Water cooler

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A Water Cooler for members only?

It has been suggested several times above that it would be useful to set up a 'private' water cooler, for members of the charity only, where members can speak openly and raise issues that are perhaps best not discussed in an entirely open forum. I am myself in two minds about that, and it would be good to have a discussion here. As I see it, there are pros and cons:

Pros

  • There is nowhere else that members can discuss private issues of interest, nor internal or contentious issues that may not be easy to discuss openly in public. Having to ring the office is not always a good solution for a member who would like to start a quiet discussion.
  • Members with concerns would be able to raise issues without contributing to what otherwise - to uninvolved readers - can easily come over as 'washing dirty linen in public' or 'navel-gazing'. Doing everything on a public forum can easily give the incorrect impression that the charity is more concerned about internal in-fighting than actually getting on with its mission.

Cons

  • Transparency is part of the charity's mission, and we should not keep things confidential unless there are very good reasons to do so.
  • The very existence of a closed discussion forum could and probably would generate suspicion, and provide fuel for conspiracy theories.
  • Users with critical views to express may well not want them kept confidential, and may prefer to have an open discussion in a forum (here or elsewhere) where they might hope to garner non-member support. That could largely undermine the purpose of having a confidential forum.

I am sure there are more issues that I have not thought of. Comments and discussion would be welcome. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 18:21, 17 October 2013 (UTC)

We have long experience of closed wikis, they tend to be used rarely and only by small numbers of the groups they are intended for. If you consider the closed WMUK Board wiki, the closed OTRS wiki and the closed Chapters wiki as examples, they tend to be used as places to dump reference material, none is a good place to discuss any issue and are likely to disenfranchise those that are less wiki-passionate, in fact related open email lists tend to be far more popular. I'm not against an experiment, even if openness is at the heart of the WMUK values, however my expectation would be that few of the 220 members would join (after all only an average of 20 members ever write here) and even fewer would use it for anything. If we increase membership (the target for 2014 being 400), I would expect an even lower proportion to engage in closed wikis or closed email lists.
If the incentive here is to close down discussion of topics such as entryism for this charity, it should be noted that the board of trustees openly published minutes of their vote and discussion on this issue of membership verification. The general way membership functions or fails to function correctly for a public charity, should be a matter of public record as it is of distinct public interest. I struggle to think of any topic that would be of genuine interest to members that should not be discussed publicly that would not create equivalent problems if encouraged to be discussed on a closed forum, for example suspected instances of financial fraud or defamatory allegations that should not be made in any written forum. Especially in the light of the fact that members are effectively anonymous, and we would have no way of stopping any member copying discussions back into an open forum, nor could we take any legal action in such circumstances unless it were a criminal matter or libel. -- (talk) 19:16, 17 October 2013 (UTC)
No 'incentive' here from my perspective. I opened the thread as it is an idea that Philafrenzy has suggested several times, and it seems at the very least to merit discussion. But there are quite clearly serious 'cons'. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 20:11, 17 October 2013 (UTC)
I will give a fuller reply later but may I point out that it is hardly my original idea Michael. The chapter, and Jon in particular, have been worried for a long time about how the water cooler appears to the rest of the world including potential members and trustees, and I think several people including trustees and Jon have asked whether things raised here could have been raised in private. I am just stating the obvious which is that if this is too public, the only logical response is to make it more private. Philafrenzy (talk) 23:40, 17 October 2013 (UTC)

Thanks for raising this, Michael. At the moment I would tend towards "no", for two reasons;

  • It is useful and possibly important to have non-members looking at, and participating in, the kinds of issues that members discuss. For instance - a Wikimedian who's never quite got around to joining might see something that interested them, and add some useful comments, and then get more involved. Also, there are some people who have valuable input but have reasons for not joining: for instance because of professional reasons, or because they don't want to compromise their anonymity.
  • Any shared space is vulnerable to abuse: if the frequency of negative interaction increases too much, people will start to avoid it and find other places to have conversations. This problem is worse in closed spaces which have fewer users. There was an example of this recently on a Wikimedia Foundation email list called internal-l, which used to include many Foundation staff and board members, chapter board members, and the like. Sadly, it became dominated by a couple of people sending shouty emails, a bunch of people unsubscribed, and it's now scarcely used. In general, more interaction, more positive interaction, and more community regulation of the shared space is more likely to make it successful, and these things are on the whole easier in the open.

But it would certainly be worth hearing more thoughts on this. The Land (talk) 08:29, 19 October 2013 (UTC)

Some good points there, and in conjunction with Fae's point about the probable lack of engagement with such a forum I am also tending towards "no". More comments would be welcome, though. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 10:12, 19 October 2013 (UTC)
Clearly there are major disadvantages in protecting this page in some way or making it member only and I don't think that two water coolers would work or be necessary. There remains, however, a reason for having a page, perhaps little used, where members only may raise matters that are not suitable for a public forum and which need to be raised in writing with the membership as a whole in a confidential way. I acknowledge the point that such confidentiality is easily broken but that is not an argument for not having such a page.
The page could act as a sort of safety valve that would allow members to "whistle blow" to other members and act as an early warning mechanism for the board that there may be something that demands their immediate attention. It would also give members a choice, which they do not have at present, of how they raise matters with the chapter and the membership and remove the excuse that there was no alternative but to post here. I acknowledge the possible anti-democratic implications of, for instance, having important debates such as about CIPR there rather than here but it is desirable, I think, that members should be able to communicate with each other in writing and in private without having to go through an intermediary on the board or the staff, as we are currently encouraged to do. It is irrelevant that such a page may be little used. It ought to exist for its own sake, much like the emergency brake on a train. Philafrenzy (talk) 14:16, 20 October 2013 (UTC)

Change is required

The Water cooler had many uses, not the least of which showing me that tilde is not spelt like a 70's instant curry! Moving to a private space is not the answer but we need to think hard about how it is or is not functioning.
It is not attracting more than 20 people. That cannot be good. It is uspetting people. That is certainly not good. Despite all the news of good initiatives and opportunities its content tends to be dominated by 'navel gazing'. Even I struggle to understand the nuances of some of the discussions. This IS our public forum after all and perhaps we should make more of an effort to be accessible? I would argue that it is far too introspective. From my observations much of the vibrant dialogue on the community happens on facebook (crosses himself lest the devil takes his open source soul). The watercooler has little levity or humour or lightness of touch. There is often a distinct lack of AGF. One of my staff fears looking at it and told me so this morning. Should I ban staff from using it? That would be so sad. How can we make it more interesting and accessible? We share a lot of brickbats and not enough barnstars on the Watercooler. As one ex-trustee once told me ' we are an organsiation that hasn't learnt to say thank you" Could the Watercooler be part of a change in this culture?
I would like to see a watercooler where my member of staff logged on every morning with enthusiasm hoping to learn more about what people were thinking and feeling ready to contribute knowing people would be polite and even kind to them. I don't think this is impossible.
Tilde time Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 20:17, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
I somewhat agree with Jon here, particularly when it comes to not moving to a private space, and also when it comes to people fearing to look at this page. :-( This should be a place where everyone can discuss WMUK in a pleasant manner, without aiming to upset anyone. At the same time, though, everyone should be able to honestly and openly express and explain their viewpoints here. I think that introspection is a really important aspect of this - and I'm really disappointed to hear that there is dialogue taking place on facebook, since that excludes a lot of people (including myself since I only participate in personal conversations there!) Levity and humour doesn't necessarily need to be here, although I would hope that this would happen naturally where things are going well. I'm not sure what 'brickbats' means (since enwp also doesn't know this term), and barnstars belong on user pages rather than this page, but it would be good to see more barnstar-worthy comments left here. I'm rather saddened by Jon's last line, though, as it really should be *our* members of staff rather than Jon's. :-( Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:31, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
I don't want to put words in his mouth but I think Jon feels protective of the staff Mike, and that their efforts are under-appreciated and meet only with criticism. I understand why he might feel that way. Philafrenzy (talk) 21:42, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
In some ways I agree with Jon here, but I also feel he is also using polarising language: Should the CEO be either commanding staff to use the Watercooler, or banning them from using it. Could not they be given discretion as to how to handle whatever situations arise as they arise? And isn't it the tensions which surface on the Watercooler which upset people, rather than the water cooler itself. Yes, it is a public forum, but not a platform for WMUK to advertise itself. For myself I think one area where clarity would be useful is that I feel we need a clear distinction between Wikipedia/Wikimedia communities, and WMUK which is a firm. In fact they are like chalk and cheese, and whenever they are turned into an amalgam, it will generate problems. When I edit Wikipedia, I am not a "volunteer" so much as an "amateur" (I really dislike the way "professionalism" has come to imply a superior quality of performance, when this is so often far from the case.) When I edit are participate in what Yochai Benkler calls Commons-based peer production. However when I volunteer for Wikimedia UK, I am functioning as an unpaid member of a firm, donating my labour because I wish to contribute to the shared goals of the organisation. Now I realise this all getting somewhat theoretical, but it is my view that this is the only way to develop a way of coping with what I regard as inevitable tensions. Let's see! Leutha (talk) 22:25, 31 October 2013 (UTC)

Splitting the Watercooler

(after edit conflict with Leutha and Philafrenzy) Wiktionary is more illuminating about what a brickbat is, possibly it could be more so but it is a start. The second sense is the one being used here.
As to the substance of the comment, I can understand why someone may not like reading this page. Far too often I'm seeing comments that read as if they are based on the assumption that the staff and/or trustees are bad, wrong and out to deliberately destroy the charity. Not a single one of the WMUK people I've met (at least two trustees and most of the office staff I think) has been anything of the sort and such attitudes should have no place on any Wikimedia-related project. If staff are frightened to come here how can we hope to attract volunteers?
Linking to Wiktionary has given me an idea for a possible way forward that might be a step in the right direction to fix this problem. At the English Wiktionary there are multiple central discussion spaces, all equally public, but each with their own purpose:
  • An Information desk, similar to the Help desk at the English Wikipedia. For minor problems, help and queries
  • The Tea Room, and Etymology scriptorium which deal with queries about specific words and etymology (not dissimilar to the en.wp Reference desks).
  • The Beer parlour is where policy discussions happen; and
  • The Grease pit is where technical requests, discussions and development happens.
I get the feeling that here the Water cooler is trying to be all of them, and isn't doing a good job of it. We don't need 5 spaces, we're not that big. So can I suggest the following reorganisation (but maybe with better names):
  • Water Cooler (or maybe Lobby or Pub it wants an image change): A place that focuses on being an open and welcoming space for informal light-hearted discussion among everybody. The welcoming public face that we show the world. The atmosphere should be as friendly and welcoming as the office is.
  • Break room: For discussions about internal matters that are not relevant to the world at large. While anyone is welcome to come and join in, it isn't thrust in their faces if they aren't interested. This should still have a welcoming atmosphere, but needn't necessarily be as jovial as the main area.
  • Technical lounge (if needed): For technical requests and queries about the wiki. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 22:30, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
Since the discussions here are discursive, and making any of them private seems to be off the menu, how will we ensure appropriate use of the pages? Won't it just lead to discussions spread over three pages? Philafrenzy (talk) 22:49, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
I'm not even sure we need that many options: just one for "Governance and Membership" and one for "Events and Endeavours": that is, one where we discuss "serious, dull" issues, and one where we discuss "charitable, fun" issues - or similar. Just a thought! Richard Symonds (WMUK) (talk) 23:34, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
Richard, as frequently happens an idea of mine is improved by simplification! Thanks!
Philarenzy, all it needs is someone to split threads when tangents arise. More thread discipline wouldn't go amiss regardless of what we do. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 23:39, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
Cat herding? Philafrenzy (talk) 23:44, 31 October 2013 (UTC)
I like the idea of "Governance and Membership" and "Events and Endeavours" spaces. The first is essentially internal-facing, the second external. What we need are two short, snappy names for them. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 10:11, 1 November 2013 (UTC)

