The Signpost

News and notes

Two new affiliate-selected trustees

Contribute  —  
Share this
By Tony1 and The ed17
New trustee, Frieda Brioschi, from Italy: we face "a couple of headaches", she says: "how to boost editors, which includes the development of the next strategic plan, and how to keep our project always 'glamorous'."
Elected to a second term, Patricio Lorente from Argentina: "I’ll do my best to help the new leadership to get a balanced view of the Foundation’s scope of action and of our communities’ ideas, worries and proposals."

The Wikimedia affiliates have announced their selection of the two affiliate-selected trustees they recommend every two years to the WMF board: Frieda Brioschi from Italy and Patricio Lorente from Argentina will start their new terms from the first board meeting after 1 July. The board has determined that for the first time since this system began in 2008, not only chapters but thematic organisations should vote for whom to recommend to the board. This change did not include user groups, of which there are an increasing number. A resolution of the chapters and the one thematic organisation was passed in March, governing the conduct of the 2014 election.

Announcing the result, Chris Keating set out the mechanics. In step 1 of counting in the preferential single transferable voting system, one of the two incumbents, Patricio Lorente, won more than 50% of the vote (15.5 of 27 votes), and was declared a winner. In step 2, Anders Wennersten from Sweden was eliminated, and his second-preference votes were redistributed to the two remaining candidates; this left Frieda Brioschi with more votes than the other two incumbents, and a final total of 17 votes of 27, bringing her over the 50% mark after Alice Wiegand from Germany was eliminated in step 3. Remarkably, only 27 of the 41 eligible affiliates voted.

Frieda Brioschi was born in 1976 and by profession is a computer scientist—specifically a digital communications consultant who works on "tech projects, web strategy, community creation and management, [and] social media". She has presented three TEDx talks: two about Wikipedia, and one about lateral thinking applied to problem solving. She was a co-founder in 2005 of the Italian chapter, an administrator or bureaucrat on several Italian-language sites, and an OTRS admin.

Patricio Lorente was born in 1969 and has qualifications in philosophy and law. He has extensive professional experience in social development cooperation, particularly with NGOs, and in university management. Since 2004 he has served in the administrative management of La Plata University, the second-largest university in Argentina. His first two-year term as a chapter-selected trustee, as they were then known, is coming to an end.

In brief

Related articles
Ukraine

Three more stories from Ukrainian Wikimedians
20 March 2023

Odd bedfellows, Elon and Jimbo, reliable sources for divorces, and more
1 January 2023

Truth or consequences? A tough month for truth
31 August 2022

Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war — three (more) stories
1 August 2022

Information considered harmful
1 August 2022

War diary (part 3)
1 August 2022

WMF inks new rules on government-ordered takedowns, blasts Russian feds' censor demands, spends big bucks
26 June 2022

Editor given three-year sentence, big RfA makes news, Guy Standing takes it sitting down
26 June 2022

Three stories of Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war
29 May 2022

Putin, Jimbo, Musk and more
29 May 2022

Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war
24 April 2022

On a war and a map
24 April 2022

Editing difficulties on Russian Wikipedia
24 April 2022

War diary (Part 2)
24 April 2022

My heroes from Russia, Ukraine & beyond
27 March 2022

War, what is it good for?
27 March 2022

The bright side of news
27 March 2022

Of safety and anonymity
27 March 2022

Ukraine, Russia, and even some other stuff
27 March 2022

"All we are saying is, give peace a chance..."
27 March 2022

We stand in solidarity with Ukraine
27 March 2022

Working with Wikipedia helps
27 March 2022

War diary
27 March 2022

Countering Russian aggression with a camera
27 March 2022

Athletes are less notable now
27 March 2022

Ukraine, werewolves, Ukraine, YouTube pundits, and Ukraine
27 March 2022

Unbiased information from Ukraine's government?
26 April 2020

Ukraine burns
12 March 2014

Diary of a protester—Wikimedian perishes in Ukrainian unrest
26 February 2014


More articles

Three more stories from Ukrainian Wikimedians
20 March 2023

Odd bedfellows, Elon and Jimbo, reliable sources for divorces, and more
1 January 2023

Truth or consequences? A tough month for truth
31 August 2022

Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war — three (more) stories
1 August 2022

Information considered harmful
1 August 2022

War diary (part 3)
1 August 2022

WMF inks new rules on government-ordered takedowns, blasts Russian feds' censor demands, spends big bucks
26 June 2022

Editor given three-year sentence, big RfA makes news, Guy Standing takes it sitting down
26 June 2022

Three stories of Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war
29 May 2022

Putin, Jimbo, Musk and more
29 May 2022

Ukrainian Wikimedians during the war
24 April 2022

On a war and a map
24 April 2022

Editing difficulties on Russian Wikipedia
24 April 2022

War diary (Part 2)
24 April 2022

My heroes from Russia, Ukraine & beyond
27 March 2022

War, what is it good for?
27 March 2022

The bright side of news
27 March 2022

Of safety and anonymity
27 March 2022

Ukraine, Russia, and even some other stuff
27 March 2022

"All we are saying is, give peace a chance..."
27 March 2022

We stand in solidarity with Ukraine
27 March 2022

Working with Wikipedia helps
27 March 2022

War diary
27 March 2022

Countering Russian aggression with a camera
27 March 2022

Athletes are less notable now
27 March 2022

Ukraine, werewolves, Ukraine, YouTube pundits, and Ukraine
27 March 2022

Unbiased information from Ukraine's government?
26 April 2020

Ukraine burns
12 March 2014

Diary of a protester—Wikimedian perishes in Ukrainian unrest
26 February 2014

Group photograph of the conference attendees
+ Add a comment

Discuss this story

These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.
  • Sad that 13 out of 40 communities didn't care to vote. As for me, I voted in the Wikimedia España sub-votation to determine our vote. I cared to read the information about all four candidates. Another twenty or so people in WMES did so, and we had a quite contested votation. So I wonder why one third of possible voting organizations didn't care about WMF Board. Would have they liked a non of above option? Do they have any problems with the Board? Any other reason? B25es (talk) 05:09, 8 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]
  • Sorry, it's 41 counting Amical, our only thematic organisation. Tony (talk) 05:18, 8 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]
  • It was not the communities who did not vote, but the affiliates. Anyway, I'm also interested in learning more about the reasons for that. I think it shows a disrespect for the candidates and the community not to take part in such an important ballot. I think this should have consequences for the affiliate organisations. They should be obliged to vote.--Aschmidt (talk) 13:45, 8 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]



       

The Signpost · written by many · served by Sinepost V0.9 · 🄯 CC-BY-SA 4.0