I'm strenuously against any "adoption" by the Foundation of these "one
of many" type sites, no matter if they claim they are "the biggest" or not.
Once we put our clout behind a site, we are destroying the natural competition engine.
I would further note, that 115,000 pages from "uploaded GEDCOMS" is actually
rather paltry.
I have 260,000 people in my own personal GEDCOM
So I could create this mass of data, alone.
Rather if the Foundation were to wish to partner with a genealogical database I would
suggest Rootsweb, or FamilySearch
Both of which are *free* and *public* and could possibly be induced to use MediaWiki
software as their next evolution in this personal ancestry space.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Cuenca <dacuetu(a)gmail.com>
To: MediaWiki announcements and site admin list <mediawiki-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Sent: Tue, Jul 16, 2013 7:52 am
Subject: [MediaWiki-l] About the wiki-adoption process
I've seen that there is a "new" Wiki Adoption Request [1] for WeRelate [2],
a wonderful project that might help sourcing birth/death dates and hence
copyright status. I was wondering if there should be a standard procedure
for this kind of adoption requests. It is very easy to add a support for a
project, but not that easy to evaluate the hidden costs (migration, legal
deffense, etc), which might require some expertise on the topic.
With all this information at hand, maybe it would be easier to take
informed decissions and evaluate the kind of success that is expected from
a given adoption.
Micru
[1]
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WeRelate
[2]
http://www.werelate.org
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