I'm really not sure what rehashing old dramas which have already been
played out at Wikipediocracy and Jimbotalk on this list is meant to
accomplish unless it is to extend the pointless controversy.
It's all very Junior High School: People A, B, and C were catty about Bobby
and Suzie, and person D who heard them felt compelled to tattle to Bobby,
since he doesn't like Bobby anyway; and Bobby's feelings got hurt and he
got publicly upset, and then people E, F, and G, had their opinions, and
Bobby was even more upset, and blah blah blah yammer yammer yammer...
So on what planet does it make sense to rehash this garbage here with a
list post arguing that being catty is perfectly normal and that little
Bobby isn't cool anyway?
It's stupid.
Moving on...
Tim Davenport
Corvallis, OR
(Carrite on WP, Randy from Boise on WPO)
On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 2:32 PM, <wikimedia-l-request(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: On relationship gossip and appropriate conversation
(Gerard Meijssen)
2. Re: On relationship gossip and appropriate conversation
(edward)
3. Re: On relationship gossip and appropriate conversation
(Milos Rancic)
4. Re: On relationship gossip and appropriate conversation
(edward)
5. Re: Fwd: [Wikimedia Announcements] Israel’s Ministry of
Education & Wikimedia Israel Agree On New, Unique Initiative (Yves Z)
6. Why Wil's actions in multiple forums are a matter of
significant concern (Pete Forsyth)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 21:41:25 +0200
From: Gerard Meijssen <gerard.meijssen(a)gmail.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] On relationship gossip and appropriate
conversation
Message-ID:
<CAO53wxVsOM5ztoN9o=b=2ux=
z83L9WjBGHf6dG3dN8RqbdBp1w(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Hoi,
Please don't
Thanks,
GerardM
On 15 June 2014 21:19, Pete Forsyth <peteforsyth(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 11:13 AM, Christophe
Henner <
christophe.henner(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
I'm puzzled of those emails.
Christophe, thank you for explaining how this looks from your end. I
understand now why this would come across this way, and will put
together a
more focused summary like you (and Nathan)
suggest shortly. Yes, perhaps
it
would have been better if I started that way.
Hinting someone dumping someone else is NOT an
organisational solution.
From my culture and my values it's not only rude and violent, but way
over
the line.
Since this seems to be the most heated issue at the moment, I want to
point
out: I am not the one who made these allegedly
nasty comments public; the
person who made them public, and then proceeded to discuss them in
numerous
public forums, was Wil Sinclair. If making them
public is the problem,
then
the aggressor and one of the victims are one and
the same person. Yes, I
mentioned it here first, but only after it had been widely discussed in
other prominent forums (links in my next email). Again. I am not the
person
who made these comments public.
Pete
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Message: 2
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 21:07:30 +0100
From: edward <edward(a)logicmuseum.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] On relationship gossip and appropriate
conversation
Message-ID: <539DFD02.2010703(a)logicmuseum.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
On 15/06/2014 20:08, Milos Rancic wrote:
Christophe, Wil tried to open issues closed few
years ago. Besides that,
not under ED mandate.
In what sense were these issues 'closed'? 'Closed' usually means
'resolved'. As far as I know, they were not resolved.
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 22:12:37 +0200
From: Milos Rancic <millosh(a)gmail.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] On relationship gossip and appropriate
conversation
Message-ID:
<
CAHPiQ2Hi8aH4R4zAjGfFBssH3jCVrKTqh8v7OrUcWAaLtj7xFw(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
On Jun 15, 2014 10:07 PM, "edward" <edward(a)logicmuseum.com> wrote:
On 15/06/2014 20:08, Milos Rancic wrote:
Christophe, Wil tried to open issues closed few years ago. Besides that,
not under ED mandate.
In what sense were these issues 'closed'? 'Closed' usually means
'resolved'. As far as I know, they were not resolved.
Whatever fits best to you. You can use imagination, as well.
------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 21:19:32 +0100
From: edward <edward(a)logicmuseum.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] On relationship gossip and appropriate
conversation
Message-ID: <539DFFD4.2070207(a)logicmuseum.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
On 15/06/2014 20:19, Pete Forsyth wrote:
Since this seems to be the most heated issue at
the moment, I want to
point
out: I am not the one who made these allegedly
nasty comments public; the
person who made them public, and then proceeded to discuss them in
numerous
public forums, was Wil Sinclair. If making them
public is the problem,
then
the aggressor and one of the victims are one and
the same person.