A lovely discussion full of good ideas and faith - thanks. Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 11:17, 1 November 2013 (UTC)

So, could we have some suggestions for short, snappy names for the proposed "Governance and Membership" and "Events and Endeavours" spaces? --MichaelMaggs (talk) 11:51, 12 November 2013 (UTC)

This is a proposal for the renaming of the Water Cooler and the creation of a new public facing page if I understand it correctly. I am not sure about names but where will each page be positioned in the navigation? Philafrenzy (talk) 15:29, 12 November 2013 (UTC)
If by "the navigation" you mean the sidebar on the left, then I'd suggest the "Events and endeavours" page takes the Water cooler's spot at the top of the "wiki" section with the "Governance and Membership page" appearing on the line below. Alternatively the public facing page could move to the "participate" section (either at the top, or after Events, Join us or Volunteer) and the inward-facing page would take a spot in the "Organisation" section (probably after either People or Board meetings). I think there would also be benefit in adding linking both pages from the "Get involved" section on the main page.
As for names, "Smoky back room" comes to mind for the membership page but that's completely inappropriate! "The pub" might work for the public page, but I'm in two minds about that. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 17:26, 12 November 2013 (UTC)
This discussion seems to have morphed from making the Water cooler members only to changing its name and possibly changing its position too. I acknowledge the sometimes fractious nature of the debate but I am not sure that there is consensus to do either right now. Under "Participate" we have events, join us and volunteer which seem eminently useful pages and where I would go first if I was new. I actually wouldn't head to Water cooler first because it is not a term in everyday use in the UK. And if visitors are going there and being put-off participating (for which we have not seen the evidence) it may only because they are seeing us as we really are. Philafrenzy (talk) 14:20, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
I've added a couple of section headers to try and clarify that this discussion is about splitting the present Water cooler page into two separate spaces, one friendly and welcoming to everyone that focuses on public-facing things; the other for internal-facing discussions of governance and membership that is open to all but primarily of interest to members. Obviously that should be friendly too, but there will sometimes be reason to be harder and more interrogative which can be offputting. The names issue is purely because we cannot have two pages both called "Water cooler" and so we need a new name for at least one of the pages. The only person to bring up changing position is you - based on your comment I floated an idea, which may be the best thing since sliced bread, the worst idea in the history of the world or anywhere in between. With exactly zero feedback on it I can't say. Your point today that the name and change of position may not be independent isn't something I'd previously thought of. A sidebar link saying something like "discuss at [the Water cooler]" or "Talk with us (at [the Water cooler])" may or may not help (I've given it only a few seconds thought). The split isn't dependent on the change of name of course - temporary names can be used until we come up with something better.
As for what there is consensus for, I'd say that there is consensus that the status quo needs changing, and of the possibilities for change splitting has the most support and seemingly meets with the approval of Jon, who was the person who noted the issue with the member of staff having problems with this place (it seems that this is not a safe space (for a reason that is likely confidential)). I don't know whether Jon has discussed the splitting proposal with that member of staff (I'm not sure whether it is appropriate for us to know that or not?), but if they have and both Jon and that staff member think it would help (or would at least be worth trying) then in my opinion it should be done. If something within the control of the Chief Exec is preventing the charity from getting the full value from a member of staff then I want him to do what he can to improve the situation as doing otherwise is wasting the charity's money. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 16:12, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
Sorry, but I am unclear how renaming this page (and/or moving it) or creating a new public facing page (we already have several good ones) will make anyone feel any more comfortable. Won't it just be the same people posting the same things? Unless you vary posting rights and/or access in some way, which has been rejected, then you essentially have the same participants as you do now. I don't want to be defeatist about it but I think the problem, to the extent there is one, relates to the conduct of individuals and no amount of messing around with the pages will change that. We also need to be very careful not to further reduce member discussion of the activities of the chapter even if occasionally it might result in bruised egos. Can we have more details please of how the new arrangements will make the staff feel safer reading or commenting here, or is the idea that the staff will not be expected to post on or read the new Water cooler? Philafrenzy (talk) 19:23, 13 November 2013 (UTC)
The basic premise underlying the proposal is that there are two sorts of topics discussed here, for ease of reference only I'll call them A and B. Type A topics are the ones about events, activities, workshops, etc, These are the ones that most interest non-members and new members, and the discussion around them is generally positive and friendly. Type B topics are the ones which discuss membership, governance and similar things - including this thread. They are typically less interesting to non-members, but it is around these sorts of topics that the ill feeling happens (and I agree it's only a small number of individuals responsible in almost all cases). This navel gazing and intemperateness is not welcoming to newcomers and outsiders.
Based on this premise, my theory (and it is just that) is that if we split the Water Cooler into Space A and Space B then things will improve. By becoming more welcoming to everyone, Space A will draw more people in (everybody wants this) and it will be a non-toxic environment to which staff, members and everyone feel welcome in. This should lead to more input into everything and hopefully more members. Space B will not be fixed by this proposal alone, but it should be less contaminating. With more people becoming members then that should lead to more discussion - once people are comfortable that is. I am unusual in being prepared to jump right in to a policy discussion and not be afraid to offer suggestions, even when the environment is hostile. Sensible newcomers would run for the hills.
My intention is most definitely not to reduce member commenting, indeed exactly the opposite. I hope that is what will happen anyway - I have no evidence. Nobody has presented any evidence to the contrary though, nor any better alternatives, and something needs to be done. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 22:44, 13 November 2013 (UTC)

WMUK Liverpool idea

I'm from Liverpool way; just thought I'd suggest an idea, maybe have some Wikimedia UK days in the Liverpool Central Library (contact details are on site).

I signed up on the old site by mistake so re-created my account on here.

This could be a good idea; make it open to the public, promote Wikimedia sites etc. (not just Wikipedia - maybe Wikinews/Wikiquote/Wikisource etc.), have a "Wikipedia day" there, get people using the library for book references for articles etc.

Just wondering what everyone thinks.

Hope this helps. --Whitacre86 (talk) 11:41, 18 November 2013 (UTC)

Jonathan Cardy, the GLAM organiser, is on holiday at the moment but I am sure he would welcome working, with your help, to make this happen. Thanks for the suggestion. Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 12:11, 18 November 2013 (UTC)
Thanks. The thinking behind this idea is people can use Wikipedia safely, lessons in Internet safety etc., something that other sites probably don't have (i.e. real-life meetups to promote the site and gain new users); promoting the other Wikimedia projects - Commons, Wikinews etc. and getting local publicity (my local newspapers are Liverpool Echo, Crosby Herald, Formby Times, Southport Visiter). This could also be done at libraries in the bordering areas of Halton, Knowsley, St. Helens and Sefton (after discussion with the city councils etc.). At least I have some sort of idea on how it would work. --Whitacre86 (talk) 13:49, 18 November 2013 (UTC)
And people have the sources for their work right there. Could also be used to reach people who don't have a computer at home, children and those for whom the library is their only conduit into the digital world. Philafrenzy (talk) 17:42, 18 November 2013 (UTC)
This could be rolled out nationally - a Wikipedian in every public library - steady stream of visitors - no need to carry equipment to a venue as they already have it etc. etc. Philafrenzy (talk) 17:43, 18 November 2013 (UTC)
Hello everyone. Whitacre86, thanks for sharing your idea. I think it's a good one. It may interest you to know that I'm currently developing a pilot project looking at exactly this kind of thing. I'm hoping to have a more substantial response form the library folk by the end of the week and will share it. But for now, you can get an insight into the way it is developing here. I'm interested to know what people think. Thanks you. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 15:26, 19 November 2013 (UTC)
  • Given I seem to spend so much time in Liverpool, feel free to ping me if you decide to have one of these days and I should be able to help out. Worm That Turned (talk) 14:39, 21 November 2013 (UTC)

Wikisource 10th anniversary proofreading contest

Wikisource's 10th Birthday

I've mentioned it on the mailing list but just to be sure: a previous message said that Wikimedia UK would be prepared to provide the prizes for a Wikisource contest. Assuming that is the case, are there any specifics about what exactly WMUK are willing to provide?

Sorry to post this twice in different places, but there isn't a lot of time left and I'd like to include this in the contest page on Wikisource.

For those not reading the mailing list (and I only usually check it every fortnight or so myself): Wikisource's 10th birthday is this Sunday. A few Wikisources are having a proofreading contest to celebrate, including the English Wikisource (see Wikisource:Tenth Anniversary Contest). Other Wikisources have suggested prizes; the original suggestion was an e-reader for the winner (there have been other ideas too). In this post, Richard Nevell wrote "If there are volunteers interested in taking the lead on this, Wikimedia UK are prepared to provide prize(s)". Now I need to know details to get things ready before the weekend.

I'm also curious about how to best advertise this contest in English if anyone has any ideas (and bearing in mind that there's less than a week to go). - AdamBMorgan (talk) 22:21, 19 November 2013 (UTC)

Email notifications - configuration request

Please could someone with the relevant permissions change the configuration of the description of this wiki for email notification purposes.

