[Wikimediaindia-l] Announcing Wikipedia meetup @ Ahmedabad, 21 November 2010

2010-11-20 Thread Anirudh Bhati
Hi all,

This is an announcement for the first Wikipedia meetup to be organized
in Ahmedabad.  Interested participants should sign up on the Wikipedia
pages listed below:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Ahmedabad/Ahmedabad1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Ahmedabad

Discussions with regard to the meetup should ideally be conducted on
the talk page.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:Meetup/Ahmedabad/Ahmedabad1

Tinu, I would request you to please check the cats and the templates
to see if they are working properly.  Any tweaks are more than
welcome. :)

Yours sincerely,

Anirudh Bhati

00 91 9328712208
Skype: anirudhsbh

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[Wikimediaindia-l] Cultural differences with Indian newcomers

2010-11-20 Thread Srikanth Lakshmanan
Hi all,

While we are all working on reaching out to more and more people to join
wiki community in India, I see an area we need to focus before it becomes a
problem.Few days back there was a thread posting a link to article[1] in
which a user claimed Foreigners deleting Wikipedias India content. In the
Chennai meetup that happened last week too, there was a person claimed new
users are being BITE http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:BITEN by
admins among other things which indicated his lack of understanding in wiki
policies / guidelines. I just came across another ANI incident[2] involving
an Indian editor and 3 admins. Without going to details / commenting on it,
am quoting part of this comment about[3] cultural gap that exists from
being an Indian editor editing from India in an English Wikipedia dominated
by Anglophone people. He needs to know when to persist, when to back off and
needs to learn the general etiquette of the Western world

There are few common patterns / misconceptions among a set of new Indian
editors most of whom never come back to wikipedia.
  1. Admins have superpowers, remove content and BITE.
  2. Lack of understanding of wiki policies. Neutrality and Copyrights seem
to be problem areas.POV Pushing happens quite a lot and there is general
lack of awareness about copyright.
  3. Then this cultural differences.

While the examples are from English wikipedia, these issues might be common
to Indic as well as they grow.

If we could address these, we could avoid newcomers leaving wikipedia.

[1]
http://www.ciol.com/News/News/News-Reports/Are-foreigners-deleting-Wikipedias-India-content/142555/0/
[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Yogesh_Khandke_and_Three_Admins
[3]
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidentsaction=historysubmitdiff=397820910oldid=397820751

Regards
Srikanth.L
Google Profile http://j.mp/SrikanthL
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Cultural differences with Indian newcomers

2010-11-20 Thread theo10011
Interesting point Srikanth, we can address part of the issue.

I propose something like Don't bite the newcomers page, pref. located on
Meta where new Wikimedians especially the ones from India can ask question
to more experienced editors. It would be along the lines of Admin
noticeboard, RfC page in terms of structure but any experienced editor would
be able to answer a newcomers question. They can watch their edit history
and even promote our adopt a user feature by experienced editors.

We can announce this page on the India Mailing list, newcomers at
wiki-meetups, regularly for any new comers. For a centralized location I
would suggest locating it on Meta considering the experienced user base and
the multilingual community there. Any thoughts?


Regards


Salmaan


On Sat, Nov 20, 2010 at 8:20 PM, Srikanth Lakshmanan srik@gmail.comwrote:

 Hi all,

 While we are all working on reaching out to more and more people to join
 wiki community in India, I see an area we need to focus before it becomes a
 problem.Few days back there was a thread posting a link to article[1] in
 which a user claimed Foreigners deleting Wikipedias India content. In the
 Chennai meetup that happened last week too, there was a person claimed new
 users are being BITE http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:BITEN by
 admins among other things which indicated his lack of understanding in wiki
 policies / guidelines. I just came across another ANI incident[2] involving
 an Indian editor and 3 admins. Without going to details / commenting on it,
 am quoting part of this comment about[3] cultural gap that exists from
 being an Indian editor editing from India in an English Wikipedia dominated
 by Anglophone people. He needs to know when to persist, when to back off and
 needs to learn the general etiquette of the Western world

 There are few common patterns / misconceptions among a set of new Indian
 editors most of whom never come back to wikipedia.
   1. Admins have superpowers, remove content and BITE.
   2. Lack of understanding of wiki policies. Neutrality and Copyrights seem
 to be problem areas.POV Pushing happens quite a lot and there is general
 lack of awareness about copyright.
   3. Then this cultural differences.

 While the examples are from English wikipedia, these issues might be common
 to Indic as well as they grow.

 If we could address these, we could avoid newcomers leaving wikipedia.

