[Foundation-l] A Wikimedia project has forked

Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84 at gmail.com
Thu Sep 22 08:12:06 UTC 2011


2011/9/22 John Vandenberg <jayvdb at gmail.com>

> On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 2:25 AM, Samuel Klein <meta.sj at gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Sun, Sep 18, 2011 at 11:51 AM, Mike  Dupont
> > <jamesmikedupont at googlemail.com> wrote:
> >> On Mon, Sep 12, 2011 at 11:57 PM, MZMcBride <z at mzmcbride.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>> From Wikimedia's perspective, I think this is "one down, several
> hundred to go."
> >>> Wikimedia has made it clear that its singular focus is the English
> Wikipedia.
> >>> All other Wikipedias are peripheral; all other project types are
> abandoned.
> >
> >> oh that is alarming. can you tell me more?
> >
> > That is alarming because it is MZM's fear, but it does not represent
> > the views of the Foundation.
> >
> > (MZM, would you mind finding a more accurate way to express your
> > observations, hopes and frustrations on this subject?)
> > ...
> > All sister projects are able to pull in grant money if it is pursued.
> > There are a variety of major foundations devoted to, or prioritizing,
> > curation and access to {primary source materials, language and
> > literacy materials, civic journalism,  free textbooks, open
> > educational resources, biology and species data, oral histories, &c.}.
> >  I would love to see us attract more of that sort of interest.  Even
> > projects that we worry about and say "did not achieve critical mass"
> > are often significant successes by the standards of existing
> > grant-supported work elsewhere in the world.
>
> Sam,
>
> While it is nice to say that the other projects can request grants
> from other organisations, MZM's point is that the WMF is focusing on
> English Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.
>
> The strategic plan mentions Wikipedia an awful lot, and the WMF does
> appear to be focusing on English Wikipedia and Commons.  Of course
> WMF's investment in the mediawiki platform and innovation helps the
> sister projects, but the sister projects continue to struggle because
> they haven't had the same amount of support as Wikipedia over the
> years.  The sun does not shine directly on them.  Have I told you
> about the time that the WMF told a journo that it was OK to use
> "Wikipedia" instead of "Wikisource" in an magazine article about a
> Wikisource project?
>
> I'm having a hard time remembering when a WMF led a project that had a
> primary stated objective to meet a need of a sister project.  It would
> be good to compile a list of any WMF projects of this kind.  maybe the
> WMF can have _one_ "sister projects support officer" (think how many
> dedicated _English_Wikipedia_ support staff the WMF has).
>

Indeed.
I remember saying that loudly in Gdansk,
when Sue presented us the Strategic Plan and Wikipedia was all over the
pages,
but none of the sister projects.
Many of our sister projects has developed a proper identity and direction
(sure Wikisource has)
but a major support wiuld be very much appreciated.
Some of the requests in bugzilla (even simple ones) lay down there for
years,
and communities are just left alone with their technical issues.
I think sister project communities would be enthusiastic if the Foundation
had staff dedicated to them and their problems.
Even a fellow as proposed by Amir (a guy who examine communities and their
tools, collecting knowledge and requests for tools, gadgets and extensions)
would be awesome.


Aubrey



> --
> John Vandenberg
>
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