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Should Wikipedia Just Accept Ads Already?

Hugh Pickens writes "Large images of Jimmy Wales have for weeks dominated each and every page on Wikipedia, making Wales arguably the single most visible individual on the planet. Now Molly McHugh writes that Wikipedia is once again pleading for user donations with banners across the top of its site with memos from purported authors and this week, Wales stepped up the shrillness of his rallying cry by adding the word 'Urgent' to his appeal. Wales attempted the same request for donations last year, and failed to meet the company's goal until Ebay founder Pierre Omidyar donated $2 million and Google stepped in with another $2 million gift to the foundation. This time around the foundation is approximately $7 million short of its 2010 fundraising goal, and Wikipedia analysts are saying the site would be better off with a marketing scheme as Alex Konanykhin of WikiExperts explains that the donations-only, no-commerce model restricts Wikipedia to relying exclusively on free volunteers, losing opportunities to involve qualified professionals who charge for their time in addition to the thirty staff members already on the Wikimedia payroll. 'Advertising is not cool. You're not as cool if you have advertising. But you know what else is not cool? Begging,' writes Jeff Otte. 'We do not care if there is advertising on Wikipedia, so long as it is not ridiculously invasive. So please, replace your sensitive mug with a Steak 'n' Shake ad or something, and start making advertisers pay for people to have stuff for free and not feel bad about it. It's the Internet's way.'"

608 comments

  1. Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't set up an admin system that shits all over people who disagree with you. Maybe then your appeal for donations would be considered by a larger number of people. I've been sending SomaFM at least $50 per year for most of this decade and even /. gets $5 from me every now and then. I bought one Wikipedia coaster set back in '03 before I discovered your incompetence and now I quickly close your 'appeals' without reading them. Some may consider that I'm being too picky, but when I saw that Barack Obama had less criticism on his page than Ghandi or Jesus Christ, I knew your system was still flawed, and the Climate Doctor debacle didn't work in your favor, either - and hey, that was, like, 12 months ago, and now you're running out of money - coincidence? Fix that shit and I'll kick down a Ben Franklin.

    --

    I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    1. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyLongNickName · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ummmm. No. This has virtually nothing to do with donations. What you are running into is human nature. People generally do not pay for things they can get for free. You will find exceptions of course, but by and large this is true. Although your very generous coaster purchase clearly stands in stark contrast to the rest of us.

      Wikipedia is no longer the center of attention that it was. It has a great deal of value and I would not mind seeing some advertising to help support it.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    2. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      I have quite a few friends who regularly give money to online organizations. None of them give money to Wikipedia. Yes, small sample size, but still, none of them.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    3. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Um, no you are wrong. There are scores of people with the means to donate to Wikipedia, and were serious editors at one time, but the "system" turned us away from helping in any way. Wikipedia has a lot of good things going, but their management structure is so flawed and filled with self serving, basement dwelling admins that have an axe to grind, that it turns off many people with the means to contribute. Take a look at the number of people who have thousands of edits but haven't editing or contributed in a long time.

      The current structure of Wikipedia administration is fatally flawed. It is functional, but flawed to the point of pissing off quality contributors of both time and money. The concept is valid, the execution is not. If not for a few corporations throwing away money in their direction, it would already be gone. Simply put, it needs to be run like a real business, with real accountability and system of checks and balances that is less subject to the whims of a few anonymous individuals. As it is, it is run like a college project, which is why it is in constant financial distress.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    4. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by magarity · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ummmm. No. This has virtually nothing to do with donations. What you are running into is human nature. People generally do not pay for things they can get for free.

      You are confusing paying for something that can be had for free with donating to a worthwhile nonprofit organization. People donate lots of money to what they perceive to be worthwhile nonprofits. Ever heard of the Red Cross or the Humane Society? The GP is complaining that he doesn't see WP as a worthwhile nonprofit, so he doesn't donate to it. It has nothing to do with getting anything from it for free.

    5. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Simply put, it needs to be run like a real business, with real accountability and system of checks and balances that is less subject to the whims of a few anonymous individuals.

      But it is being run like a real business. It is subject to the whims of a dictator that needs to be replaced but won't be, there's no accountability, the useful people have largely been driven off, and the system of checks and balances is a sham.

    6. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      absolutely.

      it's exactly as predicted two years ago, when the admin model was upped to be the hysterical bureaucracy it is now.

    7. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      As a matter of interest, do your friends use Wikipedia's services at all?

      Thought so. And in fact (truth be told) I am just as guilty. But I hate advertising too. And I despise begging. All very contradictory, but the bottom line is that either Wikipedia must find a sponsor with a bottomless wallet, or it must come up with some other funding arrangement.

      I would really hate to see Wikipedia founder for lack of a pragmatic means of maintaining its existence.

    8. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      but their management structure is so flawed and filled with self serving, basement dwelling admins that have an axe to grind, that it turns off many people with the means to contribute.

      So there have been two posts within the first few moments of this article's posting, including yours, that says the Wikipedia organization itself is pissing people off, so that is why people don't donate. I honestly haven't heard about any such issues, so could someone list some actual examples of things that Wikipedia does that turns people off to educate those of us who aren't in the know? I have edited articles and added a couple and haven't had any real issues. So I am curious about the issues people have had.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    9. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some may consider that I'm being too picky, but when I saw that Barack Obama had less criticism on his page than Ghandi or Jesus Christ, I knew your system was still flawed, and the Climate Doctor [nationalpost.com] debacle didn't work in your favor, either "

      Might I recommend www.conservapedia.com for you?

    10. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I completely agree with Pharmboy. The issues I've ran into are:

      -Paged fast-deleted for no reason (pages with external sources, links to other Wikipedia pages, etc)
      -Trolls that maintain their pet topics to their standards, and lock out changes from others.
      -A general attitude that limited information that the admin gang approves of is better than distributed information

      I donate to other projects that are free. If I were still able to edit & post on Wiki & have it be used, I'd be donating both time and money. Since I've been run off (not banned at all, just all of my work ignored), I don't donate either.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    11. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by bhcompy · · Score: 0

      Based on his post it has nothing to do with "worthwhile nonprofit" as in the Red Cross or Humane Society. It has to do with a site that does its members a service with a smile rather thank shanking you in the back after giving so much time and effort.

      He specifically mentions SomaFM. SomaFM is a very good service and it caters to the people who use it. There is no nonprofit humanitarian effort at SomaFM, it's just internet radio, but they treat the people that use it well rather than turning their back on them and letting partisan morons undo lots of good work.

    12. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by smartr · · Score: 1

      I personally find the whiny "please give us money" more annoying than just putting up unobtrusive advertising.

    13. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      Frankly, your reason for not donating is my reason for not editing. I have no desire to play politics with various people's little baliwicks (baliwikis?); I'm sure that various edits that I've had the urge to make at various times would doubtless tread on someone's toes with a lot more free time than I have, and result in all manner of bullshit politics.

      Besides, their system--like most reputational systems--is broken. The way they're set up, with proper attention to a given area, it would be possible to gain administrative privilege within about six months--possibly less, if you chose your 'area of expertise' wisely.

      Don't get me wrong; I do like the concept behind Wikipedia. Unfortunately, the execution kind of sucks, and I think that, at this point, the brokenness of the system is too deeply entrenched to be removed.

      Maybe some other knowledge repository with equal promise will start up. I'd like to support a competitor--a viable competitor--if only to ensure that competition would drive quality up. ...come to think of it, there's a good motto for it--"In competition, quality". Stick it in Latin (in contento, specialitas...or something like that; I don't have my dictionary with me) and you've got something to work with.

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    14. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I thought it was Jimmy Wales until I saw him wailing about being broke. It's Jimmy Wails!

    15. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Um, no you are wrong. There are scores of people with the means to donate to Wikipedia, and were serious editors at one time, but the "system" turned us away from helping in any way.

      There may very well be scores of former editors that were once willing to donate but got turned off by Wikipedia's mananagement, but unless those scores of people were millionaires willing to donate hundreds of thousands of dollars of cash, they aren't really going to have any effect at all on Wikipedia's need for donations.

      The vast majority of Wikipedia users neither know, nor care, about Wikipedia's management or the problems faced by editors. As long as the Lady Gaga article is there, that's all they care about. There are hundreds of millions of these people, so these are the ones that they are seeking donations from - it only takes pennies from each viewer. (or some advertising revenue).

    16. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is always the cry.. "oh people would donate but I have been upset by something so that's why it doesn't work".

      Donation models don't work on this scale unless wealthy people back it.

      It is the sort of thing corporate companies could easily sponsor, which is essentially whats happened in the past anyhow.

      Advertising would be fine. They won't be for profit so it won't be degrading the service, just sustaining it. Does anyone seriously think Mozilla has ruined itself with google money?

    17. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Being that I'm desiring a site without admin bias, that's not helpful.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    18. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

      Some may consider that I'm being too picky, but when I saw that Barack Obama had less criticism on his page than Ghandi or Jesus Christ, I knew your system was still flawed,

      What are you implying here?
      Are you saying that Obama deserves more criticism than Jesus & Gandhi?

    19. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      The humble indie bundles disagree with you.

    20. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by TrisexualPuppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Exactly. Most people just hate the incessant nagging that goes on with these "Personal Appeal" behemoth banners that have nothing to do with an appeal. Be straightforward and forthcoming, and just ask for the money.

      As commonplace as Wikipedia has become, I think that the Web could use less of it. I am tired of seeing the Wikipedia article as the first result on every search. This isn't good for the diversity of information sources in general if everyone is reading from one source and few have a motivating factor to create independent pages or sites on the topics anymore.

    21. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      People generally do not pay for things they can get for free.

      Bullshit. I see people chugging bottled water all the time in the building I work in, even though there are water fountains. I see people buying boxes of matchbooks. I see people putting money in the collection plate at church. I see people putting money in Salvation Army buckets, and those folks get absolutely NOTHING back for their efforts, except the good feeling you get from helping someone.

    22. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

    23. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by buchner.johannes · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Wikipedia is not collecting money for Wikipedia. Wikipedia has enough money.
      Wikimedia is collecting money to build up Wikipedia's sister projects and get funding for 3rd world education projects (e.g. free books). But since Wikipedia is the most prominent project, they go from this angle.

      Maybe Wikipedia having ads would be the 'internet way'. But the 'internet way' is also shitty websites. And all the projects with 'paid writers' or 'experts' have failed compared to Wikipedia. So better be independent, and (roughly) continue the way its done now.

      Of course, I agree with your criticism. I would even be ok with a regular (e.g. every 3 years) database reset that deletes the discussion pages and user (privileges).

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    24. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Gunnut1124 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because that worked so well for Encarta. "Real Business" models have no way of encompassing the intrinsic motivation to share your knowledge with others. We all want to do it. People here are even bitching that they aren't allowed to (for free). What makes you think that changing a socially motivated author/editor population into workers will make them work more or better? [CITATION NEEDED]

      --
      America is all about speed. Hot, nasty, badass speed. -Eleanor Roosevelt, 1936
    25. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Duradin · · Score: 1

      The examples were deemed original research and non-notable thus flagged for speedy deletion.

    26. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Exactly this. Kick out the deletionists and banish the concept of 'notability', and you're off to a good start.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    27. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Teancum · · Score: 2

      To evidence that there is a problem, the number of new contributors to Wikipedia has all but stopped. It is a fairly large number, but as I've also pointed out that there are many countries of the world who have more people involved with the development of Wikipedia in their native languages as a proportion of their overall population (Germany in particular comes to mind) than is the case for English language development on Wikipedia. The only reason why English is so dominate is mainly due to the overall dominance around the world of that language.

      There certainly are untapped "markets" of people who have the potential to contribute to Wikipedia and simply are not choosing to do so. Some of that is due to the fact that there aren't large blocks of people who are discovering Wikipedia, but mostly individuals one at a time. It is easy to dismiss their contributions, especially as it take effort to train and develop some of these mostly non-writers into encyclopedia article writers. If anything the desire of many on Wikipedia, at least the "active" editors who are also developing and setting policies for Wikipedia governance, also are at least proposing in some cases and certainly by unofficial actions are throwing efforts by new editors away and driving out new contributors. Doing so I argue that those same editors are also driving away the potential growth of Wikipedia as well.

      There are also abusive administrators, and little that can be done to stop them other than to stand up to them and call them a bully to their face... setting up the potential for a wheel war and other sorts of nasty actions where admins thump their chests and try to carve out alliances among other admins to support their actions. Ordinary users sort of get lost in the shuffle when that happens too, not to mention imagined "consensus" when "minority" viewpoints are simply blocked or kicked out of the discussion forums for various reasons.

      The Wikilawyering going on from time to time is particularly bad, especially when it ends up driving away potential contributors and browbeating opposing points of view to leave. Some of that is admins and the Wikipedia "governance", but a great portion of it also has to do with simply "fellow editors" who may be more knowledgeable about policies and therefore get an edit to stick strictly because of that knowledge... thus pushing their point of view.

    28. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by TiberiusMonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The thing is, (and I do plan on giving some money to Wiki next week) the huge "personal appeal" banners are more intrusive than some small (but likely very well paying) adverts would ever be.

    29. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Duradin · · Score: 1

      I pay for many services I could normally get for free. Both because I want to reward them monetarily and because I wish to use their services in the future which necessitates their continued existence.

    30. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Duradin · · Score: 1

      With all the hype they should really drop the humble.

    31. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Informative

      There are scores of people with the means to donate to Wikipedia, and were serious editors at one time, but the "system" turned us away from helping in any way.

      Back in 2006 I developed a cataract in one eye, so the first thing I did was to look it up on Wikipedia. After looking it up I saw a specialist for the surgery, who informed me of a new (FDA approved in 2003) device that replaced the traditional IOLs, an accomodating IOL that unlike older types, is on struts, is operated by the eye's muscles, and actually lets the eye focus like a young person's.

      I checked Wikipedia again, and found no mention of this three year old technology on the page about cataract surgery. They had the single focus and multifocal (working much like bifocal or trifocal eyeglasses) lenses, but not the accomodating lens. So I edited it.

      A week later the edit was gone. Re-edited, same thing.

      Oddly, after I mentioned this in a slashdot comment in an article about editing wikipedia, maybe a year or so later, the accomodating lens was added to the article. Obviously, someone from Wikipedia had seen my comment.

      But I'd already given up editing wikipedia; it makes no sense to take the effort to contribute, only to have your easily fact-verified contributions discarded.

    32. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by fucket · · Score: 1

      The word you are looking for is "dominant." That is, unless somebody modified the Wiktionary page while I wasn't looking.

    33. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't pee on WikiPedia if it were on fire.

    34. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by vxice · · Score: 1

      Well google still provides a useful service while using ads and paid staff. Maybe the shitty websites are made by shitty organizations and the amount of advertising is only incidental. I could easily imagine a situation where google had flashy intrusive ads and while providing an amazing service no one wanted to use it because of the ads. maybe two or three little goodle context ads would provide the money they need while not intruding. hell make it optional, and if you opt in you aren't bombarded by requests for donations. it is not like they are paying for their content.

      --
      every anarchist is a baffled dictator. Benito_Mussolini
    35. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There may very well be scores of former editors that were once willing to donate but got turned off by Wikipedia's mananagement, but unless those scores of people were millionaires willing to donate hundreds of thousands of dollars of cash, they aren't really going to have any effect at all on Wikipedia's need for donations.

