[Foundation-l] WMF and UNU-Merit announce first survey of Wikipedians
daniwo59 at aol.com
daniwo59 at aol.com
Fri Jan 25 02:31:57 UTC 2008
I apologize for the previous email, which was sent inadvertently.
In a message dated 1/24/2008 8:08:07 PM Eastern Standard Time,
jwalsh at wikimedia.org writes:
Hi folks - keeping you informed,
Earlier today we made an announcement in concert with the Collaborative
Creativity Group at UNU-MERIT [a joint research and training centre of United
Nations University (UNU) and Maastricht University] about the first ever
survey of Wikipedians.
Thanks for this message. It could be argued that people have surveyed
Wikipedians privately before (I just received an email this morning from someone
conducting a survey of Wikipedians), but this seems to be the first such survey
under the aegis of the WMF.
As such, it raises man interesting questions, the chief of which for me is:
"How is 'Wikipedian' defined?" In Hebrew, the word for definition is
"hagdarah," from the root "gader," or fence. In other words, when you define
something, you put a fence around it, defining what is inside and what is out. When
conducting a survey of Wikipedians, you are similarly determining "Who is in"
and "Who is out."
Since you are very new to the community, I am sure Erik has informed you
that this definition has long been debated on mailing lists, at meetings of
staff and chapter leaders, at Wikimanias, and in various other fora. One such
argument, which immediately comes to mind, was an email by Sj about two years
ago, in which he suggested a very inclusive definition (from the pipes to the
minarets, as he put it). Others, myself included, sought something a tad more
exclusive. To the best of my knowledge, this issue was never resolved.
Perhaps that is because in an open project, such as Wikipedia, the
boundaries are so fluid. Are staff considered Wikipedians? What about people who left
the project, but who were largely responsible for establishing its
infrastructure? What about trolls (Willie on Wheels has a hell of a lot of edits)? What
about metapedians, who deal with policies, but have very few edits? What
about critics, particularly critics who come from within the community? In the
English Wikipedia there is often a debate as to whether Jimmy himself is part
of the community or not--I do not know if the same debate occurs in other
projects. While one might answer cynically that it all depends on what is
convenient at the moment, the fact is that there is a certain fluidity of
boundaries which must be taken into account.
Having rambled on about this, I am, again, curious to understand how you
define community for the purposes of this survey? Nor is this just a
philosophical issue; there are practical ramifications as well. For instance, when Imran
and I organized the first community board elections, we had to determine who
could vote--in other words, we had to determine who the community was. The
result was only partially successful, as there were many exceptions to
consider (could developers vote, for instance). In fact, at that time there was some
effort to distinguish between "Contributing Active Members" and "Volunteer
Users," whatever that meant. Only much later did the Board decide to abandon
these definitions--and the principle of membership--entirely.
It seems to me that by conducting a survey such as this, of Wikipedians, all
of these issues have been resolved. So, for purposes of clarification, how
is Wikipedian being defined in his poll?
I apologize for the length of this post, but I believe that all these qu
estions merit answers.
Danny
**************Biggest Grammy Award surprises of all time on AOL Music.
(http://music.aol.com/grammys/pictures/never-won-a-grammy?NCID=aolcmp003000000025
48)
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