Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] [Press] : First Post : Good News: Indians most willing to donate to Wikipedia

2012-02-06 Thread Srikanth Ramakrishnan
Just a question.
The 'study' mentioned at the bottom of the page. Was it the one done by
Oliver Keyes of the foundation?

On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 12:26 AM, Tinu Cherian (Wikimedia India) 
tinucher...@wikimedia.in wrote:

  *First Post : Good News: Indians most willing to donate to Wikipedia*

 http://www.firstpost.com/tech/good-news-indians-most-willing-to-donate-to-wikipedia-204429.html

 *Wikipedia recently concluded its annual fundraiser, which was quite
 successful with the online encyclopedia collecting nearly $20mn dollars
 which will be used for the daily operations of the site. Jimmy Wales,
 founder of the site had appealed passionately to all users to donate to
 help keep the site free from advertisement. More recently the Wikipedia
 blackout to protest SOPA/PIPA was seen as a strong anti-censorship stand
 taken by the website, for which it was widely supported by readers and
 users alike. (We chronicled how readers/users of the web survived that day!)

 Post the donation drive, Wikipedia has just published results from a
 readers survey as a way of understanding the major donors to the site. Some
 of the facts that come out from the survey are rather surprising.

 For once Indians are number ONE, when it comes to a desire to donate to
 Wikipedia. According to the survey 42 percent of Wiki readers from India
 were ready to donate, followed by Egypt and US where nearly 33 percent
 users were keen to donate. The survey also noted that users from Germany,
 France and Japan were less prone to making a donation.

 However a constant a problem that many users said prevented them from
 donating was the lack of affordability. Ayush Khanna, Data Analyst, Global
 Development at the Wikimedia foundation wrote in a detailed blogpost that

 The high value of the dollar may also have an effect, with 68 percent
 of Japanese readers and 57 percent of Indian readers citing affordability
 as a reason. However, about 60 percent of UK readers also cite this reason.

 While dollar rates could be a possible issue for not donating, Indian
 users who don’t possess a credit card were probably stumped on how to go
 about donating to the website.


 But perhaps the biggest shocker is that nearly half of Wikipedia users are
 not aware that it’s a non-profit  organisation.  The number is quite high
 with 47 percent of readers being blissfully unaware of this crucial fact.
 Being non-profit has helped Wikipedia remained ad-free since it began 2001.
 Russia (64 percent), Brazil (56 percent) and the United States (56 percent)
 were countries where this lack of knowledge was woefully high. The fact the
 US figures on this list too is quite interesting, since the US also had a
 sufficient majority of readers who were willing to donate to the site.

 What was even more bizarre, according to the survey numbers, was that
 nearly 28 percent of its users who had edited pages on Wikipedia were
 unaware that it was a non-profit organisation.

 Wikipedia has been putting out quite some information from this survey for
 nearly a month now on the Wikimedia global blog. Other key facts are that
 only 6 percent of its users have ever edited a Wikipedia page and most of
 the users are happy to just read the content.

 Many felt that they didn’t have the grasp of a particular subject to
 actually edit a page (Around 28 percent felt that they didn’t have enough
 info). Six percent of the users also felt that they were afraid their edits
 would be removed.  The survey also confirmed that Wikipedia is still being
 edited by very few people and a lot of people are hesitant to make edits.
 In an earlier survey the site had stated that

 80 percent of our editors are from the Global North. In most other
 countries, a very small number of respondents as percent of total sample
 say that they had edited Wikipedia.

 Once again it seems that the editors for Wikipedia are still largely based
 in the developed countries, despite Wikipedia launching pages in several
 languages other than English. Expectedly men are far more likely to edit
 pages than women on Wikipedia, for there are more men online than women.
 The number of young readers who edit is also increasing.

 The study was conducted during the summer of 2011. A 15-minute survey was
 administered to a total sample of 4,000 participants within the following
 16 countries: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, India,
 Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Spain, South Africa, UK, and United
 States. To read about all the blogposts on Wikipedia survey click here*

 Regards
 Tinu Cherian
 pr...@wikimedia.in
 http://wiki.wikimedia.in/In_the_news

 Important Note : Non-commercial reproduction for informative purposes
 only. The publisher ( First Post) of the above news article owns the
 copyrights of the article / content. All copyrights are duly acknowledged.



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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] [Press] : First Post : Good News: Indians most willing to donate to Wikipedia

2012-02-06 Thread Theo10011
On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 4:27 PM, Srikanth Ramakrishnan 
parakara.gh...@gmail.com wrote:

 Just a question.
 The 'study' mentioned at the bottom of the page. Was it the one done by
 Oliver Keyes of the foundation?


Oliver? huh, why on earth would it be done by Oliver Keyes of the
foundation? That's Ironholds, he's a long standing en.wp community member
and a friend. He has been contracted recently to work on Article feedback
tool for WMF.

It cites Ayush and Mani, the data analyst and the surveyor and the editor
study WMF did last year as source.

Regards
Theo
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] [Press] : First Post : Good News: Indians most willing to donate to Wikipedia

2012-02-06 Thread CherianTinu Abraham
The news article is primarily based on this foundation blog post
http://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/02/05/who-are-wikipedias-donors/

-TC

On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 4:38 PM, Theo10011 de10...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 4:27 PM, Srikanth Ramakrishnan 
 parakara.gh...@gmail.com wrote:

 Just a question.
 The 'study' mentioned at the bottom of the page. Was it the one done by
 Oliver Keyes of the foundation?


 Oliver? huh, why on earth would it be done by Oliver Keyes of the
 foundation? That's Ironholds, he's a long standing en.wp community member
 and a friend. He has been contracted recently to work on Article feedback
 tool for WMF.

 It cites Ayush and Mani, the data analyst and the surveyor and the editor
 study WMF did last year as source.

 Regards
 Theo

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