Thanks Marshall for your pointing out an official answer from the WMF,
Let me say that this is not only disappointing, you are also presenting a false 
dichotomy where we can only "save a kitten" OR "plant a tree", while we have 
budget, staff and enough talented volunteers to do both. The dichotomy is 
presented in a way that makes us think that an estimation of the cost of 
solving this problem has been done and it is out of all the possibilities, but 
we don't know what the estimation is. Is there an estimation of how much would 
this cost? If so, could you please share it so we know why this is out of our 
possibilities?

I say that this dichotomy is false and I will try to explain why:

  *   When Maryana Iskander assumed her CEO role, she pointed that the way the 
annual plan is done should be changed, because the previous monolithic 
assumption that only things reflected in the annual plan can be done (and 
nothing else) was preventing us from going forward. You can read it the full 
reflection 
here:https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Chief_Executive_Officer/Maryana%E2%80%99s_Listening_Tour/My_Incoming_Priorities.
 Claiming that a high priority problem can't be solved now because it wasn't 
planned one year ago is not the way it was supposed this to be done.
  *
The message is not about the Graphs extension. It has some weight there, but 
reading this message about interactive content in terms of "if we solve the 
graphs issue, our job here is done" is also a wrong reduction. But let's think 
that, indeed, this was the only problem we should solve. Arguing that it is not 
in the Annual plan so it can't be solved is a fallacy, as explained above, but 
even then, the annual plan was done AFTER the graph extension was broken. 
Waiting two years for a high importance problem to be solved can't be the way 
to do things.
  *
Two weeks after Iskander's message, Yael Weissburg wrote in Diff this post: 
https://diff.wikimedia.org/2022/01/28/what-does-the-world-need-from-us-now-external-trends-to-watch/<https://diff.wikimedia.org/2022/01/28/what-does-the-world-need-from-us-now-external-trends-to-watch/>.
 In this post Weissburg wrote about "trends that we should expect to accelerate 
in the years to come because they relate to key changes in how people access, 
interact with, and share knowledge". You can read the post by yourself, but 
there is an important takeaway: people is searching for content in another way, 
and we should give them "rich content". Whatever it takes.
  *
One year after Iskander assumed she wrote an update. There we can read that the 
number 2 priority is "Re-centering the Foundation's responsibility in 
supporting the technology needs of the Wikimedia movement by understanding the 
needs of our contributor communities, as well as emerging topics like machine 
learning/artificial intelligence and innovations for new audiences." We should 
be doing that "innovations for new audiences", but from you message it seems 
that we still need "a conversation to happen" 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Chief_Executive_Officer/Updates/Year_One_Update
  *
Later that year, Selena Deckelmann wrote that "The Foundation needs to exhibit 
better accountability in maintaining essential services (e.g. 2-factor 
authentication), and to be explicit about the technical tasks that it is 
definitely leaving for volunteers to own." 
(https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Executive_and_Leadership_teams/Chief_Product_and_Technology_Officer/Selena%27s_Listening_Tour).
 Yes, I understand that the example given is another one, but the idea is 
there: "the foundation needs to exhibit better accountability in maintaining 
essential services". The message follows with an elephant in the room, but we 
are not going to talk again about the elephant, for sure.
  *   Finally, last two years annual plans were said to be rooted in the 2030 
Strategy (which talks about this issue) and, more specifically, on the 2019 
Medium Term 
plan.https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Medium-term_plan_2019.
 This Medium Term plan (which, again, is the one used as a roadmap) has only 
two high priority topics, the second one being: "2. Modernize our product 
experience. We will make contributor and reader experiences useful and joyful; 
moving from viewing Wikipedia as solely a website, to developing, supporting, 
and maintaining the Wikimedia ecosystem as a collection of knowledge, 
information, and insights with infinite possible product experiences and 
applications.". Then, there's a priority named "Platform evolution" which says 
literally this: "The Platform Evolution priority encompasses improving and 
modernizing Wikimedia’s technical ecosystem to respond to a landscape where 
Artificial Intelligence is creating content, rich media dominates learning, 
content is structured, and collaboration tools work across multiple devices and 
have minimal technical requirements. (...)Addressing content gaps also includes 
making it easier to incorporate rich media, which requires more storage and 
server power, and better tooling for editing, uploading, and incorporating more 
types of media. On the engineering front, better automation of the software 
release process through continuous integration, and a more intentional focus on 
code quality and testing will allow for more innovative and faster 
experimentation". Again, this is not something new that happened two months 
ago, this was written in 2019 coming for an extremely long conversation that 
already happened between 2017-2019 and that is the guiding principle of our 
current Annual Plan, stated by the authors of the annual plan. If we are not 
moving in the way we decided, we are doing it wrong.