Wiki From Subject line
en.wp Wikipedia <user> left you a message on Wikipedia
WMUK (current) MediaWiki Mail You have a new talkpage message
WMUK (better) Wikimedia UK <user> left you a message on the Wikimedia UK wiki

Thanks, Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 09:55, 20 November 2013 (UTC)

Does anyone know where this table is? Richard Symonds (WMUK) (talk) 13:05, 26 November 2013 (UTC)

ps: This message also triggered the new external link captcha and I'm puzzled about why? Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 09:55, 20 November 2013 (UTC)

Yes, I get exactly the same problem even when there is no external link in my contribution. Philafrenzy (talk) 21:15, 21 November 2013 (UTC)
I reckon it's the table that's triggering the captcha as I my edit adding one to the #FDC 2013-14 recommended funding for Wikimedia UK section required me to enter a captcha despite there being no new external links. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 12:43, 25 November 2013 (UTC)
But just adding a table in my userspace here didn't trigger it, so it's not as simple as that. Sorry. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 13:03, 25 November 2013 (UTC)
I think the CAPTCHA applies to existing external links, as well as new ones. Chris, the links to your talk pages on other projects in your signature is probably what's triggering it. I suspect most people don't notice because a lot of the more active users on this wiki have admin rights; personally, I'd gladly give you both admin rights (I'm sure you can both be trusted not to break anything) but I'm not important enough to make that decision. Harry Mitchell (talk) 12:28, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
Have given Thryduulf admin rights now. Thanks for the edit summary Harry - difficult to spot this otherwise! Richard Symonds (WMUK) (talk) 12:56, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
Cheers Richard. Harry it's more complicated than that as I wasn't getting a captcha for every edit I signed, but it's possibly some combination including that as I didn't sign the test edits in my userspace. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 13:21, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
I *think* that this is determined by MediaWiki:Notification-edit-talk-page-email-subject2 using Echo (based on the code at [1]); I've just changed that so it uses Thryduulf's recommended message (based on the syntax at MediaWiki:Notification-edit-talk-page-email-subject2). Would anyone like to test this? If it doesn't work, then we need to find the right MediaWiki: namespace page to edit (or file a report on bugzilla). Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:51, 8 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Thryduulf for sending me a test email. The email subject from that is defined by MediaWiki:Defemailsubject; it currently has a subject along the lines of "Wikimedia UK email from user "Thryduulf"". Does that need changing? It's a different variable than the one used for notification of a user talk page message, though.... Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:52, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

The talk page message notification is better but not quite right yet. It still comes from "MediaWiki Mail" and the subject is "$1 left you a message on the Wikimedia UK Wiki", so it's seemingly treating the variable as a literal for some reason. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 11:25, 13 December 2013 (UTC)

Grants - micro, macro or otherwise

I understand that there is a major underspend here. Can we have a refresh please on what sort of grants are OK? It seems to me that as there is no payment for time, there always will be an underspend as that is likely to be the largest cost of most projects in reality. I have no evidence, but am theorising that projects with large costs are also likely to take up a lot of time and that people can't afford to do them for free even if the out of pocket expenses are paid, and that is why there are no applications? Philafrenzy (talk) 22:26, 21 November 2013 (UTC)

  • The problem is mainly the huge effort of pulling together a proposal, always a major barrier for a project. For this reason it becomes do-able to have microgrants as you can knock out a few paragraphs and have lost little if they don't work, and it is okay to work on "very big ideas" like the GLAMtools project with Europeana as they involve teams and tend to be partially running even as proposals develop, but the middle-ground of a couple of thousand quid is highly unlikely to get done due to the fact that it may take as much of your volunteer time writing the proposal and making the case as would be spent doing the project.
  • You can have your time paid for, this is precisely what Wikimedians in Residence do, they are invariably contract or employed positions, I cannot remember the last time we used that title for someone who was unpaid (though we should have such examples!).
For example, if I had a clever idea for working with an archive to get a massive amount of useful and well categorized material on Commons, then I could either spend a year trying to do it for free and exhausting myself, or I could put in a proposal that the partnering organization supports, based on an FTE rate for my time to work for 2 days a week (with a list of committed outcomes) and have it all done within 12 or 24 weeks. A well written proposal might even be able to get funding even if the UK chapter had to ask for special funding; in fact a well written proposal might end up having funding bodies rushing to fund extensions to the project. -- (talk) 00:00, 22 November 2013 (UTC)
Yes, this is exactly what I was getting at of course. An academic recently told me how she got funding from Leverhulme for a project to do a particular piece of work. I don't know exactly how that goes, never having worked in academia, but it seems to me that we need to cross this bridge and allow people to apply for a round sum amount of money to deliver specific outcomes, for which they would be accountable, in order to move beyond the useful but narrow scope of the WIR. This would allow payment for time but not on an hourly or daily basis as such. It would be up to applicants to manage a project and decide what their time was worth. This might also allow a wider range of projects to be funded than is currently possible. How do other chapters handle this? I imagine there might be tax problems. Philafrenzy (talk) 00:20, 22 November 2013 (UTC)

This is a significant problem and one that we share with other chapters and the foundation. At heart we are restricting individual recipients to Chapter members which limits the people who tend to know about it. At the last London meet-up I asked around whether the people there (about 22 people) knew about the grants or would be interested. There was no real enthusiasm but the issue that Philafrenzy raised. paying for time, was discussed. We have tried to streamline the process and this may help but there are some questions that I would like the community to think about?

  • Should we open up the grants to non-members?
  • Can we make the process easier in any way?
  • How can we better promote the grants?
  • Should we offer recompense for time as part of the grant?

Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 16:34, 22 November 2013 (UTC)

For large grants:
  • Membership is not important as anyone can get it for £5 but a track record in relevant work would be essential. This could be in one of our projects or a related field, e.g. OpenStreetMap. Applicants would need to show they were credible. If involved in a Wikimedia project they should also be in good standing. We could set any criteria we like, to ensure a good fit with our aims. This would also be an excellent opportunity to fund things that are not related to Wikimedia projects which we ought to be trying to do as part of our charitable objectives.
  • If the grant is many £1000s then the process would inevitably get more difficult but micro grants could continue with a light touch.
  • We do not spend anything now to promote grants or anything else about membership even at meetups. We would have to do some proper marketing rather than relying on word of mouth and free pens. If we became known as a grant making body, WMUK would find itself listed in relevant charitable directories and would probably start to receive regular inquiries from potential applicants.
  • I don't realistically see people making applications for large grants unless they receive something to live on. Is it fair to expect people to work for free or expect other people to fund them (spouses, employers)? The people in the WMF or WMUK don't work for free, nor should they. If we make a grant of £5000 and somebody does a great job of producing something worthwhile but only spends £3000 on expenses and lives on the rest why should we care? There is also the point that most of the current budget already goes on time built into the services and products bought, we just don't separately identify it. It seems unfair that everyone we pay gets payment for their time apart from the members who are expected to do everything for free. (our unpaid trainers for instance)

I understand the issues regarding paid editing on Wikipedia but WMUK is not Wikipedia and I don't think the same rules necessarily apply. It might depend on what the anticipated outcome of the project was. Editing Wikipedia, for instance, would be quite different from a digitisation project that was then made available as a resource on a Wikimedia project.

In terms of processes, I think we are in danger of trying to reinvent the wheel here. Grant-making charities have been doing this for a long time with no problems. Here is a link to a Leverhulme page which explains how they go about it (much larger sums probably): http://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/funding/RPG/RPG.cfm I am not suggesting that we become like them, we can design our own criteria and our own processes, but we could probably learn a thing or two from how they do things. Philafrenzy (talk) 23:54, 22 November 2013 (UTC)

