Some of you might have seen that I did write a bot to edit on Wikipedia.
Actually it is not a bot per-se, but a framework to be able to write
wikipedia bots. I have used this framework to make a new and consistent
lay-out for all the nl: year pages, and currently its two greatest hits
are automatically adding consistent interwiki links and
semi-automatically disambiguating links to disambiguation pages.
I am running these robots on the nl: wikipedia only, and I think that is
the way it should stay. My idea is that if a language wikipedia agrees
to have a robot sniff around, it should be handled and monitored by
someone that is a very regular visitor of that language.
Now of course I am getting into trouble with this: there are other
people that want to run this software. First other user was Andre
Engels. I just gave him a copy of the code. Then there was Christian
List on da:, and he got a copy. But then more people working on
wikipedia started asking for the code, and recently also people that
have other instances of the wikipedia software running for other
projects. I am quite fond of free software, but here I am hesitating a
bit: if I give out the code to a growing select few, maintenance for me
is going to be a nightmare.
Now, I could just start an open source project at sourceforge to
collaboratively develop it further. BUT: I am afraid of the power of
this software, and the damage it could do if it ends up in the wrong
hands (vandals). On the other hand, it is not very difficult to write a
vandalizing robot for wikipedia, and I haven't heard anyone did it so
far; why would it start if a decent piece of robot software would be
freely available?
I'd like to evoke a discussion on this list to help me find a solution
to this. What do wikipedia developers and admins think about it?
Regards,
Rob Hooft
--
Rob W.W. Hooft || rob(a)hooft.net ||
http://www.hooft.net/people/rob/