SB_Johnny
Sat 9th January 2010, 7:19pm
QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Sat 9th January 2010, 5:56pm)

I would have expected the widespread recession to have increased participation in Wikipedia by experienced adults unable to find work, but I suspect the fact that it's difficult to use Wikipedia to build a reputation that can then be leveraged into finding employment has a lot to do with that. If you're a writer and seeking employment on that basis, you'd be better off writing a blog or writing on a site that seeks to showcase, instead of conceal, individual effort. And if your expertise is in some other area, you're better off on an "answers" site of some sort where you can show off your individual knowledge; again Wikipedia's culture of suppressing individual editorial identity dilutes what value it might otherwise have as a professional networking site. Not to mention the impact of its "COI" policy (which, like most Wikipedia policies, has almost nothing to with what it's named) on people whose participation in Wikipedia is determined (rightly or wrongly) to be for "self-serving" purposes.
Beyond that, there are the problems of it being less "geeky fun" than it used to be, and simply that the rest of the 'net has evolved considerably in the past few years.
In my "hay-days" on the wikis plant and bug geeks like me could hunt down redlinks to species that didn't have an article yet, write a paragraph or two about it, and then watch as people came along and added taxoboxes and additional materials. Redlinks are frowned upon now, and even where they are found it's to extremely obscure topics or people. Yes, I know that most people would consider cottony cushion scale to be rather obscure, but probably not as obscure as 19th century cricketers.
There's also a problem of linking to articles you work on from networking sites like FB and Twitter... you never know if you're sending your grandmother to a page that prominently displays a soda bottle protruding from some guy's asshole.
QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sat 9th January 2010, 1:32pm)

It is a shame that the Foundation has never engaged in any type of psychological and sociological analysis of the motivations for, and attraction in, editing. If it had done so, it might have been able to tweek its interfaces and strategy to make a better product.
My initial impression was that Wikiversity would be doing a lot of that. Didn't happen.
QUOTE(Doc glasgow @ Sat 9th January 2010, 1:32pm)

Don't get me wrong, the current model certainly works and has produced a remarkable volunteer base that have created a unique and unexpected product. It is just that having stumbled on this formula, Wikipedia has shown little or no ability to work with the engine it has created to better the output. It is as if someone, having discovered that putting sails on a boat makes it go very fast, then utterly refuses to consider the benefits of a rudder, or the advantages of having retractable sails, on the basis that "sails got us where we are today, thus we need to resist anything that impedes or threatens that brilliant breakthrough". So speed triumphs over direction. You get to go somewhere, you've just no control over where. It is a remarkable ideological fundamentalism from a project that supposedly prides itself in pragmatism.
Agreed there: WMF has been something of a one-hit wonder. My impression is that they're taking the "don't fix it if it ain't broke" approach, but if it does devolve into just a kids' thing, it will be broken.