I hope someone else will give their views on this or the budget seems likely to continue to be underspent, which would be a real pity as projects completed using it have the potential to greatly increase the chapter's impact. Philafrenzy (talk) 14:57, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
I'm just wondering whether we have feedback that have decided not to apply for grants for whatever reason, or is it more that people don't know the grants are available? It could be both of course but spending effort to fix the wrong problem wont help. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 15:30, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
I think we just don't know. It's easier to ask those who applied why than find out why unknown people didn't do something. I hope you agree that doing nothing also isn't an option or we might as well just allocate the money elsewhere. Philafrenzy (talk) 15:37, 26 November 2013 (UTC)
We should do something, but not just anything for the sake of doing something. At the risk of sounding like Donald Rumsfeld, there is merit in putting down on (metaphorical) paper what we know and what we know we don't know, and basing our action on things that will address the known issues and on things that will fill in the blanks in our knowledge. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 10:01, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
OK, to address Jon's points
  1. Membership: I think the financial aspects of membership aren't the issue, it is about agreeing with the objects and not bringing the charity into disrepute. By having membership as a criteria for applying for/receiving a grant it means that that issue has been dealt with. However I am not sure how the membership rules apply to unincorporated and incorporated organisations, as the seem to imply that membership is open to all natural persons. Some clarification on this would be useful, and maybe we should look at how organisations could get grants. Access to grants is + for membership.
  2. Process: Maybe some change in the processes may come out of this discussion, but no suggestions at the moment
  3. Promotion: Regular updates in members newsletter. Blogs from successful recipients.
  4. Recompense for time: Fæ suggested this is currently possible, but Jon sees this an open question, but is in favour of it. I agree with Jon's comments. I could and probably would get in a proposal quite soon if this was clarified. But otherwise an individual is taking on a certain amount of risk, probably committing themselves to a substantial amount of work-time (which might otherwise go on editing) for a project which might get torn apart in the application process. Also, it seems that some proposals are excessively scrutinised as regards any personal benefits that a person may enjoy, i.e. as if they were equivalent of trustees. I think a simpler equation of cost and benefits in terms of the WMUK charitable objects would be more effective. However, I do feel that we should be careful to avoid any sistuation which could be described as paid editing.
I also think that in light of the FDC recommendations below, we should look at ways we could encourage matched funding. I think this might work particularly if we dealt with community organisations. In this context we could use networks like the Community Archive Heritage Group as a network to find partner groups to work on relevant issues (and that is just one such network). I would be interested to know whether any progress has been made in linking up with HLF to work on compatibility with their funding strategy. In light of the comments on Kwaku's blog, I would agree that one off editathons are of little use, but working in a consistent way over a longer period I think would lead to much more impressive results. Leutha (talk) 12:42, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
The charity is accused, not entirely unfairly, of a lack of impact for its potential and size. Our reaction is to do more of what we are already doing by arranging more low impact events with few measurable outcomes. I have lost track of the number of editathons I have attended, all of which I enjoyed, but which had very few outputs that I could discern apart from WMUK and the host both putting a tick in their activity or engagement plans and some editing which just replaced other editing. Much of our activity (by no means all) amounts to a fig leaf over our lack of impact.
I am suggesting that instead of more and more frenetic activity that pads the plan but delivers little, we start to move to giving grants to individuals or organisations that result in defined outcomes for which they would be accountable. Our annual report would then read as a list of projects we had funded and the specific outcomes that had been produced. The comparison in this respect is with grant-giving academic charities. This does not mean, however, that a lot of what we currently do wouldn't continue, including editathons. The matter of payment for time is crucial as I don't think we can reasonably expect people to produce large projects for free, subsidised in reality by spouses or employers and to face an inquisition here over costs when applying. Lets also not confuse Wikipedia's rules with our own ability to fund specific projects carried out in public with known participants and defined outcomes that can then be used on Wikimedia projects. We have the money, let's use it. Philafrenzy (talk) 13:15, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
Yes, I think we have to admit that editathons can create a handful of important articles and may result in a few thousand good images, however this is vastly outweighed by the productivity of individual Wikimedian volunteers we know well, who personally deliver far more in their spare time than all of these chapter events added up. For example I have uploaded over 150,000 photographs to Wikimedia Commons over the last year (the uploadsum tool has not been working for ages, so I can't check this right now), of which hardly any relate to Wikimedia UK events, they are just me getting on finding historic and cultural free photos (with good metadata) being a pet project of mine costing $0 to Wikimedia. I have recently put in a grant proposal for a dedicated macmini to support this individual non-WMUK organized activity (the sort of thing I could not ask for when I was a trustee), I suggest other highly active volunteers think of ways that Wikimedia UK might support them a bit more; any grants of this type represent incredibly high returns in terms of measurable Wikimedia project outcomes and are actually spot on with the charity's mission statement. Certainly travel and expenses should be claimed more often by volunteers (like Leutha and Philafrenzy) that go out and negotiate/maintain interesting relationships and push for events or projects that are eventually claimed as successes by WMUK. -- (talk) 14:01, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
I would personally be very keen to do more to help and encourage highly active volunteers as this is an area that has great potential for high impact at relatively low cost. At present the main way in which we make anything more than moral support available is via the grants process, and that is apparently not attractive as it has historically been undersubscribed. Innovative ideas for ways in which the charity can do better would be welcome. One idea that has been floated, for example, is a 'bounty board' where we offer a fixed payment as a 'prize' for completing a particular task that we/the community thinks would be worthwhile. In addition to the prize, we would also pay reasonable expenses, if agreed in advance. Such an approach might bring more volunteers forward who want to help out but who are nervous about having to prepare a formal grant application. A possible downside is that we could end up paying out prizes for tasks that a volunteer might be prepared to do for free. However, there are probably any number of tasks that we already know, in practice, that no volunteer is otherwise going to get round to. Thoughts on this, or other ideas? --MichaelMaggs (talk) 19:03, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
Another idea is the one that has been outlined above Michael, which is grants that include an element for the time costs of a project. What are your views on that? Can we also please stop obsessing about paring down the costs of everything? We have the money, which currently goes unspent because we give people the third degree if they so much as want to buy a ham sandwich. When people donate they imagine we will use the funds in pursuit of our charitable objectives by spending it on things. Lets start acting like adults running a serious charity with serious objectives and take a chance on people. A few might disappoint, but it is worth the risk. Philafrenzy (talk) 21:52, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
A bounty board would actually be one way to achieve 'payment for time'. The bounty would be enough to represent a worthwhile investment of a volunteer's time, though it need not explicitly be described as a time-based payment. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 06:54, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
Rather than a "bounty", a suggestion I made a couple of years ago of keeping an Agile style backlog list of "volunteer jobs", some of which might entail compensation or prizes as an incentive, would be a reasonable step. On the whole this works better for lots of small tasks and we ought to choose tasks that it remains unlikely that volunteers are ready and willing to do for free. Two examples:
  1. (Large task) if we were looking for volunteers to help with a UNESCO bid for matched funding bid of £100,000 to help with a 5 year programme of minority language cultural preservation, then paying £1,000 for an estimated two weeks of effort to research and write up a draft (just over the minimum wage mark) would be a pragmatic offer for a task that would be demanding and remain unattractively hard for most volunteers.
  2. (Small task) get the popups navigation tool working on the UK wiki, it is a neat feature and has been waiting for a year for someone to do. Reward - £10 John Lewis voucher.
-- (talk) 08:45, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
Maybe it does not matter what this is called, but perhaps a page called 'bounty board' would attract more immediate member interest than 'volunteer jobs' (pure PR, I know!). Anyway, we are talking about very much the same thing. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 12:28, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
(unindent) On bounty boards, and generally paying volunteers for time, the thing I'd worry about is that it sets up the expectation that volunteers would be paid for their time (and hence, no longer being volunteers), which may result in them not volunteering their time when no money is on offer. Probably the best example of this in the Wikimedia movement is technical development work, where there is much more of an expectation of being paid to contribute to MediaWiki than there is to the other Wikimedia projects, and in my opinion that's now a fixed trend that would be impossible (and probably also undesirable) to change. There is currently a risk of organising outreach events going the same way (although more in terms of being a paid employee, either directly or as a WiR), which would be a real shame. I wouldn't like to see other activities going the same way, which would be a risk if there is the promise of money in return for doing things. Compensating people who are running a big event that needs a lot of time spent on it that prevents them from working their day job is one thing (and something I would support), but paying for small tasks that can be done in spare time is a very different thing.
Reading through this section, I've just spotted Fae's comment about a small paid task being fixing the navigation popups. I fixed that a few days ago based on the discussion here; I probably wouldn't have done so if it had been a bounty board task. (Note that this wasn't planned - I didn't notice his comment until I started writing this!) Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:38, 8 December 2013 (UTC)
My particular proposal Mike, is not for payment for completion of small tasks. That probably would have the undesirable effects you suggest and certainly would be time consuming to organise (though there is an unresolved question about the trainers who find themselves teaching a room in which every other person is being paid). No, my proposal is potentially more far reaching and involves moving to spending more of the chapter's funds on large grants (£1000s), including payment for time and expenses, to complete projects in line with our charitable objectives that would not otherwise be viable. For instance, a large digitisation project that could then be a source on one of our projects. The WMUK annual report and the plan would then be a list of projects funded and outcomes achieved rather than a list of low impact events that I suspect we only do because we have to put something in those documents. I said at the start that I am theorising that we don't get applications for large grants because people can't afford to work for six months for free. Who knows what projects would be completed if we used some of our money creatively? If we don't revise the grants budget in some way, it really ought to be transferred elsewhere or returned to donors or the Foundation as surplus to our needs. Philafrenzy (talk) 22:09, 8 December 2013 (UTC)

FDC 2013-14 recommended funding for Wikimedia UK

Amount requested: £442,217 ($714,746)
Amount allocated: £353,000 ($570,000)

  • The stabilization of growth of WMUK’s staff is a good sign, although there are concerns about the number of staff devoted to administration (three full time administrative staff).
  • Governance issues are being addressed.
  • WMUK’s programs are not focused enough, and WMUK has not fully defined its goals and metrics or provided sufficient justification for what it wants to achieve, especially in the context of its size and ability to influence.
  • The proposed growth is too rapid and the amount requested is large.
  • Despite last year's FDC recommendation, WMUK has pursued a path of rapid and potentially unsustainable growth in the current year, making long-term commitments; furthermore, it is increasing its reliance on FDC funds in the proposed year.
  • WMUK’s projected impact on Wikimedia projects is too low in proportion to funds requested.
  • WMUK has a lot of potential for impact on Wikimedia projects; for example, through partnering with GLAM institutions, and demonstrated by success in implementing the Wikipedians in Residence program and EduWiki conferences.

Source:FDC_portal/FDC_recommendations/2013-2014_round1

I am reposting the FDC recommendation and feedback/criticism of this year's bid for funding for the convenience of members and other readers of the watercooler. Very few members show much interest in the financial affairs of the charity, so any comments and thoughts would be welcome, particularly in relation to whether the FDC's pointers need visible corrective action from the chapter, and given the context of the original bid of £442k included a freeze on staff numbers. -- (talk) 17:18, 24 November 2013 (UTC)

Thanks to Fae for positing the good news. We received 80% of what we requested, above the overall average. All in all, without pre-empting any discussions in the chapter, I would say a fair result. We don't do everything perfectly but the FDC has recognised that we do some great stuff, have made progress and are addressing the two big issues: the need for a long term plan and consistent and co-ordinated metrics. Mostly thanks to all the volunteers, trustees and staff who helped write the bid and tell the story of the good things we are doing. It as been a really tough couple of years for the chapter but got through them. Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 09:10, 25 November 2013 (UTC)
It's interesting looking at the allocation/feedback and the earlier comments, certainly I think we need to think about how to address the feedback, but it's worth reading feedback to all the chapters and the funds they were allocated as it provides interesting context. Fae do you have things in mind re: visible corrective action or the staff number freeze? Sjgknight (talk) 09:19, 25 November 2013 (UTC)
It is hard to understand why an originally conservative funding proposal that included no growth in the resource plan being cut back by over 20% can be repainted as a sign of a successful bid. My understanding is that this effectively drops Wikimedia UK's total funding compared to last year. It would be sensible for the board of trustees to put in place timely and specific improvement plans to address the many issues raised by both the WMF and the independent FDC with regard to Wikimedia UK's reporting, resource plans, sustainability and focus of strategy. Defensively blaming both organizations for giving honest feedback is unhelpfully divisive and though we can learn from other bids, pointing to other chapters to say "aha, but look how bad they are" (remembering how low Wikimedia UK's ratings were compared to all other assessed chapters) is equally not a response that recognizes change is needed or a foundation for improvement.
If you want to know what improvements I recommend, I have made the same recommendations for basic consistent operational management and reporting for the past 2 years as a trustee, and have given a number of replies along these lines on this page, repeating these yet again seems pointless. I suggest you talk with the other board members and plan to have a serious review in December making some real changes rather than talking yourselves out of making any. Thanks -- (talk) 10:03, 25 November 2013 (UTC)
Hi Fae, I certainly wasn't saying "aha, but look how bad they are". But it is useful to look at the scores, feedback, and funds allocated. On the other point I was responding to your comment re: "corrective" response wondering if you thought there were specific things we should respond to (or rebut) in the feedback, rather than general recommendations. Cheers Sjgknight (talk) 10:17, 25 November 2013 (UTC)

For some context with the numbers:

Entity Amount requested Amount recommended Difference Percent recommended Rank by % recommended Rank by difference
Wikimedia Nederland $436,312.00 $410,000.00 -$26,312.00 93.97% 1 3
Wikimedia Serbia $119,335.00 $108,000.00 -$11,335.00 90.50% 2 1
Wikimedia Sverige $435,596.00 $390,000.00 -$45,596.00 89.53% 3 6
Wikimedia Argentina $196,451.36 $175,000.00 -$21,451.36 89.08% 4 2
Wikimedia Österreich $310,686.00 $276,000.00 -$34,686.00 88.84% 5 5
Wikimedia UK $714,746.00 $570,000.00 -$144,746.00 79.75% 6 8
Amical Wikimedia $134,608.00 $100,000.00 -$34,608.00 74.29% 7 4
Wikimedia CH $552,400.00 $400,000.00 -$152,400.00 72.41% 8 9
Wikimedia Deutschland $2,431,458.00 $1,750,000.00 -$681,458.00 71.97% 9 11
Wikimedia Israel $438,306.00 $200,000.00 -$238,306.00 45.63% 10 10
Wikimedia India $176,214.00 $53,000.00 -$123,214.00 30.08% 11 7

Postponed events?