 [1]
 http://www.ciol.com/News/News/News-Reports/Are-foreigners-deleting-Wikipedias-India-content/142555/0/
 [2]
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Yogesh_Khandke_and_Three_Admins
 [3]
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidentsaction=historysubmitdiff=397820910oldid=397820751

 Regards
 Srikanth.L
 Google Profile http://j.mp/SrikanthL

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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Cultural differences with Indian newcomers

2010-11-20 Thread theo10011
I beg to differ Anirudh, the issue is that the newbies don't know of WP:HD
or any other place was the reason I suggested the page. By the same logic,
If the newbies could ask their question on Help desk, they could also look
up the same guidelines and the Noticeboards to see what they did wrong and
complain appropriately, which would make the entire process redundant. What
I suggested was a centralized page where all the links that might be helpful
to newbies would be collected together, where they can ask senior editors
questions directly or look into issues for them.

I suggested Meta for two reason- one to keep it off the English wiki since
there is no shortage of similar places, and second most of the users there
are very well-versed in policies and guidelines more than local wikis
especially Indian Language Wikis, something of an outside context might be
useful to newcomers.

I agree with Srikanth, there is a cultural difference, besides a different
language there is rather large repository of policies of guidelines that
might seem daunting to newcomers, we want to provide access as easily as
possible. We have met many wikimedians who want to get involved in the
movement on meetups, mailing lists - this page would act as a first step
page for all of them, we can refer them to it to read up and ask questions
if they have issues. What I would like to see is, something similar to adopt
a user program so that experienced editors could adopt and guide new comers.

Regards

Salmaan

On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 1:34 AM, Anirudh Bhati anirudh...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Sat, Nov 20, 2010 at 11:48 PM, theo10011 de10...@gmail.com wrote:
  Interesting point Srikanth, we can address part of the issue.
  I propose something like Don't bite the newcomers page, pref. located
 on
  Meta where new Wikimedians especially the ones from India can ask
 question
  to more experienced editors. It would be along the lines of Admin
  noticeboard, RfC page in terms of structure but any experienced editor
 would
  be able to answer a newcomers question. They can watch their edit history
  and even promote our adopt a user feature by experienced editors.
  We can announce this page on the India Mailing list, newcomers at
  wiki-meetups, regularly for any new comers. For a centralized location I
  would suggest locating it on Meta considering the experienced user base
 and
  the multilingual community there. Any thoughts?
 

 I wouldn't attribute this to cultural differences. Let's be clear on
 something, it's not only users from India who complain about rogue
 admins and editors.

 [[w:en:WP:HD]] is still the best resource for new users to seek advice.

 Creating a redundant page on meta serves no purpose.  The India
 noticeboard is a responsive place to seek advice if the user finds
 himself/herself embroiled in a dispute over India-related subjects.

 I do understand that a significant number of new pages patrollers,
 recent changes patrollers and some administrators are impatient with
 new users and that leads to unnecessary escalation of conflict.
 However, the underlying issue is much deeper and not exclusive for
 editors from India.

 anirudh


 
 
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Cultural differences with Indian newcomers

2010-11-20 Thread theo10011
One point that I wanted to mention Anirudh,

The India noticeboard is a responsive place to seek advice if the user
finds
himself/herself embroiled in a dispute over India-related subjects.

We have a India Noticeboard??? on en.wp?

I don't know anything about it, how can you expect people joining in the
movement now to find it for themselves. How would they even know what the
noticeboard is for in the Wiki context. My suggestion related to easing them
into it.

Regards




 On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 1:34 AM, Anirudh Bhati anirudh...@gmail.comwrote:

 On Sat, Nov 20, 2010 at 11:48 PM, theo10011 de10...@gmail.com wrote:
  Interesting point Srikanth, we can address part of the issue.
  I propose something like Don't bite the newcomers page, pref. located
 on
  Meta where new Wikimedians especially the ones from India can ask
 question
  to more experienced editors. It would be along the lines of Admin
  noticeboard, RfC page in terms of structure but any experienced editor
 would
  be able to answer a newcomers question. They can watch their edit
 history
  and even promote our adopt a user feature by experienced editors.
  We can announce this page on the India Mailing list, newcomers at
  wiki-meetups, regularly for any new comers. For a centralized location I
  would suggest locating it on Meta considering the experienced user base
 and
  the multilingual community there. Any thoughts?
 

 I wouldn't attribute this to cultural differences. Let's be clear on
 something, it's not only users from India who complain about rogue
 admins and editors.

