Hoi,
How about a study on the adverse effects on the systemic bias given to
English Wikipedia? It gets less than 50% of our traffic more than 50% of
the funds are raised from English Wikipedia and it gets way more attention
than what could be expected because of said traffic. For projects like
Wikisource there is no fundraising at all and it does not get attention
that will raise its traffic and makes all the work done relevant to the
Wikimedia public.
The point of an equal part in fundraising is that people do say that "we
have to be glad for any attention given" and "what is done for English
Wikipedia translates to the other projects". We do know how wrong the
notion of trickle down economics is and it is easy to observe the
discriminatory bias that is in current practices.
We need to have an eye on diversity and it is much more than only gender.
Thanks,
GerardM
On 22 December 2016 at 16:59, James Salsman <jsalsman(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I was very glad that the Foundation decided to extend
the fundraiser.
I think adding projects outside of the lengthy, formulaic,
overly-committee laden, but necessary in part FDC funding process and
getting a head start on the endowment is essential for retaining the
soul of the Foundation's traditional agility and creativity. Sure, it
made a liar out of Jimmy and other officials this year, and they
should be commended by those of us who think the effective
non-sacrifice to their reputations is worth it.
Accordingly, I propose the following $2.5 million-range projects for
further extension of this year's fundraiser:
1. A study of systemic bias in economics articles on the English Wikipedia;
2. An extension of the (in the interest of full disclosure: my student
and my) Accuracy Review of Wikipedias Google Summer of Code Project
into a general computer-aided educational system including authentic
intelligibility remediation of spoken language skills, as proposed at
https://goo.gl/WGUIFa
3. A study of the top five endowment-grade mutual funds available for
general Foundation investments, their prospects, and opportunities for
divestments and strategic investments consistent with the Mission
broadly construed.
4. A study of the social implications of copyright law and regulation
changes in relation to the Foundation's Mission for the Public Policy
group.
That's about $10 million. What other ideas are there?
Best regards,
Jim
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