Hi all. There seem to have been quite a few postponed events in the last few months, which is particularly notable since I don't think we've had to postpone events in previous years. Do we know why this is happening? Is it an indicator that events need to be planned further in advance than they currently are? Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 05:52, 27 November 2013 (UTC)

Hi Mike. Thanks for asking. I know about two, which I can clarify. The first was the VLE workshop due to take place early in November. This was set up plenty of time in advance but there have been some technical problems in making sure that the Moodle platform has been ready to use, particularly the Moodle + MediaWiki transclusion function. Given the technical problems, Charles and I felt it best to postpone until the software is ready for a proper road test. We are making progress and the event will be rearranged in the new year. The second one I am aware of is an event at Imperial College this weekend. As I understand this has been pushed back because there aren't actually many students around because the end of term is approaching. I haven't been personally involved but perhaps someone who has can add some extra context. Hope this is useful. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 08:50, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Stevie - that is good to know. The first sounds like a reasonable cause postponement to me; the latter sounds like the timing needs to be better considered before an event is scheduled. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:50, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
I think there are two factors at play. One factor is the relatively low number of active and experienced volunteers and members available to notice the events calendar and will register to take part, the other is the move over the last two years from volunteer driven events to employee driven events.
As employees are concerned that WMUK is seen to have a full calendar of events, it is no surprise that they are pushing the envelope of what is practical. As a result we have seen wikimeets and editathons that fail to attract an appropriate number of attendees and have cases of some being cancelled or floating forward. When we had volunteers driving more of the events, they tended to only be set up after being discussed with other enthusiastic volunteers at wikimeets, meaning that there was already a handful of folks intending to sign up as soon as the registration page was available. Employees tend not to do this, with events being planned with partners and sometimes announced without much testing of the volunteer community.
If membership went back up to the 330 level of 2 years ago, and the number of active volunteers increased from the declared "101" to several hundred, then our problem would be how to cope with numbers registering for our free events.
One part of the solution would be better networking with volunteers at wikimeets to test the coming proposed quarterly schedule of events before they are announced with fixed dates on the website, and reduce the monthly number if unrealistic. Employees would be better measured by popular and volunteer-driven events rather than just a number of events. If we knew that 3 or 4 volunteers were ready to sign-up immediately after an announcement, and that these key volunteers would work with the community to make the event popular, we might avoid these problems. -- (talk) 10:00, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
I'm not sure of the reasons behind postponement of individual events; it depends on a variety of factors, not all of which are under our control. And Fae, you're half right, but what we've moved from is events driven by board members (acting in a volunteer capacity rather than as directors/trustees) to events driven by staff, which isn't quite the same thing as you suggest. Harry Mitchell (talk) 18:35, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
Yes Harry, I have seen you repeat this theme several times, it wears a little thin as I don't accept it as matching our history. The fact is that there always were plenty of unpaid volunteers not on the board that were busy and engaged in creating events without being directors or trustees. Some of them even became employees. I don't think it is a good thing that any future board have a majority of members that do not actively help make our events a success, being a trustee should not ban you from supporting our activities for fear of treading on anyone's toes. Thanks -- (talk) 19:23, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
That doesn't match my recollection of our history; your involvement in WMUK pre-dates mine, but I remember from late 2010/early 2011 most of the active people were also the directors (that's not a criticism, merely a suggestion that we haven't seen a sudden exodus of volunteers). There were a handful of people (like Andy and Rock drum, for example) doing things on their own initiative with support form the board, but most of them are still involved today. I think you and I agree, though, that more needs to be done to recruit and retain more of those people, and that WMUK hasn't, to date, been very good at that. And I completely agree that being a trustee should not ban you from supporting our activities..., though that seems to have become the default state in the wake of the so-called "Governance Review". Harry Mitchell (talk) 15:06, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
I haven't said there was an exodus of volunteers, though membership dropped by 30%, the number of volunteers has been relatively static (i.e. under a 20% increase over 2.5 years when employee numbers grew by 900%), only that we moved from events driven by volunteers to a de-facto standard that events are driven by employees, oh and sometimes employees wearing a volunteer hat. -- (talk) 17:41, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Mike, can you give some examples? I saw the Ctrl Alt Change one, and the VLE one, but I haven't seen many more postponed... I recall the membership survey asked some questions about why people don't attend - one of the answers was related to "not planned far enough in advance". When the results are out I think that'll help answer. Richard Symonds (WMUK) (talk) 21:54, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
Indeed, discussing the causes before looking at the actual data set would be pre-judging the situation. Richard Nevell (WMUK) (talk) 10:04, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
That's a bit tricky to do as a complete data set - the ones you mention (VLE Workshop and Ctrl Alt Change) are currently labelled as postponed on the Events page, but there are others that were postponed but are no longer marked as such. The others that I've spotted being postponed are Early Photography in Scotland Edit-a-thon and Training the Trainers/February 2014 event; perhaps the office can remember if there are any others that I've missed from this list? Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:47, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
A quick search of edit summary on Events gives Python and Wikimedia bots workshop Oct 2013 (lack of interest), Leaders in Community Wikipedia training (venue issue), Science editathon at the British Library, AHRC Wikipedia training workshop at the British Library. Early photography was postponed as the organiser (and the one who can let attendees into the building) got ill. So mostly outside our control I'd say. -- Katie Chan (WMUK) (talk) 20:43, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Katie. My aim in raising this for discussion was because I was curious to see whether there were any systematic reasons why this had started happening in the last 6 months; if it's simply reasons outside of WMUK's control (and probably due to the increase in the number of events over the last few years) then that's great. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:03, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Just to point out the Ctrl/Alt/Change event was an external event arranged by Imperial College that I had been asked to run a workshop and give a presentation at. Mrjohncummings (talk) 16:23, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
Part of the reason may be that we are getting better at recording such things. Daria Cybulska (WMUK) (talk) 17:04, 6 December 2013 (UTC)

Navigation popups

Is the 'Navigation popups' gadget broken on this wiki? I've just tried it, and the results are unreadable. It works for me on en.Wikipedia and Commons. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 16:29, 27 November 2013 (UTC)

Yes it is. As far as I know, it has never worked correctly. I'll see if I can do anything to fix it when I have a moment unless someone else wants to do it. -- Katie Chan (WMUK) (talk) 16:33, 27 November 2013 (UTC)
I looked at it a year or two ago, and raised the question on this Water cooler. It met with a big meh so I was not inspired to fix it.
Dug out the link; Water_cooler/2012#Does_Navigation_popups_work_for_you_on_WMUK?. -- (talk) 23:27, 27 November 2013 (UTC)

We're missing the required CSS, which can probably be gleaned from a MediaWiki:Common.css on a Wikimedia wiki.--Jasper Deng (talk) 02:49, 28 November 2013 (UTC)

It should be working now. The problem was that the gadget css wasn't being included using MediaWiki:Gadgets-definition; I've now fixed that. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:35, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Mike! Richard Nevell (WMUK) (talk) 11:11, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
Working well. Thank you. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 12:12, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

International Principles on the Application of Human Rights to Communications Surveillance

Hello everyone. Wikimedia UK has been asked to consider signing a document supporting these International Principles on the Application of Human Rights to Communications Surveillance In principle I think this is worthwhile and shows that we are on the side of the every day internet user. But some may say it is out of our scope. What do people think? If there's a consensus I'll add Wikimedia UK to the list. Thank you. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 13:22, 28 November 2013 (UTC)

This looks a bit indirect. Could someone spell out in clear and specific terms how this fits with the current Mission of the UK charity?
Wearing a slightly different hat, I note that being monitored by the state due to your identification as LGBT, or thought to be an LGBT advocate, is a hole in this document. Any government agency can choose whether a right to privacy extends to LGBT activities at their convenience, depending on their interpretation of "other status". I would flag the current document for that ambiguity, however the choices appear to be to either support it, or don't. -- (talk) 13:46, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
Tend to agree with Fae here. While the document looks like an interesting one regarding digital civil liberties, and I know many of our members care a great deal about that area, I don't see how it relates to Wikimedia UK's mission. I could be persuaded, though. 137.73.98.70 18:02, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
(Better to log in rather than waive a narrow IP address around. -- (talk) 18:32, 28 November 2013 (UTC))
I agree it is too remote from the mission. We are not a campaigning organisation, at least not on those issues, and WMUK should not be endorsing on behalf of the membership any political cause or manifesto as we don't all share the same politics. Philafrenzy (talk) 19:59, 28 November 2013 (UTC)
I agree with Philafrenzy and the anon editor here - I think it's too remote from the mission, although I can see why others would disagree. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:07, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
I would say no, because I think the point Fæ made is actually more serious. Actually the document endorses the use of surveillance against Gay people where LGBT rights are denied. I think this a significant flaw in the document and would oppose any move to sign it.Leutha (talk) 00:37, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Can anyone point me to where "the document endorses the use of surveillance against gay people" please? I didn't see anything resembling this when I read it. Thank you. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 09:18, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
It is implicit in the way the document accepts what is decried as a crime: "Any limitation to the right to privacy must be prescribed by law. The State must not adopt or implement a measure that interferes with the right to privacy in the absence of an existing publicly available legislative act, which meets a standard of clarity and precision that is sufficient to ensure that individuals have advance notice of and can foresee its application." So in countries where homosexual acts are serious crimes, individuals do have such advance notice, this statement says surveillance is OK. As Fæ points out, there is no reference to LBGT issues to mitigate this. 86.179.102.14 09:46, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
I'm not a lawyer...but perhaps the "Legitimate Aim" para is relevant. Sjgknight (talk) 09:53, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
I can see the relevancy of that paragraph but it also includes at the end "... and other status." But I do agree it's not particularly well phrased. Interestingly, it seems strong enough for Amnesty International USA and Human Rights Watch if that's any reasonable barometer. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 10:32, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

Any idea what other chapters/WMF are doing/if they might sign/are discussing, etc.? Sjgknight (talk) 09:53, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

