I like your idea Notafish ....... I would certainly volunteer for this
Waerth/Walter
crossposting to wikipedia-l as this is an international issue
Hi all,
as a totally non-en person, admin on other wikis and actually working "behind the scenes", I would like to give my view on what I believe is needed, and why an en-admin-only channel and list won't help to the extent that is needed. This is long, but please bear with me.
Let me try to make this more concrete.
OTRS (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/OTRS) receives a lot (and here I mean "A LOT") of complaints.
Those range from: "there's a mistake in this article, please fix it", to: "You're defaming me, delete this article/those revisions, or I will sue you!" through "this page is an enormous copyvio from my site!"
with as Sam Korn already pointed out, various degrees of civility.
The problem is the following:
Only a few people have agreed to help on OTRS. It's one thing to spend hours editing wikipedia, it's another to want to spend hours alone on a boring screen answering (most of the time) crazy emails. We have appealed to the en population several times (why en? because it is the one most attacked, but actually, other wikipedias are suffering from the same problem, and as we grow, these will get bigger and more numerous) and have gotten only very few answers. Fine, I can understand that.
The people who *are* working on OTRS are for some "good editors", for others "better e-mail answerers" than "editors" (me, for example). In the end, I think anyway that we *will* have to pay someone to answer those emails. As I speak, there are 280 unanswered emails in the info-en queue. Probably most of these are spam, but even sorting spam takes an awful lot of time.
What happens is this: you get an email with a complaint, you go see the page, realize there's about 2 hours of work on the page, and get discouraged. Because on one hand, you can't really go "public" with the complaint (it's, after all, an email, gives personal information etc.) and on the other, you *know* that something needs to be done. Here you have two options: -either you take the two hours to fix the article, but then, there are still 279 emails to be answered in OTRS. -or you go to a person you know, who you think could be good at fixing the article. Here two options again: -the person you chose to tell does have two hours and can fix the article -they don't and it gets forgotten and maybe a third one: -They don't have the time, go to other people, the "issue" is somehow broadcasted, makes the front page of USA Today... and you know the rest.
So what's the solution?
I don't think that the solution is en-admin-only anything. I think the solution is something that would be more like:
- The wikipedia community at large realizes that there *are* problems
with some articles
- The wikipedia community at large *knows* who is: "good at NPOV",
good at "speedy deleting", good at "cleaning histories", good in "Famous people stuff", good at "sourcing an article". -The wikipedia community at large *does* agree that something needs to be done to clean up Wikipedia in a (sorry, but it's true) hidden kind of fashion. -The wikipedia community at large decides to "appoint", "elect", "designate" (whatever suits the wikipedia community at large) a few trusted users who are reknown for the things listed above and agrees that they should all get together on one list where the people working behind the scenes (in OTRS) can just forward the email and are *sure* that it is going to be taken care of in a timely and discreet fashion.
NB. This list should not be of 800, it should not either be of 20, I am thinking something along the lines of 50-70 people from all across the wikipedias (because there are problems that may be repercuted from one language to the other- see tron for example), admins and non-admins (I can cite at least 5 people on fr who are not admins whom I would trust to do that kind of stuff better than many admins).
I am not sure how we can do that without ever falling in the "clique" type thing. But how different is it from all the "associations" of every kind that I have come across on en? Not sure.
What I am sure of is this: either the wikipedia community at large acknowledges the problem and tries to find a solution *together*, or we'll end up (not tomorrow, but soon enough) by having to "pay" some "NPOVers", or "history-cleaners", or choose them in a cabal-fashion, to do the work. Because the work to be done is there and most of it has to stay a little private.
The idea is to have people who know how to do this stuff (NPOV, sourcing), who are recognized for doing it well, who can get together on an article and work together on it when the complaint comes in, who are ok with doing it as part of their "normal" participation on wikipedia. The only thing is that their "work" will be a little directed. ie. "Please look at these 20 articles, that are a copyvio of this site". They can be tasked with asking people outside the list to help them etc.
This is what it's all about.
Hope this long email helped a little, and that it will spark ideas... I am for my part, short on ideas about how to deal with this stuff, and afraid that some day it will backfire in a much nastier way than just the front page of USA Today.
Delphine
~notafish _______________________________________________ Wikipedia-l mailing list Wikipedia-l@Wikimedia.org http://mail.wikipedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikipedia-l