[I apologize for the longish response, and I will do what I can to take the
rest of this offlist as needed. I just see a couple of places where I need
to add more explanation.]

On Fri, Dec 1, 2017 at 10:31 PM, mathieu stumpf guntz <
psychosl...@culture-libre.org> wrote:

> Hi Leila,
>
> First, thank you for your clear analyze and suggestions.
>
> I won't respond extensively on list about this thread anymore for now.
>
> So to your reply, I will just make a single point more clear, and take the
> rest in consideration off list.
>
> Le 01/12/2017 à 22:49, Leila Zia a écrit :
>
> (ii) I demand transparency: You need to answer my questions since
> transparency is important for us and I have the right to ask about any
> topic and demand more explanation until my satisfaction.
>
> Once again, this is not about "I, me and my". Transparency is a core value
> of *our* Wikimedia movement. So the question is not to reach my
> satifaction, but the level of transparency which is expected in the
> Wikimedia movement.
>

​(​Side-note. We should take this part offline but for the record: I
couldn't find a place where transparency was listed as an agreed upon and
shared value of our movement as a whole. There are subgroups that consider
it a core value or one of the guiding principles, and it's of course built
in in many of the things we do in Wikimedia, but I'm hesitant to call it /a
core value of our movement/ given that it's not listed somewhere as such.
btw, for the record, it's high on my personal and professional list of
values.)

​While I agree that transparency is a value for many of us, it is not very
clear, to at least me, how we as a whole define transparency to the level
that can be used in practice. In the absence of a shared practical
definition for transparency, each of us (or groups of us) define a process
as transparent as a function of how big/impactful the result of a process
is at each point in time, our backgrounds/cultures/countries-we're-from,
how much personal trust we have in the process or the people involved in
the process, etc. If this is correct, this means that in practice we as
individuals or groups define what transparency means for us and we will
demand specific things based on our own definition. So, while in theory you
are requesting/demanding something that is likely a shared value for many
of us, in practice, you are entering your own checklist (that may be shared
with some other people's view on transparency in a specific case) that once
met, you will call the process transparent. That's why I interpreted what I
heard from you as "I" demand transparency, versus "we, as a movement"
demand transparency in this case.

To give you a more specific example: as an Iranian involved in Wikimedia
movement who knows Markus through his contributions to Wikidata and at a
professional/work level, I trusted Markus' words when he said that those in
early stages of the project didn't think of Wikidata as a project that one
day becomes as big as it is today. I believe it that this was a fun project
that they wanted to see succeed, but they were not sure at all if it gets
somewhere, so the natural thing to do for them was to spend time to see if
they can help it take off at all as opposed to spending time on documenting
decisions in case it takes off and they need to show to people how they
have done things. If trust between Markus and I were broken, however, I
would likely not be content with that level of response and I would
ask/demand for more explanation. In case (ii), and in the absence of a
shared practical definition of transparency, my personal priors and
understandings of the case would define when I call the process transparent.


> As far as I'm aware, this level is nothing like "a right for any
> individual to ask full transparency on any topic at whichever level it
> wants". This is just broad unfair generalization of what I said. I never
> demanded such an extensive transparency level, and I actually would raise
> against such a demand more vigorously than what I'm doing here in favor of
> more transparency on a scoped issue.
>
> My demand is on a scoped topic which, to my mind, is of deep importance
> for the general governance of the movement and its future as a whole. So if
> that is asking too much information, then yes it can be stated that I was
> wrong in my view regarding the expected level of transparency our community
> is demanding on its governance. Or maybe it's the importance of the topic
> and its impact that I'm miss-evaluating.
>
> I recognize I'm all but perfect, I do mistakes, and the form of my message
> was a terrible one. Exaggeratedly generalized interpretation of a
> transparency demand is however not a proper way to discard the underlying
> issue.
>

​Point taken. Those 3 categories and descriptions are not very carefully
crafted, partly because I wanted to share the general signals that I've
received from your messages (which btw, also touches on another topic: you
may or may not mean certain things when you say them, but your audience,
based on their own priors can understand them differently.). They are
supposed to signal to you how in a broad sense what you had written had
translated in my mind. I acknowledge that this thread is about one specific
topic (not "any topic") and "right" to transparency can be much stronger
than what you had in mind. The intention was not to exaggerate what you had
said. Thanks for calling it out.

Best,
Leila



> Kind regards,
> mathieu
>
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