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Advisory Council on Project Development |
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Nerd |
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QUOTE(Eva Destruction @ Fri 10th July 2009, 9:03pm) Surprised this hasn't already been mentioned here, especially since it seems to be composed of 75% WR members. While I'm more than willing to be pleasantly surprised, this looks like a very peculiar idea to me. (My thoughts on the matter are here). I brought it up a minute after you posted on a different thread, here. I agree with all your points in any case.
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Sarcasticidealist |
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Head exploded.
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QUOTE(Nerd @ Fri 10th July 2009, 5:28pm) I don't follow that logic. That's because it's a famous comical example of fallacious thinking; it's just that in this case I think there's a grain of truth to it. QUOTE This is just a front anyway. For what? The Trojans? The Tamil Tigers? The Trojan Tigers? The hounds with bees in their mouths, so when they bark they shoot bees at you?
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Sarcasticidealist |
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Head exploded.
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QUOTE(Nerd @ Fri 10th July 2009, 5:35pm) It's a pretence that arbcom actually care about the community. Ah yes, when all they're really interested in doing is lounging around in togas having grapes fed to them by attractive rollbackers. QUOTE Why did people like Giano accept the invitation, when they could be better spending their time working on articles? Because Giano is at least as interested in causing/involving himself in drama as he is in editing articles (in fairness, his interest in both seems quite high).
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Kelly Martin |
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Bring back the guttersnipes!
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QUOTE(Sarcasticidealist @ Fri 10th July 2009, 3:39pm) Also, why would you consider volunteering? To accomplish something, or to amuse yourself at Wikipedia's expense? I've no doubt you'd be successful in whichever of those was your true objective, let me make clear. I still hold forth some hope that Wikipedia's core purpose could be salvaged with enough commitment from stakeholders. This is the best hope I've seen for that in a long time. Also, I've spent a lot of time thinking about what's wrong with Wikipedia and have many ideas (some good, most probably bad) on how to improve it, mostly unhampered by any involvement in the day-to-day drama of the ongoing site. I'm sure they're not interested in my services anyway, so I won't bother with this further. If someone here wants to convey my offer to the appropriate parties, they're welcome to do so. My email address is well-known, and I can always be contacted via a WR PM.
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Eva Destruction |
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Fat Cat
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FWIW, I think Kelly (or Greg, for that matter) would actually be quite good at this. Part of Wikipedia's problem is that those at the top don't like listening to people who aren't positive about the project. Someone willing to say "this project is failing" and articulate enough to explain why – as opposed to some of the "Wikipedia is evil and must be destroyed" brigade – might be just what Jimbo needs. Regarding my preliminary opinions of this particular proposal, to save people trawling through threaded discussions for them, my personal opinion on it is: I'm sure everyone involved has the best of intentions, but this looks designed to become Wikipedia's version of the European Parliament; a meaningless, unelected and unaccountable committee with no formal powers, which ends up only existing to rubber-stamp and legitimise decisions. Maybe I'm being cynical, but the current list of members looks like a deliberate attempt to create sinecures for the noisiest critics of the current setup, on a "better inside the tent pissing out" principle. This just looks like Arbcom's revival of Jimbo's old arbitrary appointments without the need for anything messy like elections or selection processes. No disrespect to the individual people who've accepted, but I really don't think this is a good idea from either angle; either you're a fan of Wikipedia in which case it's diverting your energy into a talking shop which Jimmy Wales will ignore, or you're an opponent of Wikipedia in which case the energies of critics are being syphoned off into this heat-sink page (as well as the blow to the credibility dealt by the critics of the system accepting an appointment to what looks like God-king Jimbo's House of Lords.)
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Kelly Martin |
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Bring back the guttersnipes!
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QUOTE(Sarcasticidealist @ Fri 10th July 2009, 4:15pm) I thought you'd characterized your motivations in being on Wikipedia -- at least at the end -- as "trolling" and "bossing people around". I've claimed to be a troll, yes, but that itself was satire based on Wikipedia's anomalous definite of "troll". I don't recall ever characterizing my conduct as "bossing other people around". I am a take-charge sort of person (comes from knowing that in any gathering of random people the odds are that I'm probably the smartest person there; please note that my intelligence is not tempered in any way by humility) and that tends to rub people who like to think they're smart, but aren't, the wrong way. Wikipedia doesn't deal well with take-charge types of people; people there care less about results than you'd expect for an encyclopedia project. Toward the end of my activitiy on Wikipedia, yes, I did engage in some actions which had purposes other than that evident on their face: my second RfA, which I fully expected to fail, was agreed to for the main purpose of it failing and failing badly so that people would stop asking me to run for admin. The side purpose, of creating drama and slightly more general discontent with the RfA process, was not unwelcome. My second ArbCom candidacy was primarily intended to get under Geogre's skin; I knew I had no hope of being elected but felt that it was important that Geogre not be elected an arbitrator and deliberately crafted my actions to goad an outburst from him; in this regard I was successful. There was a time in which I held forth some hope of rehabilitating my image within the Wikipedia community, but I realize that that is a foolish hope, and there is no point in trying. My goal now with respect to Wikipedia is to find ways to minimize the damage it does to humanity, by undermining its credibility and public perception, and by (to what limited degree I can) altering its community practices to curb its worst excesses. (Undermining Wikipedia's credibility also benefits me by making it easire to dismiss the defamatory material Wikipedia continues to publish about me, material which it has, to date, refused to remove, or even acknowledge exists.) Wikipedia needs to pull itself out of the Cult of Jimbo. I realize that this is very unlikely to happen, but I remain the eternal optimist on this issue. Having a noncultie on their council would likely be of some benefit to them, even if they can't see it.