Ahem. After the conference, Kevin Gorman allegedly sent an email to Wil
Sinclair telling him to 'back the fuck off'. Sinclair asked (on wiki)
"Please, Kevin, in the future if you have anything to say to me
regarding Wikipedia, try to do it on-wiki where everyone can take part.
(10:37, 12 June 2014 UTC).
Directly after this, Sinclair published an email from Gorman, as follows:
"Given how cautious people have asked me to be in speaking to you I
would normally hesitate to share this - but given the *sheer number of
people who were reiterating the sentiment in NYC*, I don't think it has
implications for anyone's anonymity - more than a couple people in NYC,
including *in positions where this would normally get them in shit in
any organization other than the Wikimedia movement - were pretty
explicitly and pretty publicly asking why Lila hadn't either dumped you
or banished you from the Wikimedia world yet*. That's not something I
want to happen - least of all because it would be a bloody mess - but
that's something that multiple influential people are already explicitly
bringing up in semi-public settings. (This is pretty certainly on the
list of issues people would rather I don't discuss with you... but I
can't even think of every person at the conference who brought it up
with me.)"
It seems clear why Sinclair felt he had to publish the emails, i.e.
being told to 'back the fuck off'. By the same token it is clear why it
is such an emotive subject in the community.
>If making them public is the problem, then the
aggressor and one of
the victims are one and the same person.
You are saying that Sinclair is the aggressor here?
------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 17:21:09 -0400
From: Yves Z <zyzzyvy(a)outlook.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Wikimedia Announcements] Israel’s
Ministry of Education & Wikimedia Israel Agree On New, Unique
Initiative
Message-ID: <BLU185-W361DBDB0ECC5F8F98BE9E8A9170(a)phx.gbl>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252"
Interesting, and nice publicity with an Education Minister.
It mentions History and Geography as topics.Does this mean a similar
project is needed in Palestine to maintain neutrality?
Date: Wed, 11 Jun 2014 09:01:11 +0200
From: ps.huard(a)gmail.com
To: wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Wikimedia Announcements] Israel’s
Ministry of
Education & Wikimedia Israel Agree On New, Unique Initiative
Kudos WMIL and everyone involved \o/
Pierre-Selim
Message d'origine
De: Pine W
Envoyé: mercredi 11 juin 2014 08:56
À: Wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org; education(a)lists.wikimedia.org
Répondre à: Wikimedia Mailing List
Objet: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Wikimedia Announcements] Israel’s Ministry of
Education
& Wikimedia Israel Agree On New, Unique Initiative
I'm forwarding this good news from WikimediaAnnounce-l that mysteriously
wasn't received by Wikimedia-l. I'm sending this to Wikimedia-l and
Education-l.
Pine
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Itzik - Wikimedia Israel <itzik(a)wikimedia.org.il>
Date: Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 8:58 PM
Subject: [Wikimedia Announcements] Israel’s Ministry of Education &
Wikimedia Israel Agree On New, Unique Initiative
To: wikimediaannounce-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org
(Posted also on the Wikimedia Blog:
https://blog.wikimedia.org/2014/06/10/israels-ministry-of-education-wikimed…
)
An agreement was met in a meeting between Rabbi Shai Piron, Israel’s
Education Minister, Jan-Bart de Vreede, Chair of the Wikimedia Foundation
Board of Trustees, Itzik Edri, Chair of the Wikimedia Israel Board and
Michal Lester, Executive Director of Wikimedia Israel, regarding a shared
cooperation with Wikimedia Israel in the framework of the ministry’s
school
curricula in the coming years. Through the
planned cooperation, history,
geography and science teachers will receive special professional training
to instruct students on how to contribute to new or incomplete Wikipedia
articles for which information is lacking or inadequate.
The Education Ministry will also examine the possibility of integrating
Wikipedia writing assignments in the teaching of research and community
involvement. They will also consider having students who speak additional
languages (primarily English and Russian) write Wikipedia articles about
Israel in those particular languages.