No but I will share it with the communications committee mailing list to get an idea. It's a useful discussion here in the UK anyway as obviously we wouldn't sign it without discussion with the community. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 10:32, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
As explained in our conversation on the mailing list, it fits with our mission because of "free and open". Arbitrary surveillance is a cost imposed on those who seek, use or produce information. I think it's clear that the document does not endorse the use of surveillance on the basis of sexuality. The language condemning surveillance on the basis of sexuality should be stronger, but it's a wild logical step that turns that into endorsement. The Open Knowledge Foundation, the Open Rights Group, the Free Software Foundation (Europe), the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Liberty are among the signatories. How likely is it that these are actually homophobic organisations with a poor grasp of their own missions? MartinPoulter (talk) 17:46, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Nobody has called any of those organizations homophobic, that's a highly polarized view of why these organizations skipped over LGBT status, and an unnecessarily divisive comment. Should anyone not want to support this document in its current state, due to a lack of LGBT rights recognition, they are in no way guilty of calling the EFF, ORG etc. homophobic organizations.
Looking at the list of involved organizations, it is no surprize that a strategy of avoiding any mention of LGBT rights or "status" was adopted. Some will be happy with that as a strategic approach to gain as many international signatories as possible, others will find it a unpalatable compromise too far. I do not see any LGBT specific rights organizations supporting this document. -- (talk) 18:08, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Well, I am afraid the document is not clear, although others may well disagree with my interpretation. As Fæ has pointed out, I was not calling any of these organisations homophobic. However, an implication of the failure to flag up LGBT issues, and at the same time the fact that the document does allow for surveillance in those situations where a particular state deems certain acts as serious crimes, is precisely as I suggested. No doubt Wikimedians will have a variety of views on the matter, and I as it lies somewhat outside the core mission of WMUK, I am not sure how likely it will be for us to reach the level of consensus to make signing it a sensible way forward.Leutha (talk) 18:39, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Paragraph 2 under "Changing technology and definitions". The broader definition of legislative process and human rights used in the document precludes your concern Leutha. Sjgknight (talk) 18:46, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
Incongruously, that paragraph is the only place where "sexual orientation" is mentioned. It is mentioned in the context of using metadata to reveal information about an individual and that use of metadata in this way should be restrained. If an individual is under surveillance in a country where being a homosexual or advocating gay rights is considered a crime, the document does not propose that this data should not be used, or that in using it the state would be considered to be acting unlawfully or illegally in an international context. -- (talk) 18:58, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

As a suggestion: it might be worth doing something like an RfC for these sorts of issues, and inviting members to express their support or opposition in a more structured way than a free-form discussion. That would probably yield a clearer indicator of whether there is consensus or not than is the case here thus far. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:10, 2 December 2013 (UTC)

I agree that a clearer process for assessing a consensus for this sort of thing is needed with members.
I note that this was still proposed to the board by Stevie this weekend, even though there were several members with concerns and objections here. Political principles of human rights are the type of thing that really ought to require a super-majority to be bothered with doing. External tangential politics and lobbying do little more than create questions and distract everyone from our mission. Hopefully the board of trustees were aware of these mixed opinions from members and did not vote for it without discussion, because an employee put it forward and it was on the agenda under "uncontroversial matters". It would be odd to have a negative RFC now to withdraw support, rather than what could have happened; a positive RFC with members to decide whether to support political principles. -- (talk) 13:24, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
As far as I could tell (I was observing some bits of the board meeting), Stevie was proposing something else ("Free Knowledge Advocacy group EU statement of intent"), not this. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 13:32, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Mike, you are indeed correct. Fae, it's also clearly stated in the agenda that is linked in your comment above so I'm not sure where this erroneous impression comes from. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 13:46, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Glad to hear it. Now you highlight the phrasing, I vaguely recall an email about this (last month?) that seemed knotty in such a way that I glazed over it. In 2012 I happily thought through a presentation by the handsome Redmonkey (a WMDE trustee) on EU lobbying and our role in it. I was impressed by his commitment but realized that this was a black sink for (my) volunteer time and decided that as a volunteer it would never be pragmatic to do any more than stick a finger in it. I'll create a new thread on the general outcome of this that we need some sort of RFC process that is member driven. -- (talk) 17:07, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Glad to see we got that confusion cleared up. Richard Nevell (WMUK) (talk) 17:15, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Actually, to provide a (rough) further clarification, the board has not formally agreed to the statement of intent at this time, rather we have given it support in principle and will be requesting comments from the community shortly Sjgknight (talk) 17:23, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Simon. There could have been an email about the Free Knowledge Advocacy Group EU last month. If there was it would most likely have been from Dimitar Dimitrov, a WMDE-funded "Wikimedian in Brussels". There will be more information about the group, and the possibility of WMUK being involved, within the next day or two I expect. This will include the community discussion that Simon rightly mentions.Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 17:37, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
In the meantime there's a whole spiel at m:EU policy. Apparently Stevie is the Designated contact. Searching my email, I see that I must have had Dimi's last two monthly "EU monitoring" reports in mind, he started putting these out on Wikimedia-l. -- (talk) 17:46, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

Membership numbers

We now have:

Philafrenzy (talk) 14:43, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

I've been bold and merged them to a single page at Membership/Numbers. The content from both pages are useful - the new one's good for the breakdown of changes and the context, and the old one's good for the historical perspective. It will be interesting to see how things develop over time in the future - and it's good to see that the office is putting time into making these numbers more easily available and comparable. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 18:01, 2 December 2013 (UTC)

Newsletter and Survey

I must share, in case anyone else has the same problem, that Google regards both of these as spam and put them in that folder with the helpful advice "Be careful with this message. Lots of other people have marked similar messages as spam." ! Philafrenzy (talk) 19:44, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

A side effect of having images, the word 'newsletter', the word Wikipedia, etc etc in our emails I guess :-( Richard Symonds (WMUK) (talk) 11:47, 30 November 2013 (UTC)
Yes, but is there anything we can do next time to make these things seem less like spam? If a lot of them are being filtered out like this it does really reduce the effectiveness of the whole thing and might explain the poor level of response to the survey (if I am correct in thinking that it is indeed poor). Philafrenzy (talk) 17:56, 30 November 2013 (UTC)
Whether a response is "poor" is dependent on what response rate you expect. Typical response rate expectations vary hugely, but an analysis of 1607 academic surveys published between 2000 and 2005 gives a headline figure: "The average response rate for studies that utilized data collected from individuals was 52.7 percent with a standard deviation of 20.4" [2] customer survvey type questionaires with a prize draw incentive seem to expect a reponse rate of between 0.4% and 16%, opt in panels for market research seem to expect around 15-40% response, This study uses a more limited sample size but it is probably the most closely relevant to our survey, their headline average response rate reported is 32.52%.
I don't know what the response rate has been so far, but based on these figures I wouldn't call a response rate above 25% to be poor. Several studies discuss timing, and the consensus is to target the release time to your target population (results from this survey will probably help us with this next time), but in general consensus is that Monday is the best time to begin a survey, but opinions differ on whether morning or afternoon is better. Unsurprisingly Friday afternoons and clashing with major events of interest to the target audience are to be avoided - don't launch a survey just before a major sporting event for example. Responses from males are disproportionately more affected by clashes with these events than responses from females, so this is something to take into account if measuring gender balance. For Wikipedia purposes if you wanted to emphasise the male bias launch your survey just before something like the Strictly Come Dancing final, to minimise it launch it just before Manchester United play $foreign_team or something even more male biased.
Regarding your main point about making it not look like spam, that is something to look in to. FWIW, my email provider uses SpamAssasin which didn't mark it as spam (using the default setting it scored -1.57, anything scoring >=5 is classified as spam, I have my personal settings customised to be significantly more aggressive and even then it scored -0.7), so it wont have been in everyone's spam folder fortunately. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 15:07, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Both timing and content of the invitation email are clearly important. I thought the invitation was good but we may have to abandon that in favour of individual messages that don't include the word survey if we want them to get through. (my Google settings, by the way, are totally standard and I hadn't marked anything from WMUK as spam.) Google, and I assume similar services, are reading the content and seeing the surveymonkey link and that is enough probably. What if we changed as follows:
  • To plain text messages, which are much less likely to be spam in my experience.
  • Individual messages from and to a named person.
  • Changed the message to "we need your views on an important matter" (or something similar).
  • Changed the link to a page on our site.
  • Finally, put the surveymonkey link on that page?
How many responses would we get if every message actually got through? Philafrenzy (talk) 15:24, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Simplifying the formatting would definitely be a good improvement to reduce the odds of this happening - it's probably not necessary to go quite as far as plaintext though. The HTML formatting's currently a bit broken too - e.g. there's extra table closing statements at the end that aren't necessary - which means it doesn't always appear right (e.g. I can't see the company info or address at the bottom), and may be causing some of the issues here. For those having problems, though, it might be easiest just to add the address to gmail's whitelist, although that doesn't solve the general issue. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 17:44, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
We want them to go through without anyone having to add them to a white list because we can't assume anyone will go to the trouble. Highly involved members are already on the look out for these messages, it is the other 80%ish we need to reach. Philafrenzy (talk) 18:57, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
I agree, that's why I said "although that doesn't solve the general issue". Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 19:01, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
OK. Regarding the survey, I suspect that the words Survey and SurveyMonkey are incredibly toxic as far as spam detection is concerned. I think we should consider dropping SurveyMonkey in favour of some other method of gathering replies. Suggestions? Philafrenzy (talk) 19:12, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
Shouldn't we wait until we know how many responses we've had before we change anything?
Absolutely, this is just a discussion. Philafrenzy (talk) 19:34, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
It's a somewhat premature discussion that presumes the response rate will be poor right at the top! :/ Lets do things a bit more logically - wait until the results are out, and do a wash up then, yes? Thanks for reporting the spam issue - it's one we're aware of and have tried to address on the Tech side. We can look at key words/HTML design improvements as well so thanks for the feedback - although really whether it merits a post on the watercooler/discussion as opposed to just sending membership@ an email is debatable.
On a productive sidenote; anyone with spare time and their thinking cap on who wants to start a page on wiki to list/group together all these disparate improvement suggestions would be a great help, otherwise we risk people wasting their time raising them in dribs and drabs on the watercooler and never getting actioned when the threads are archived. Philafrenzy - you've raised a LOT of these points in the last few weeks so if you find time to do this at any point it would be massively helpful/productive I think. Katherine Bavage (WMUK) (talk) 11:51, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
Did mention at the start Katherine that the results may not be poor, but I think it is reasonable to think that a large number of the newsletters and the survey are being filtered out. This no doubt applies to everyone's bulk communications, it's not just WMUK obviously. Is a reminder being sent in a different form to the original so that it is not caught by filters (in the form of a personal email from somebody in the office, not a bulk email)? A lot of effort went into the questions, pity to let it all fall on deaf ears. It's not too late to signficantly increase responses by sending the right sort of reminder. Will you do that Katherine?
A page for snags/technical/operational issues is a good idea as long as anyone reads it. Title Operations Noticeboard or Technical something or other? Philafrenzy (talk) 12:19, 3 December 2013 (UTC)

Boardgame trivia

I played a boardgame the other gay called CV. The game is a card/dice game built around different things a player can do with their life, from adolescence to retirement. There is card called "Wikipedia author" which requires two lightbulbs (i.e. knowledge) and which allows you to roll to extra dice (a significant bonus). Leutha (talk) 22:09, 29 November 2013 (UTC)