      Saying that the thousands of people who can donate a few hundred per year "aren't really going to have any effect at all on Wikipedia's need for donations." is exactly the same type of arrogance that leads to droves of contributors leaving. Do you even realize how that kind of statement guarantees that people will not contribute to the project? It is the same attitude of the admins, that they are the expert and even if 50 editors disagree, it doesn't matter as those 50 people don't has as much effect as themselves. That they care more than those 50 people combined.

      And yes, most USERS don't care, but that isn't the issue. The issue is the pool of potential contributors, those of us that have been involved with using and supporting free software for a couple decades and have the means to not donate millions, but our efforts combined IS millions. Saying it doesn't matter just proves that you have exactly what it takes to be a Wikipedia admin.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    36. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just put up the ads. They can be filtered.

    37. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by stms · · Score: 0

      I agree with you completely except for one point google is not throwing away money on wikimedia If wikimedia went down I (and hoards of other people) would have to find some other encyclopedia to use. It might not be so willing to let google index them. This is a serious investment by google in the form of a gift. As for ebay co-founder he probably loves and uses wikipedia a lot and just wanted to give for personal reasons. If I had more money I know I would give more.

    38. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pharmboy · · Score: 2

      You THINK you understand what I mean when I say "like a real business", as if that is a singular thing, but you do not. Not all businesses have "dictators", and most businesses are not run like the narrow minded version you have inside your head. It is painfully obvious that you have never owned or managed a business, or had a job within a quality organization.

      "Like a real business" doesn't imply a particular method, it implies a system of leadership with clear, tangible goals and accountability throughout the organization. There are many ways to fry that catfish. What makes them good or bad isn't the flow chart of power, it is how it is run day to day.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    39. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by eleuthero · · Score: 1

      I ran into problems with wikipedia during the recent elections in my state. Wikipedia was not my first stop in gathering information on candidates, but I did go there after forming some initial conclusions to see if the masses had noted anything I had missed in the governor's race. The incumbent surprisingly had, despite having worked in the state for years (and despite my having seen at least a couple of positive things in the news) not ever done anything good. The article was well sourced, but it was entirely negative. I will grant you that politics corrupts, but it seemed a bit off. When I got to the challenger's wikipedia page, I discovered that he had never done anything bad (or marginally negative even), only good. There are theoretically moderating folks involved in each area of wikipedia, so it was surprising that the pages (and their history for some time) were as they were. Others are noting that their edits are being rejected. I don't know much about this, but it would appear likely given this one example.

      All the challenger's efforts (or his supporters') to "fix" the wikipedia entries relevant to the election were for naught (I guess not many people take wikipedia seriously). The incumbent ended up winning despite apparently having a challenger with a staff dedicated to manipulating popular websites.

    40. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Totally agree. I can't remember what article it was, but I had tried editing something that I was very knowledgeable on and my edits were reversed by the article troll, which resulted in a pointless debate on the discussion page, the admin maintaining control of the article, and Jimmy Wales losing revenue.

      The only solution I've come up with is a wiki that allows multiple articles on the same subject, with usefulness being rated by a community through both votes and dollars, along with 'universes' that can approve articles for inclusion, thus if you want to read only articles in the Jimmy Wales universe, you can do so, or specifically avoid them.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    41. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      People generally do not pay for things they can get for free.

      Bullshit. I see people chugging bottled water all the time in the building I work in, even though there are water fountains. I see people buying boxes of matchbooks. I see people putting money in the collection plate at church. I see people putting money in Salvation Army buckets, and those folks get absolutely NOTHING back for their efforts, except the good feeling you get from helping someone.

      Sorry, pretty much everything you cited are things you cannot get for free.

      1. For Example: Bottled water != Fountain water - for a number of reasons, perception of purity, perception of sterility, and convienience of consumption.
      2. For Example: Donation to a charity buys the user the perception of improving the world in some way, you don't get to change the world for free.

      Those folks get exactly what they intended to get, and they consider the purchases proper value for the money, or else they make the purchases elsewhere, a new church, or a new chairty, for example.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    42. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Teancum · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Wikimedia Foundation isn't pissing people off? I take it you have never read much of the Wikimedia Foundation mailing list (sometimes called Foundation-l), where regularly there are people who do air issues and grievances... including pointed attacks against much of the leadership of the organization.

      Some people try to take the issues up the food chain, and on occasion some of those issues do get resolved, but there are some endemic issues that seem to be regularly put off from time to time. One of the issues that seems to still eat at my craw is how the majority of the Wikimedia Foundation is still under the direct control of Jimmy Wales, as he appointed those board members personally and put them into that position. There are "elected" members of the board who as a matter of practice do most of the real heavy lifting work, but they still hold a minority position on the main governing board.

      Jimmy Wales himself has sort of stirred the pot from time to time, most notably with his intervention into the governance of Wikiversity and the Wikimedia Commons.... both of which met with some extreme resistance from the respective communities where he was even "uninvited" due to his meddling and forced him to essentially lose his "founder's flag" as a matter of principle with his account. Wikiversity is still a fractured mess, and the Wikimedia Commons community (those who do most of the regular maintenance of that resource) has all but ignored the advise of Jimmy Wales... particularly as it applies to "obscene images".

      There are indeed some reasons why there is some complaints about the governance of the Wikimedia projects, and some of it well founded. Perhaps the most current issue is mainly a complaint that the funds are somehow being managed inappropriately. The Foundation headquarters was moved from St. Petersberg, Florida to San Francisco. Perhaps there may have been some merit to that move for several reasons, but it certainly has ended up costing the Foundation much more to hire and keep support staff through financial incentives. Also, the number of staff members has grown considerable over the past couple of years, and there is also some questioning what exactly they are doing other than becoming a bloated bureaucracy of their own which is mainly busy trying to justify their jobs to donors. Most of the new jobs have little to do with the infrastructure of the Wikimedia projects (running the server farm, maintaining the network backbone connection, providing professional software development to the development of the MediaWiki software, etc.) but rather more to "public outreach" efforts or "community relations" issues. In other words, what exactly are those people doing that are spending the donations to the Wikimedia Foundation? In some cases they are duplicating volunteer positions, and those volunteers still exist.

      If any of this is new, I hope you are somewhat enlightened. There are some complaints, and for me well founded complaints too. Some of the administrators do get rough from time to time when dealing with new contributors to Wikipedia and the other projects too. An "admin" really is just a volunteer position, which also brings in the problems with volunteer leadership and how to keep that under control. There really isn't an effective way to reign in admins unless they are being blatantly abusive, so for the most part the process to become an admin is usually set at a pretty high bar to begin with. Most of the time what happens when somebody gets upset with Wikipedia is that those new contributors usually have a different viewpoint about what Wikipedia is really all about, and if those new contributions go "out of scope" for what a typical administrator is looking for there are usually conflicts with those new contributors and the admins. Some admins are very blunt about the issues too and don't do a very good job of working with these new contributors either.... which is also why some people occasionally get a bad first impression about Wikipedia. Enough of those with a bad first impression exist where it is a negative factor for new contributors as well.

    43. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      [citation needed] ;-P

      Seriously, though, that's exactly the same story I keep hearing over and over from everyone who isn't on "the in" with Wikipedia. Despite its marketing, it is -not- an encyclopedia for 'the masses', it's an encyclopedia for a few handsfull of obsessives who carve out their own little fiefs under the feudal Lord of Wales.

      The 'guidelines' are as much a coded language as scientology corpspeak. It's a whole different civilization in there...

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    44. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > But I'd already given up editing wikipedia; it makes no sense to take the effort to contribute, only to have your easily fact-verified contributions discarded.

      That's also why I stopped contributing. I'd put considerable effort into a few things, only to have some petty fiefdom dictator revert them. My changes were accurate and verifiable.

      The whole problem with wikipedia is the petty dictator nature of it and all the behind the scenes politics. That's ruined the whole concept of a "user created" encyclopedia. It isn't a meritocracy at all.

    45. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention people that have an axe to grind against certain topics and keep fast-deleting those (eg, just about everything that can be called "fan-cruft" or doesn't have 100,000 google hits.)

    46. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Thomasje · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Criticism of famous / historical figures has no place in an encyclopedia in the first place; they are supposed to be repositories of information, not opinion. I spent countless hours with major encyclopedias when I was a kid, and whenever I see criticism or praise of people in Wikipedia, it feels jarring and out of place. I don't consider it a problem, though, I just skip over those sections.

      What keeps me coming back to Wikipedia is because it is actually truly excellent as an encyclopedia. Whenever I'm looking for something about physics, chemistry, mathematics, biology, geography, history, etc. etc. etc., I find what I'm looking for and I find it quickly. The edit wars that so many people seem to have such huge stakes in tend not to affect articles that disseminate actual information, and those are the only ones I'm interested in; those are the only ones that belong there. The fact that lots of other people use Wikipedia as their personal political soapbox or Geocities page is a very minor annoyance, and maybe the way Wikipedia deals with those annoyances is heavy-handed and/or misguided sometimes, but it takes little to nothing away from its true utility. Certainly not enough to stop me from donating $100 a year.

    47. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Fnkmaster · · Score: 1

      Just throwing in a quick shoutout to a startup (not mine, no financial interest therein) that is commercial but takes a different approach to Wikipedia, and is nerdy enough to appeal to the Slashdot audience.

      Skeptive is all about framing hotly debated issues and "crowd-sourcing" (I know, I know, buzzwordy, but it works) pro and con points to help people assess truth on the internet.

      It's complementary to a Wikipedia approach - whereas Wikipedia articles present "consensus" that is edited by people who often protect their little information domains like private fiefdoms, and their approach often leads to contested points or simply things that an editor disagrees with getting reverted or wiped out very quickly, Skeptive encourages people to submit points on both sides of a debated topic and has some cool mechanisms to help you assess the relative balance of information on both sides of a debate.

    48. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by blue+trane · · Score: 2

      Disagree. When you get ads, you'll get the equivalent of the old "blinking text" - they'll make it as distracting as possible, so that for example if your mouse happens to be over a certain region an ad will expand in an extremely obtrusive manner. How many times has that precise behavior in the WoW ads that were running above the Slashdot logo caused me annoyance in the past few weeks? I for one prefer the begging on wikipedia. Begging is very cool, Jainism has built an entire religion around it.

    49. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, no you are wrong.

      Are you "like" 14? "Um"?

    50. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I donated to Wikipedia before they decreased the font size from normal to tiny. This was important to me, so now they can forget about donations.

    51. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MokuMokuRyoushi · · Score: 1

      Okay. I see what's wrong with Wales' approach to getting funding. A lot of people find begging annoying, ads are the Way of the Internet, and it's just not working, sadly. But I honestly respect the guy for it. Wikipedia has always been ad-free, and was meant to stay that way. The founders wanted to make a clean site where everyone could come to contribute and take information freely. Right now, he's eating a big ol' slice of Humble Pie trying to keep it that way. So I say, regardless of his doomed support plan, he deserves a lot of credit for fighting for it.

      --
      Humans are terrible replicators of Godly things.
    52. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they play all elitist putting 'nofollow' links and now want my support?

      yes they do that to 'resolve spam problem'

      meh, they lived and thrived on being referred by everyone and now they're not giving back the referring favor, if they don't want to play by the web rules allowing for interconnected content and such they should die the relevancy death they so hardly try to avoid.

    53. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by hawguy · · Score: 1

      I didn't say "tens of thousands", I said "scores" because you said "scores"...perhaps that word does not mean what you think it means. One score is "20". I suppose when you said "scores" you meant "500 scores", but that's would not be typical usage. Most people wouldn't say "hundreds of editors" if they really meant 10,000. I think most people would assume "scores" would mean 100 at the most.

      In any case, even if there are 10,000 editors disenfranchised by Wikipedia's management and each was willing to donate $100, that only gives Wikipedia a million dollars.

      And yes, most USERS don't care, but that isn't the issue.

      I thought that was exactly the issue - rather than trying to extract $500 from 10,000 editors (who are already donating their time), Wikipedia can go after 400 million users to donate a much smaller amount. Such a small amount per user is needed that it could easily be made up by running banner ads. And I thought that was what we're talking about in this Should Wikipedia Just Accept Ads Already article.

    54. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MokuMokuRyoushi · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, they aren't always there(though it seems like it now). I'm not sure it's even about that though. Right now, it looks like Jimmy is struggling to keep the original dream of an ad-free information depot alive. It's against crushing odds, and chances are he'll fail, but this is a fight for pride.

      --
      Humans are terrible replicators of Godly things.
    55. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      That sounds kind of interesting, actually--perhaps you could get a bit more granular and have the option available to view different sections of longer articles within different perspectives. Cultivating competition within the site might cause even more improvement.

      Newsletter, etc.

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    56. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by scribble73 · · Score: 1

      Most of us are familiar with the for-profit Corporation legal model. When we say, "run like a business," this is usually what we are referencing. The "not-for-profit" corporate model also works, and might work in this case, too. NPR is probably not an ideal example, but the St. Petersburg Times probably is a better example. They run a daily newspaper that runs on advertising but their journalists are isolated from their executives and advertisers, and the 'not-for-profit' charter protects them from the takeovers that have destroyed so many other daily newspaper compeditors over the last twenty years. I think Wikipedia could probably adapt that 'not-for-profit' model successfully, and do away with their hot and cold running begathon forever. sc

    57. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by dargaud · · Score: 1

      My contributions to wikipedia are really minor, so all I know of the 'problem' is what I've read on slashdot and other sites. Shouldn't it be enough to set up a 'complaint box' with people on the other side checking the work of editors and other 'managers' ?

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    58. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you suggesting that Barack Obama is a more controversial person than Jesus Christ?

    59. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, hold on a minute... The info about a bleeding edge medical technology made it into the encyclopedia only 4 years after introduction? This is freaking impressive, and all thanks to you. Stop whining and fight the revert ninjas with better sourcing and citing.

    60. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      Hello Yahoo, is that you?

    61. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by geekoid · · Score: 1

      exceptions? no buy and large people Do pay for things they could otherwise get for free.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    62. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by moonbender · · Score: 1

      I agree, though abolishing deletionism will create certain challenges, e.g. without notability criteria you would end up with hundreds of biographical articles of non-notable persons, making it difficult for users of the encyclopedia to find the (notable) person they're looking for. It'd also lead to a huge number of articles that are hardly edited, and many more vandalized pages. E.g. an article about me would instantly be deleted on account of notability (lack thereof), and so it's hard to spread misinformation about me that way. If it isn't deleted, somebody has to watch out for (even subtle) misinformation. Dealing with BLPs is hard enough as it is. I guess those are all classic deletionist arguments, sorry about that.

      At the very least, you'd need to emphasize certain rules about verifiability and the sources of verifiable information. For instance, there certainly should not be an article about your (hypothetical) new-born niece even though she exists (you know, hypothetically), because there is probably no publicly verifiable information about her. And I'm not sure a mere entry in a phone book or on a personal or even a university course list should be a "good enough" source for verifiable information, either. You might end up with notability criteria for primary sources, which I think would be an improvement.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    63. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by QuantumBeep · · Score: 1

      Christ, no.

    64. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I mentioned one in a previous comment. In that case, it's likely that one of the IOL manufacturers that is competing with did re-edits, since the new kind I got actually makes all the others obsolete. When the patent on it runs out, it will likely be the only kind of IOL on the market.

      This happened three years after the FDA approved these devices.

    65. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes. The "cite better sources" argument.

      So how many and what quality of "sources" need to be cited nowadays? What's the magic "anti-ninja" number?

