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Critical Masses + Uncritical Asses, What Is Their Impact On Projects? |
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| MBisanz |
Sun 22nd March 2009, 11:20pm
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One of the themes I've thought about is the critical mass required to sustain an online project. I was recently looking at some Wikia wikis and noticed they have few if any editors. And of course there are the endless debates on what it means when Wikipedia loses editors and admins because of drama, etc.
I think we can all agree that Wikipedia does have the critical mass of editors required to operate. It is creating loads of new content, refining it, having internal debates, and tackling the various backlogs in a reasonable time with regard to its size.
Looking at Commons though, I think you see what happens when a project is below critical mass. While Wikipedia attracts individuals with an interest in any topic you can write an article on, Commons mainly attracts those interested in photography and/or visual imagery. So it already has a smaller pool of potential editors to draw from. Compare [[WP:AFD]] and [[COM:DR]] and you can see that Commons is below the critical mass of editors to compete and beat other image services (compare the billions of images on Flickr with the millions on Commons and the tens of thousands of articles in Britannica with the millions in Wikipedia). I think more people would start with Google Image or Flickr when searching for a random image than Commons. Granted this could change at more search engines provide search criteria that include CC searches (Yahoo just started).
Lastly, looking at Meta, you can see a project that is almost exactly at or slightly below critical mass. Meta can create new pages, process requests, etc, but it lacks the editorship to update all the help pages, document the new features, update the lists of things on various wikis, etc. I remember a few months ago seeing a Help page as Meta that talked about how Usermod was still used for the Finnish Wikipedia, as Usermod was better for small websites.
My thought is something along the lines of how much above critical mass is Wikipedia? Wikipedia operates well enough that most people consider it an acceptable source for looking up basic facts in an informal environment. The average figure I've come up with is 205,000 edits a day to Wikipedia. Also, I calculated that since Jan 2006, the average daily edit count has ranged from about 140,000 to 280,000. So what is the critical mass of editors and edits to maintain it's market position?
We have about 10,000 active editors, about 900 of whom are admins. How low can those numbers go (and the corresponding daily edit count) before the public senses a decline in the quality (however poor it is now, it can get worse) of information provided? How low can that quality go before the public finds other sources of information that it finds better than Wikipedia? Right now WP is the 800 lb gorilla in the room. The barrier to entry for a new 'pedia is so high because Wikipedia's 200,000 edits a day is more than any new endeavor could ever match (look at Veropedia, Conservapedia, etc). How low could that number go before other entrepreneurs can create products that can compete with a smaller WP?
Thoughts? Suggestions?
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| Jon Awbrey |
Mon 23rd March 2009, 2:05am
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| Jon Awbrey |
Mon 23rd March 2009, 3:12am
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τὰ δέ μοι παθήματα μαθήματα γέγονε
        
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QUOTE(MBisanz @ Sun 22nd March 2009, 10:55pm)  I believe that is a picture of the Chernobyl disaster and that Jon is saying Wikipedia has already exploded and can't be fixed. More to the point, I'm suggesting that the picture of the informational situation that you sketched above has fallen victim to an overly simplistic analogy or a superficial cliche about the physical phenomenon of "critical mass" — when the informational situation is rather more complex. What is the "critical mass" for writing a quality article about, oh, I dunno, Charles Sanders Peirce? Well, one scholar familiar with the subject probably qualifies, two or three would certainly be a boon. You seem to be assuming that all bodies added to the pile are equally radiant in the desired portion of the mass spectrum. Is that what Wikipedia has? Not even approximately. What it has is an uncontrolled mass of lead-heads and dirty plutocraps all tossed into a massive nukifying salad bowl. Jon Awbrey
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| Somey |
Mon 23rd March 2009, 3:19am
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Can't actually moderate
        