Says it is best with three players, while ours has millions, making ours a more complicated game with much less chance of winning. Philafrenzy (talk) 22:13, 29 November 2013 (UTC)
'fess up Leutha, who was the other gay you refer to? -- (talk) 17:07, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
AGF - I assume that was a typo meaning 'day'? Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 17:47, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
LOL, 'twas the point of the comment. -- (talk) 18:34, 2 December 2013 (UTC)
You read too much Freud!Leutha (talk) 17:09, 3 December 2013 (UTC)
Even Sigmund would say that sometimes a gay is just a gay. -- (talk) 13:17, 6 December 2013 (UTC)

Lua session

Any chance of another Lua session? Leutha (talk) 17:09, 3 December 2013 (UTC)

I don't think we have one planned at the moment, but the feedback from the last Lua session was very positive. Would you be able to put together a short proposal for another Lua event (eg: location, target audience, date etc)? Richard Nevell (WMUK) (talk) 12:32, 6 December 2013 (UTC)

CIPR publications

Just for the record, CIPR have released new social media guidance which specifically excludes Wikipedia for which members are referred to the 2012 booklet listed last. Links:

Philafrenzy (talk) 22:13, 6 December 2013 (UTC)

The guidance also links to other guides (e.g. their social media monitoring guide), so this is probably a case of conciseness rather than specific exclusion. Plus, Wikipedia isn't a social media website (although some people think it is), so shouldn't really be included in such a guide anyway. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:18, 8 December 2013 (UTC)
I wasn't suggesting that they were wrong to exclude Wikipedia Mike, just noting the fact that they had and were directing people to the other brochure. Philafrenzy (talk) 21:45, 8 December 2013 (UTC)
Ah, apologies for misunderstanding. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:58, 8 December 2013 (UTC)

Considering that Wikimedia UK's name is on the guide, it is a great pity that the board of trustees refused to either issue the draft document, or withdraw it. Staying in limbo is an abdication of responsibility. -- (talk) 13:29, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

Could you elaborate a little more by what you mean by "it is a great pity that the board of trustees refused to either issue the draft document, or withdraw it." ? Seddon (talk) 00:31, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
/2013#.22CIPR_and_Wikimedia_UK_volunteers_have_agreed_a_set_of_guidelines_for_PR_practitioners.22
/2013#Responding_to_comments_about_CIPR_vs._issuing_or_withdrawing_the_draft_WMUK.2FCIPR_paid_editing_guidelines
-- (talk) 11:49, 15 December 2013 (UTC)

Proposal for a chapter Request for Comment process

I would like to propose a simple supplement to the Water cooler, a parallel of the standard RFC process that we use on many Wikimedia projects. This would give the chapter a light-weight process for assessing the views of our members (and others interested) without resorting to surveys or EGMs.

I would be happy to see alternative ideas on how this could work successfully, but I suggest the following characteristics to fit the chapter:

  1. RFCs should be written to be short and positive. They are kept to simple propositions of less than 50 words which can be answered with a binary "support" or "oppose" and may link to supplementary essays, case studies or guidelines as necessary. If an RFC becomes overly complex or divisive, it may be closed down early or replaced by a better written RFC.
  2. Consensus is not a vote (hence the term "!vote" to refer to opinions), so to make it simpler to decide what is suitable for RFCs, we would like to see more than 75% supportive !votes.
  3. RFCs should be unambiguously within the scope of the charity's mission.
  4. A limit to the number of RFCs being raised in order to avoid "proposal fatigue". Perhaps no more than one per month as a rough guide, any more might be held in a backlog area, which could usefully act as a place to draft out new proposals.
  5. A norm of at least 60 30 days might work well with a longer period agreed if there is extended discussion and research.
  6. A minimum number of opinions are required to be valid. I am uncertain how to set this, we currently have 224 members, a minimum of 12 !votes might be wise for an RFC closure to count. Less than this and the RFC closes without real consensus.
  7. Closure takes account of the proportion of board member, employee and unpaid volunteer numbers. It may appear contrived if the majority of !votes in a RFC were trustees and employees, a fair proportion of general members should be interested enough to take part for an RFC to count as meaningful (50%+ of !votes from general members perhaps?). Matters of operational interest but without much traction with members may be better as general discussion and board meeting reports rather than RFCs.
  8. Non-members will be welcome to take part, though notification would normally be though channels focussed on members.

Note that much of the value of RFCs comes from discussion of consequential issues and detail, such as getting a better wording for policies, or resolving questions around implementation. -- (talk) 17:37, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

This generally sounds good to me, but I think 60 days would be too long (and I suspect interest would die out long before the end of that period) - two weeks or a month would be much better. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 17:55, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
I'm open to it. The norm on en.wp is to close at 30 days, while on Commons the minimum of 30 days is just that as RFCs tend to stay open for many months (in practice stagnating). What may work well here is to make a decision to close with a consensus or lack of sufficient consensus at 30 days, unless something came up during discussion that effectively rewrote the proposal and a few people are asking for more time.
With regard to who closes, I guess that is anyone interested, though what I see working well (for more complex RFCs) is that someone offers to be the closer a few days before the end is due, and then puts a bit of time aside into writing up a closure statement. Personally I don't see much harm in the proposer being the closer, but others may feel differently. -- (talk) 18:02, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks for posting this suggestion Fae. In principle I think this is a decent idea. It would certainly make identifying a consensus easier. It could be particularly useful for longer term ideas. There are a couple of things I think would need to be ironed out. Such a lengthy process doesn't lend itself to agility, for example. It adds a greater bureaucratic burden, too. It would need to be backed up with some cross-channel promotion as we know from experience and from the survey that not all of our members or volunteers find the wiki a particularly welcoming or friendly place but perhaps people could be encouraged to join the conversation when there's a particular topic with a defined outcome. A potential problem that I see is that there's often a tendency towards whispering positivity and loud negativity. I wonder to what extent that would have an impact on any process. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 18:17, 9 December 2013 (UTC)
Yes it's not very agile but is a wiki-process so can adapt after being raised. Quick opinion polls are a different beast and do not currently fit our membership, perhaps apart from emails on wikimediauk-l (which is a not a chapter list, even if used as a channel).
Bureaucracy is minimal in my view. It does not need board or employee authorization, it can be flexible in format and it does not require any particular operational maintenance. Compared to, say, the expenses and bureaucracy of getting trustees to vote on something, this is extremely light-weight.
Yes, cross-channel notification would be good, but there is nothing here that could not be covered by current communications so I don't see additional costs (a link in a relevant blog post, if there is one, an email out to wikimediauk-l, a note on the main page of this wiki listing open RFCs).
As for negativity, I suggest RFCs are drafted before being proposed. If they are going to be disastrously controversial, then they probably should not be RFCs as we want to see a super-majority / solid positive consensus. Saying that, RFCs are often usefully cathartic, everyone gets one opinion and a few highly critical opinions are normal and often met with the usual 'meh' response. If someone starts lobbying on every opinion counter to theirs (as opposed to logical corrections or adding neutral new information), we might nudge them as to RFC etiquette from other Wikimedia projects; in practice the community tends to balance itself out on these things. -- (talk) 18:34, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

This seems like a good idea, and while there are undoubtedly kinks that will need ironing out the best way to find them is to actually see how it works in practice. The only adjustment I'd make at this point would be to the bullet regarding scope - there are things such as the EU policy statement that would be well suited to an RFC format but are only ambiguously within the charity's scope. I can also imagine an RFC to determine whether something is within scope or not. The best way I think to express this while keeping RFCs focused on charity business may simply be to change "RFCs should be unambiguously within the scope of the charity's mission." to "RFCs should be directly relevant to the scope of the charity's mission.". Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 19:06, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

First time editor, long time listener. I have a few concerns here. I list them below.

  • Speaking as someone who has in the past been heavily involved in the RFC process, RFCs are less successful than you might think. My experience is that they tend to polarise the decision making process - except when there is a supermajority, in which case the outcome was obvious in the first place and the RfC unnecessary!
  • The water cooler community does not seem to reflect our membership (ie. those entitled to a view in how the charity is run). It certainly doesn't reflect my views, and seems to be used by a hard-core of Wikipedians (a dozen at most). I find it difficult to believe that these dozen, however well meaning, reflect all 200 members! In short, I cannot see any way to make this proposed process inclusive of all of our members, including those who don't or can't use the water cooler (I know of three friends, also members, who are incapable of using it). I am seriously worried that this proposal actively discriminates against those people by offering them no other way to get involved and ensuring that their voices cannot be heard.
  • The proposal talks about 'opinions' (!votes), but counts them as votes (with support/opposes, majority decision making, a minimum number of votes etc) in so many ways that they become votes in all but name. If we want a genuine request for comment, it need be no more complex than we currently use: eg a notice sent on the water cooler and the mailing list reading "please comment on the proposal at X" - which is exactly what we currently do!

TLDR: I am concerned that this proposal fails to solves a problem we don't have, using a solution we already use... it needs a lot more work! Flossing a Dead Horse (talk) 19:59, 9 December 2013 (UTC)

(My personal view - I am not speaking for the charity here). I would not like to see this, for three reasons. First, the RFC process is only really useful where there are so many editors that discussion needs to be formalized in order to encourage focus and ensure that it reaches a conclusion. That is not the case here, and adding additional rules and complexity is likely to detract from our efforts to be open and easily accessible to new contributors. Second, the process would introduce unnecessary polarization into community discussions and would open the door to all the negativities and conflicts that too often characterize such processes on WMF controlled sites. And third, the board of WMUK (a registered charity) has a legal duty to further the charity's objects to the best of its ability, and that legal duty cannot be overrridden on the basis of a !vote by the very small proportion of editors who are able to or who wish to contribute to this page. While openness and transparency are built into what the charity does, a formal RFC process would give a false impression that the board is here to follow the instructions of the editors of this page. The board welcomes but cannot be constrained by suggestions posted here; rather, it is subject to the votes of our members at the AGM. --MichaelMaggs (talk) 10:42, 10 December 2013 (UTC)
True. I guess our saving grace for this form of democracy is that with a minuscule number of members in comparison to the large funds the charity controls, the members should more often consider running EGMs, instead of RFCs, for anything where in the opinion of a minority of members the board does not appear properly to have taken on board or understood community views or values. Currently it only takes 5 signatories to require the board to organize a meeting and hold a legally binding vote.
By the way Michael, as you are the Chairman now, I cannot divorce your statement here from speaking for the charity; it is not really a hat you can easily lay aside when making public statements about charity processes or policy. Thanks -- (talk) 11:12, 10 December 2013 (UTC)
12 signatures. Seddon (talk) 02:37, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Michael, your third response seems to assume that the issues that would be raised would be ones that the board would make decisions about. I'm not sure that necessarily be the case with questions that could be asked via this process - I'd have expected this to be a useful avenue for the staff to gain an understanding of the community's viewpoints on operational issues. Couldn't a system like this co-exist with the board's decision-making ability, and both reduce the number of items that the staff would have to raise with the board and also give the community more of a say in the work that the staff does? Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 18:33, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Tangent
Why do you believe it takes 12 members to call an EGM rather than 5, given we have around 225 registered members? -- (talk) 09:28, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Under the Companies Act 2006, the directors are required to call a general meeting once the company has received requests to do so from 5% of the total voting rights of all the members having a right to vote at general meetings. 5% of 225, rounded up, is 11.25, so a request from 5 members would not be valid. You would need a minimum of 12. Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry (talk) 14:03, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Could you stick to one account please? You are an employee of the UK chapter, writing on this wiki, or any other website, under different account names does not legally change any responsibilities for what you choose to publish about the chapter or its members. Thanks -- (talk) 14:17, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Please assume good faith, Richard is not using the account to avoid legal responsibilities as you are suggesting.