      --
      In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
      A stately pleasure dome decree
    66. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by khallow · · Score: 1

      A thing to keep in mind here is that nobody is complaining because something really important has been left out. It's rather relatively ephemeral things, significant but fail to make it into traditional media, which happens to be the criteria for notability.

      A good example are subjects that solely have an internet presence, for example, blogs, web comics, and internet memes and sociology phenonena. They're not terribly important in general, but the issue is that something can be significant, but not be remarked on in traditional media and hence, not notable by Wikipedia standards. So the complaint is something like "My favorite blog/web comic/etc isn't on Wikipedia, but a list of catgirls is."

      As indicated above, the disturbing thing is that fairly unimportant stuff can make it into Wikipedia. For example, I have been interviewed for a New York Times story on betting markets and I have published several math physics papers in hard cover journals. With such a presence, I can qualify as notable should I ever feel the desire to primp my ego publicly on Wikipedia. OTOH, there are people who've made long contributions to culture or internet discourse, who wouldn't, merely because they haven't appeared in a newspaper.

      It's also worth noting that perhaps my most notable (yet not notable by Wikipedia standards) effort to date is a blog post (that happened to be cited in the betting market literature a few times).

      I think Wikipedia's notability standard is flawed at the edges. It's something of a lottery to get enough press attention that you qualify for inclusion into Wikipedia. What I think offends people is the harshness with which articles that fail get treated.

    67. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Seumas · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight. You can copy the entire contents of wikipedia and use it for anything you can conceive of. Even commercial. For absolutely free. But if I want to contribute by editing some pages or maybe just look up the distance from Earth to Saturn, I have to be blasted with ads? Can't there be at least one place on the fucking planet that someone isn't trying to make a buck selling me Viagra or Pepsi? I ran a community site with about a hundred thousand members for over a decade and I stuck by my principals not to ever have ads or charge a dime, even though it sure would have helped with the expense of it all (not to mention the amount of my life that I gave away to the project). But I couldn't stand the thought of trying to monetize every fucking corner of the world. So, I didn't.

      Where are all these expenses for Wikipedia? (Yes, I'm sure there's a schedule somewhere with it laid out, but I didn't see it in the article or linked from it). So they need at *least* $11,000,000 per year? For what? I understand they use a lot of bandwidth, but they're mostly just text pages. What do they need besides hardware, bandwidth, and a few guys to maintain the hardware and website? Maybe a lawyer on retainer. It sounds to me like there's a lot of people possibly making a living at this. There are plenty of well known charities out there where the top levels of the charity make six or even seven figure salaries. And there are plenty of startups that get millions of dollars in venture capital when all they really need is two servers at a colo and a sysadmin to keep the boxes running. Instead, they hire 50 guys, get a bunch of aeron chairs, and lease some flashy office space.

      If I had to choose between ads or seeing Wale's face on a plea for donations, I'd choose Wales. At least he isn't trying to sell me shit, other than supporting the website I'm directly using. Then again, I'm sure when Siemen's and Monsanto and McDonald's run massive ad campaigns on the site, there's absolutely zero chance that articles about those companies would ever be altered in any way whatsoever and everything would continue to be on the up-and-up, just as they always have been for the execs/chairs on Wikipedia all these years (d'oh . . . well, except for those incidents where that wasn't the case as we've seen reported every now and then).

      I guess its time that we face it. There is NOTHING on this planet that is worth PAYING for and there is NOTHING on this planet worth doing if you can't PLASTER IT WITH ADVERTISING. Hell, I think it's time someone started sponsoring every trip I take to the rest room.

    68. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Seumas · · Score: 2

      I always found it amusing that every single fucking pokemon character gets their own long wikipedia article, while most real human beings of some reasonable note are flagged and deleted as "not notable", just because they're regional or otherwise not someone that you've seen in People Magazine.

      I edited for awhile, Got tired of the navel-gazing bullshit. Quit. I hit wikipedia up now and then to search for something, but not so often.

    69. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Seumas · · Score: 1

      I think it's pretty fair to compare Wikipedia to the Red Cross. Both are charitable organizations that do considerable fundraising and have highly questioning financial practices that cause sensible people to pause and reconsider before throwing their money into the charitable pot of either organization. I donated a good chunk awhile back and have not done so again in at least a couple years, due to my lack of confidence in the integrity and forthrightness of the foundation.

    70. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe there's a good reason why you could write a more in-depth article (which might also be critical of the subject at hand along the way) about Ghandi or Jesus Christ: They are both dead. In the case of Christ it's not even sure that he can be considered a historical person. Both of them have some sort of myth (and many misconceptions) connected to them and there has been a lot of research by all kinds of people. It's not the ammount of criticism an article cites (if you cannot give a good source that can be checked by the reader for the criticism it does not belong in an article), it's how it deals with the subject as a whole. Scholarly work is not first and foremost about being critical of something (and least of all about personal opinions by some "random guy" contributing to Wikipedia). If by what you say you mean that Wikipedia does not have high enough a standard than I agree with you for the most part. But citing those three articles whose subjects are hardly comparable on a number of grounds is just as bad as some of the strange things you find in Wikipedia articles or the lack of citations.

    71. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the flip side, I've seen articles that *used* to be great resources, e.g., lots of detailed information, images, etc. which have been completely "dumbed down", stripped of good chunks of information. I think its the soundbyte generation at work, it seems more and more articles are being condensed (I guess folks today don't like to scroll or something).

      Wikipedia is most certainly not the resource it used to be.

    72. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by chdig · · Score: 2

      Like many mods have suggested, this is an "interesting" idea. It's also completely without any reference and seems to be a serious accusation. Wales' appeal states that wikipedia does need the money for its website, while you say they're lying, and that it's just a siphon.

      Your comments are stated as facts, but you give a note at the bottom suggesting it's just opinion.

      I'm suggesting that until you give some valid reference that the money is going to sister projects, that your post is full of FUD and not much else.

    73. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your, "I won't donate to you because you present a world view that I cannot accept because of the truthiness of a statement made by my favorite [rightwing/leftwing] editorial [journal/tv program]" seems pretty shallow. Statements that have these qualities may work well on Fox News and MSNBC, but here in the real world your critisizms come off as political pandering. You complain about criticism of Obama, but having the ability to contribute you don't seem to indicate that you added any criticism. You link the misrepresentations made by the national review (well known as an editorial journal for Republicans) are the reason they're running out of money. The fact is, when you're non-profit, you occasionally need to go on beg-a-thons. This is normal. Both PBS and NPR do the same thing several times per year. IMO, Wikipedia would be well served to go on several spread-out beg-a-thos throughout the year rather than just one, but that's beside the point.

      In conclusion, you should make your decision to donate because you find the articles written by wikipedia informative and useful. Don't not donate because statements that don't match untested, unproven or patently false hypotheses appear within, be you liberal, conservative or brain washed by 24 hour news channels.

    74. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fan cruft needs to go away. Wikia maintains specialized wikis for just that type of information. There doesn't need to be an encyclopaedic article written about each and every episode of Jem and the Holograms.

    75. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by jeanph01 · · Score: 1

      Same story for me... discarded edits should at least be justified. This is Wikipedia where everybody can contribute, not Encyclopedia Britannica

    76. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by twistedsymphony · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not even politics but a holier than thou attitude... I own and operate collectorsedition.org it's basically a database of collector's edition video games. A vast majority of the games in the database I bought new, and have taken detailed photographs of the contents and details. then the relevant data is added to the database along with the photos and accompanying descriptions.

      Looking though Wikipedia I'd notice some descriptions of the CEs for certain games would be wrong, and/or not sourced, I probably made a dozen small edits one day correcting minor errors and adding my database as a source. All of the edits were denied because my site was deemed an "unreliable source".

      I don't know, when a description on Wikipedia is unsourced and says "included a soudtrack CD with 5 tracks" and I change it to read "12" tracks and site a source that has a detailed description as well as a photograph of the liner notes showing 12 tracks... I'm not quite sure how much more reliable they're looking to get.

      Another instance is they had some incorrect technical specs listed for the Nissan 240sx, I own two of these cars and know quite a bit about them. I changed the uncited text and and cited a digital copy of the original Nissan Sales brochure that Nissan themselves were hosting online... again my edits were denied with no reason given.

      I'd happy contribute time, knowledge, and money on a regular basis, but they've made it pretty clear that they don't want my help, and based on what I've seen on the topics I am already knowledgeable about, I've since stopped using them as a source of information altogether.

    77. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      So define guidelines for adverts, like no scripting, no flash, no altering of users' windows, no expanding beyond designated advertising space, no sound, etc. Accept only reputable advertisers, agree to contracts, and if anything is violated, get damages or reserve the right to boot an advertiser with no warning. I visit many about.com pages, which carry adverts, and they never get in the way. I barely notice them. Not impossible for wikipedia to have the same.

    78. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Great point. I remember creating an article on the producer of "The Dave Ramsey Show" after they won an award for best talk show. It is on 500 radio stations as well, so you think the producer would be notable.

      No, fast-delete. Not notable. They would rather than their Pokemon characters and have a big red "Blake Thompson" link on the DR show page. I don't get it.

      Note, I don't listen to the show often at all, and don't know the producer. I heard they won an award, and he accepted it. I was curious if he was a producer for other shows or what his history was. When I saw he didn't have page, I did some research and created the page. I figured if I was curious, others would be too.

      That is the way it is supposed to work, so I thought.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    79. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The personal appeal didn't bug me But that "I'm too cool to shave" look did. If you want money, maybe get a better picture that doesn't scare people away. Maybe getting a good photographer is hard when you don't have any donations?

    80. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Bottled water != Fountain water - for a number of reasons, perception of purity, perception of sterility, and convienience of consumption.

      In many places bottled water IS better than the drinking fountain, but the city water here is excellent. "Perception of purity" might have worked once, but not with anyone who actually watches or reads the news; lots of bottled water comes straight from somebody's tap.

      And you didn't explain matches.

      Donation to a charity buys the user the perception of improving the world in some way

      Which is why people would happily donate to wikipedia. Note that if I had to buy a subscription to look stuff up I woudn't, but that's a different thing entirely.

    81. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by dolphinlover · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is not collecting money for Wikipedia. Wikipedia has enough money. Wikimedia is collecting money to build up Wikipedia's sister projects...

      "It's absolutely not clear to me (and I don't think anyone) that a focused investment in, say, textbook development is actually going to result in predictable payoff in a transformatively larger number of sustainable content contributors. That doesn't mean that there isn't a potential for such an investment to be successful, and it doesn't mean that it's not a risk worth taking." -- Erik Moeller, Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

      http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/foundation-l/2010-October/061608.html

    82. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for trying to contribute. I think a lot of us here have had similar experiences. If only 'editing Wikipedia' looked good on a resume. We should start calling it the second-best information source---the best being anything other than wikipedia. In any case, you've made your mark here, and we highly respect your contributions to this community. Here's to hoping you continue to spout wisdom, erudition, and the occasional angry rant for many more years to come.

    83. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by geniice · · Score: 1

      The overwelming majority of pokemon don't have articles.

    84. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Moryath · · Score: 1

      No kidding.

      Wikipedia tried to hush up scandal after scandal after scandal. The Durova "hit-list" scandal. The Essjay scandal. The "Jimmy was cleansing his girlfriend's wikipedia page" scandal. The "Jimmy was embezzling money" scandal. The Wikia/Wikimedia financial embezzlement scandal. "Sam Blacketer", Sockpuppet Admin. Wikipedia Scanner's revealed abuses. The Siegenthaler scandal. Gary Weiss as "Mantanmoreland" and Wikipedia administrators' refusals to investigate and accept evidence on the problem.

      The ongoing behavior of the harassing, abusive assholes who call themselves "administrators" on Wikipedia and operate in ways that have been well documented, over and over again.

      Why don't people donate to Wikipedia? Let's face it, if Wikipedia deserved it - if it were a worthwhile institution - they wouldn't be nearly having this much trouble. But they don't deserve it, so people don't donate. It's really that simple.

    85. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God damn, you seriously are a moron. Let me iterate your transgressions:

      1) You were offended by an A/C.
      2) Making a sarcastic joke.
      3) You replied with an obvious partial understanding of the real world.
      4) While you were trying to sound smart.

      Posting A/C for such obvious reasons that you would have to be less intelligent then the parent.

    86. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Jenkins112 · · Score: 0

      This is why I don't donate to wikipedia.. The service is out of control and infringing on search results. We know wikipedia is a searchable public knowledge source. Google does not need to link me to them, I'd use the wikipedia search vs. google if I wanted knowledge results. :p Google should buy Wikipedia and then add that as a "search type" like news/images/etc. with the service still functioning the same as it always did. Problem solved, less personal appeals, better search results, everyone's happy.

    87. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      For Example: Donation to a charity buys the user the perception of improving the world in some way,

      Funny, that's EXACTLY what we're talking about. People can use Wikipedia for FREE, but they can contribute and get the perception that they're helping maintain this resource for all to use.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    88. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by drb226 · · Score: 1

      A week later the edit was gone. Re-edited, same thing.

      Did you check the edit summaries? There is a history of diffs that documents exactly when your content was deleted, and by whom. Wikipedia would never work if a bunch of people just throw information into the pot and then leave. The problem is, though, that Wikipedia kind of advertises itself as if it worked that way.

      To really change anything at Wikipedia, you need to stick around for a bit and defend your contributions with good sources and sound logic.

      But I just want to throw in my 2c and not think about it any more! It's voluntary so you should be happy that I at least did that! I'm right and if you're smart then you should see that because my logic (which I haven't taken the time to explain to you) is infallible!

      If that's you, then do you really think your 2c are really worth even 2c? Especially on popular articles, there has been a lot of thought that went into making them; the edit that took you 20 seconds to dream up was probably thought of already. If you really do have infallible logic, then lay it out on the talk pages, if necessary.

      The accommodating lens was added to the article. Obviously, someone from Wikpedia had seen my comment.

      Basically, unless you are willing to become "someone from Wikpedia", you're not likely to make a lasting dent, and will instead rely on the whims of those who actually commit some time to the process.

    89. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Moryath · · Score: 1

      Their goal is $16M.

      They are supposedly at $9.6M.

      That means they are $6.4M shy. Assuming an average donation of $100, they have pissed off 640,000 people who are not bothering to donate. Assuming an average donation of $50, double that number. They claim to have "400 Million Users."

      They also refuse to take donations of less than $20. That's a pissy mark of hubris right there. Especially considering the "if each of our 400 million users just donated $1" bit from King Jimmy The Embezzler's shilling.

    90. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      What keeps me coming back to Wikipedia is because it is actually truly excellent as an encyclopedia. Whenever I'm looking for something about physics, chemistry, mathematics, biology, geography, history, etc. etc. etc., I find what I'm looking for and I find it quickly.

      I can think of half a dozen articles that disseminate actual information - yet are incomplete, misleading/slanted, out-of-context copy pasta from other sources (usually US or state government since it's copyright free), etc... etc... Being able to find information quickly isn't the same thing as being able to find quality information quickly. (And if you aren't familiar with the field, you can't tell which is which just from it 'looking excellent'.)
       
      Not to mention that if you think articles that concentrate on 'actual information' are unaffected by edit wars, political soapboxes, etc... you're seriously deluding yourself.

    91. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I started very hopeful in 2005 and joined an alt language now grown to 5 times its then-modest article totals.

      My edits were OK until I discovered one or two brand new articles of mine got deleted --not just emptied, I mean the article just disappears without trace. Plenty of other people were creating new articles similar to mine, so I stopped wasting my time gathering, proofing and formatting new articles in both languages.

