortnaming it to Commons anyway)
On the whole, I very much agree with what Phoebe wrote about it. Wikicolonizations/WMFappropriations apart, it's very difficult to foresee how such a move would advance the goals of our Movement. What problem is solved by it? If anything, it seems to bring even more confusion between Wikipedia and the other sister projects.
Best, Paulo
Jennifer Pryor-Summers jennifer.pryorsummers@gmail.com escreveu no dia terça, 16/04/2019 à(s) 07:52:
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 3:49 AM Paulo Santos Perneta < paulosperneta@gmail.com> wrote:
I wouldn't describe Wikinews as a success case, though.
Paulo
Compared to Wikitribune it is! But more importantly, if Wikinews is
not
thriving, then why not? Does it lack resources? What could or should
the
WMF do to revive it? Perhaps some of the money spent on rebranding
would
be better spent on the projects that are not doing so well as the big Wikipedias -- or perhaps the WMF should cut its losses and close them
down,
on the principle of reinforcing success instead. These are the big questions it should be asking itself.
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