Hi,

The Wikimedia technical spaces Code of Conduct is enforced by a committee.
That committee's selection process is defined as follows:

"The first Committee will be chosen by the Wikimedia Foundation’s Technical
Collaboration team. Subsequent members and auxiliary members of the
Committee will be chosen by the current regular members through a majority
vote." [1]

About a month ago, the CoC Committee put up a slate of "candidates", and
was soliciting feedback on them. The decision on these candidates was
supposed to happen on June 12, last week. I don't know if it actually
happened - I didn't see an announcement, and the candidates page is still
up. [2] In any case, I doubt any of these candidates will have trouble
getting through, since these candidates are also, for the most part, the
people deciding who gets in.

That's what I'm writing about: I now think that the committee should be
decided via open elections, instead of having the committee appoint itself.
At the moment, this group has a complete lack of accountability: they could
make any decision whatsoever at any time, and, according to the rules,
there is literally no one who can stop them. With every passing year and
additional "renewal" (that's what it's called), [3] it seems to me that
their legitimacy as representing the views of the overall community
decreases.

I had a strange personal experience that made me start to think about this.
Pretty soon after they requested feedback a month ago, I sent en email to
the CoC Committee giving my negative view about one member of the
committee, and explaining why I thought they shouldn't remain there. The
committee responded a few weeks later by saying they were rejecting my
feedback - which is their right - but then spent the rest of the email
criticizing my own previous behavior. Which I found bizarre. Thinking about
it later, it seems to only make sense as what's known in American business
as "circling the wagons" - a group of people responding to outside
criticism in a defensive way, by rejecting all of it, attacking the
critics, etc. Which is not the kind of thing you want to see from people
who are supposed to be making rational, unbiased decisions.

Now, it could be that I'm making too much of this one interaction - maybe
some people there were just having a bad day - but there's still the larger
question of whether elections make sense, and to some extent it's a
question that's independent of whatever you think of the people currently
on the committee.

As for the mechanics of voting: one option is to give one vote to anyone
who has a Wikimedia developer account. The vote could be held on
wikitech.wikimedia.org, or perhaps there's an even better technical
solution. The key thing for now is just to get a sense for people's views
on this.

So, what do people think - is there any kind of significant support for the
idea of elections for the CoC Committee?

-Yaron

[1] https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Code_of_Conduct/Committee
[2]
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Code_of_Conduct/Committee/Members/Candidates
[3]
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Code_of_Conduct/Committee#Creation_and_renewal_of_the_Committee
_______________________________________________
Wikitech-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l

Reply via email to