On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 13:10, Andrew Lih andrew.lih@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 11:43 AM, Sarah slimvirgin@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 12:34, Andrew Lih andrew.lih@gmail.com wrote:
And, in Wikipedia's crowdsourced way, potentially a re-oriented, mobilized Wikinews could produce in one week what National Geographic normally produces in one year. This could be a multimedia endeavor that could kick up the Wikimedia efforts in audio and video that seem to have stalled lately.
WMF's mission is about giving free access to "the sum of all human knowledge."
Wikipedia is about condensing and curating knowledge.
Wikinews can be the force to go explore and acquire it.
Yes, exactly. I'm currently working on an article about female genital mutilation. Can you imagine how wonderful it would be if I could find some women who had experienced this, arrange an interview, contact a Wikinews person in London, or Kenya, and ask them to put certain questions to those women?
That way, you can make the interview and the article interactive, in the sense that you could ask the women to address specific points in the article, then link to the video in that section. It would give us a whole new depth of coverage.
This is exactly what it's like to work for an international news organization, where someone in the Timbuktu office has an idea, and collaborates with someone in the local area to produce it. We do have that potential as a movement. It's just a question of how to give people the confidence, and the space to add their material. And to have sensible editorial policies that encourage quality without stifling early efforts.
Yes, and if you look at Achal Prabhala's Oral Citations project, it's very much in line with this.
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Oral_Citations http://vimeo.com/26469276
Also, by coincidence, in the 1990s I oversaw a masters student project covering FGM in Africa which had original reporting with women that had undergone the procedure. Instead of that story just sitting on the shelf, wouldn't it be great to have that body of reporting and those interviews as part of a Wikimedia project that could be source material? I focus in on A/V in particular for this effort, because it provides a level of verifiability. Of course you can still fake/stage audio and video, but it's more involved to do that than synthesizing typed words.
-Andrew
I think the oral citation project is a wonderful idea. I would extend it to the whole world, including areas rich in written sources, because there are always stories out there that give you more depth.
The student project you describe would be a great resource to add to the Wikipedia article. Could it be done?
Sarah