      In me, they've lost one more cloner-translator, and they can't afford to let us go. Find any non-front-page, non-political article and open the link to your favorite alt language on the left side --note how lots of topics have no translations at all, or have ridiculously small stubs because nobody is helping just translate content that is easily available in English. I'm not talking geek topics or region-centric trivia pages.

      Unless you place either micro-contributions, or don't care about nukers of new pages and page-mergers, you should avoid serious contributions taking more than 5 minutes.

    92. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by scribblej · · Score: 1

      The fact that you've seen the begging means that despite your disagreement with how it's operated, you still find it a valuable and useful service.

      You're just making excuses to not support a service I'd bet a dollar you use /every single day./

      For the record, I think they're a bunch of dicks, too, but they're dicks doing something with an /actual value,/ not just value invented by marketing people and mindless masses.

    93. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've started blocking those appeal banners on Wikipedia. The way I see it, you are correct about the admin abuse but also I already "pay" Wikipedia by donating my time to fix and add articles. If they want to put ads up, fine, they'll just get blocked like all other ads. If they die off, there are other encyclopedias that I can turn to, or my offline version of Wikipedia or just wait until someone else leaps in to fill their place (hopefully with a better way of running things).

    94. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by RajivSLK · · Score: 1

      Well the specific reason I don't donate has to do with Wikipedia editors.

      I run a software company that has been around for 10+ years and we have over 100,000 people using our products. We offer hosted forums, blogs and other software. A lot of our competitors have wikipedia entries about their companies and their blog and forum software (detailing things like launch date, features, version history, noted users etc). Many of these competitors are much smaller and have fewer users than we do. Long story short when we try to create a wikipedia entry it immediately gets deleted by a zealot admin. Why would I donate to a foundation that promotes our competitors and doesn't allow us the same?

    95. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by scribblej · · Score: 1

      I'm not making any claims, I'm just asking honestly - how do you know the dropoff in editing isn't due to Wikipedia now being so complete? Remember back in the old days when anything you'd search for on Wikipedia would have a half-written article or be missing completely? I can't remember the last time I couldn't find a thing on Wikipedia.

    96. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Unequivocal · · Score: 2

      Double plus. I agree. I find a lot of complaints around WP are about someone's inability to insert something they value but which isn't widely known or reported in the media.

      There are good counter-examples where legitimate info is rejected for "bad" reasons of various kinds.

      But as a core reference work, WP is better than anything else I've ever used. The effort to value ratio is just excellent.

      I've had some run-in's with obnoxious editors messing with my stuff or personally insulting me, but I've also had lots of great cooperation and support in improving articles I've written or edited.

    97. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 1

      > and few have a motivating factor to create independent
      > pages or sites on the topics anymore

      That doesn't seem to have stopped anyone. Far from it, now there's pages who's entire existence is debunking the "mainstream view" on the wiki.

      Another example of a game that is not zero-summed.

    98. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Any idea how the $10m looks in relation to years past?

      $10m is a lot of bucks with seemingly a need for a handful of people. When I read they have 30 on staff I have trouble comprehending that number. Seems like a dozen would be more than ample to address day to day operations, plus spurious subject matter experts to help prune here and there from time to time.

      Does anyone have any idea how and on what they are spending their money? Perhaps I'm being nieve, but it would seem like something in the neighborhood of $4m-6m/yr would cover quit a bit (salaries, facilities, bandwidth, infrastructure, and expansion), including some okay, but not great, executive salaries on the top. And now at the $10m mark things are getting critical?

      Seriously, anyone have any idea what their accounting looks like?

    99. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Their annual reports are here:

      http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Annual_Report

      Last year they spent about 45% of their budget on bandwidth, equipment and salaries (including contractors).

    100. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't agree with...
      >Criticism of famous / historical figures has no place in an encyclopedia in the first place; they are supposed to be repositories of information, not opinion.

      1) Opinions are everywhere. Selecting some facts and omitting others creates a perception much different than reality
      2) interpretation of "facts" sometimes helps explore the reasoning behind such facts...just like in Math you document "theories", why not have opinions on people? The Big Bang is a theory and you don't just dump the facts, but explains what it probably means, how different version of the theory apply and how there are opposing theories for explaining the same phenomena. Making sure theories are marked as such is necesary, just as when talking about science, so how to do it is more important that trying to ban them.
      3) Opposing views enable a reader to understand different positions about a subject, something as important as understanding a proposed theory. The reader should be aware of what he's reading is opinion/theories there. And the people vocing their opinions can do so there, and avoid confusing facts with opinions (or messing up articles).

    101. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you take advertising, you become beholden to the advertisers. Better to keep it free of as many moneyed interests as possible!

    102. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Teancum · · Score: 1

      The drop off happened rather suddenly, with a specific month and year that can be noted. I think it is about October 2007 as the point where Wikipedia stopped growing. Wikipedia has been able to maintain itself since but it hasn't been collecting more editors and contributors than it has been losing.

      Until that point, the growth of Wikipedia was geometric with a definite upward slope in terms of new contributors. Oh, there have also been seasonal fluctuations, but those seasonal fluctuations have always stayed at about the same levels since too. If you look at various sorts of statistical graphing of Wikipedia activity, it all seems to hit that wall about the same time.

      I've tried to identify what might have been the deciding factor as a magical event for that time period. Some of it might have been that it is now harder to find new subjects for Wikipedia, but for it it hit a certain month as a dropoff point doesn't seem to explain that... you would think it would be more asymptopical to a certain maximum and possibly a general decline in the number of new articles created and accepted. Instead, what you find is more of a steady rate of growth with roughly the same number of new articles being created and the number of edits staying roughly stable, but not increasing or decreasing.

      Basically I don't think it is for a lack of things to write about, the issue is that editors aren't showing up to edit Wikipedia anymore in large numbers.

      A good argument that has been made is that about that time Wikipedia participation leveled off (October 2007) is about when Facebook went live as well as Twitter and a number of other "social media" websites that are sucking the life out of places like Wikipedia that were once upon a time the hot spot for on-line socializing. Wikipedia also instituted a number of interesting policy changes at the same time too, and it was about that same time that the Wikimedia foundation got much more formal... and IMHO much more distant from the ordinary contributors too.

      I'm sure all of those factors have played a role and perhaps some other things I haven't considered. I do on occasion find topics that haven't been described on Wikipedia, and certainly several that I think are poorly described, but then again I am a regular contributor to Wikipedia as well and have written a few articles myself over the years. It is still something to think about. I do think that some changes could happen to Wikipedia that could encourage some additional growth that isn't happening right now.

    103. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Holy Crap ... thats a lot of characters.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pok%C3%A9mon_characters

      I'm more pissed of at Wikipoodia for the "No Trivia Section" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Handling_trivia -- UHM, HELLO, anything based on fictional is ALL Trivia. Sometimes it nice to spot all the "easter eggs" of Trivia!

    104. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > Bullshit.

      Exactly. Two counter-examples to help prove your point ...

      a) Bit Torrent.
      b) Ever been to a Tanning Saloon? Why pay for sunlight / radiation when you can get it for free ...
      c) We don't "have" to pay for free electricity (via solar), yet there is a huge demand to pay for electricity.

    105. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      And others that have just slowly eroded. For example, there used to be a side bar on all mobile telephone protocol articles, showing them all in them, grouped by generation, so you could easily see where the one you were reading about fitted in with the rest. This disappeared about a year ago. No idea why.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    106. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Confusador · · Score: 1

      Came here with the intention to post this, and lo, I am not alone. It bears repeating:

      I (would) support Wikipedia. I do not support the rest of Wikimedia.

      Without being able to direct my contribution, they get nothing. And really, if they can't pay their hosting costs with $10M, I'm either seriously underestimating either the cost of bandwidth or the amount of their traffic.

    107. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      Based on comments provided elsewhere, it seems I'm not the only one who seems to smell questionable spending is at the root of their cash crunch.

      I just looked. I'm not sure where you got your number, but they spent 13% on bandwidth. They spent 49% of their budget on management, finance, legal, and fund raising. Equipment, staff and bandwidth is 45% of their budget; of which bandwidth is only 13%.

      A breakout says they're hosting (I assuming that's colo and bandwidth) works out to be $822,000. Salaries and wages are $2.3m. So basically, assuming all employees are actually required, which seems highly doubtful, are bare nut is roughly $3m/yr. Hell, even without question, their total expenses are $5m. So as I said, the $4m-$6m seems more than ample to allow for various overhead and expansion. Which begs the question, how the fuck is $10m considered critical and unless he needs a new jet and sports car?

      Based on their own numbers, it sounds like at the $10m mark, unless they've been extremely abusive of their funds, they have more than enough for the next two years without raising another dime. Critical? My ass.

    108. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Google adsense makes text ads very unintrusive. It's the choice of the person putting the ad online, nothing else.

    109. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If that's you, then do you really think your 2c are really worth even 2c? Especially on popular articles, there has been a lot of thought that went into making them; the edit that took you 20 seconds to dream up was probably thought of already.

      Did you read my comment? It only took a minute to add the content, yes, but it was about a revolutionarily addition to the old fashioned IOLs. It was FDA approved three years before I added it. Sure, somebody may have dreamed it up first, and likely did. I wouldn't doubt that a hundred people added the accomodating lens (the new one) before I did, only to have THEIR edits deleted before mine was.

      Basically, unless you are willing to become "someone from Wikpedia", you're not likely to make a lasting dent

      Well, I'm not. I saw a needed edit, edited, and had the edit deleted. I've got better things to do than play office politics with a bunch of strangers; I get enough of that at work.

      It's like throwing a dollar in the Salvation Army bucket and seeing the bucket guy fish my dollar out and throw it on the ground.

    110. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by grumbel · · Score: 1

      Ummmm. No. This has virtually nothing to do with donations.

      A large part of Wikipedias issue come from its crappy outdated user interface, following discussions for example is virtually impossible, tracking down page deletions is a complete mess, looking at deleted pages is still impossible and so on. All of that makes Wikipedia completly inaccessible for all but the most extreme inner circle. And all of those are completly the fault of the management and fixable by proper use of the money.

      Human nature also comes into play, but it is the broken system that encourages bad behavior and frequently punished good intentions.

    111. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Moryath · · Score: 2

      Back when Jimbo's former right-hand man, Danny Wool, got the boot, he started letting slip how fast-and-loose King Jimmy The Embezzler really plays with Wikipedia finances.

      Yeah. Wikipedia doesn't need money. They just need to jettison dead weight like Mad King Jimmy.

    112. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by skarphace · · Score: 1

      The personal appeal didn't bug me But that "I'm too cool to shave" look did. If you want money, maybe get a better picture that doesn't scare people away. Maybe getting a good photographer is hard when you don't have any donations?

      If you're scared of people with beards, how can you exist with all the neckbeards on /.? You must constantly fear for you life.

      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    113. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by nbauman · · Score: 1

      I just looked at that IOL page, because a friend was getting cataract surgery and asked me about it. I knew a lot about IOLs 10 years ago, but I wanted an update.

      I agree, it looked like they pasted together the patient information brochures of a collection of IOL manufacturers, and ophthalmologists' web sites.

      Interestingly, the cataract surgery page was much better. It wasn't until they got into specific brands that they got into trouble.

      I don't think the manufacturers were touting their own lenses themselves, because they're highly regulated, there's a good chance they would get caught, and there are potential regulatory problems. But it does look like there are some WP editors who are very enthusiastic about certain brands.

      I do know that investors in some of those companies create pages touting their latest buy.

      In general, the medical pages are pretty good. There are lots of doctors, medical students, graduate students and PhDs on WP. If I get a good page half the time, I'm satisfied.

    114. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by pookemon · · Score: 1

      He could also spend less on fancy images of himself as a way of begging for money. Not that I care - I get my information from Fox News...

      --
      dnuof eruc rof aixelsid
    115. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      You ever try that? I did...I got banned. I must be some super subversive or something. Hell it wasn't even an issue on a hot button topic or anything, just a simple edit over a TV show. The site said "the story and character is thus" and I pointed out that BOTH the director AND the writer did NOT want it to be thus, but it was changed by executive meddling by the network. i then linked to BOTH the blogs of the writer and the director, as well as cited where on the DVD box set you could find the director's commentary where both were pointing out the executive meddling in the last years of the series run, including the one I pointed out. It lasted a whole 12 hours before being deleted, and when I asked why I got told the matter was closed. I asked what more was required besides the Director AND the writer as far as citations, I got banned.

      There are quite a few of us that liked the IDEA of Wikipedia, but found the actual site is nothing but a bunch of basement dwellers on a serious power trip. Now I wouldn't use that site for anything more exciting than info on what the atomic weight of lead is or what wires need to be switched to make a crossover cable. Anything else will most likely be guarded by a wiki-troll. Hell just look above at some of the scandal links to see how many pages are being guarded by wiki-trolls. Personally if the site disappeared tomorrow I would say "nothing of value was lost".

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    116. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

      So, the major issue appears to be that Wikipedia is free as in beer, but not as in speech?

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    117. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

      The point of effective marketing through advertising is to piss off a large number of people, but piss them off only a tiny little bit. Messages "filtered" by normal cynicism - the ones you think you're ignoring - become imprinted in your memory, only to arise as a bit of "bold" font when you next see the object that was advertised.

      The point is you want the message to be embedded in the subconscious, not the conscious. If you piss people off big time, they will put the advertiser into an entirely different category.

      Say the Jimmy Wales advertisement, for example. It's big, it pisses people off, people won't donate and will quickly scroll away. But if you had a tiny message above a "quote of the day" saying "Was Wiki good for you too? Then please donate" with a link. They'll subconsciously equate Wiki to sex, and want to uh, donate.

      See? Persycholology can work for you.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    118. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've gotten into a few 'non-notable source' argument with the admins, and it's a complete waste of everyone's time. Basically, it comes down to: your site might have the most detailed information about collectors' edition games on the planet, but unless it's been covered (repeatedly) by a big-time publisher (like the Wall-Street Journal, New York Times, CNN, or the like), then it may as well not exist. Ostensibly, this is to keep any Joe Blow from creating a website, putting up any old garbage, and getting it passed off as fact because, hey, there's a citation on some random web site. But, really, this keeps the troves of information compiled by amateurs from being included.

    119. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by vigmeister · · Score: 1

      I would really hate to see Wikipedia founder for lack of a pragmatic means of maintaining its existence

      Why would you see Jimmy about that? I recommend you see Similing Bob or JG Wentworth about your problems.

      *rimshot*

      Cheers!

      --
      Atheist: Buddhist in a Prius
    120. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      Yep, I had a recent run in with a mod at Wiki, I think his username was JzG or "Guy" - something like that.
      I was an ass in an article (deliberately) and he gave me fair warning. Then someone else from a US ip address reverted back to my shitty version, he didn't even check the logs and banned me for it permenantly.

      The guy was a complete idiot, no way to discuss with him, my case is an exception since I mostly deserved the initial trouble, however I've heard many similar stories of completely tightfisted asshole moderators.
      Fuck them.

    121. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      It's just that they don't want people using Wikipedia to promote themselves or their companies. Wikipedia is intended to document what already exists (which is the function of an encyclopedia), not be an advertising vector for the "up-and-coming".

    122. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      You were banned for posting a question on a talk page? Methinks there's more to this story that you're not relating.

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    123. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting idea. People can pay to have an article that favors their viewpoint.

    124. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      So you want Wikipedia to be more like Facebook?