I could continue making a list of claims, but I think that is enough to 
understand that the conversation has happened, that we can save the kitten and 
plant the tree, that we already have decided that we need this and that it is 
already written in the annual plan. Claiming that there's no budget is also a 
bad move, because we don't know how much would this cost. In fact, knowing the 
cost would be the result of having a plan, but if there's no plan, we can't 
know if we can pay for it.

Let me end pointing again the big issue here: if we don't go forward with our 
top importance strategic goals because they are too complex to be solved, then 
every year will be more difficult to get there. The only way to solve complex 
issues is to start doing them. Postponing them while we try to take the low 
hanging fruits is a bad move; claiming that we are not working on them ("one 
that we have not yet started given the other priorities we’ve been working on") 
because we have been solving other issues is the worst news we can have.

Have a nice day

Galder



  *


________________________________
From: Butch Bustria <bustr...@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, February 7, 2024 5:19 AM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: We need more interactive content: we are doing it 
wrong

Hi Everyone,

My earnest hope that the Wikimedia Foundation on its 2024-2025 Annual Financial 
Plan prioritize and I mean put first among all is the technical infrastructure 
among all its budgetary items. We can scale down budgets to 3rd party 
organizations like the Knowledge Equity Fund, Movement Strategy Governance 
funding, campaign grants, and other "wants" to accomodate a highly technically 
reliable and stable Wikimedia online projects ("needs"), future proof, and user 
friendly experience which require investments on quality manpower, hardware, 
applications and the like. We love open source but we also be pragmatic and 
wise on selection of choices because we want our content be conveniently 
available and reliable to our readers, users, consumers and also editors.

A welcome development is the MediaWiki Users and Developers Conference, the 
successor to EMWCon.
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki_Users_and_Developers_Conference_2024

The said conference will be held in Portland, Oregon, from April 17–19, 2024.

I also hope the Foundation invest in more technical gatherings, both onsite, 
hybrid or online to engage and reach out to more technical contributors, within 
and beyond the Wikimedia movement. I also hope WMF to start exploring eastward 
to Asia or elsewhere in the world as well fully diversify the technical 
community.



Kind regards,

Butch Bustria




On Wed, Feb 7, 2024, 4:54 AM Brion Vibber 
<bvib...@wikimedia.org<mailto:bvib...@wikimedia.org>> wrote:
Thanks for weighing in, Marshall!

I agree wholeheartedly that we need to do a proper architecture for a sandbox 
for interactive media, that will be safe (first and foremost), perform well in 
the browser, work across device types (desktop web, mobile web, mobile apps), 
and maintain our key requirements on editability and reusability, balanced 
against the security and privacy needs of users if we're going to invest the 
effort.

Backing up to do it right rather than patch up Graphs “one more time” is the 
right thing, and I’m very happy to see a confluence of interest around this now!

My hope is we can figure out how to make that architecture & testing work 
happen in the near term until we collectively (inside WMF and out) can wrangle 
resources to make the implementation production-ready.

Once we have a common infrastructure to build on, it’ll be easier for work to 
progress on individual types of media (graphs, charts, maps, animations, 
editable simulations, coding examples, etc, as well as classics like panorama 
viewers and integrating the audio/video player into a sandbox for heightened 
security).

My biggest hope is that we’ll enable more work from outside WMF to happen – 
letting volunteers and other orgs who might have their own specialty areas and 
work funding to progress without every change being a potential new security 
risk.

When we have succeeded in the past, we have succeeded by making tools that 
other people can use as their own basis to build their own works. I’m confident 
we can get there on interactive media with some common focus.

Let's all try to capture some of this momentum while we've got it and set 
ourselves up for success down the road.

– b


On Tue, Feb 6, 2024, 12:27 PM 
<mmil...@wikimedia.org<mailto:mmil...@wikimedia.org>> wrote:
Hi everyone – My name is Marshall Miller, I am a Senior Director of Product at 
the Wikimedia Foundation, and I work with many of the teams that are involved 
with the user experience of our websites and apps, such as the Editing, Web, 
Growth, and Mobile Apps teams (among others) [1]. I’m part of the leadership 
group that makes decisions about how the WMF teams approach things like graphs, 
interactive content, and video.  Thank you all for having this in-depth and 
important discussion.

