Hi
Just a few thoughts: we probably need to focus on what Wikipedia currently does not do, rather than on the current demographic and what it does more or less well. A quick list off the top of my head would produce somenting like:
I am also copying this here from Wikipedia:Collaboration of the week because I think that this kind of focused FAC idea could usefully address bias:
Currently COTW is too big and too many minority interest articles get lost after a week or two. I would propose having a number of sub-pages: COTW/Science/Arts and literature/Popular culture/History and politics/Biography for example. Then each page could set its own weekly minimum for commitments to contribute (note:not votes). That way, a lot more articles would get improved, the management of each subpage would be easier, and types of articles that currently have no hope of being COWT would be in with a shout. Also, it would reduce the number of passing interest votes by getting people to say 'I think this needs improving and I'm willing to help.' rather than 'Why not.'. Filiocht 15:03, 20 Sep 2004 (UTC)
When we go more public with this, lose the cute acronym. Be direct about what we are: Wikipedia:Countering systemic bias or some such. -- Jmabel 18:33, Sep 22, 2004 (UTC)
I like Solitude's suggestion. Filiocht 12:45, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
As a sidelight on this, I found the following on User:Jimbo Wales/Pushing To 1.0:
Britannica exists to support a particular canon, that being, the British and now American concept of "what history is." It is, for instance, light on the History of India, China, Africa, Latin America and figures of those cultures - one way Wikipedia can differentiate itself is to say that it is less Anglo-centric than Britannica. Build up an audience in developing nations who can really benefit from having a neutral encyclopedia — like in China where Wikipedia.org is banned, but they won't be able to keep all the CD-ROMs out. It may thus make sense to *focus on Chinese figures and history* deliberately. How can they keep out the only encyclopedia that does their history justice?
Filiocht 12:43, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I noticed Mohamed Siad Barre is a one-line stub. I recognize that he is more important than this but don't necessarily know much about it myself. Perhaps a "Poorly covered topic area stub" like the music stub, etc. could be developed to bring it to the attention of this project. Rmhermen 02:30, Sep 26, 2004 (UTC)
There are some relevant articles on Wikipedia:Collaboration of the week just now. Filiocht 08:24, 28 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Hi
Just a few thoughts: we probably need to focus on what Wikipedia currently does not do, rather than on the current demographic and what it does more or less well. A quick list off the top of my head would produce somenting like:
I am also copying this here from Wikipedia:Collaboration of the week because I think that this kind of focused FAC idea could usefully address bias:
Currently COTW is too big and too many minority interest articles get lost after a week or two. I would propose having a number of sub-pages: COTW/Science/Arts and literature/Popular culture/History and politics/Biography for example. Then each page could set its own weekly minimum for commitments to contribute (note:not votes). That way, a lot more articles would get improved, the management of each subpage would be easier, and types of articles that currently have no hope of being COWT would be in with a shout. Also, it would reduce the number of passing interest votes by getting people to say 'I think this needs improving and I'm willing to help.' rather than 'Why not.'. Filiocht 15:03, 20 Sep 2004 (UTC)
When we go more public with this, lose the cute acronym. Be direct about what we are: Wikipedia:Countering systemic bias or some such. -- Jmabel 18:33, Sep 22, 2004 (UTC)
I like Solitude's suggestion. Filiocht 12:45, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
As a sidelight on this, I found the following on User:Jimbo Wales/Pushing To 1.0:
Britannica exists to support a particular canon, that being, the British and now American concept of "what history is." It is, for instance, light on the History of India, China, Africa, Latin America and figures of those cultures - one way Wikipedia can differentiate itself is to say that it is less Anglo-centric than Britannica. Build up an audience in developing nations who can really benefit from having a neutral encyclopedia — like in China where Wikipedia.org is banned, but they won't be able to keep all the CD-ROMs out. It may thus make sense to *focus on Chinese figures and history* deliberately. How can they keep out the only encyclopedia that does their history justice?
Filiocht 12:43, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I noticed Mohamed Siad Barre is a one-line stub. I recognize that he is more important than this but don't necessarily know much about it myself. Perhaps a "Poorly covered topic area stub" like the music stub, etc. could be developed to bring it to the attention of this project. Rmhermen 02:30, Sep 26, 2004 (UTC)
There are some relevant articles on Wikipedia:Collaboration of the week just now. Filiocht 08:24, 28 Sep 2004 (UTC)