    125. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      My problem with wikimedia/wikipedia's donations is exactly that: they're being deceptive to push their agenda.

      Here's an idea: why don't they have people buy their own books. Something free is rarely appreciated. (Compare and contrast: public library use vs. Barnes and Noble.)

      As many have said, WP is a good source of information which is often biased and incorrect solely due to poor management and petty assholes.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    126. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by morari · · Score: 1

      [...] when I saw that Barack Obama had less criticism on his page than Ghandi or Jesus Christ, I knew your system was still flawed [...]

      I'm pretty sure that the myth of Jesus Christ, and the atrocities of his followers, is far more ripe with criticisms than anything Barack Obama could ever manage to do. Hell, even Hitler has a hard time living up to Christ's legacy of bloodshed.

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    127. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by ogl_codemonkey · · Score: 1

      Any consumer network hardware you've picked up in the last decade or more will likely auto-sense using the incorrect pair and effectively add the required crossover; and only one device of the pair needs to support this.

      This is so common, reliable (and useful) that it was added to the standard for gigabit.

    128. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Kashgarinn · · Score: 1

      There's only really one solution/rule to this problem of admins denying information which gets put forward.

      1) If the editor/admin cannot verify that the information cited is true or false, or that the source is true or false, then the admin/editor must leave it alone. Only verifiable false information is allowed to be removed, and a citation to why it was removed and links to verify that it is indeed false should be given.

      i.e. innocent until proven guilty. There's more of a chance of wrong data, but more honest people wouldn't feel as if they're wasting their time editing things they can cite and link to, and over time the structure would be more solid.

      Don't know why they don't have that in there right now.

    129. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps there ought to be a simple function to request a second opinion. When the edit in question has been refused, a message is sent to inform you, presenting an "Really? Again, please!" button, which sends it to the next available editor.

      If one editor is refusing your edit, maybe is because of him/her. If two do it, there is either probably something missing in your edit, or something wrong in the Wikipedia organisation. And in the former case you can actually do something about it.

    130. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      I never said Wikipedia never pissed anyone off. I said they never pissed me off; and asked for reasons why others who are pissed, well, why they are pissed off. It is obvious that some people are pissed off since the original post is about this subject.

      And then you get insulting because of your perception that I said that Wikipedia never pisses anyone off (which as mentioned is NOT what I said). Maybe you have issues with them because you miss the point sometimes. I mean, not EVERYONE is pissed off at Wikipedia. I would believe that some people who had their articles pulled or criticized actually do deserve to have their articles pulled or criticized. And when that happens at least some of them will likely get pissed off at Wikipedia... and are still pissed off at Wikipedia. I don't know if this is you. But it isn't me. Heck maybe you have a legitimate beef... but I don't care since you are so quick to misquote me. How can I trust your judgment?

      And yes if people complain that Wikipedia pulled articles unfairly, there has to be at least some percentage in which this is true. And I do agree with the people who can't understand why there is so much information available about fictional characters, and relatively little on real people (relative to the size of the articles about fictional characters).

      But what I was interested in were examples of what Wikipedia does that pisses people off. And to be truthful, I've had some edits reversed and been a little miffed; but not so much to get a hate on for Wikipedia. i.e. I'm not pissed off at them. I was and am interested if there is anything really egregious that I haven't heard of. That is what this forum is partly for, learning about new things. And yes, for trolling too of course. But that is not my intent here (and is almost never my intent... almost [grin]).

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    131. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      By Obama article admin logic, the atrocities of Christ's followers should go under the Atrocities of Christ's followers, because they have nothing to do with Christ and shouldn't even be linked from the Christ article.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    132. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by nacturation · · Score: 1

      The personal appeal didn't bug me But that "I'm too cool to shave" look did. If you want money, maybe get a better picture that doesn't scare people away. Maybe getting a good photographer is hard when you don't have any donations?

      The best laugh I've had this week is in the linked article: seeing Jimbo's smug face right above the article for Coprophagia. It wasn't until I clicked that I learned coprophagia means to eat shit. Now I really don't want to know about this "urgent personal appeal" from Jimbo.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    133. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Majkow · · Score: 1
    134. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Remember that according to the "common sense" and the "obvious facts of human nature" a collaborative encyclopedia opened to anyone could simply not work.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    135. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Yvanhoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe they shouldn't put a picture. Is that an American way of doing things ? When you have a message to give, write it, don't read it in a youtube video. Want to write an edito ? I don't care to see your brushed face with a fake smile on top of the page. If I want to give, I'll give to wikipedia, not to this badly shaved man.

      Also, I would like to be able to give to the American wikipedia. Being French I am automatically directed to the French foundation that manages the French wikipedia which, quite honestly, sucks hard.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    136. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      St. Petersburg Times probably is a better example. They run a daily newspaper that runs on advertising but their journalists are isolated from their executives and advertisers, and the 'not-for-profit' charter protects them from the takeovers

          Well, that's not totally accurate.

      http://www.tampabay.com/company/about-us/times-history

          In 1978, the majority shareholder passed away, and willed his shares to a non-profit school for journalists, which bears his name.

          In 1988, they almost lost control of the paper, because an investor who had purchased outstanding shares tried to take the company over. 2 years and $56 million later, the school is again/still the owner.

      I think Wikipedia could probably adapt that 'not-for-profit' model successfully, and do away with their hot and cold running begathon forever.

          You're right here though. Not necessarily with the "not-for-profit" model, but dammit, any business model other than the hopeful "We'll do it for free. People will help us for free. When we need money, we'll just beg for it." Simply enough, that's not a business model of any sort. You'd think with the $4 million that Google and eBay dropped on them, they could have afforded to rent some professional business men for a few hours.

          They could be supporting themselves with simple banner ads (text or image) in half the space they're wasting with that god awful "Please, g'vnar, pretty please, can we have some shillings? It's so cold. We're so hungry. We only made $7 million through donations this year." (the summary and article show different numbers, so that's a guess at the income)

          They're playing in the world of business, but pretending they're kids having fun. I guess they forgot that they signed contracts for pesky things like their office, datacenters, bandwidth. I'd guess that at least part of their infrastructure is leased, so there are revolving payments there too. It's a business, not a playtoy.

          Hell, even my playtoy, my own news site, I had to give up on the donation-only method. We were lucky to make $1/wk. So I went shopping between advertising services. Who pays (just a few), doesn't pay (quite a few), gives fair rates (hahaa!), doesn't cheat the hit counters much (they all do), and aren't obnoxious, intrusive (interstitial ads/flash/etc), or riddled with malware. I was testing one on offline pages that only I saw, and within about 10 views of the testing front page, my antivirus was screaming about malware. I reported it to them with some friendly terms like "if you can't keep this off your advertising network, I won't use you." They danced around, and two weeks later said "oh no, it won't happen ever again." I re-enabled them on my testing page, and the second page view was hit again. Most of the rest I've tested were clean, but they had a terrible reporting or payout rate. Really, if I know I have an average of X users per day, and ad position Y gets so many average clicks per day, then I switch the ads over to a new provider, that report X/10 users, and Y/20 ad clicks without a change in real traffic, there's a problem.

          People like us know how to disable ads. The other 99.8% of the users will provide them with more than enough ad revenue.

          Eventually, they'll have to adopt/develop a business model, or threaten to fold. I'm sure they day they're ready to shut the doors, someone will buy them out.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    137. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Thomasje · · Score: 1

      I can think of half a dozen articles that disseminate actual information - yet are incomplete, misleading/slanted, out-of-context copy pasta from other sources

      I guess your idea of "actual information" is not the same as mine. Maybe I'm naive, but I have a hard time even imagining edit wars over things like the carbon cycle, the climate of Buenos Aires, Winston Churchill's alma mater, or the progression of the U.S. GDP or unemployment levels.

      If you can provide some actual examples -- as opposed to saying "I can think of half a dozen articles" and then not citing a single one -- I would be interested to hear about them. If I'm really so seriously misguided, I'd like to know.

    138. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      It's not American it's human. People identify more personally with faces than text. If you see a picture of a starving child you're more than 3x as likely to give than if you're presented with a message on hunger/poverty. We want to fix what we see. Hence the title of the banner is "A personal appeal".

    139. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Not really. First I was told not relevant, so I asked how could it not be relevant when the page says A and both the director and writer says it was supposed to be b? Then I was told citation needed and I pointed out that there was BOTH the writer and director as well as the exact time index on the box set, what more was you supposed to cite? Then I was told the discussion was closed, and when I was why when the edit followed all of their rules, then I was banned.

      Sorry I can't give you a more exciting tale, but as I said I didn't really care, not enough to play 20 rounds of office politics over something I'm not getting paid for. It is pretty obvious to me that just like anywhere on the net you've got wiki-trolls and instead of sitting there going "nigger nigger" they instead watch their favorite pages and drop the banhammer with anyone who dares fuck with their masterpiece. I'm sure if I had bothered to see who had been editing the page it would have been the same one that kept erasing anything I did. Believe what you want really, I don't care enough about it to deal with trolls, sorry.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    140. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by opposabledumbs · · Score: 1

      Definitely. And there's a cult of personality about it all, too. I don't edit articles for Wikipedia, so I don't have their groupthink, but I can't help but feel that the entire campaign this year has been set up by some of the more fawning members of the Wikipedia community.

      Personally, I could give rocks about Jimmy Wales. I might consider giving money to Wikipedia, though, if they just had the barometer of cash donated vs. cash that they ran in the previous years.

    141. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by morari · · Score: 1

      Obama article admin logic doesn't seem to make a lot of sense...

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    142. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      I agree, though abolishing deletionism will create certain challenges, e.g. without notability criteria you would end up with hundreds of biographical articles of non-notable persons, making it difficult for users of the encyclopedia to find the (notable) person they're looking for.

      When I type "Ben Franklin", it should go to the American founding father. At the same time, the disambiguation should have "Ben Franklin - Plumber" and "Ben Franklin - Cool Dude" as listings. They might be grouped differently, so the less notable ones are harder to find, but this isn't a hard problem to solve.

      Text is cheap. Put the notability standard on pictures.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    143. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      scores of disgruntled former editors are not going to fill up 7 million USD. unless you guys are all worth 2 billion $ or something.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    144. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by perryizgr8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      iirc, at the start, one of wikipedia's goals was 'sum of all human knowledge'. when did this notable/non-notable shit kick in?

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    145. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by AnnaZed · · Score: 1

      You are not the only one with this experience, not by a long shot. Unless one is willing to be vigilant and monitor the pages that one contributes to over and over and over again armed with references and links and on demand prose eloquence, then it's just an exercise in frustration. Try venturing into a contested area like addiction medicine and it could become your life's work. Not only that, I personally know two people who were not only summarily edited but contacted and accused of being socks even though they were contributors both to content and as monetary supporters. The environment there is insane. It's great for high school kids to look-up basic stuff but move on to the big ticket items and the politics behind the scenes (that frankly I don't even understand) distort the entries beyond usability or recognition. Contribute to this mishegas? As you say, not until they clean up their act.

    146. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      Jimmy Wales is a dickhead and the appeals for donation are actually more obtrusive than most advertisements, add in the fact that internal wiki politics is pretty awful and no one is going to donate to that. You're certainly right that most people don't donate, but if you want serious amounts of donated time or money you have to be someone people like(which wikipedia aren't) or doing something which is vitally important to society(which they aren't). Assange is also a dickhead, but what he's doing is important so people still donate.

    147. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      no, wikipedia's main goal is to be 'the sum of all human knowledge'. being somewhat like an encyclopedia is a side-effect. if i write a wiki page on myself, and if i do it in an impartial manner, it ought not to be deleted.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    148. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      XKCD might disagree, but I'm pretty sure your post is an example of irony.

    149. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      finding the notable person you're looking for is a problem for the search engines, not wikipedia. wikipedia's job is to host all the available information related to a certain name.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    150. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

      Uh, they've condensed all the pokemon characters into a single useless list.

    151. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

      I donated $20 to wikipedia 2 years ago when I saw the progress bar asking for donations. It wasn't even until I saw this article that I noticed the big advertisement looking thing on the top of the page which forced me to scroll down to find the article was asking for money.

      The little bar had much more impact because it was much more visible than the huge, loud thing you just scroll past. The progress bar was at least on the screen while you read the first page. When you have to scroll down anyway, you scroll it off completely.

      That said, I actually would vote for someone who believed that contributing tax money to wikipedia as part of the educational budget was a good idea. Additionally, I would contribute again if someone did a kids.wikipedia.org site so that there was an elementary school level encyclopedia available for schools to use as well.

    152. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by doom · · Score: 1

      Thanks, interesting post. It's a subject I've been wondering about lately, because it's pretty obvious to me that writing stuff on wikipedia just isn't any fun. There's a huge number of rules and guidelines you're supposed to be familiar with, and large numbers of the editors there insist on taking them too seriously (it appears that no quantity of caveats about how a guideline is a rule of thumb and you're supposed to apply "common sense" will dissuade a true internet nerd that said guideline is the word of god that can be applied with mathematical precision). It's really easy to spend a hell of a lot of time trying to achieve some sort of reasonable, neutral consensus with people who are of dubious sanity. Wikipedia's conflict resolution process is no where near adequate, it's ineffective against any nut that doesn't actually exhibit Turette's syndrome. On articles that I care about, I've watched the content churn back and forth over the years without looking like it's going to converge out onto any stable state ever... you can't just work on something and move on to something else, you have to camp out and defend the older work or else it gradually deteriorates. The whole system is just way to labor intensive to expect it to be sustainable by volunteer labor.

    153. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by joost · · Score: 1

      It's like throwing a dollar in the Salvation Army bucket and seeing the bucket guy fish my dollar out and throw it on the ground.

      ++

    154. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by m50d · · Score: 1

      It's good as an encyclopaedia, sure. But five years ago it was something more - you got a (vague internet consensus, but still useful) opinion on things, rather than just a collection of dry facts. I now use other sources to get that, which is maybe the way it should be, but I miss the old wikipedia.

      --
      I am trolling
    155. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Teancum · · Score: 1

      You asked for some specific examples of why "the Wikipedia organization itself is pissing people off". Those are your words, not mine. I gave some specific examples here, and some more general issues that also impact people using Wikipedia and trying to contribute.

      BTW, there is no "Wikipedia organization" at least under that name. It is the Wikimedia Foundation that sets policies and has overall control over the project, although there is also some specific in-project hierarchy that sort of runs the show as well, but you will find considerable overlap from one project to the next and blurring of lines in terms of who is in charge on that level. It also isn't a strict hierarchy especially with principles of "all editors are equal" applying as well.

      Ask, and ye shall receive. This is what you asked for, so why are you so pissed at me personally for giving you examples? You seemed a little uninformed simply from your comment about how it appeared there is some god-king running Wikipedia, forgetting that the king has been removed by a coup-d'etat and is now being run by mostly a democratic-like mobocrachy. That sort of works for something like Wikipedia, but it also makes it hard to point to a specific person.

    156. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      When I go to wikipedia, it's almost always to sate my curiosity about something, or to look up track listings for an album or tape I'm sampling to CD, and I've generally had good results from wikipedia when looking something up.

      I doubt the Britannica would have had the accomodating IOLs listed. But it was still disappointing to not be able to update the article.