I know that issues with graphs [2] are what started this discussion, but I 
agree that it makes sense to think about this in terms of the broader category 
of “interactive content”, because other kinds of interactive content, such as 
maps or timelines, would share architecture with what is needed for graphs 
(video is a different and more complicated content type).  I wrote a lot in 
this email, but here are a couple of the main points up front: to support 
graphs and other interactive content, we would need to take a step back and 
make a substantial investment in sustainable architecture to do it – so that it 
works well, safely, and is built to last.  And because that’s a substantial 
investment, we need to weigh it against other important investments in order to 
decide whether and when to do it.

I know that it is very frustrating that the Graph extension has not been 
operational for many months – it means readers haven’t been seeing graphs in 
articles, and editors haven’t been able to use graphs to do things like monitor 
backlogs in WikiProjects.  Over the months of trying to find a way to turn 
graphs back on, it has become clear that there isn’t a safe shortcut here and 
that the path forward will require a substantial investment – one that we have 
not yet started given the other priorities we’ve been working on.  Every year 
we have to make difficult tradeoffs around what areas of our technical 
infrastructure we can and cannot take on.  In the current fiscal year, the 
Product and Technology department has made experienced editors a priority [3], 
and many things that volunteers have asked for are either accomplished or in 
flight:

Improvements to PageTriage (complete) [4]
Watchlist in the iOS app (complete) [5]
Patrolling in the Android app (in progress) [6]
Dark mode (in progress) [7]
Improvements to the Commons Upload Wizard (in progress) [8]
…and other projects.

But I know this conversation isn’t as much about what editors need as what 
current and future readers need.  Between talking about interactive content and 
talking about video, it sounds like we’re having the larger conversation of 
what we should be offering today’s and tomorrow’s readers to help them learn 
from encyclopedic content – whether we need to be offering interactivity, or 
video, or perhaps enabling other platforms/apps to use our content to make 
interactive or video materials there.  This is a really important conversation, 
because even working together we probably will not be able to build all of it – 
we’ll have to make hard choices about where to invest.  One place where this 
broader conversation is happening is called “Future Audiences”, which does 
experiments on how to reach newer generations who use the internet differently 
than previous generations – and thinking particularly about video.  Future 
Audiences has regular calls with community members to shape the direction of 
those experiments, which in turn inform how the broader Foundation prioritizes. 
 I hope many of you will get involved in those conversations – you can sign up 
here. [9]

Focusing back on graphs, since that’s what kicked this thread off, the several 
approaches we’ve attempted for quickly re-enabling the extension have ended up 
having security or performance problems.  Therefore, we think that if we were 
to support graphs and other interactive content, we would need to plan 
substantial investment in sustainable architecture.  This way, our approach 
would work securely and stably for the longer term.  But that would take 
significant resources, and we’ll need to weigh it against many other important 
priorities, like tools for functionaries, improvements to the editing 
experience, automated ways to stop vandals, etc.

To be clear, if we do assign resources to the planning and building of an 
architecture for graphs (and other interactive content), it means that we are 
still at least several more months away from having a working 
Foundation-supported architecture.  Therefore, I think we should also be having 
the additional conversation that many others have brought up about what 
volunteers can do in these intervening months to make graphs somewhat available 
to users.  I know people are talking about that concretely on the Phabricator 
task, and I will join that conversation as well.
For the bigger question, I would like to start with some more learning about 
which kinds of interactive content are important for our encyclopedia, and how 
our community members see the evolution of the reading experience on our 
projects.  I’d like to have some small conversations with many of you so that 
we can get into the details and ideas, joined by some of my colleagues.  I’ll 
start reaching out to see who is interested in talking – and please let me know 
directly if you’d like to talk.

Thank you for weighing in so far, and let’s keep talking and planning together.

Marshall

[1] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:MMiller_(WMF)
[2] https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T334940
[3] 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_Annual_Plan/2023-2024#Our_approach_for_the_future
[4] 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Page_Curation/2023_Moderator_Tools_project#October_20,_2023:_Final_update!
[5] 
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Apps/Team/iOS/Watchlist#October_2023
[6] https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Apps/Team/Android/Anti_Vandalism
[7] https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Reading/Web/Accessibility_for_reading
[8] 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:WMF_support_for_Commons/Upload_Wizard_Improvements
[9] https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Future_Audiences#Sign_up_to_participate!
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