On 8/21/07, Craig Spurrier craig@craigweb.net wrote:
I am proposing the creation of a separate organization that would allow Wikinews to properly handle press accreditation. The Wikimedia
I strongly believe that the development of internal and external organizational structures that support our projects' interaction with other online and offline communities is critical to our long term abilities to sustain the projects. But as Erik, Delphine, and others point out there are some core questions that need to be answered:
- what does this organization do? is it just accreditation or is it more general support of Wikinews activities? - what is the nature of this organization's relationship with WMF? what is the governance structure of this organization? - where does the funding come from? who gets to set the budget? - how does this organization interact with local chapters and other WMF initiatives?
I believe that answering these questions for Wikinews will help create a solution for other projects' needs as well, both for very specific ideas like supporting accreditation as well as more general ideas like interest groups.
In the case of the problem Craig describes the issue of recognition needs to be addresses by a believably-named organization that has Wikinews in its name and is international in scope to reduce duplication of effort (and deal with the fact that we need recognition in many more geographical areas than those with established chapters).
I suggest the following as a set of answers to the questions from above that satisfies this goal:
1) Create a non-profit organization with an international scope whose goals are to provide material support for Wikinews community members for the purpose of content creation, issue press cards to any community member accredited by one of the projects, and represent the projects as a central point of contact in interactions with other news-making or news-reporting organizations.
2) name the organization something that sounds like a news credential granting organization: Wikinewswire, or Wikinews Press, or something along these lines. The problem with the "foundation" or "union" approach is that traditional foundations and unions are internally-focused and are not known to issue press cards in the "real world".
3) set the organization up as a standalone non-profit organization with its own governance structure, but create a strong set of requirements that the organization must adhere to if it wishes to retain a license to use a WMF-trademarked name. The requirements may be that the organization cannot pretend or be the publisher of core Wikinews material; must not encourage the creation of non-open content; must not represent itself as the WMF; must report on its activities to the WMF twice a year, etc.
4) have the organization be responsible for its own funding, but have the WMF provide the license for its trademarked names for free, and encourage the WMF to provide small funding opportunities to these kinds of interest groups.
5) by becoming a partner to the WMF with regards to a given project, this new organization also becomes a de-facto partner to the chapters. The organization may approach the chapters for help with bureaucracies in certain locales; the chapters on the other hand may use the organization to serve as the point of contact for all Wikinews-related inquiries.
By creating this sort of a structure the WMF retains some oversight over project-specific organizations, and reserves the right to help these kinds of organizations with funding etc, but at the same time allows them to live and die on their own. If the organization becomes a strong enabler of content creation, the WMF may even choose to internalize some of this organization's functions down the line.
-ilya haykinson