 [[w:en:WP:HD]] is still the best resource for new users to seek advice.

 Creating a redundant page on meta serves no purpose.  The India
 noticeboard is a responsive place to seek advice if the user finds
 himself/herself embroiled in a dispute over India-related subjects.

 I do understand that a significant number of new pages patrollers,
 recent changes patrollers and some administrators are impatient with
 new users and that leads to unnecessary escalation of conflict.
 However, the underlying issue is much deeper and not exclusive for
 editors from India.

 anirudh


 
 
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Cultural differences with Indian newcomers

2010-11-20 Thread theo10011
You are making an assumption that the strict editorial control and
over-zealous administrative actions are a problem endemic to only English
Wikipedia, the scope of my suggestion were towards all the Indian Language
wikis, in addition to the English wiki. Considering that this thread is on
Wikimediaindia, my context was limited to Indian Editors.

Editor retention has been one of the large problems that all the projects
witness, there have been multiple studies on how to address that very issue.
Going forward, India and the local language projects are a high priority
according to the Strategic plan [1], what Srikanth brought up is a
fundamental problem for retention, not only according to the example he
cited but from talking to new people at our meetups, they described a
complete lack of awareness about why their first entries were deleted, most
of them never followed up afterwards.

Again, I am bringing up Meta here because you assumed that the scope of this
suggestion was only the English Wikipedia, I would wish it to address any
Indian interested in contributing to the projects including
any Indian language projects, the intent was to provide a first-step guide
and a point of reference instead of the brief 7-line welcome template and
a brief mention of the Five pillars, thats employed on the English
Wikipedia. Indians also have the option of contributing in multiple
languages, most however, might not even know about the existence of a local
language project.

This problem is inherent to our system, your wish for maintaining the status
quo would disregard all the attention and importance India has on the
Movement Priorities. The issue is supporting and nurturing the community, I
am arguing for a subdued approach while we build our own local communities.

For example, you tepidly suggested that I go through the archives of ANI to
find similar issues addressed earlier, Most people on the list would know
about the several thousand pages, not to mention hundreds of thousand of
incidents on the English Wikipedia Administrative archives, how can we
expect any newbie to go through something that daunting for the purpose of
making or retaining their edit. The Guideline pages alone number several
hundred pages, dictating everything from the appropriate 3rd party sources
to the usage of quotation marks according to WP:MOS, dispensing things that
matter the most from them is a critical issue for newcomers. People I met
had no idea about the existence of* *WP:NOTE or our BLP policies, but they
were expected to comply with them.

Public outreach is a very important issue, I believe the foundation
undertook the Bookshelf project[2] recently for the same issue to increase
outreach and provide easy assimilation of new wikipedians into the
community. I was thinking of something along the same lines for India.


Regards


Salmaan

[1]http://strategy.wikimedia.org/wiki/Strategic_Plan/Movement_Priorities
[2]http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/Bookshelf_Project

On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 3:13 AM, Anirudh Bhati anirudh...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 2:03 AM, theo10011 de10...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  I beg to differ Anirudh, the issue is that the newbies don't know of
 WP:HD
  or any other place was the reason I suggested the page.

 Finding out about the help desk or simply asking for help is much
 easier for a new user than looking for ideas cross-wiki.  A simple
 welcome template contains instructions to ask for help without even
 having to move from one's talk page.[1]

  By the same logic,
  If the newbies could ask their question on Help desk, they could also
 look
  up the same guidelines and the Noticeboards to see what they did wrong
 and
  complain appropriately, which would make the entire process redundant.

 Newbies aren't expected to know each and every rule from the day they
 join Wikipedia, you have more experienced users asking them to IAR.
 IAR doesn't mean a free license to do whatever you want, but to learn
 as you go.[2]

 What would make the entire process redundant are administrators who
 would be willing to give appropriate amount of attention to each and
 every contentious issue (esp. those which involve using the blocking
 tool).  Many new users complain of over-zealousness on the part of
 long-term contributors, I can empathize with their position but cannot
 completely shift the blame on to the janitors.

 As the encyclopedia continues to grow so does the amount of data that
 is churned on the project.  Administrators continually end up deleting
 pages within moments of their creation, and get defensive when
 questioned.  They block vandals without appropriate warnings and most
 of the time such blocks go unchallenged because of the nature of the
 edits (overt vandalism).  But sometimes, as it happens with the huge
 amount of backlog, an administrator may perceive tenacious editing as
 disruption and vandalism, and when this happens our problems begin.

 Please go through the archives of