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Is the WMF looking for a sub-lease tenant? |
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| One |
Fri 4th September 2009, 4:48pm
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QUOTE Emperor
Nice story. Donations of time or money to Wikipedia are also donations to Wikia, a for-profit company.
The silly thing is, Wikia makes so little money that Jimmy would probably be better off selling it and focusing on Wikipedia.
Have you explained “nofollow” recently? I don't know what their agreement might look like, but it's probable that venture capitalists are the majority owners of Wikia. And if you're offering to buy it, I wouldn't be too surprised if they'd like to get rid of it hardly any premium above book value. (Not a criticism of Jimbo or anyone else--these ventures are much more often losers than winners--but the winners are sometimes very big winners. Was it crazy to invest in a project led by one who (co-)founded one of the top ten websites on the internet? Probably not--you'd be surprised at the projects who scored financing before the credit crisis. Some of the winners are surprising. I mean, Twitter!? But at this point, I think a rational investor would conclude that Wikia isn't going to be one of those winners.)
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| One |
Fri 4th September 2009, 8:53pm
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Fri 4th September 2009, 8:34pm)  $25 a square foot? You can rent space in the Sears Tower (sorry, the Willis Tower, a/k/a The Big Willy) for $10-$12 a square foot, and that's A grade commercial. Stillman is at best B grade and might even be C grade; no way it's worth $25 a square foot.
I wouldn't be so sure it's an outrageous asking price (even if it's a far-fetched market price). Poking around, it seems that San Francisco is just fabulously expensive. http://www.joneslanglasalle-ca.com/researc...nsight_2Q09.pdfIt's amazing to me that the best possible real estate in Chicago is cheaper than crap in SF. They chose a helluva time to expand into Wikia space. This post has been edited by One: Fri 4th September 2009, 9:01pm
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| GlassBeadGame |
Fri 4th September 2009, 9:55pm
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QUOTE(One @ Fri 4th September 2009, 2:53pm)  QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Fri 4th September 2009, 8:34pm)  $25 a square foot? You can rent space in the Sears Tower (sorry, the Willis Tower, a/k/a The Big Willy) for $10-$12 a square foot, and that's A grade commercial. Stillman is at best B grade and might even be C grade; no way it's worth $25 a square foot.
I wouldn't be so sure it's an outrageous asking price (even if it's a far-fetched market price). Poking around, it seems that San Francisco is just fabulously expensive. http://www.joneslanglasalle-ca.com/researc...nsight_2Q09.pdfIt's amazing to me that the best possible real estate in Chicago is cheaper than crap in SF. They chose a helluva time to expand into Wikia space. Wow, Class A in the Central Business District at 39.00/sq ft. Coming from deep in fly-over America that seems extreme. Of course a non-profit doesn't need (and it does appear unseemly) Class A space and doesn't need to be in the CBD. From what I've seen WMF's space it is neither. I suppose you could make a business reason argument for being in SF but not in such a rarefied neighborhood. WMF resources would be better used building a staff infrastructure that could impose some policies support responsible editorial and social concerns. But my understand is Wikia rents from WMF. If that is right I see no impropriety. If I have that backwards it would be a serous problem.
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| Kelly Martin |
Fri 4th September 2009, 10:33pm
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QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Fri 4th September 2009, 4:55pm)  But my understand is Wikia rents from WMF. If that is right I see no impropriety. If I have that backwards it would be a serous problem. It would be improper if the rent was substantially below market, since that would amount to self-dealing resulting in financial detriment to the nonprofit. However, the reality is that Wikia is leasing to Wikimedia, which means the lease is being used essentially as a vehicle to "launder" restricted donations into private funds. And, based on the discussion that followed, it seems that Wikia's offer wasn't the lowest; it was merely judged to be the "best".
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| anthony |
Fri 4th September 2009, 10:55pm
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QUOTE(One @ Fri 4th September 2009, 10:38pm)  QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Fri 4th September 2009, 9:55pm)  But my understand is Wikia rents from WMF. If that is right I see no impropriety. If I have that backwards it would be a serous problem.
One of the comments on Koh's post said that. Maybe I'm in error, but it sounded like they were renting space from Wikia. http://blog.wikimedia.org/2009/01/21/a-not...ity-initiative/The WMF *is* leasing space from Wikia. But that's old news. The new news is that the WMF is moving out of its current location and trying to sublet it out. Does anyone know what the per square foot rate is the WMF is paying to Wikia? By the way, the $25/square foot is only the asking price, for the Stillman Street location. AFAIK there are no takers yet.
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| No one of consequence |
Sat 5th September 2009, 4:35am
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Fri 4th September 2009, 10:33pm)  QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Fri 4th September 2009, 4:55pm)  But my understand is Wikia rents from WMF. If that is right I see no impropriety. If I have that backwards it would be a serous problem. It would be improper if the rent was substantially below market, since that would amount to self-dealing resulting in financial detriment to the nonprofit. However, the reality is that Wikia is leasing to Wikimedia, which means the lease is being used essentially as a vehicle to "launder" restricted donations into private funds. And, based on the discussion that followed, it seems that Wikia's offer wasn't the lowest; it was merely judged to be the "best". TFA says Wikia did not have the lowest bid but they lowered their price to be "closer", whatever that means. Needs a reliable source.
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| thekohser |
Sat 5th September 2009, 5:10pm
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QUOTE(No one of consequence @ Sat 5th September 2009, 12:35am)  QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Fri 4th September 2009, 10:33pm)  QUOTE(GlassBeadGame @ Fri 4th September 2009, 4:55pm)  But my understand is Wikia rents from WMF. If that is right I see no impropriety. If I have that backwards it would be a serous problem. It would be improper if the rent was substantially below market, since that would amount to self-dealing resulting in financial detriment to the nonprofit. However, the reality is that Wikia is leasing to Wikimedia, which means the lease is being used essentially as a vehicle to "launder" restricted donations into private funds. And, based on the discussion that followed, it seems that Wikia's offer wasn't the lowest; it was merely judged to be the "best". TFA says Wikia did not have the lowest bid but they lowered their price to be "closer", whatever that means. Needs a reliable source. Will you accept the published word of the Deputy Director of the Wikimedia Foundation? Also, what do you mean by "TFA says"? This post has been edited by thekohser: Sat 5th September 2009, 5:16pm
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