      Tell your friend that if he can afford it to get the CrystaLens, and for God's sake get a good surgeon. I wound up with better than 20/20 after my surgery. A year or two later my daughter told me that Evil-X had to get cataract surgery, and she got a CrystaLens too. Well, I saw her later and she was wearing bifocals! She's BAD about choosing professionals, had heard "bad things" about Dr Yeh (who was probably the best doctor I've ever had) and went to some... well, the guy must have been a quack, he didn't even ask "if for some reason we can't use the CrystaLens do you want to be nearsighted or farsighted?"

      Get some references! The more precise the measurements of the eye are, the better your vision will be after the surgery. Few who get a CrystaLens need corrective lenses after surgery, and my guess it's because of sloppy measurements and testing.

    157. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      The Wikimedia Foundation isn't pissing people off? I take it you have never read much of the Wikimedia Foundation...

      This implies that I said Wikimedia is not pissing people off. I don't like people putting words in my mouth whether it was done overtly or accidentally. That does piss me off. I get into enough trouble on my own thank you very much.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    158. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why not link to the reverted edits so we can change it back and fight with you? how can i know you're not making this up? why not give proof when you have it?

    159. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by rakaur · · Score: 1

      I've run into this problem repeatedly on Wikipedia. Once, a local author that was fairly well known noticed he was linked to a lot and that his page was very sparse. He started editing it himself, providing his official PR website as a source. They deleted his changes claiming that they didn't care who he was, his sources were invalid. So, the most accurate source possible is discounted and the official information on that person is discounted. A week later, the entire article on him was deleted.

      Wikipedia is nothing but a bunch of bullies running it they way they see things. If you disagree or try to make an article truly neutral, you're shunned immediately.

    160. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by trifish · · Score: 1

      attitude of the admins, that they are the expert and even if 50 editors disagree, it doesn't matter
      Umm, if the admin is a real expert, and the 50 people are not, then it should not matter that the 50 people disagree with the expert. That's why we have experts. To educate the less knowledgeable.

    161. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by rakaur · · Score: 1

      I think my difficulties can be summed up by noting they have this huge list of rules and styles and guidelines for every single little thing that in order to make a tiny edit to Wikipedia "by the book" you have to become an expert on how to contribute to Wikipedia. It's bureaucracy at its best.

    162. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not. I saw a needed edit, edited, and had the edit deleted. I've got better things to do than play office politics with a bunch of strangers; I get enough of that at work.

      Yes. I made an edit to a famous author's page which neglected to mention his efforts towards eugenics and forced sterilization. It was deleted. I put it back with a citation. It was deleted. I sourced a copy of the original book, it was deleted. I gave up.

      Basically, any article on WP is framed by a dedicated editor with a perspective. There's little there that's false, and there's quite a bit missing. WP should have a process to 'fire' such editors - it would never stand at a reputable organization.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    163. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      when did this notable/non-notable shit kick in?

      Duh, space on the Internet is limited.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    164. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Not only did you miss the point, but you don't understand how Wikipedia works: by consensus. There is no such thing as "experts", unless they are self-appointed experts. What you were witnessing was sarcasm, sorry you missed it.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    165. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      so unobtrusive that the other day i was clicking on them thinking they were part of the text of the page, but they led to ads that were not at all what I was looking for, only related by the most far-fetched stretch of imagination.

      When you have ads you start worrying about not getting money if you post something that advertisers or google doesn't like, and that hampers objectivity.

    166. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by trifish · · Score: 1

      Consensus means that everyone agrees. Otherwise, it may just be the case of the majority of the people (idiots) trying to argue with a lonely expert. Therefore, the analogy does not work whether it was meant sarcastically or not.

    167. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      That is not what consensus means. Not even close. Crack a book some time, amazing what you can learn.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    168. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you conveniently skipped the main point of the post and instead chose to comment only on the meaning of the word consensus (which was not the main point of the post)? How typical of a wikipedia asshole/loser.

      And as regards the secondary point of the post: The English dictionary defines consensus as:
      "general agreement or concord; harmony."

    169. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Antaeus+Feldspar · · Score: 1

      To play devil's advocate here:

      Is there anything that Blake Thompson has done other than produce The Dave Ramsey Show that has made him notable?

      If not, then everything that makes Blake Thompson notable is already described in a Wikipedia article, and there's no point in adding all the same information to a new article just so the article can have his name on it.

      (Note: I readily admit I have no knowledge of Thompson or the show he produces and so there may be a perfectly good answer to the question "What besides this show makes Thompson notable?" that I don't happen to know. However, back before I gave up Wikipedia in disgust I had to explain, many many many times, that if X's only notability is their participation in Y, it's much better to make the title "X" a redirect to the article "Y" than to make them two separate articles which can fall out of sync as people update one but forget to update the other.)

      --
      If people are to respect the law, perhaps the law should begin by respecting the people.
    170. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      Great point, and this give some insight. A simple line like this would have been far more helpful than a quick-delete with no notice.

      However, let's use Thompson as an example. Everything *notable* he has done might be in the DR show article, along with the articles for the TV show and other DR show that he does (forget now, but it sure would be nice to have an article on him to remember what that one was).

      That wasn't the content of the article. The article answers the question that yes, these ARE the only notable shows he has done, and that was precisely the question I had. Now, someone that wants an answer to the same question I had will not have an answer, and might even do the same research as me trying to answer the question.

      The content of the article, as I remember it, was listing the shows he has produced, noting where he lived and vitals such as age, martial status, etc. It also had a few lines about his history, basically that he was just a simple radio station worked that Ramsey hired with no previous production experience.

      So, what is the point of deleting a text-only article like that? Yes, it might be short and simple, but sometimes just seeing that a subject is short and simple is valuable information in itself.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    171. Re:Yo, Jimmy, I've got an idea: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has been a major problem for a long time now. The majority of the so called Wikipedians are content police, carefully guarding any edits to pages they watch. If an edit doesn't have adequate references which are up to their standards (multiple citations of peer reviewed journals), or in any way conflicts with Wikipedia guidelines (which of course are full of constantly conflicting and changing points of view), then your edits are likely to be reverted. Even content that has been in place for years isn't safe. All it takes is for someone to come along and question it, or point out that it doesn't have enough references, and a previously full, articulate, informational article can be quickly pruned down to a vague stub. Eventually people who have real paying jobs tire of having to fight against know-it-all teenagers to contribute real knowledge in their field.

  2. User donation model by devbox · · Score: 0

    So basically, user donation model doesn't really work and either you need ad revenue (losing your privacy to advertisers like with Google) or you pay for your product (professional you-get-what-you-pay-for like with Microsoft)?

    1. Re:User donation model by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

      The conclusion presupposes three boxes, and I think you're artificially limiting your thinking by having those three boxes.

    2. Re:User donation model by skids · · Score: 1

      Give it time. They are still tuning their message.

    3. Re:User donation model by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      Ok, so what are the other options?

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    4. Re:User donation model by commodore64_love · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well.....

      The "ad model" doesn't work that great either according to NBC and FOX Broadcast executives. They've lost a lot of money these last two years, and now they are moving to a subscription fee model (~50 cents per cable home) instead of providing free programming.

      Trivia: Most Viewed Networks (Sept2009-August2010):
      #1 FOX
      #2 CBS
      #3 ABC
      #4 NBC
      #5 CW
      #6 Univision
      #7 MyNetTV / Ion (tie)
      #8 Telmundo

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    5. Re:User donation model by tenchikaibyaku · · Score: 1

      I've been considering donating, but I haven't gotten around to it yet. Perhaps partly because it's not entirely clear to me why exactly they need all the money they are trying to gather. Right now, my "local" donation page says that half of the money would go to the Wikimedia Foundation and half of it to Wikimedia Sverige, "which, in Sweden, acts to make knowledge freely available to everybody."

      I'd happily help keep the servers running, but how much of my money would end up helping that part of it all? I guess I will end up donating some small sum anyway in the end, though, because I do use wikipedia a lot.

    6. Re:User donation model by God'sDuck · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sell books.

      No seriously -- have an Amazon referral account for Wikipedia. Let users link articles to books on Amazon with more information. Link every footnote to a book to a "buy now" button. It's value-added, not random advertising, and Wikipedia would get a cut. In return for all the traffic, have Amazon serve the site for free. Then the only money needed is for the salaries of the full-time staff, which the book sales would cover.
       
      Since there aren't ads everywhere, you can even continue asking for donations with a straight face.

    7. Re:User donation model by TheCarp · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How about a hybrid? Sell ads, but offset with user donations. As the user donation pool grows, the amount of advertising available, goes down.

      Similar to what WBUR does. They schedule a week long fundraiser with a goal. Then before the fundraiser they start telling people "the fund raiser ends when we reach our goal".... now they are starting to even let people donate towards that goal before the fundraiser starts!

      Ever since they staryed doing this, maybe 2 years ago? The fundraisers have been... reaching their goals and getting shorter! I think, at this point, they have nearly cut them in half!

      Could create paid subscriptions with a value add. Maybe some new features that are a bit server intensive or require storage... like letting you keep a set of private annotations on pages, or a real time chat feature.

      Look at OKCupid. There are many "A-List" members, even though the majority, and indeed the most important basic functions of the site, are all available for free.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    8. Re:User donation model by geegel · · Score: 1

      Ad revenue doesn't really have to mean loss of privacy, especially in Wikipedia's case. You could easily sell ads for each individual page. Some of them (like those which are history related) won't have any ads at all, while others (like those technical/networking terms) will probably be very competitive. Put in place a bidding system and an ad scoring system and it could actually work.

      --
      right...
    9. Re:User donation model by mark72005 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But we use Wikipedia so we don't have to read books.

    10. Re:User donation model by AndrewNeo · · Score: 1

      Page hits and ad clicks aren't extrapolated from a few people filling out a Neilson rating for the week.

    11. Re:User donation model by camperdave · · Score: 1

      Lost money? I doubt it. Not made as much as they anticipated, that I'll buy.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    12. Re:User donation model by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      No really... NBC and FOX Broadcast are both losing money due to a lot of empty ad slots. Their cable channels are profitable but not the "free" broadcast channels, which is why they started charging Comcast, Time-warner, etc for access. (Or else pull the plug.)

      Also Nielsen does track page hits & DVR viewing too, and reports back the results to ABC, CBS, CW, etc.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    13. Re:User donation model by Sanity · · Score: 1

      The ad model is working extremely well for Google, Facebook, and others.

    14. Re:User donation model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Is it bad that this actually sounds like a good idea?

    15. Re:User donation model by bhcompy · · Score: 1

      This is what the Sports Reference pages do(like Baseball-reference.com). Sponsor Albert Pujols page with your own personal message or with your business if you're in the sporting goods business. Seems to work for them

    16. Re:User donation model by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      Sell books.

      I, for one, felt Vreni Schneider: Annemarie Moser-Pröll, FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Winter Olympic Games, Slalom Skiing, Giant Slalom Skiing, Half Man Half Biscuit was quite thought-provoking.

    17. Re:User donation model by Outlander+Engine · · Score: 1

      This is a great suggestion! Wish I had mod points today.

    18. Re:User donation model by cashman73 · · Score: 1

      That's funny. Didn't Amazon.com just announce something similar to this? Granted, Wikipedia doesn't get a cut from that deal, but maybe Jimmy Wales should be talking to Jeff Bezos?

    19. Re:User donation model by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is a reference, not a source.

    20. Re:User donation model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Could create paid subscriptions with a value add

      Erggh!!

      "with additional value", please for the love of English!

    21. Re:User donation model by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      So what? What if I want a book about something that I am interested in, but do not need to be an authority on. Let's say I want to read an overview of Civil War battles. Wikipedia is fine for that.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    22. Re:User donation model by metrometro · · Score: 2

      Link every footnote to a book to a "buy now" button.

      This would have unfortunate consequences for citation spamming.

      But overall I really like the idea. I think you have to charge for the links, as well as take a cut via Amazon. Wikipedia creates a paid placement box on every article, full disclosure, with a max of three books in it, and auction the locations at runtime, adwords style. Desirable articles (Argentina tourism) would have an arms race to keep Lonely Planet on top, while the rest will take smaller cuts across the VERY long tail of Wikipedia traffic.

    23. Re:User donation model by SpeZek · · Score: 1

      You're right, but if you're writing a paper on the subject, it would be useful to not have to copy + paste the source links at the bottom into google, and just be able to click them and hit up an Amazon preview.

    24. Re:User donation model by gknoy · · Score: 1

      Most of us don't care deeply enough to follow the sources; we're after the compilation of knowledge, so that I can find out what the heck the Gunpowder Plot was, or the Monroe Doctrine (well, OK, that I knew), or how soap works. We want to do this without feeling we need to go read a dozen pages, or a hundred pages, or make a trip to a library. That's the entire point of an encyclopedia: Vast breadth of deep-enough-for-most-people knowledge.

    25. Re:User donation model by houghi · · Score: 2

      We do not like what you wrote about us concerning the latest events. Edit it or we take away your site in 20 minutes.

      Signed:
      Amazon Management

      (19 minutes and counting)

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    26. Re:User donation model by ewibble · · Score: 1

      Isn't that advertising for Amazon. Not saying its a bad idea, just that it fits in one of the boxes

    27. Re:User donation model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but we use wikipedia to check their references, which are preferably books!

    28. Re:User donation model by serutan · · Score: 1

      That's a pretty interesting idea. I wonder if Amazon would go for it. But I wouldn't want them to become dependent on an advertiser for free hosting. That would be like running your home business out of the spare bedroom in your friend's house.

    29. Re:User donation model by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      How about a hybrid? Sell ads, but offset with user donations. As the user donation pool grows, the amount of advertising available, goes down.

      Similar to what WBUR does. They schedule a week long fundraiser with a goal. Then before the fundraiser they start telling people "the fund raiser ends when we reach our goal".... now they are starting to even let people donate towards that goal before the fundraiser starts!

      Ever since they staryed doing this, maybe 2 years ago? The fundraisers have been... reaching their goals and getting shorter! I think, at this point, they have nearly cut them in half!

      Could create paid subscriptions with a value add. Maybe some new features that are a bit server intensive or require storage... like letting you keep a set of private annotations on pages, or a real time chat feature.

      Look at OKCupid. There are many "A-List" members, even though the majority, and indeed the most important basic functions of the site, are all available for free.

      -Steve

      What? turn down opportunities for more money?

    30. Re:User donation model by Teancum · · Score: 2

      Instead, Wikipedia is outsourcing the book selling. I don't know what financial arrangements are currently being made between PediaPress and the Wikimedia Foundation, but there has been some arrangement which has been made and it is at the moment an exclusive arrangement so far as publishing a "book" containing Wikipedia content in a book form (and they are also doing this with the other Wikimedia sister projects as well).

      I do think that some kind of more formalized book preparing volunteer group could be organized to separate out the spam from the quality materials on Wikipedia and to prepare what I think would be a high quality book of Wikimedia material... where the results would be to have something of a "product" that people would be willing to buy. Publishing content is much more than simply throwing some random text on a web page and throwing on a picture or two. You may even need a professional coordinator or two for the effort, but the main end-task would be to set up something that would be of comparable quality to something like say the CRC handbook or some other non-fiction reference guide.

      My largest problem with trying to get an effort like this going has been trying to find a proper forum to present my ideas. I've tried to propose this idea on the Wikimedia Meta website and the Wikimedia Foundation mailing list, but those who happen to be regular readers of those forums are not really interested in being involved at that level. The Wikipedia Village Pump has also similarly fallen flat with any sort of response to setting something like this up. I know that efforts like Distributed Proofreaders exist that are somewhat similar and seem to bring in people with talent and abilities to do the "post-editing" document preparation that would be needed to turn quality Wikipedia articles or featured Wikibooks into a finished book, but I haven't been able to figure out how to do that either.

