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Funding for the Wikipedia Library and six other projects; April Fool's Day ructions

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By The ed17

IEGs awarded

An individual engagement grant (IEG) barnstar.

The first round of individual engagement grants (IEGs) have been awarded to seven applicants.

The IEG program was introduced in January 2013 to empower individual or small teams of volunteers to tackle long-term on-wiki problems; it covers tasks largely outside the scope of other WMF programs like entity-focused FDC or GAC procedures. The Foundation reaches its final funding decisions based on community input and a volunteer committee's recommendations. The first round of proposals were reviewed in a community consultation period and assessed by the volunteer committee.

This round's grants covered a wide range of topics, including building awareness in China, art schools' contributions to Wikimedia sites, Wikisource–Wikimedia integration, developing a way to browse Wikipedia's structured data, a visual diff system an educational game (the Wikipedia Adventure), and a system that allows editors to browse multiple research archives at once (The Wikipedia Library). The largest amount disbursed was US$15k (€11.6k) for the structured data viewing, followed closely by $13k (€10k) for the Wikisource project; in total, roughly $55.6k (€43k) was awarded.

The Signpost asked Ocaasi, the editor behind the Wikipedia Adventure and Wikipedia Library proposals, about his thoughts on the IEG process and his idea to open paywalled online research archives for Wikipedians.

On the subject of the IEG project itself, Ocaasi called attention to the interface and the design of the page (created by WMF staffer Heather Walls), both of which are highly user-friendly. In his estimation, "the pages don't feel like they're made with markup."

In addition, the individuals involved in the grant selection process itself, including Siko Bouterse—the Foundation's head of IEG grants—and the volunteer committee—which Ocaasi joined but recused from, due to his proposal—were able to help him craft, shape, and refine his proposal. In particular, these individuals were the key to ensuring that his proposal could be run completely independent of the Foundation; this is one of the major differences between IEG and the discontinued Wikimedia Fellowship program.

Ocaasi told the Signpost that after the committee recommended funding his proposal, he was faced with a period of intricate questioning that challenged and/or focused on the weakest parts of his proposal. This "frank" discussion was something that he credited with keeping his expectations pragmatic and his budget conservative. On his project to open paywalled archives to Wikipedians, named the Wikipedia Library, Ocaasi said that the idea came from the news archives of HighBeam Research:


These accounts are typically extremely expensive for the partner institutions; giving them away, especially with a medium-term goal of 2,000 accounts and a long-term goal of 10,000, is likely to represent a significant loss in revenue. What do they gain or ask from these agreements? Ocassi illuminated the reasoning behind such moves, saying that it has been "both altruistic and mutually beneficial". The altruism aspect is clear, as giving away free accounts to the dominate internet reference site furthers the information available to the world.

The mutually beneficial aspect is not so obvious. The site allows Wikipedians to discover and add information they may not have otherwise found. The donating institutions, on the other hand, "gain increased visibility of their site in our community through the account sign-up process, some positive publicity in blog mentions and the social media, and their site may be linked in article references." However, Ocassi told us that in the latter case, full bibliographic information needs to be used so that editors and readers are given a chance to find a free copy, should they not have access to the archive.

Where do the GLAM-Wiki movement and regular Wikipedians fit in with the "Wikipedia Library" plan? While Ocaasi told us he believes the Library and GLAM-Wiki are "natural partners", he said it is very different from a GLAM project in the traditional sense, since it is not about "having institutions freely license content or learn how to edit articles about their collections ... we're looking for material donations to proprietary databases and resources." As for Wikipedians, they could play a central role in forming the planned central website for Wikipedians to log in and access multiple archives at once: "In a later phase of the project it would likely be necessary to have a staff person with library information management expertise and/or an expert in security authorization (OpenID, SAML) to contribute. A drastically effective shortcut would be piggy-backing on an existing University Library's system so that we could gain access through that portal and not have to individually configure every donor ourselves." He asks that people contact him if they have a connection to someone like this at a university, research institution, or major public library.

Beyond that, he says what Wikipedians can do most to help is simple: sign up and use these resources. This will show potential partner institutions that that there is demand for such a project, a project whose final goal is far-reaching: "I want the most active Wikipedia editors to have free and full access to as many or even more resources than the finest research libraries and universities in the world."

April Fool's Day controversy

A parody of the Wikipedia logo created in 2005 for the supposed takeover of the Wikimedia Foundation and its projects by the Encyclopædia Britannica.

The English Wikipedia's April Fool's Day main page was the subject of controversy this week, as editors opposed the addition of non-serious content.

As Wikipedia:April Fools notes, "every year [on 1 April], some editors decide to pull a few pranks on Wikipedia. It is traditional to have a mischievous Main Page on this day." "Mischievous" has ranged from blatant hoaxes (like the infamous announcement that the Encyclopædia Britannica was going to take over the Wikimedia Foundation and its projects), to the layouts seen today (typically strangely worded yet true statements), and the bizarre (like the gigantic question mark for the day's featured article).

