As the person who essentially built the September 11 wiki, I can say that permanently killing the project on the tenth anniversary of the attacks would be a telling testament to both the lost opportunities of Wikipedia itself and of human civilization, which did seem for a fleeting moment to have a chance at a greater unity, dashed by either realpolitick or a mad president, depending on how you view the world. Instead, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq trundle on, outlasting an effort of individual people to celebrate the wonder and beauty that are the collective lives of an essentially random and unremarkable collection of people, a reminder that encyclopedias of the past, that focus only on the glories of the great, don't truly tell the story of the world.
So it would be nice to figure out how to preserve the collection.
imho.
--tc
On Tue, Aug 16, 2011 at 9:47 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 12:52 PM, Brion Vibber brion@pobox.com wrote:
It's fascinating cultural history (both of a country called "the USA" and
more importantly to some here perhaps? - of Wikipedia's early years) --
if
we don't want it, well, I think that's a darn shame.
IIRC Erik Moeller was one of the drivers behind moving this tiny
collection
of pages (much smaller than thousands of other things we host) offsite in '06, and at the time even he seemed to agree that the pages had relevance and should be preserved:
For all your meta-history needs:
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/9/11_wiki_move_proposal
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Proposals_for_closing_projects/Archive/Septem...
and related links.
Also:
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2006-September/023757.html
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2006-September/023819.html...)
It's too bad (if not entirely surprising) that the external site is no longer up; in the interest of preserving history I'd support archiving a static HTML or read-only wiki (ideally with minimal skin) copy under some subdirectory URL (dumps.wikimedia.org/whatever ). If we want to do a nicer job at it, we might start making a bit of a space for these collected pieces of wiki-history (Joseph Reagle's Wikipedia 10K Redux derived from the first dumps would be another candidate: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/~reagle/wp-redux/ )
But, let's please not reactivate sep11.wikipedia.org as anything other than a redirect to a different URL, to avoid confusion of readers/visitors coming in through search engines (even if we run a big banner explaining that it's archived for historical purposes, it's still likely to be confusing to folks under that domain name).
It does look like the Internet Archive nabbed a full copy of it from sep11memories.org (which had the final cleaned up version of the wiki). http://web.archive.org/web/20080807125041/http://www.sep11memories.org/
-- Erik Möller Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation
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