      Another issue is that there seems to be a group that wants to automate the process of creating books entirely. While I applaud that effort so far as something is better than nothing at all, I think something is missing when the whole process is automated. The books I see are certainly of inferior quality to books which are hand-made with a little extra TLC which has been put forward into its preparation... and I've seen some amazing quality books based upon Wikimedia project content which has been put together. The question is how to set that up, and for those parts that could use some assistance through automation perhaps could be used but also there should be the ability to "step in" and tweak that automation as well to refine the process and make it better.

      On the whole, I do think this is a missed opportunity for the Wikimedia Foundation.

    31. Re:User donation model by Hazelfield · · Score: 2

      Do you think Amazon would be happy about an article like this?

      Problem is, when you get a big sponsor you lose some independency. You lose credibility. Random ads showing up on the pages? Fine. One big company that has the power to shut down the entire site? Maybe not a very good idea.

      A conflict of interest is bad not only because what could happen, but because of what you suspect could happen. Maybe Amazon would tolerate the negative article, but let's say it got changed or removed for some reason. It could be perfectly legit, but everyone would suspect Amazon had something to do with it, so Wikipedia would lose credibility.

      I think if Wikipedia decides to do ads, it needs to do it in a way that doesn't in any way compromise the integrity of the articles.

    32. Re:User donation model by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Riiiiight..... and the book publishing business is falling apart now that we have computers, where there is no need at all for something written down and put on dead trees with a cover of some kind.

      There will always be a demand for quality books, which is exactly what is being proposed here. If anything, the advent of computer technology has been a blessing to the book publishing industry by both making it cheaper to print books and to print them in smaller quantities (print-on-demand publishers) as well as to increase the number of titles and the number of authors who are available to publish.

      I don't know how something like the Kindle is going to change the book publishing industry, but even that requires something a little bit better prepared than some of the tripe that sometimes gets put into Wikipedia articles. That requires some real effort. Besides, e-books have typically failed to pan out with their promise, where e-books were predicted to completely replace paper books several decades ago yet seldom seem to ever happen.

    33. Re:User donation model by Idbar · · Score: 1

      I was thinking about that, but also have a box at the bottom with relevant products. Let's say that you are looking for specialized tools then show where you can get them. If you have very in depth articles, then yeah.. books. I wonder how would that work for diseases (I hate drug related advertisements), but plants may also link to seeds or gardening, etc.

      If something, Google would envy such an opportunity, because each article is already contextualized: it's what people is looking for. So there is an advantage placing ads on those pages.

    34. Re:User donation model by Zorpheus · · Score: 1

      Sounds good. But I would not limit it to one book store. Amazon will make a lot of money with this. And this after some people in Germany stopped shopping at Amazon because they removed wikileaks from their servers.
      Then again, maybe others do not have the option to buy from other online book stores as we do. I do not know, do you have other book traders than Amazon in the US?

    35. Re:User donation model by metrometro · · Score: 1

      This will never happen because BOTH amazon and wikipedia make money off the deal. Simply put, shit people say in wikipedia matters less to Amazon than Amazon selling books. Capitalism is real reliable that way.

    36. Re:User donation model by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      Amazon was (presumably) making money off hosting Wikileaks, but they had no problem killing that.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    37. Re:User donation model by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      That's fucking brilliant. We need a +6 interesting.
      There's a caveat of choosing which books to shill though. A bidding system sounds like a good idea, as long as you're ok with re-enforcing the status quo. Something like Project Wonderful.

    38. Re:User donation model by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      No, we use wikipedia so we don't have to schlep down to the sity library to look something up, and we use wikipedia because it has more information than you'll find in the library (try finding a track listing for Razamataz in Britannica), and unlike books, it's up to date.

      I'd wager that most slashdotters are bookworms. I know I am. But guess what? I still use wikipedia.

    39. Re:User donation model by Doomdark · · Score: 1

      If you are comparing TV broadcast ads to online ads you are doing apples-to-oranges comparison however: with sites, adding ads has negligible cost increase so even with low revenue it is very hard to actually lose money, as compared to not including ads. My blog for example earns just couple of dollars a month via adsense, but adding those ads does not add cost to site hosting, so it is "extra" money, if a very low amount.

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    40. Re:User donation model by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      No seriously -- have an Amazon referral account for Wikipedia. Let users link articles to books on Amazon with more information. Link every footnote to a book to a "buy now" button. It's value-added, not random advertising, and Wikipedia would get a cut. In return for all the traffic, have Amazon serve the site for free. Then the only money needed is for the salaries of the full-time staff, which the book sales would cover.

      This idea conflicts with fair use (17 USC 107), such as using an image that identifies the subject of the article if the subject is a non-free work of authorship. A use is more likely to be considered a fair use if it is non-commercial, and if there's no ad, Wikipedia qualifies as "non-commercial".

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:NFC

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    41. Re:User donation model by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      "But we use Wikipedia so we don't have to read books."

      Wikipedia cannot do everything yet, and many free books on Wikibooks are incomplete or are not that great.

    42. Re:User donation model by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      They're not "moving" to anything since they're still showing ads. They're charging subscription fees to cable companies because they can, because they know that the cable company would rather not have to tell their own subscribers that they need to watch their regular channels with an antenna. And they'd do it whether they lost money or made money, because they see money on the table and they're grabbing it.

    43. Re:User donation model by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1

      why exactly they need all the money they are trying to gather

      Jimbo Wales needs a salary raise.

    44. Re:User donation model by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      I'm always surprised that it takes 3 clicks to get from an article on a book to the Amazon page for the book (ISBN -> Booksellers -> Amazon.com). It really should only take one, though I appreciate all the resources for people who want to find the book elsewhere!

    45. Re:User donation model by KarrdeSW · · Score: 1

      In theory, this is a great idea, but as a 501(c)3 tax exempt organization, it is unlikely they could enter into a deal like this with a major book retailer and maintain their tax-exempt status. At the very least, doing such a thing would risk a prolonged court battle that they would only have a marginal chance of winning.

      Now, in theory, they could adopt this model and simply forfeit their 501(c)3 status (or fight to keep it, but the court battle might actually cost more than simply paying taxes), but they would have to take into account that their donation revenue (I'm not sure just how large it actually is) would be impacted. People who donate the fatter checks to places like Wikipedia do so expecting to be able to receive a tax deduction, which requires that the receiving organization be a 501(c)3 organization.

    46. Re:User donation model by theaveng · · Score: 1

      The word "moving" is appropriate. NBC's CEO has discussed several times the possibility of quitting broadcast and becoming a cable-only channel. He said in an interview, "The cable model is better and more stable than the ad-supported model. We want to become more like our cable properties MSNBC and Syfy which have been very profitable even during this downturn."

      --
      FOX NEWS.com should be BANNED from television and internet. Have the Congress take it over and give us Truespeak.
    47. Re:User donation model by xclr8r · · Score: 1

      Then every schmoe writing a book will want citations on wikipedia, I'd rather see more 'needs citation' than more spam of irrelevant footnotes.

      --
      Beware of those who profit off the docile and persecute the unbelievers.
  3. Big Empty Space by BondGamer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Isn't there a big empty space down the left side of most pages? What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

    1. Re:Big Empty Space by Neil_Brown · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

      With AdBlock, the end result is much the same.

      Is AdBlock sufficiently prevalent that ad-based funding is decreasingly viable? Is an advert annoying no matter what site it might be on, or are there many AdBlock users who disable blocking on sites which they want to support through that site's chosen revenue model?

    2. Re:Big Empty Space by shadow349 · · Score: 1

      More appropriately, given the audience here:

      What is the difference between it being blank because Wikipedia didn't put anything there and it being blank because we all have AdBlock Pro installed?

    3. Re:Big Empty Space by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      Isn't there a big empty space down the left side of most pages? What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

      I'll bet you have a Google branded plush pony in your bed and the shirt you're wearing says either 'Izod' or 'Brawndo".

      It's annoying, that's what. Even the modest, quiet, well bred Google ads of distant history are annoying. Blank space is a critically important design concept as well.

      Yes, advertising can be done such that it's minimally invasive, but it's invasive nonetheless.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    4. Re:Big Empty Space by pz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Isn't there a big empty space down the left side of most pages? What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

      That is precisely the sort of attitude that gets us enhanced pat-downs and video cameras monitoring our every move.

      I use Wikipedia frequently, and made a donation. Did you?

      Here's a hint: the money to run Wikipedia comes from somewhere. If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products, but because the conversion of money in your pocket through a retailer's payment processing system to the manufacturer's accounts receivable to the marketing department budget to an advertising agency to an adbuy at Wikipedia is horribly inefficient, the total cost for you, out of pocket, will be much higher than if you just send Wikipedia money. The only difference is you won't be obviously, immediately aware of it.

      Please, donate directly.

      For related reasons, when you donate money to a charitable or non-profit organization, don't take the gifts. That just increases their cost of acquiring your money, making your donation less efficient (and reducing the amount you can deduct on your taxes because the US government considers that a sale of goods and your donation is just the excess above fair market value for the gift you received). Just give the money.

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    5. Re:Big Empty Space by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 2

      The difference is that advertisers see it as their right to put in flashing/noisy "active content" ads that in some cases (I'm thinking about the recent use of DoubleClick to install driveby downloads) harmful crap on the page. I come to WikiPedia to look stuff up, not to be sold on something.

      This doesn't even touch upon the potential for editorial shenanigans... great - I go to WikiPedia to see what kind of MP3 Tag management software might be available... (Free and commercial) and when I get to the articles, I'm seeing targeted ads for someone's commercial offering? yeah, ok great, I can ignore that, but one wonders if there wouldn't be potential conflict - what if the very page I was viewing on that software happened to mention the advertiser's product in a bad light? would they try and pressure that article to be changed? or what if they went and astroturfed the article to make it favor their product?

      Even if the article was completely unbiased, I kind of feel that the potential for, or even the appearance of conflict of interest is too great.

      Ads would reduce the credibility of WikiPedia and would potentially devalue it as a go-to source for helping improve the signal to noise ratio of today's Internet.

      --

      The Digital Sorceress
    6. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Is AdBlock sufficiently prevalent that ad-based funding is decreasingly viable?"

      It's the equivalent of people taking a leak during TV commercials.
      80% of the people are noobs doing mostly Facebook crap and Youtube cats which wouldn't know an adblocker if it bit them in the ass.

    7. Re:Big Empty Space by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      Since I already donated, I would prefer an 'Already gave" button to switch those mugshots off.

    8. Re:Big Empty Space by dave420 · · Score: 1

      No, as people taking a leak during TV commercials are not recorded by the TV network. People using AdBlock are indeed noticed by the sites in question, and that has a direct effect on revenue.

    9. Re:Big Empty Space by prakslash · · Score: 0
      If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products.....the total cost for you, out of pocket, will be much higher than if you just send Wikipedia money

      You forget that advertising costs are distributed over millions of widgets that a company may make and sell. A single individual will never pay more out of pocket. Millions depend on wikipedia. These same millions will see the ad and pay just a fraction of a cent more in the product cost. To me, this is fair. Some non-intrusive advertising will actually be a very good model for wikipedia as long as it doesn't influence the content.

    10. Re:Big Empty Space by pz · · Score: 1

      If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products.....the total cost for you, out of pocket, will be much higher than if you just send Wikipedia money

      You forget that advertising costs are distributed over millions of widgets that a company may make and sell. A single individual will never pay more out of pocket. Millions depend on wikipedia. These same millions will see the ad and pay just a fraction of a cent more in the product cost. To me, this is fair. Some non-intrusive advertising will actually be a very good model for wikipedia as long as it doesn't influence the content.

      No, I'm perfectly aware of the distribution of advertising dollars over everyone's cost. That means that people who do not use Wikipedia end up paying for it. How is that fair?

      It also means that the money goes to lining the pockets of the middlemen. How is that fair?

      The only fair approach is for people to pay directly for the service. Unfortunately, we expect web sites to provide service for free, making it quite difficult to set up a popular subscription-based service. But that would be the fair model.

      If you think that advertising dollars do not influence editorial content, be it a web site, magazine, or newspaper, then you are naive indeed.

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    11. Re:Big Empty Space by PyroMosh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I need a plugin that blocks comments on slashdot and other forums where people mention how great it is that they use Ad Block.

      We get it. Everyone here knows this technology exists. Some of us choose not to use it. There are half a dozen posts saying "Put up ads! I won't see them! I run Ad Block Plus!" on this article, and only 50 comments total.

      You folks made a choice to opt out of the ad model, but reap the rewards of content that ads pay for anyway. I get that, and hopefully you do too. But why are you folks all so damn vocal about it? It's as if you're smug about blocking ads, and I honestly don't know why you would be smug about that.

    12. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you're using AdBlock, you can add a filter to block wikipedia.org##div#siteNotice.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    13. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If all ad blocker users were so smug and vocal there would be more than half a dozen posts.

    14. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use Wikipedia every day. I have never donated. I have no intention of ever donating.

      I use Wikipedia precisely because it is there and it is free, not because the the most accurate, most authoritative source.

      If it was not there, or not free, I would simply use something else.

    15. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "You folks made a choice to opt out of the ad model, but reap the rewards of content that ads pay for anyway. I get that, and hopefully you do too. But why are you folks all so damn vocal about it? It's as if you're smug about blocking ads, and I honestly don't know why you would be smug about that."

      Advertisers smugly shove everything and the kitchen sink at us day after day. Why are they so damn vocal about it? It's on the web, tv, magazines, billboards, product placement in movies and now games. i have to sit through commercials before I even get to the movie previews at the theater. We're tired of listening to it. I've got a blacklist of products I won't buy because they insist on screaming at me when their commercials come on the tube. The smugness of some adblock users probably comes from being able to say for once, hey, I don't have to look at this crap and neither do you.

      i have yet to click the disable adds button on /. despite it being offered to me regularly. There are a number of sites that I frequent that use unobtrusive ads that i exclude from adblock. you may think everyone on the internet knows about ad blockers, but i still run into plenty people that have never heard of them. reactions range from "oh my god, that's amazing" to "is that legal? don't i have to watch the ads?"

    16. Re:Big Empty Space by dmmiller2k · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but perhaps you would please repost your comments using different other words. My custom Adblock Plus filter seems to have removed it from the page.

      --

      "No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up." -- Lily Tomlin

    17. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the difference is the blank space doesn't annoy the shit out of me trying to get my attention.

    18. Re:Big Empty Space by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a big empty space down the left side of most pages? What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

      Why, the difference is simple: advertizers don't like controversy, so if you run Wikipedia with their money, they'll "sanitize" it. At the very least all negative information about any of their products must go. Very likely everything sex-related gets removed too. We might also get annoying mature content warnings a la Tvtropes.

      Taking corporate money is the path of corruption, as our politicians have shown time and again.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    19. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The total cost of being advertised to ($0) will never exceed the cost of handing someone money (>$0).

      But you make a good point that allowing advertisements on the internet is akin to the expansion of the State in private lives. /sarcasm

    20. Re:Big Empty Space by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      AdBlock doesn't get rid of that stupid Jimmy Wales plea for money. I know I'm not paying for the articles, but they're not paying for the articles either. They were typed by people like me. So why make things annoying for me? I didn't make things annoying for them those times I fixed errors on their articles.

    21. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't say for the OP. But for me, ads just piss me off.