Most of the main page's sections participate, but "In the news" (ITN) has been alone in rejecting it, only carrying one item in 2011 and none in 2012 or 2013. Opposition to including foolish-day-centric content at ITN included the time sensitivity of the regular, serious news. Opposition to having a foolish main page, however, coalesces around the usual serious nature of the Wikipedia site as a whole, as contrasted what was seen as the immaturity of April Fool's Day jokes. HiLo48 took a rather combative tone, decrying the changed nature of Wikipedia on the day: "The point is that we are not at all important. That's why everything here is sourced to someone or something else. Everything, that is, except the April Fool's garbage created by self-appointed fiction writers (otherwise known as editors). By creating April Fool's jokes you are declaring yourself to be important, and you're not." Those against such jokes made statements such as calling on Wikipedians to "not damage the WMF trademark, remembering that many native English-speakers could give a dump about April Fool's Day, and most non-natives don't know about it."

There was also a proposal to abandon any April Fool's jokes for 2014, with a chance to assess whether that practice should be continued after 1 April, but it was quickly opposed. Given a chance to expound on his views, the proposer declined to comment, saying that he had gone through enough vitriol in the aftermath of his proposal.

The Signpost talked with two editors who participated in April Fool's Day discussions. Crisco 1492, the author of the day's featured article (and the subject of a related interview in this week's "featured content") told us:


He went on to express support for the "misleading, yet accurate" stories Wikipedia has run since 2007, and gave a four-point summary of his personal opinion:

  1. Keep it factual
  2. Keep it out of article space (the Main Page excluded)
  3. If reverted, do not edit war
  4. Keep an open mind.

On the issue of what makes Wikipedia different from other major online presences, like Google, who conduct elaborate April Fool's Day jokes, Allen3 told us:


How much of the traditional humor, which is based around perceived dirty words (like this year's "Did you know... that Polish girls are getting wet and spanked today, but will have their revenge tomorrow?", could be improved to satisfy the complaints of some editors? Allen3's answer was complex: to get 'good' humor, one must provide incentives for it, like "preferential times and placements". Such humor, though, can be difficult to find; often "creating a quick article with a dirty word in the title" is far easier than crafting a "truth is stranger than fiction" article.

The Signpost invites readers' views on the talk page.

In brief

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  • April Fools' Day is pranks are inconsistent with Proverbs 26:18, 19.—Wavelength (talk) 15:21, 5 April 2013 (UTC) and 16:26, 5 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oh wow. Reading the flak this years April Fools Day has gotten kinda makes me a little embarrassed for participating. I mean its a day for laughs and in the end we recieved disappointment. GamerPro64 15:38, 5 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • I always find the angst about April Fools Day to be rather amusing. But if you look at pageview stats for the DYK hooks, I think it is also clear that they are extremely popular with readers. I did one of the DYK hooks, Sam LoPresti. The article had 7000 views on April 1 against a daily average in March of just over 10. Comparing against some of my other DYKs on obscure hockey players, Bill Cook had about 500 views on its DYK day against 20ish on a normal day, and Mickey MacKay was 800 against 15-20 for a normal day. For some other of this year's April 1 gags, James Bond (American football) had 7500 views, Śmigus-Dyngus had 47,000 (!), John le Fucker was around 16,700 and Clive Mantle was at 25,000. Personally, I think our annual debates about whether or not it is appropriate to use the main page for gags considerably misses the point. Our main page gags gets readers interested in a wide variety of topics they never would read otherwise. And that is far more useful and valuable to this project than yet another attempt to MFD a core policy page or RFA a known vandal, or other similar, tedious pranks. Resolute 15:40, 5 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • Yes, I did create a joke AfD. No, I do not feel ashamed about it. Why would I? I did five things that I feel are important for such a piece:
  1. I did not edit the actual article page (keeping it out of article space - though in this instance it might have been a good joke to do it with, I respected the suggested guidelines).
  2. I used the humor template on the AfD page.
  3. For the subject, I used something that could be tied to the last 364 days historically (the Harlem Shake, which became big in early February of this year).
  4. I tied my topic into an older joke (Rickrolling).
  5. Had it been allowed to run its course, I would have closed it.
Look at a "proposal" I make back in 2011. No one complained, everyone knew it was a joke, and thus it was allowed to run its course. Surely they saw I was hanging around and watching it. If you want a good source for opinion on April Fool's Day pranks, some of the people making the funny comments there might be good sources, especially TenPoundHammer (whom I believe I had alerted to the "proposal" and went over to join in). I closed the discussion in the first fifteen minutes or so of April 2 as promised, and nothing was said of it again (except perhaps on talk pages talking about what they thought of the joke, but I did not research this at the time). Heck, I've seen people make joke edits to Jimbo's talk page, such as being welcomed to Wikipedia and receiving an offer from extra-terrestrials. I myself witnessed and eventually reversed, on a different user's page, an indefinite flogging. As for my joke AfD: delete that darn Harlem Shake nonsense.
I bet reading these now, you (the reader) are getting a bit of a laugh, are you not? If certain editors here would realize that having fun like this for one day without causing actual destructive harm is actually GOOD for you, then this whole need to debate the merits of the whole thing would not be necessary. It's a chance for editors who are serious for the other 364 days to have a little fun. Done in small quantities, there is no harm intended by it, and it should be recognized as such. If anything, create a group to help control it, or dictate criteria to follow, but don't outright ban it or threaten to block editors. Wikipedia is like Google in being a top site; if Google can have a little fun, surely we can as well. And that's what I think. CycloneGU (talk) 02:26, 8 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]



       

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