By the by, the latest membership numbers are 237 rather than 225. Richard Nevell (WMUK) (talk) 14:21, 13 December 2013 (UTC)

Today I'm not at work - I'm on holiday. I have the right to get involved with discussions that affect the charity I'm a member of. I was a teller at the last few general meetings so I thought myself best placed to answer your questions about general meetings and company law. Nevertheless, I am sorry if my conduct is confusing and I will try my best to be clearer in future. Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry (talk) 14:40, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks. I would expect any employee of the charity to always use their employee identity when writing about the charity and its processes. I will take your statement as a commitment to stick same account or make your identity known if you are using other identities on other websites to publicly write about the charity or its members, or indeed to be transparent if you are writing via others. I had thought this was both a consequence of the employee contract and pretty obvious good practice. This is not a choice between your human rights and the employee contract. -- (talk) 15:19, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Fae, that really wasn't nice. That's a shame as this tangent was otherwise quite interesting. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 18:26, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Seems that a lot is being read into basic good practice. No representative of the charity should believe that any form of pseudonymity, meatpuppetry or sticking "this is my personal view" at the end of a public comment or allegation may not come back to bite them and the charity. I am surprised that I have had to spell this out so many times over the past couple of years. Thanks -- (talk) 19:34, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
Members of staff and trustees are perfectly entitled to have personal opinions, and to share those opinions by speaking in their personal capacity. It is absolutely best practice for someone with an official capacity in an organisation to make explicit with which hat they are speaking when there is a possibility of confusion, and the use of a personal account is one acceptable method of doing so. Only people with authority to act on behalf of WMUK who are acting in that capacity have the right to associate or disassociate the charity with remarks not made on behalf of the charity. My understanding is that this authority is held only by the board of trustees and the staff, and that you presently hold neither position. Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 19:51, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
There is a difference between having an opinion and choosing to publish it (particularly libellous or defamatory allegations). Trustees are free to follow their conscience and publish as they see fit. It is one of the expectations for the behaviour of a UK charity trustee to be able to speak up if things are going wrong (there are plenty of recent legal cases of charity fraud that illustrate why this is a good thing). The same is not true of employees, who would not just appear remarkably foolish to publish statements which damage the charity they work for, and probably their own careers, but they would be by-passing the employment policies in place that give them the ability to complain about any issue they believe they have. As for me, I am not an employee of the charity, so yes I am free to publicly call anyone a bad name if I want to, and this is only my problem not the charity's, unless I were delivering an event as a named volunteer for the charity as I do from time to time. Luckily for wiki projects I always use the same identity so there is never any confusion, as I did when I was a trustee, I don't really understand why others feel the need to do otherwise and jump from one to the other willy nilly (as can be seen in email correspondence even today). -- (talk) 21:27, 13 December 2013 (UTC)

I can't see how this proposal would help solve any problems we actually have. The best point in it is that contributions to discussions should be "short and positive" - I would certainly endorse that - but otherwise it strikes me as a procedure that's unneccessary and unlikely to be helpful. The Land (talk) 12:59, 11 December 2013 (UTC)

Free Knowledge Advocacy Group EU - statement of intent

Hello everyone. As you may have seen the board discussed the Free Knowledge Advocacy Group EU at their meeting the weekend past. The Group is a collection of Wikimedia chapters which is looking at ways to improve the regulations regarding copyright in the EU. They have provisionally agreed to sign a collective statement of intent which sets out how the group will work. This is subject to a community discussion period. Please do take a look at the statement here and get involved in the discussion here. Thank you. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 13:14, 11 December 2013 (UTC)

Potential MOU and collaboration with the BBC

Hello everyone. I'm currently exploring how we may be able to develop a working relationship with the BBC. We are discussing various possibilities for collaboration and a memorandum of understanding. Before we go too far I'd like to get an idea of how people feel about working with the BBC. I'd also welcome suggestions for projects we may work on together. There's a page with some notes here so please use the associated talk page for the discussion. Thank you. Stevie Benton (WMUK) (talk) 13:28, 13 December 2013 (UTC)

QRpedia what next?

We are now dotting the 'i's and crossing the 't's on QRpedia. The next question is how do we make sure the community benefits from it? Do we need training, events etc. We have already started a FAQ page to help those who want to use it but is there more we can do?

Can we get some ideas going?

Jon Davies (WMUK) (talk) 15:30, 13 December 2013 (UTC)

There's a parallel discussion on the UK mailing list (aside: it's almost always better to have one discussion, and post pointers in other places). I've posted a link there to Wikipedia:QRHowTo and mentioned the outstanding development tickets. By FAQ, you eman, I think, meta:QRpedia. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 21:45, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
The important milestone here is the domains being transferred to WMUK's ownership, as it's only when that happens that this issue is really resolved. Until that happens, I would recommend that WMUK doesn't do anything to advertise QRpedia, although starting to plan to do things after that milestone makes a lot of sense. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 18:43, 15 December 2013 (UTC)

Jon Robson's world of Wikipedia

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:World_of_Wikipedia_by_Jon_Robson.png

Philafrenzy (talk) 22:44, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
The bit about the secret cabal is remarkably inaccurate. It doesn't reference Phillippe Beaudette's cardigans at all. Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry (talk) 01:33, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
And the scale is all wrong. The City of in Popular Culture is far larger than that in reality. Philafrenzy (talk) 00:40, 15 December 2013 (UTC)

Book of Aneirin put online by National Library of Wales

This popped up on my Facebook news feed earlier:

"The Book of Aneirin, one of the most important literary works from medieval Wales, can now be freely viewed online.

The 13th century text is now kept at the National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth. Written around 1265, the Book of Aneirin contains a long poem called ‘Y Gododdin’. The poem is attributed to Aneirin, who was in his prime during the second half of the sixth century and commemorates the heroic deeds of part of the Gododdin tribe who fell in an assault upon the strategic site of Catraeth (Catterick, Yorkshire), about the year 600. After a fierce battle, only 3 Brythonic warriors escaped with their lives, among them the poet Aneirin. He then composed a series of stanzas in a form of early Welsh, commemorating the slain young warriors."

The bottom of the page however notes: "The National Library of Wales has digitised and published the Book of Aneirin by kind permission of Cardiff Council. Rights relating to the use of these images are retained by Cardiff Council: permission for copies for commercial research, or for publication in any form, must be obtained from Cardiff Central Library, The Hayes, Cardiff CF10 1FL, localstudieslibraryatcardiff.gov.uk"

I think that means that we couldn't do anything with this on WikiSource for example? Is this something we should be talking to Cardiff Council about to try and get the rights freed up? Thryduulf (talk: local | en.wp | en.wikt) 00:42, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

It might be worth reminding our friends at Cardiff Council that copyright in the original work is not indefinite. While it's possible that local laws allow a "sweat of the brow" claim over new images (reasonably so for pictures of three dimensional objects), that doesn't seem to apply in the USA to images of two-dimensional pages, so one of our overseas colleagues might upload them to WMF servers (suitably cropped, to remove the modern accessories). we could also point to the recent mass release of scanned images by the British Library (not to mention US national archives and the Rijksmuseum) as more enlightened examples of best practice. As for Wikisource, attempts to claim copyright over the text content are laughable and can (IANAL) be ignored with impunity. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 12:14, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
I've mentioned this discussion, on Commons:Village pump. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 12:52, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
Another user has created File:The Book of Aneirin.pdf. Andy Mabbett (User:Pigsonthewing); Andy's talk; Andy's edits 20:37, 14 December 2013 (UTC)
As far as I am aware, "sweat of the brow" remains a myth rather than a legal reality in the UK too. This is one of those situations where Wikimedia should be calling the bluff on these sorts of claims rather than letting fear of prosecution where there is no legal basis suppress legitimate open knowledge, especially in the many cases where public domain documents are being locked away on thin rationales of revenue creation, which do not survive basic scrutiny of the financial record. If anyone has some useful UK case studies of anyone being successfully taken to court and ordered to pay damages after a "sweat of the brow" case, I would love to review the case notes.
By the way, I should declare that I have done a couple of batch uploads from UK institutions this year which ignored false claims of copyright or non-commercial use restrictions. I do correspond with the institutions and try to move them on in their thinking, but as an open knowledge advocate I do not think it right that I should be expected to sit by indefinitely when polite negotiation has got us nowhere. I take care with checking there is completely unambiguous legal evidence on record of the works I upload being public domain; which means that no judge could ever assess damages being more than zero pence, which would make for a useful case study should that ever happen. -- (talk) 12:08, 15 December 2013 (UTC)

Guidance on COI

Hi, Can I have some guidance on what I've done here. I bumped into a conversation in a Google Group that a prominent organisation were actively planning to edit two Wikipedia articles directly associated with their 'products'. I posted into the Google group a bit of advice on COI and provided a link to the relevant page. The two articles fall into a project and so I also advised them to contact the group, and I provided a link for this too. I decided not to create a topic for discussion on the COI noticeboard because, as yet, they haven't actually done anything. Is that okay, or should I have done anything differently? (Sorry if I've been a bit vague but I don't want to out them unnecessarily) Thanks in advance.--Graeme Arnott (talk) 23:39, 14 December 2013 (UTC)

I would not expect any more than off-wiki advice, I would be cautious about raising the equivalent of warning flags on-wiki before anything has actually been done. In my past OTRS work, I have suggested by discrete email that those with plans to edit when they have an obvious COI, share their thoughts on WP:COIN where someone might even offer to help more directly and this sounds pretty much what you have done. -- (talk) 11:43, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
Hi Graeme. You've done just the right thing. If you're concerned that they're going to go ahead with dishonestly, then let an admin know (or the COI noticeboard, but it can get a bit hectic on there with so many people who feel strongly about the issue). Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry (talk) 19:02, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks for that folks; much appreciated. :-) --Graeme Arnott (talk) 21:51, 16 December 2013 (UTC)