Danny wrote:
"We don't want ad sense or Google ads."
Gosh, I don't know why we wouldn't *try* such a program. The benefits seem huge, the pitfalls few, and if we don't like it we could just cut it off after the trial period (we'd vote!). A test would scale up nicely: first you allow the ads on the front page, then if that worked alright some other pages, and if that looked good, you'd open up more. Moreover, since we're big and have leverage, we could limit the *kinds* of ads AdSense placed to those consistent with our goals (e.g., no porn, no x, no y, no z--damned if I know). Another idea: we could use AdSense in focused, time-limited "campaigns," like a pledge drive on NPR. We assess our needs, state a fund raising goal, tell AdSense to serve the ads until the goal is reached. After that, the ads come down until we need more money. I imagine that just the prospect of long AdSense "campaigns" would drive contributions from users. "You tired of those ads? We are too. So donate to Wikipedia and shorten the campaign."
Best, MP
Marshall Poe, Ph.D. The Atlantic Monthly 600 New Hampshire Ave. NW Washington, DC 20037 202-266-6511 mpoe@theatlantic.com -----Original Message----- From: foundation-l-bounces@wikimedia.org [mailto:foundation-l-bounces@wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of daniwo59@aol.com Sent: Monday, October 24, 2005 5:53 PM To: foundation-l@wikimedia.org Subject: [Foundation-l] Answers.com stuff
Well, since the list is being overrun by people's comments on the Answers.com agreement, I may as well dive in with some thoughts of my own. I think I am pretty qualified to speak-after all, I actually saw the agreement, which is more than I can say for many of the people commenting on it.
But first, I want to tell you a little story about my former place of employment, a museum in Manhattan. Said Museum is now $17 million dollars in debt. It has used up its emergency fund. It has been forced to let people go (I was not let go, and was immediately replaced, but a few of my colleagues, including many more qualified than me, were).
It's part of a problem faced by most not-for-profits today. Lots of great ideas, and not enough money to go around. In fact, the little donations ($10-$500), or in the case of museums, admissions are never enough to cover basic operating costs.
We are now among the top 30 websites in the world. I believe that we are the only one that is a not-for-profit (haven't checked it recently, but it is a fairly safe assumption). How can we cover our operating costs?
Grants are one possibility, but there are plenty of people competing for those same grants. Besides, grants have to be sexy. And they have to be something we can really carry through with. And NO ONE will give us a substantial sum to just do whatever we want with it. The CFO of my old place of employment used to tell me that it was easy to find people to pay for some crap sculpture that no one else liked, or for marble in the elevators, but when it came to basic operating costs like a monthly cleaning bill of $40,000-forget it.
Nor are we in the position to put up a plaque, have a cocktail reception, and dedicate the "Stanley and Edith Rosenthal Server in honor of their grandson Milton's bar mitzvah." Nor do we want to.
We don't want pop up ads on our site. We don't want ad sense or Google ads, though I find it rather odd that one of the vocal opponents to the Answers.com deal admits to running a mirror of Wikipedia with Google ads. Along comes someone who wants to use our information, which we are giving away for free, and to pay us for it in the name of fair play. Rather than asking for ads on every page, they simply suggested a modest link on a single page, a tools page which most people don't go to. They did this out of respect for our mission and our ideals.
How are people responding? Well, someone suggested that it would be better to shut down Wikipedia for editing except for one hour a day. People are talking about drastically cutting the budget, though I can only wonder if they can point to anything significant in the budget that can be cut, or if they have even seen the budget at all. Of course, everyone wants the site to run faster. I would just like someone to tell us how we can do just that without getting significant funding. I would like someone to explain to me how we can realize our goal of providing every person in the world with an encyclopedia in a language that they can understand without paying for it in some way.
Danny
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