Dear JFC,
we do not have a charter, but we have a technical project proposal [1] and a list of fundamental requirements [2].
[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Technical_proposal [2] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Notes/Requirements
I am not sure if this addresses your comments, as I am frankly having trouble to follow them. You are frequently using of neologisms and weird terms. Also you seem to be discussing within a conceptual space that is on a different level than we are interested in.
In short, we have for Wikidata two pragmatic goals: * Wikidata's first aim is to support the Wikipedias with their language links * Wikidata's second aim is to support the Wikipedias with the infoboxes
Out of the support for these tasks, other interesting use cases might and are expected to arise.
Until I manage to understand how your comments relate to one of these goals, I will personally take the liberty to ignore your comments.
Cheers, Denny
2012/4/5 JFC Morfin jefsey@jefsey.com
At 17:20 04/04/2012, Stracke, Christian wrote:
Dear all, I'm sorry bit "jfc" is mixing up different standards and committees (what is easy):
Sorry for the confusion. The problem with ISO and ISO documents is that they are not documented on (i.e. interested in? i.e. interesting for?) Wikipedia.
- 19788-1, can be found for free at: http://www.sis.se/PageFiles/**
2140/MLR-utkast%**20arbetsmaterial.pdfhttp://www.sis.se/PageFiles/2140/MLR-utkast%20arbetsmaterial.pdf
- The Wikidata issue, as I see it, is that we do not start from an
architectural framework based on a business plan, charter or TOR. It seems that the current target is to implement a W3C semantic web current-Wikimedia general data-store. This does not consider Wikidata as a major contributor to the future-Wikimedia development.
Agreeing on the role Wikidata is to play in the Wikimedia adaptation to the Internet future should be our first point of consensus. Otherwise :
- Wikidata is of no direct interest to Internet Users, only to Wikipedia
contributors; 2. another Wikimedia project is to be considered as a Wikidata back-end.
Certainly, at a time, there will be a need for a datamodel. But first we need to locate Wikidata in the Wikimedia strategy as a data-collector and as a data-desseminator, not only as a data-store, in a real world where there are five main conceptual channels : (1) Business World diversity (Search Engines, etc.), (2) JTC1, (3) W3C, (4) emergent IUsers [Intelligent lead users: FLOSS, IUCG], (5) Wikimedia. Possibly we have to consider Big Data, and the border with Big Data as it will emerge.
As being on the IUse side, I know that we need a convergence of these channels if we want to attain a good degree of (meta/syllo) data interchange and not multiply costs, complication and lack of progress everywhere (not only in sciences). Wikidata is not only about millions of lonely contributors/authors as Wikipedia is, it also is about
- ISO 11179 conformant very large sources contributions
- diktyologies (from greek diktyos, network), i.e. dynamically
auto-maintained intelligent ontologic spaces. This is a part we have to explore and support with new concepts (such as syllodata: data between metadata), cloud architecture, programming languages. Otherwise Wikimedia will soon be a story of the past, its free commons being copied by many (like http://wikipedia.orange.fr) and distributed and automatically enhanced by powerfull diktyologies with integrated big (scientific, etc.) data servers.
jfc