Education Minister Rabbi Shai Piron said, “It is important to us that the
education system in Israel leads in innovation and cooperating with
Wikipedia is a wonderful opportunity to think outside the box and enable
students in Israel to do things that make a difference from which others
can also benefit.”
Jan-Bart de Vreede, Chair of the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees
said, “Israel is today among the leading countries in the integration of
Wikipedia in the education system and academia. I hope our joint work
model
will also serve as an example to other education
systems around the
world.”
In the framework of cooperation that is already in place between
Wikimedia
Israel and the Ministry of education, several
pilot projects are being
conducted. The projects involve teacher training in good Wikipedia usage,
article composition, Wikipedia article writing by gifted high school
students and the teaching of proper Wikipedia usage to elementary
schoolchildren. It is worth mentioning that through cooperation with
academics in a variety of universities and colleges throughout Israel,
hundreds of articles are written each year by students in courses. Thus
students write Wikipedia articles as part of their degrees, sometimes
even
in lieu of exams or final papers. The Faculty of
Medicine at Tel Aviv
University recently conducted a special 2-credit course on the subject of
Wikipedia and medicine.
Survey results published last week as part of Wikipedia Academy 2014
Israel
revealed that 84% of the Israeli public relies
heavily on Wikipedia and
74%
say that it provides all the information they
need. Over one third of the
population expressed interest in learning to write for Wikipedia.
*Regards,Itzik Edri*
Chairperson, Wikimedia Israel
+972-(0)-54-5878078 |
http://www.wikimedia.org.il
Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the
sum of all knowledge. That's our commitment!
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Message: 6
Date: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 14:32:38 -0700
From: Pete Forsyth <peteforsyth(a)gmail.com>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Why Wil's actions in multiple forums are a
matter of significant concern
Message-ID:
<CAGWts0G1wYW8pVSFiTx8LBLn_j_Me4FonuXuzhbNUr642A=C=
Q(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Wikimedia has a problem right now, and in the absence of any effective
intervention, it appears to be escalating, not receding.
The problem, in a nutshell: Wil Sinclair, the partner of Wikimedia's new
Executive Director Lila Tretikov, has taken strong, even radical positions
on what is needed for Wikipedia's future well-being; and owing (by all
accounts, unintentionally) to his connection to her, his views are
receiving a much higher degree of attention than they would otherwise, and
having significant impacts on our community. Lila, whose name and position
are a key ingredient in the notoriety and influence Wil has so quickly
gained -- and who is therefore in a uniquely responsible and uniquely
influential position in this matter -- has made only one public statement
on the matter, stating that she intends to do nothing about it.[1] But this
is a problem that needs to be addressed.
As Milos Rancic has said, "Wil tried to open issues closed few years ago."
The issues he's raised, by and large, are ones that have been widely
discussed many times; we see people bring them up often, and they generally
don't get much traction or lead to 100+ comment discussion threads.
The key difference, I am confident, is best exemplified with the first
words Wil ever spoke on this list: "I'm Wil Sinclair, Lila Tretikov's
significant other."[2] Regardless of his intentions, his introductory
message to this list garnered "welcome" messages from three WMF staff, and
also from three others, and many people (as I have confirmed in many
offline conversations) made a mental note that here was somebody it would
be worthwhile to keep on the radar. These 6 prompt messages foreshadowed
the disproportionate amount of attention he would receive in the coming
weeks. I believe this unusual level of attention derived almost entirely
from his connection to Lila. (I don't know any way to prove that, but if
any longtime subscribers think the attention he got was typical of a new
list contributor without Wikimedia experience, I'd be interested to know.)
Wil soon parlayed that popularity into other forums. He's now had extensive
discussions on Wikipedia (WP), where 166 of his 400 edits are to his own
User Talk page;[3] and Wikipediocracy (WO)[4] where he's posted 283
messages in maybe a dozen topic threads; and relaunched his personal
blog.[5] His blog's stated goal is to end what he calls the "Wiki War"
between WP and WO; in the 10 days since he launched it, he's published 3
blog posts, all on this topic, and collected about 70 comments. He also
launched a petition on change.org,[6] calling for better treatment of
(arguably) English Wikipedia's most notorious banned user.
So although he is no longer posting multiple messages per day on this
particular email list, his daily efforts to shape the direction of the
Wikimedia movement has not slowed down.
