had photo-walks, local cultural institute
partnerships, sponsors,
promotion, juries, and yes, prizes among other things. (Beh, clarify here
please!)*
Well, I can only talk about WMPT experience, and it was so much off line
work. We had like 8 in person meetings to get the list from IGESPAR (our
ASI), we needed to travel several times to meet with sponsors (sometimes
crossing the country), we needed to talk with promotion partners, prize
partners and PR partners (all that also in person). We needed to set up a
place for the jury meeting (and all the logistics involved). We had 2 "Wiki
Takes" events and we needed to set up the prize reception.
WLM is a wonderful thing to do, but definitely isn't a "pure virtual"
event.
_____
*Béria Lima*
*Imagine um mundo onde é dada a qualquer pessoa a possibilidade de ter
livre acesso ao somatório de todo o conhecimento humano. Ajude-nos a
construir esse sonho. <http://wikimedia.pt/Donativos>*
On 6 November 2012 13:53, Theo10011 <de10011(a)gmail.com> wrote:
There is actually very little that is as disappointing as people who
never did the work, complaining about people who actually did. I don't
recall any previous organization of WLM from you or the chapter in the last
year. It is easy to nitpick an incoming batch of young volunteers, doing
something for the first time, it is harder to actually do something. I
didn't have the time or the energy to take this up, neither did you, but I
won't criticize them now over trivial matters on an announcement email.
On Tue, Nov 6, 2012 at 6:57 PM, Arjuna Rao Chavala <arjunaraoc(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
I'm not sure how familiar you are with WLM.
But if you look on the
commons page for the winners[1], a large majority of them are redlinks with
next to no information about real names and locations of photographers. I
believe the competition has more to do with the pictures themselves than
the photographers. Some of the winners created their account for the sole
purpose of uploading the pics, some chose their names, some didn't. It is
their right if they choose to not declare their real name and location.
Putting this information on commons without their permission, can be
tantamount to WP:OUTING[2] and against the Wikimedia privacy policy.
I very much am involved with WLM and also know the policies. You seem
to have missed some mails on this topic from me.
Ah, I must have forgotten the time you organized WLM in the past. Lucky
for you, all mails are archived[1]. Why don't you go ahead and find it? I
only see a single relevant email from you in the last year mentioning the
IRC meeting time related to WLM and other business. I wasn't talking about
WLM policy, just general privacy policy, which would require that
information oversighted on en.wp, and commons, and the offender warned in
most cases.
BTW, this is just not a virtual world event as there is lot of prize
money at stake. I am not advocating that Karthik share the real names
without contacting the winners. If my mail was not clear in that aspect, I
am sorry.
Yes, it wasn't clear. You are not just haranguing what might be, a small
oversight publicly, which is really supportive of these new office bearers.
On Mon,
Nov 5, 2012 at 5:01 PM, Arjuna Rao Chavala <
arjunaraoc(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Disappointed that there are no user pages or information on
> background of contributors of winning entries.
>
Let's try and contain the disappointment, shall we? ;) This was a big
initiative taken by such a young group of volunteers. They deserve to
lauded for their achievement. The information about the individual
photographer is rarely a priority during these initiatives.
Sorry to disagree. As mentioned, this is just not a pure virtual world
event. Once we know the winning photographs, there is a curiosity to know
the author/photographers of the award winning entries.
Apparently, you seem to be the only one with this burning curiosity.
Actually to correct you again, it is not a "pure virtual world event", in
most countries, it had photo-walks, local cultural institute partnerships,
sponsors, promotion, juries, and yes, prizes among other things. (Beh,
clarify here please!) As I mentioned before it's a photo contest, not a
photographer contest.
Also after spending quite a lot of effort and
money, there are more
expectations on leveraging this for the movement. May be some of these
people will become passionate Wikimedians and start initiatives to improve
media about India.
Yes, and they are answerable to you? Anyway, I must be missing where your
criticism fills the gap and inspires them.
Hope the winners will take action to update
their pages soon so that
> the community knows bit about them and their
passion for
> Photography/monuments and their approach towards the contest and also few
> words about their winning entry.
>
If they choose to mention those details, sure. They don't have to do
anything, like the majority of winners from other countries.
Agreed. Again there is an opportunity for India to be different while
respecting the policies. That is the focus of my message.
It's not.
You actually just seemed petty, this all might have just been an
oversight on the organizer's part, which you could have mentioned to
Karthik and others in private, and they would have corrected. Instead, you
nitpicked on a public list to a group of 20 year old (Karthik I think is
even younger), for something, let's face it, that you, I and others, were
too busy or lazy to organize ourselves.
-Theo
P.S. When you reply inline, try and leave a gap so that the quote doesn't
get truncated with the reply.
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