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Cla68 |
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Postmaster
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Obviously, a council such as this one, without any formal, decision-making or implementing authority, is not as strong of a step towards a change in Wikipedia governance as I would like to see, but it's a small step, at least. We'll see how it goes. Perhaps they can create an on-wiki forum for the council, like the ArbCom noticeboard, where the council can have their discussions on the front page, with everyone else allowed to comment on the talk page.
This post has been edited by Cla68:
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Cedric |
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General Gato
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everyking |
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Postmaster
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Sat 11th July 2009, 1:47am) QUOTE(everyking @ Fri 10th July 2009, 7:34pm) This is junk. An advisory council to the ArbCom? While I freely admit that the ArbCom needs advice--and lots of it!--a toothless body working under an incompetent and wrongheaded committee, with its membership decided through "invitations", is not progress. I proposed a much superior alternative yesterday--a reforms committee elected by the community itself, which would formulate and present reforms to the community as referendums. Everyone who accepted an "invitation" should resign. Didn't get an invitation, did you? Well, of course I wouldn't get one! I'm a Wikipedia felon, Kelly, as I'm sure you'll recall. With my record, it's a wonder I'm trusted to even fix a typo. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/laugh.gif)
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everyking |
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Postmaster
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QUOTE(Sarcasticidealist @ Sat 11th July 2009, 2:01am) QUOTE(everyking @ Fri 10th July 2009, 9:34pm) I proposed a much superior alternative yesterday--a reforms committee elected by the community itself, which would formulate and present reforms to the community as referendums. That is a better system, but it involves granting powers that do not currently exist (i.e. the power to force a referendum). How do you think Arb Comm's more vociferous critics -- such as, to select an example purely at random, you -- react to Arb Comm creating a committee and giving it powers that nobody else currently has? Do you think there's even the tiniest chance that you'd be running around shrieking about its power grab? If the ArbCom created such a committee itself, decided its composition, and retained power over its decisions, yes, I suppose so. But if its power was derived from the community and its composition was decided by the community, no.
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Cock-up-over-conspiracy |
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Now censored by flckr.com and who else ... ???
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QUOTE(Eva Destruction @ Fri 10th July 2009, 8:03pm) Surprised this hasn't already been mentioned here, especially since it seems to be composed of 75% WR members. If this is true, is this just giving them the benefit of all the good thought going on here with none of the pain and embarrassment of reading some of the more funnier or more acutely critical stuff? If it is an enfranchisement of the spirit of WR, why not recognize it and call it "The Wikipedia Review Council"? A promotion sideways, like the appointment of a diplomat to some far off region, is always a great way of disarming critics whilst getting back to 'business as usual'. "Look, we done something. We are never going to credit you. Now leave us alone". I would underline the need for external - professional - appointments. There are plenty real people of integrity, using their own names, putting their own careers at stake, in the ombudsperson/mediation world. The only way forward would be a clean sweep of the 'Cult of Jimbo' cronies, including Queen Jimbo himself, and the appointment of truly independent, professional and liable parties.
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thekohser |
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QUOTE(Malleus @ Fri 10th July 2009, 5:06pm) QUOTE(Eva Destruction @ Fri 10th July 2009, 5:50pm) FWIW, I think Kelly (or Greg, for that matter) would actually be quite good at this.
I agree with that too, even though I've clearly upset Greg's 10-year-old daughter by putting a naughty word on the main page. I'm content to sit back and see whether this new initiative can make a difference. I hope that it can. She's not 10. But, no... you haven't upset her, you silly twit. You've upset me, in that you feel you are a better judge of what is okay for her to be reading about on a tax-advantaged website in a publicly-funded school, than I do. Believe me -- in the short term, I'm delighted that this crap (humorous as it may be for us adults) is pushed to the front page of Wikipedia, while Jimbo jets around saying that Wikipedia is rightfully used in schools. I hope the Jenna Jameson article is in the queue. Then smotherbox, too. It presents, then, a clear example of how unaware of social mores that Wikipedia's "free culture" leadership is, which then makes it more vulnerable to attack. At that point, it will be a piece of cake getting a national school policy movement going, to ban Wikipedia outright from public schools.
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sbrown |
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QUOTE(everyking @ Sat 11th July 2009, 2:15am) If the ArbCom created such a committee itself, decided its composition, and retained power over its decisions, yes, I suppose so. But if its power was derived from the community and its composition was decided by the community, no.