This is true of many dedicated Wikipedians, of course; but in this case, he
is getting a disproportionately high level of attention from influential
people. His user talk page contains 25 comment threads full of advice from
Wikimedia Trustees, longtime Wikipedians, former ArbCom members,
Wikipedians in Residence, staff and board of affiliated organizations, etc.
By contrast, I have students and clients who have made more edits, over
longer periods of time, who have received little more than a {{welcome}}
message on their page. Wil, or his activities, have also ended up in
extensive discussions on Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales' user talk page,
most recently here.[7]
This level of influence is, to my eyes, clearly a function of his
connection to Lila. Not exclusively -- he has of course demonstrated a
knack for presenting himself in a way that attracts attention -- but his
connection to her is a vital ingredient in his success.
But I'd like to get back to how he has used that influence. He has focused,
as far as I can tell, almost exclusively on trying to stimulate discourse
and reconciliation between the Wikimedia and Wikipediocracy communities.
For those who are not familiar with Wikipediocracy: I am not one of the
people who would paint it as "bad" with a broad brush. It's a tremendously
active forum dedicated to criticizing Wikipedia and Wikimedia, and many
well intentioned people say many useful things there. However, it is also a
place that where *truly* mean-spirited and damaging things are sometimes
said, and are frequently allowed to remain indefinitely.
An example, drawn from the recent controversy, may help:
A couple days ago, a regular, anonymous WO participant -- who has benefited
from many friendly exchanges with Wil -- had the following to say about a
longtime Wikipedian (who's not active on Wikipediocracy, to my knowledge)
using their full given name: "[name elided], you're a cunt...You are the
worst kind of coward" and then insults this person's physical appearance.
Some forum participants objected to this comment,[8] and suggested it might
be removed, but to date it hasn't been. Wil responded with light,
good-natured scolding.[9]
While we can all agree that discourse in Wikimedia spaces can be
problematic, I do think that a vulgar, direct, personal attack like this --
especially launched from behind a veil of anonymity, addressed to a
person's full name -- would generally not be tolerated here. So there is at
least one good argument in favor of maintaining some distance between
Wikimedia and WO.
I wouldn't say reconciliation between the WP and WO communities is
necessarily a bad goal, but it is most certainly a *delicate* area. And Wil
has exhibited, repeatedly and even explicitly, that delicacy is not his
thing. His impact is, of course, hard to measure, as there are many
judgment calls involved; but in my estimation, the discussions he's started
or participated heavily in have (1) commanded a good deal of time from
volunteers, staff, and Trustees who ideally would have something worthwhile
to show for the time invested; (2) galvanized the community of, in some
cases, the most disruptive banned users and critics of Wikipedia; and (3)
created a central issue that, like it or not, will impact many parties'
perception of Lila and her disposition toward community dynamics, at the
expense of her ability to define that for herself.
I believe this is a substantial problem, and one that is growing, not
shrinking, with every passing day. I do not know what the solution is, but
I do believe that Lila is the one person (apart from Wil, who seems to
pride himself on disregarding advice, and who of course has no professional
obligation at all toward Wikimedia) with the most at her disposal to come
up with an effective resolution.
I firmly believe that if Lila doesn't do something effective to address
this problem soon, it will take on a life of its own, and encompass a lot
more of the Wikimedia world we all care about than it has so far. If she
doesn't do anything, yes, I think the rest of us need to address it
somehow; I don't have a proposal for that, but I would be happy to discuss
possibilities.
-Pete
[[User:Peteforsyth]]
[1]
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-l/2014-May/072059.html
[2]
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-l/2014-May/071519.html
[3]
https://tools.wmflabs.org/supercount/index.php?user=Wllm&project=en.wik…
[4] Wil, who today stated that he's done posting to Wikipediocracy,
previously posted to most of the recent threads in the "Governance" section
of Wikipediocracy:
http://wikipediocracy.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=14 and
also the parent topic area:
http://wikipediocracy.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=8
[5]
http://wllm.com/
[6]
http://www.change.org/petitions/wikipedia-make-wikipedia-conferences-truly-…
[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Jimbo_wales#Regarding_the_nauseatin…
[8]
http://wikipediocracy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=99887#p99887
[9]
http://wikipediocracy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=99937#p99937
------------------------------
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