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QUOTE(MBisanz @ Sun 22nd March 2009, 9:55pm)  I believe that is a picture of the Chernobyl disaster and that Jon is saying Wikipedia has already exploded and can't be fixed. More likely, he means that Wikipedia's inevitable abandonment by its user community won't be accompanied by the removal of the site itself. The site will therefore never really be cleaned up, but instead will remain as a blight on the internet landscape for many years to come. As for this whole question of "critical mass," IMO it would be wrong to suppose that there's a "magic number" of active editors/admins, below which Wikipedia will cease to be functional or worthwhile. Every person is different, requiring varying levels of community interaction to remain "active," and every topic area is different, requiring varying levels of maintenance. And as Jon seems to be suggesting above, user-base numbers aren't proportional to the usefulness and quality of the information those users "generate." You'd also have to take varying ratios of constructive vs. destructive activity into account as the community's numbers decline. If the ratio of "good" editors to "bad" editors (and edits) remains constant during such a decline, then you could probably assume that the future Wikipedia would be mostly business-ass-usual (pun intended), and that a "critical mass" number could even be theorized to some extent. If the ratio decreases significantly, then you have to assume that some degree of lockdown would take place. Whereas, if the ratio increases significantly, then you'd have to assume that most of the administrators would begin to become superfluous and the personal narcissistic motivation for WP community involvement (i.e., power, praise, recognition, territorialism) would begin to evaporate, leaving behind a core group of "true believers" to manage an increasingly drama-free, and therefore dull and tedious, site environment. Either way, it's probably best not to compare a future Wikipedia, one with a significantly reduced-size community, with some of those non-starter Wikia projects. For a wiki site to flourish you need a core-group of about a dozen fairly committed users, and even now I believe Wikia will set up a subdomain on the request of just one person, assuming a similar wiki doesn't already exist and they think the subject matter is of any interest at all (i.e., the "if you just set up the subdomain, they will come" approach).
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| emesee |
Mon 23rd March 2009, 5:12am
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ban me
    
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QUOTE(Somey @ Sun 22nd March 2009, 8:19pm)  QUOTE(MBisanz @ Sun 22nd March 2009, 9:55pm)  I believe that is a picture of the Chernobyl disaster and that Jon is saying Wikipedia has already exploded and can't be fixed. More likely, he means that Wikipedia's inevitable abandonment by its user community won't be accompanied by the removal of the site itself. The site will therefore never really be cleaned up, but instead will remain as a blight on the internet landscape for many years to come. As for this whole question of "critical mass," IMO it would be wrong to suppose that there's a "magic number" of active editors/admins, below which Wikipedia will cease to be functional or worthwhile. Every person is different, requiring varying levels of community interaction to remain "active," and every topic area is different, requiring varying levels of maintenance. And as Jon seems to be suggesting above, user-base numbers aren't proportional to the usefulness and quality of the information those users "generate." You'd also have to take varying ratios of constructive vs. destructive activity into account as the community's numbers decline. If the ratio of "good" editors to "bad" editors (and edits) remains constant during such a decline, then you could probably assume that the future Wikipedia would be mostly business-ass-usual (pun intended), and that a "critical mass" number could even be theorized to some extent. If the ratio decreases significantly, then you have to assume that some degree of lockdown would take place. Whereas, if the ratio increases significantly, then you'd have to assume that most of the administrators would begin to become superfluous and the personal narcissistic motivation for WP community involvement (i.e., power, praise, recognition, territorialism) would begin to evaporate, leaving behind a core group of "true believers" to manage an increasingly drama-free, and therefore dull and tedious, site environment. Either way, it's probably best not to compare a future Wikipedia, one with a significantly reduced-size community, with some of those non-starter Wikia projects. For a wiki site to flourish you need a core-group of about a dozen fairly committed users, and even now I believe Wikia will set up a subdomain on the request of just one person, assuming a similar wiki doesn't already exist and they think the subject matter is of any interest at all (i.e., the "if you just set up the subdomain, they will come" approach). get out your Geiger counters, people 
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