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Wikipedia talk:Wikipedia Signpost/2015-06-03/News and notes

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tony1 (talk | contribs) at 03:24, 7 June 2015. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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  • Blue? I don't see any blue names in the ranking chart, but I do see green ones. I've double checked my settings and looked from three different devices, and it looks green on all of them, not blue. Incidentally, red and green are the colours most difficult for colour-blind individuals to differentiate. Risker (talk) 18:59, 6 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
  • Mooted? Please be careful using words that have very different or even nearly-opposite meanings in different parts of the English-speaking world. In some countries such as England, "moot" typically means "open for discussion/presented as an idea." In other countries, "moot" typically means "unimportant" or "reduced it unimportance." davidwr/(talk)/(contribs) 19:30, 6 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
  • My suggestion for solving the "diversity problem," so-called, would be for Jan-Bart to take a wikibreak and resign his seat in favor of a female from outside of Europe and North America, preferably one older than 50 years old. Don't put "diversity" on the community-elected seats, put that on the board for its appointed 5 seats. The gender/age/ethnicity of those can be directly controlled. The last discretionary appointee was Guy Kawasaki, a North American male. Money where mouth is, and all that. —Tim Davenport /// Carrite (talk) 21:37, 6 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
    Both Jan-Bart and Stu are stepping down at the end of their term this December, as noted two years ago when they were reappointed. And in fact the last two appointees fit the demographic you mention. – SJ + 00:18, 7 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
    Concern trolling aside, I agree any solution to address this issue should apply to the entire board, not just the community seats. There's no reason the composition of the board can't be rearranged to have seats, either additional ones or re-purposed existing ones, designated for a specific continent, for example. Gamaliel (talk) 00:30, 7 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
  • I'm looking at the Facebook conversation and going "what the heck?" at some of the comments. "If you look at the voting counts, the election was, once again, dominated by major languages and projects. At this point, I seriously think the Board needs to do something in order to give more incentive to people outside of the U.S. and Europe to actually participate in our movement's politics." So the biggest projects should be disenfranchised? The English-language Wikipedia proportion of votes (30.64%) was actually less than the proportion of their eligible voters (35.38%). --NeilN talk to me 00:07, 7 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]
    • I've tired of pointing out that if you don't read English, you're in the gutter on Meta election pages: relying on the availability of volunteer translators is not going to work. Is it a comfortable moral construct that "if x language community can't supply a volunteer translator, that's their fault"? WMF elections are surely a high priority for contracted translation into targeted languages. For designing a system, even on a trial basis, I'd like to see an editor survey of English-language reading ability among the non-English-language communities, particularly outside the Euro-Anglo world.

      And what proportion of Japanese Wikipedians can struggle through an English-language candidate statement, and the instructions? Only two-point-something percent of their elegible editors voted. Isn't the apparently insular Japanese community one of the elephants in our living room? If we can get the data <cough>, we'll know whether to prioritise, for example, Japanese, Arabic, Spanish, and Russian, over German and French, where a much larger proportion of eligible voters might have enough English. Don't we have stats from an editor survey some years back that show what proportion from each language group also read or edit en.WP? That would be a start, but new and better data are needed if this is to be a truly international body. I have to say that I'd rather spend money on good translation to make the movement more cohesive and more democratic through language accessibility than on some of the rather expensive offline activities I see being put to grantmaking that can make only a tenuous case for impact. Tony (talk) 03:22, 7 June 2015 (UTC)[reply]