Im really looking forward to the elections. Theyll make the Arbcom elections look sensible. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/biggrin.gif)
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MZMcBride |
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Sat 11th July 2009, 12:28am) Believe me -- in the short term, I'm delighted that this crap (humorous as it may be for us adults) is pushed to the front page of Wikipedia, while Jimbo jets around saying that Wikipedia is rightfully used in schools. I hope the Jenna Jameson article is in the queue. Then smotherbox, too. It presents, then, a clear example of how unaware of social mores that Wikipedia's "free culture" leadership is, which then makes it more vulnerable to attack.
At that point, it will be a piece of cake getting a national school policy movement going, to ban Wikipedia outright from public schools.
You realize they'll just use their phones, right? (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/smile.gif) Or use a proxy or ... whatever. This is, of course, if you can even get an encyclopedia banned. Until Wikipedia's usefulness can be replaced by a comparable site, it will continue to dominate, with or without permission from a school board.
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toddy |
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Am I the only one who finds the fact that this "Advisory council" is made up of two members of Arbcom? Surely the ony way such a group could be of any use is if it was actually independent? But then, Arbcom wouldn't be able to manipulate the consensus to ensure that nothing that they don't like actually gets recommended, could they?
Another excellent play from Kirill here, using his Arbcom vote to approve a council on which he will serve... frankly I wonder if any of the people in this Politburo have even heard the word "integrity" - although it is clear that it's not change they are after, it's legitimisation from a few outspoken critics of the system. Nice work.
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Somey |
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Can't actually moderate (or even post)
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QUOTE(Cock-up-over-conspiracy @ Fri 10th July 2009, 9:15pm) QUOTE(Eva Destruction @ Fri 10th July 2009, 8:03pm) url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arbitration_Committee/Noticeboard#Advisory_Council_on_Project_Development_convened]Surprised this hasn't already been mentioned here[/url], especially since it seems to be composed of 75% WR members. If this is true, is this just giving them the benefit of all the good thought going on here with none of the pain and embarrassment of reading some of the more funnier or more acutely critical stuff? It's really more like 33 percent, not 75 percent, based on the list I'm seeing now. I've never even heard of four of them... Moreover, of the six who have been participating WR members, only Giano and (ex-member) Rootology have ever spent a significant amount of time being blocked or banned. Jennavecia (Lara) probably has the largest WR post count, but she's been known to disagree with the majority here on more than one occasion... (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/hmmm.gif) I doubt anything like this could really going to do much good unless the members can help make technical decisions, i.e., drive the implementation of new software features, changes to the wording of disclaimers and templates, maybe even the UI itself - things of that nature. And it's clearly stated that this group isn't going to have any actual authority. The whole thing is too vague anyway. If they're just looking to improve the way WP handles disputes, that's fine, but at the risk of sounding overly cynical, I've always believed that the two goals of "editor retention" and "better encyclopedia" are incompatible with each other on Wikipedia, and if they're hoping to change that they're going to need a specific mandate, and yes, outside expertise as well.
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Kelly Martin |
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Bring back the guttersnipes!
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sat 11th July 2009, 10:22am) The whole thing is too vague anyway. If they're just looking to improve the way WP handles disputes, that's fine, but at the risk of sounding overly cynical, I've always believed that the two goals of "editor retention" and "better encyclopedia" are incompatible with each other on Wikipedia, and if they're hoping to change that they're going to need a specific mandate, and yes, outside expertise as well. "Editor retention" is vague, and depends on them recognizing that not all Wikipedia "users" are "editors". I don't think they've made this realization yet. Wikipedia needs to get rid of, or at least restrict the privileges of, many of its users, if it wants to improve either editor retention or encyclopedic quality. I doubt there is any will to do this, however.
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Eva Destruction |
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Fat Cat
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Sat 11th July 2009, 4:43pm) QUOTE(Somey @ Sat 11th July 2009, 10:22am) The whole thing is too vague anyway. If they're just looking to improve the way WP handles disputes, that's fine, but at the risk of sounding overly cynical, I've always believed that the two goals of "editor retention" and "better encyclopedia" are incompatible with each other on Wikipedia, and if they're hoping to change that they're going to need a specific mandate, and yes, outside expertise as well. "Editor retention" is vague, and depends on them recognizing that not all Wikipedia "users" are "editors". I don't think they've made this realization yet. Wikipedia needs to get rid of, or at least restrict the privileges of, many of its users, if it wants to improve either editor retention or encyclopedic quality. I doubt there is any will to do this, however. Amen. "Everyone can edit" and "Best possible information" are both worthy goals, but they're incompatiable. Personally, I think Greg's idea of separate namespaces (a neutral-and-well-written mainspace, and a separate crapspace for all the pet theories, spammers and obscure bands) is a good one if it could ever be made workable.
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Sarcasticidealist |
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Head exploded.
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QUOTE(everyking @ Fri 10th July 2009, 10:15pm) If the ArbCom created such a committee itself, decided its composition, and retained power over its decisions, yes, I suppose so. But if its power was derived from the community and its composition was decided by the community, no. Well, clearly that's not possible. What if Arb Comm created it itself, decided it's initial composition, but then released it into the wild to have elections and make its own decisions? Because it seems to me that that's about the best you can hope for.
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