[Foundation-l] On Wikinews

Andrew Lih andrew.lih at gmail.com
Wed Sep 14 18:34:27 UTC 2011


On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 11:10 AM, Sarah <slimvirgin at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 12:02, Andrew Lih <andrew.lih at gmail.com> wrote:
>> of Wikipedia principles. Wikis depend on eventualism: given an
>> infinite timeline, pages eventually get better. News cannot survive on
>> that. The "decay" of the value of breaking news and eventualism are at
>> odds with each other.
>>
>> The question is, would paid staff be a healthy temporary boost for
>> sustainability or be futile artificial life support? I fear it's the
>> latter.
>>
>> -Andrew (above taken from an earlier, longer post)
>>
> There are current affairs issues that would continue to be of
> interest. I've always felt this was an area Wikipedia and Wikinews
> should pursue: video interviews by Wikipedians of interesting people.
> Not necessarily celebrities or news types -- interviews with ordinary
> people, oral histories of certain communities, people who've had odd
> experiences, etc.
>
> It has been discussed a few times, and I know David Shankbone did some
> good ones, but for some reason it has been limited. Adding some
> original videos to our articles (adding them to Wikipedia articles,
> supplied by Wikinews) would be very attractive to readers, I think.
>


I agree, and to quote from my reply in another thread:

Where Wikinews has been successful and clearly valuable is in what
those in journalism call "feature" content. Interviews with political
leaders, photography of events, and investigative pieces. These
verifiable forms of reporting are not time critical and don't demand
"full coverage" like breaking news beats. The Wikinews interview with
Shimon Peres is a good example:
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Shimon_Peres_discusses_the_future_of_Israel

And, in Wikipedia's crowdsourced way, potentially a re-oriented,
mobilized Wikinews could produce in one week what National Geographic
normally produces in one year. This could be a multimedia endeavor
that could kick up the Wikimedia efforts in audio and video that seem
to have stalled lately.

WMF's mission is about giving free access to "the sum of all human knowledge."

Wikipedia is about condensing and curating knowledge.

Wikinews can be the force to go explore and acquire it.

-Andrew



More information about the foundation-l mailing list