Hi Amir,
It isn't too late to ask about the utility of welcome messages, but be aware that
there are reasons for their evolution over the last decade. Your email almost implied that
this has been an unreviewed area for the last decade.
There was some research a few years ago that concluded that welcomed editors were more
likely to stay, despite many welcomes being of the "welcome your article has been
tagged for deletion" variety. If someone fancies digging further it would be good to
compare welcomed and unwelcomed editors among the 75% of newbies who edit existing
articles and also among the 25% or whatever is left of that who come here to create new
articles.
I think that now would be a good time to develop tailored welcomes for mobile and V/E
newbies. I'm conscious that the Welcome I usually use assumes that newbies who do good
edits are using the classic editor and contributing with something bigger than a tablet.
So sometimes I leave newbies unwelcomed rather than give them a potentially confusing
welcome.
As for getting a welcome message from a wiki where I have visited but not edited, I
consider that a privacy violation. We normally claim not to log anything about our
readers, but if a logged in Wikimedian visits arwiki a log is created artificially by
issuing them a welcome. It isn't a Privacy violation that especially irks me
personally, but if we allow it we should change the global privacy statements
accordingly.
Regards
Jonathan
On 30 Dec 2017, at 13:38,
wikimedia-l-request(a)lists.wikimedia.org wrote:
Message: 4
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2017 10:29:34 +0200
From: "Amir E. Aharoni" <amir.aharoni(a)mail.huji.ac.il>
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Welcome messages at arwiki
Message-ID:
<CACtNa8vKK+7tnLh=4VKBmvX4WOaHD3QvGc2N+Cui-br8VQg4sQ(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
It's a good opportunity to step back and discuss a little something.
The existence of pretty much every bot is a reason to think of a missing
feature in the site's software. The same goes for templates and gadgets.
Why do many wikis have custom welcome templates and bots that send them?
The intuitive answer is "to send a personal message to a new user", but if
it's done by a bot, it's already not personal. What does the bot actually
automate? The placement of a template? But what is the actual purpose of
the template?
Is it to say "hello and welcome"? The notifications feature already does it
nicely.
To send people a list of useful links? I heard many times that new users
actually do find them useful, and it's a good thing. But it's nevertheless
an anecdotal claim, and smarter questions should be asked:
* How many people actually read these messages?
* Are all the links useful? Do people actually click them?
* Could some be removed? Could some be added?
* Why is it different in every project? Could at least some parts be reused
across languages in a robust and properly localizable manner?
* Is the talk page really a good place to do this?
* How useful is it for people for people who come from another language and
have an account auto-created?
And so on.
Welcome templates have been a part of our sites for well over a decade, but
it's never too late to ask fundamental question about what purpose do they
serve, and how could this purpose be served better.
Happy New Year :)
בתאריך 29 בדצמ׳ 2017 11:21, "John E