This is a strawman. The current board is a good one, and recognizes that the power to organize, inform, and guide the projects' social and creative content movements lies with the community. The /reason/ that this board
is
wise has to do with its history, its long experience with the projects,
and
its community membership.
And that board, with all that experience, has come to an understanding born in a long process of work that we need some outside expertise on the board, and that we have not managed to get the kinds of expertise that we need solely by drawing from a community process that has tended to choose excellent community members and editors (who we also need).
****** 63 people have signed the petition as of this writing. They include sysops on at least 3 projects, a former arbitrator, a checkuser, and some people who rarely see eye to eye about anything. http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Community_petition
The message I hope this sends is that the board is not necessarily wrong in its decision to restructure, but it did a poor job of communicating. Since the need for restructuring was apparent at WMF for some time...
* Why wasn't this need discussed with the volunteer communities? * Why wasn't the proposed solution shared with the volunteer communities? * Why wasn't the anticipated restructuring even mentioned for public consumption until it was already done? * Why wasn't a formal statement prepared at the same time explaining these unusual circumstances, and the need for proceeding in this way?
What happened here stretched the good faith of many dedicated volunteers, and I suspect unnecessarily so. With better communication that need not have happened.
Some of the responses on this list - including the Foundation's present and former counsel - have enhanced concerns rather than allayed them. Off list, more volunteers have been reading the Foundation's bylaws and realizing its shortcomings. So long as there was no reasonable worry that a power consolidation would occur, hardly anyone cared. Now the board has created that appearance. It was unwise of them to do so.
It was also unwise at this juncture for some individuals to remind concerned volunteers of how severely limited their formal power is within Foundation bylaws, because in a friendly relationship nobody actually exercises the limits of their formal powers. Bylaws notwithstanding, the volunteers wield great power here - more so than in almost any nonprofit:
*WMF is a provider of content, but its content is entirely copyleft.
*WMF runs on powerful software, which is also copyleft.
*WMF is almost entirely dependent upon volunteer labor for its content.
*WMF is not particularly well funded: it has no endowment, no contingency fund, and would shut its doors in less than half a year if donations disappeared.
So long as the volunteers who fund WMF and provide its content remain content, there is no realistic danger that they will bring the full import of these facts to bear. I'll be candid, though: when I read the words "stop whining" the first thought that came to mind was that all it would actually take to render WMF obsolete is one Silicon Valley resident with $20 million to kick around, and volunteers who've had enough of "whining".
I don't enjoy entertaining that thought; I doubt anyone else could do what you folks do as well as you do. Treat me with respect; treat the volunteer base with respect. Be mindful that we deserve respect. We shouldn't be an afterthought.
-Durova
P.S. While I was composing this, the petition gained a sixty-fourth signature.
On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 7:41 PM, Durova nadezhda.durova@gmail.com wrote:
It was also unwise at this juncture for some individuals to remind concerned volunteers of how severely limited their formal power is within Foundation bylaws, because in a friendly relationship nobody actually exercises the limits of their formal powers. Bylaws notwithstanding, the volunteers wield great power here - more so than in almost any nonprofit:
*WMF is a provider of content, but its content is entirely copyleft.
Depending on how you interpret "provider"... The editors provide the content. The WMF owns the servers that host it. The WMF makes the content available to the general public.
*WMF runs on powerful software, which is also copyleft.
The Wikimedia Foundation does not run on any software. Its projects do :)
*WMF is almost entirely dependent upon volunteer labor for its content.
Right.
*WMF is not particularly well funded: it has no endowment, no contingency fund, and would shut its doors in less than half a year if donations disappeared.
Probably... which brings me to your next comment:
So long as the volunteers who fund WMF and provide its content remain content, there is no realistic danger that they will bring the full import of these facts to bear.
With all due respect, and I might be wrong in my interpretation of your sentence, but... the volunteers who provide content and the people who fund (donate) the projects are, I believe, two different sets of people. While there are donors who are editors and vice versa, we need to be aware that the donors are way more numerous than the editors (thankfully). Not to mention the number of our readers, which in turn is more important than that of our donors (unfortunately ;-) ). In short, thinking the power resides in the hands of the actual editors and only them is, in my opinion, a shortcut we should not indulge in. 20 million and (even lots of) volunteers ready to go "somewhere else" does not make a new Wikipedia. The real power resides in the synergy of it all. The volunteers, the readers, the donors.
Delphine
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org