Ryan Lane wrote:
Kim Bruning <kim@...> writes (roughly):
Washington post article: http://wapo.st/1zUXNXj
The response to this is embarrassing and lacking. Wikipedia Zero is an amazing program (and is one of the only excellent non-engineering things the foundation has done). [...]
I think calling Wikipedia Zero non-engineeering is kind of bizarre, possibly just wrong. Wikipedia Zero spans both development and operations. It has a MediaWiki extension https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:ZeroBanner and custom back-end (Web server) configuration to support it. And of course ZeroBanner is just the latest extension, it's had others, while parts of Wikipedia Zero's infrastructure have been integrated (yay!) with other extensions.
To be clear, I'm not attacking Wikipedia Zero or the resources it's using, I kind of like the idea, but it's definitely an engineering project. In addition to engineering resources, Wikipedia Zero requires administrative overhead for partnership negotiation and management, which is probably not unique to the Wikipedia Zero team. "Only excellent" seems a bit rough.
My biggest wonder here is: why in the world is the HR director for the foundation speaking with the press about this on behalf of the foundation (and the movement)? This seems like the kind of thing the communications department, or the ED (or DD) should be doing.
This isn't arguably wrong, just plain wrong. :-) Gayle's title is "Chief Talent and Culture Officer" and the Director of Human Resources is someone else who reports to her; cf. https://www.wikimedia.org/wiki/Template:Staff_and_contractors#HR. I agree that for a media outlet such the Washington Post, having a C-level person speak is best... and that's what happened here. (Now whether the Wikimedia Foundation should be large enough to require a Chief Talent and Culture Officer position is a separate question that can hopefully be addressed in another thread.)
I'll let others respond on the basic point here about whether Wikipedia Zero is violating net neutrality. I personally agree with Gayle that it's complicated. :-) I think it's difficult to argue that Wikipedia Zero is not, at least in the strictest sense, a violation of net neutrality.
MZMcBride