      When I see an obnoxious ad (and they are all like that - even those begging for money) I just want to never buy that product ever. I think it has to do with my understanding of ads as being tools used on me for the purpose of manipulating me into doing what I would otherwise not do - for someone else's gain. And I resent the fact that most of these marketing bozos apparently consider me to be on the intellectual level of a monkey when they try to sell me products by throwing banana pie's in their commercials, proclaiming themselves to be the best, showing tv magic happening before my eyes (wow, look how it shines), comparing their product to an orgasm, telling me how cheap they are if I would just go now and run to the store today for this one day offer... Thank god I don't watch shows on the tv anymore where it takes you an hour to finish watching a half an hour show.

      I am just so happy I can do without ads on the internet because everywhere else they're always there - screaming for attention and pissing me off.

    22. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to realize that ads are forced upon users and donations aren't, therefore, having unobtrusive ads *and* donations is way better in the end. The stupid as fuck donation banner IS an ad for fuck's sake.

    23. Re:Big Empty Space by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I need a plugin that blocks comments on slashdot and other forums where people mention how great it is that they use Ad Block.

      Well, given that they are basically advertizing, shouldn't AdBlock block them ?-)

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    24. Re:Big Empty Space by rcastro0 · · Score: 1

      Here's a hint: the money to run Wikipedia comes from somewhere. If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products (...)

      Here's another hint: advertisers want to buy "impressions", or exposures of their product/brand to eyeballs. Having a greater supply of these impressions (by Wikipedia starting to supply them) would decrease (not increase) the cost of advertising. It's the old supply and demand dynamics.

      When you work at the marketing area of a large corporation you see that they set the advertising budget first (usually using a % of revenues metric comparable to their peers) and then (only then) look for where they will spend it. At that point they will seek the most efficient way to advertise, and the existence of yet another venue to advertise on (such as Wikipedia, or a new cable channel) will only impact the efficient solution, not the advertising budget.

      --
      Quem a paca cara compra, paca cara pagará.
    25. Re:Big Empty Space by QRDeNameland · · Score: 2

      It's as if you're smug about blocking ads, and I honestly don't know why you would be smug about that.

      Personally, the only time I'm ever smug about blocking ads is when I read about ads being used to deliver malware. It's not the same as ads on TVs, more like ads delivered in person to your living room by random people who might rob or vandalize you. I understand that blocking ads breaks web sites revenue models...but as long as ads remain an unnecessary malware vector, I will not feel one bit of remorse for blocking them.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    26. Re:Big Empty Space by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      No, I disagree. Unless you think that adblock users represent more than 10% of browsers, it is disproportionate.

      Remember, at the time I posted, there were only like 53 or 56 posts on the story (browsing at 0). That's over 10%. Even here on Slashdot, where it's possible adblock approaches or exceeds 10%, having 100% or near 100% of adblock users drone on about it is tiresome. Especially on an article that's not directly about adblock (though to be fair, it's not exactly off-topic).

    27. Re:Big Empty Space by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      I read those stories too. I can't help but feel they're overblown. I've never had one of my Windows boxes infected with malware. I don't run anti-malware software on them, and never have on a continuous basis. (Though I do scan a couple times a year). Most of these exploits are mighty particular, and were only exploited by affiliates of web sites who were dodgy to begin with.

      You might as well lump "web sites" or "email" in as a vector for malware. Why not avoid them as well? I understand that the reason is that you see value in email or web sites, but not ads. But my point is that you can't lump all of a group together as bad because a very small subset are.

    28. Re:Big Empty Space by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Spacehasafunctiontoo,evenlargespaces.

    29. Re:Big Empty Space by splatter · · Score: 1

      It will make a custom filter to block:

      http://wikimediafoundation.org/

      That will take care of it once and for all

      --
      "(I) have this unfortunate condition that causes me not to believe a single thing any politician says when a mic's on.
    30. Re:Big Empty Space by QRDeNameland · · Score: 2

      Say what you will...but when the New York Times got hit with malicious ads last year, as a regular NYT user of the site I was unaffected because of AdBlock. You should have heard the howls of those who didn't.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    31. Re:Big Empty Space by Seumas · · Score: 1

      A blank square doesn't leverage hundreds of thousands of dollars in advertising to get information about itself manipulated within the database.

    32. Re:Big Empty Space by Tom · · Score: 3

      Isn't there a big empty space down the left side of most pages? What is the difference between it being blank or there being an advertisement there.

      One occupies just some pixels on the screen, the other occupies space in my mind (to filter out).

      Or in more simple terms: Ads are fucking distracting, that's their job. Every advertisement worth its money is built and designed to catch you attention. "catch your attention" is the marketing speak for "distract you".

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    33. Re:Big Empty Space by Peeteriz · · Score: 1

      I believe that the uninformed people also have a right to free their mind from intruding advertising - so I tell them about AdBlock and suggest to try it.
      I believe that the current majority who watch ads don't do it because of an informed choice - they just don't know what modern technology can do for them.

    34. Re:Big Empty Space by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      I was going to say wow, I hadn't heard of that. And concede that it's a bigger problem than I was aware of.

      But this isn't an exploit at all. It required user intervention to install "anti-malware" that contained a trojan.

      Are you seriously saying that if not for adblock, you would have clicked "Yes, please install this anti-virus software I've never heard of, and anything else you like!"?

      This is like blaming your door's lock when you let the guy pretending to be the mail man in, and he robs you.

    35. Re:Big Empty Space by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1

      I use Wikipedia frequently, and made a donation. Did you?

      Hell no.

      Here's a hint: the money to run Wikipedia comes from somewhere. If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products, but because the conversion of money in your pocket through a retailer's payment processing system to the manufacturer's accounts receivable to the marketing department budget to an advertising agency to an adbuy at Wikipedia is horribly inefficient, the total cost for you, out of pocket, will be much higher than if you just send Wikipedia money. The only difference is you won't be obviously, immediately aware of it.

      Web hosting service does not cost very much. They are begging for more money so they can pay for other pet projects of Jimbo Wales, not because they can't pay the Hostgator monthly fees.

      Please, donate directly.

      No thanks. I'd rather give to Salvation Army than line Jimbo's pockets. Last time I looked he was doing quite well for himself from Wikipedia.

    36. Re:Big Empty Space by QRDeNameland · · Score: 2

      So I should have allowed the bad ad and hope I don't click it accidentally?

      All I'm saying is that if I don't admit the fake mailman in the first place, I don't have to worry about whether or not he's going to rob me. Not sure what's so hard to understand about that.

      --
      Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
    37. Re:Big Empty Space by Yossarian45793 · · Score: 1

      My kingdom for a mod point! Mod parent up please.

    38. Re:Big Empty Space by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      You may not notice the FLASH ads the inevitable day Wikipedia starts using them, but your PC fans and smartphone battery definitely will.

    39. Re:Big Empty Space by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      Unless of course WP's proposed ads were so effective that they drove *up* demand for purchasing online ads.. Hmm.

    40. Re:Big Empty Space by BondGamer · · Score: 1

      That is precisely the sort of attitude that gets us enhanced pat-downs and video cameras monitoring our every move.

      I can't believe you got marked insightful with a comment like that. Advertising = TSA? What a joke.

    41. Re:Big Empty Space by BondGamer · · Score: 1

      It must be by some miracle that Slashdot and every other website out there, makes money on advertisements. Or maybe not everyone uses advertisement blockers. I would guess Wikipedia could still make double or triple their operation cost, despite all the people blocking advertisements.

    42. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there was an ad blocker that only got rid of moving ads, I would use it to allow the static ads through. Until that time...

    43. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like that space the way it is... empty.

    44. Re:Big Empty Space by ToasterMonkey · · Score: 1

      Here's a hint: the money to run Wikipedia comes from somewhere. If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products, but because the conversion of money in your pocket through a retailer's payment processing system to the manufacturer's accounts receivable to the marketing department budget to an advertising agency to an adbuy at Wikipedia is horribly inefficient, the total cost for you, out of pocket, will be much higher than if you just send Wikipedia money. The only difference is you won't be obviously, immediately aware of it.

      Please, donate directly.

      For related reasons, when you donate money to a charitable or non-profit organization, don't take the gifts. That just increases their cost of acquiring your money, making your donation less efficient (and reducing the amount you can deduct on your taxes because the US government considers that a sale of goods and your donation is just the excess above fair market value for the gift you received). Just give the money.

      I don't use the services of the Red Cross _at all_ but somehow I consider that to be a more worthwhile organization to donate to.
      If I should feel guilty about using Wikipedia without donating, maybe they should be charging something for it. Put another way, would you even consider donating to Wikipedia if you didn't use it.. a lot?

      Same goes for PBS (hey, and OSS too). Begging for donations from the people using your "public" service is so ass backwards. Either pay for use, or help _other_ people. Not "please pay for use, pretty please".

      Here's a thought experiment. Pick any real charity out there, and imagine for a second that the set of people they are helping completely overlaps the set of people they are begging for donations. That would hardly be a charity any more... we have a name for stuff like that in the software world, "nagware". Now, is that not the most annoying software publishing model in the world?

    45. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it came from advertising dollars, that money would ultimately be reflected in a increase in the cost of products

      Don't be absurd. Do you really think that companies are going to respond to wikipedia accepting ads by putting their prices up? The money would primarily, perhaps exclusively, come from spending less on other ads elsewhere.

    46. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I need a plugin that blocks comments on slashdot and other forums where people mention how great it is that they use Ad Block.

      Ah, yes, you need FoxFilter 7.6.1 which includes keyword blocking (e.g., "ad block" "adblock"). You're welcome!

    47. Re:Big Empty Space by demonbug · · Score: 1

      I need a plugin that blocks comments on slashdot and other forums where people mention how great it is that they use Ad Block.

      We get it. Everyone here knows this technology exists. Some of us choose not to use it. There are half a dozen posts saying "Put up ads! I won't see them! I run Ad Block Plus!" on this article, and only 50 comments total.

      You folks made a choice to opt out of the ad model, but reap the rewards of content that ads pay for anyway. I get that, and hopefully you do too. But why are you folks all so damn vocal about it? It's as if you're smug about blocking ads, and I honestly don't know why you would be smug about that.

      I tend to use Adblock, mostly because the adservers always seem to be so abysmally slow - on many sites no content loads until the ads do, and they often take forever (not due to bandwidth limitations, just because the ad servers seem to take so long to respond a lot of the time). I would disable adblock immediately if websites took the responsibility to host the ads themselves, or at least require some sort of minimal responsiveness from the companies they contract with to serve up the ads. I generally try to unblock websites I like that have decent performance (although saying that I just noticed that there don't seem to be any ads visible here... oops), but I think it is reasonable to expect ad-based websites to ensure the ads they show do not actively deteriorate the service they are offering. An example that pops off the top of my head is Anandtech - love the site, they have great in-depth information, but for years they had an abysmal ad-server; more often than not when trying to read an article I would have to wait for the ad server to respond, in the meantime looking at content-free pages as it was set up so the article content doesn't load until after the ads. I'm happy to see ads from Newegg and Gigabyte etc. when browsing articles on a tech site, but not if there is a 30-second delay every time I look at an article while the ad server takes its own good time to get around to serving the ad.

      I wouldn't mind ads on wikipedia, as long as advertisers are barred from requesting ads on specific articles. "Genres" of articles might be okay, but I think it creates a major conflict to have advertisers targeting specific articles on a publicly-editable website. There would be a strong motivation for advertisers to cross-reference as many articles as possible to their targeted articles, and modify content to bring in more viewers. Banning targeted ads might decrease the advertising rate, but I think given the traffic Wikipedia gets they'd be able to find enough advertisers to cover costs. Ads don't automatically destroy the credibility of the website, although there do have to be clear rules set up. The main danger would be becoming too dependent on one or a few advertisers, in which case those advertisers might develop leverage to get things changed. Of course, once you start selling ads it gets really hard to sell anyone on making donations, so it would likely be an all-or-nothing endeavor.

    48. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good choice. Over 95% of money donated to the SA goes to actual charity work.

    49. Re:Big Empty Space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      awesome.

    50. Re:Big Empty Space by pipatron · · Score: 1

      I'm one of those few people here that have reached the age where I can remember a time before Wikipedia. I know, I know, you think I jest, but it's true. And it was not pretty.

      Trying to find a decent summary about any subject with a google search before wikipedia was very frustrating.

      Don't make me start on the wonders of google compared to what was before it.. Altavista.

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    51. Re:Big Empty Space by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

      I don't use the services of the Red Cross _at all_ but somehow I consider that to be a more worthwhile organization to donate to

      Not to quibble but....

      If you've ever swum in a public pool or at a public beach, had a safety lecture given to you at a job or school, had a first responder bandage your arm, head, hands (or those of family member), been effected in any way by a natural disaster, etc. Then there's a pretty good chance you've used the services of the Red Cross, if indirectly.

      --
      "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
    52. Re:Big Empty Space by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      You don't need to use adblock to block those kinds of adds, no-script works perfectly fine for that sort of thing.

      I use noscript because it blocks intrusive ads, I don't mind advertisements, but I hate when they make the page hard to use.

    53. Re:Big Empty Space by enz · · Score: 1

      If you have a user account at Wikipedia, you can disable the fundraiser ads in My Preferences -> Gadgets -> Suppress display of the fundraiser banner.

    54. Re:Big Empty Space by m50d · · Score: 1

      Given the way the wikimedia foundation is organised nowadays, getting money to the actual wikipedia (y'know, the one I'm using, not wikicookbooks or outreach programs or whatever) is just as inefficient - probably worse.

      --
      I am trolling
    55. Re:Big Empty Space by sourcerror · · Score: 1

      I use adblock but it won't block text ads like Google Adwords, and I don't mind it. Annoying, flashing, popping ads however must go. It's teaching advertisers a lesson. (And keeping me sane.)

  4. Wrong person on the banner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Replace Jimmy Wales with someone hot and you'll get many more donations.

    1. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      They tried putting a woman there for a while.

    2. Re:Wrong person on the banner by mark72005 · · Score: 0

      Try Natalie Portman [/slashdotter]

    3. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not a naked woman though.

    4. Re:Wrong person on the banner by cashman73 · · Score: 1

      Why not? Before Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales used to own Bomis, Inc., which was in the online porn business,. . .

    5. Re:Wrong person on the banner by pyrr · · Score: 2

      At first glance, I thought there was a bum panhandling on Wikipedia. Then I read the caption and realized it was just Jimmy. After a week or two, it seems they at least posted a photo of him that lacked the week-old-stubble look.

    6. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Are you talking Florence Devouard, aka Anthere?

      While she succeeded Jimmy Wales as "chair" of the Wikimedia Foundation, she didn't really replace him as founder... a sort of ambiguous sort of position that still gives him a seat on the governing board and more significantly gives him free reign to do whatever he wants to do on the projects including appointing himself as admin or bureaucrat on any project at any time without even a vote. This is something he has chosen to do several times in the past, effectively giving himself complete control over content and user rights privileges on any project.

      Jimbo claims that he won't do that any more and will respect community wishes, but I'll believe it when I see it. He still retains essentially the final word on the English language edition of Wikipedia. As a general rule of thumb he seldom exercises that authority and generally stays away from the general politics of the site, but those user rights are still there.

      Some of this made sense when he was personally footing the site hosting bill for Wikipedia when he was legally responsible for the operations and content on Wikipedia. As a board member, he still has a fiduciary responsibility for the content of Wikipedia, so it is still somewhat of a concern... but there are other ways to deal with those few issues that come up from time to time and he really doesn't need such direct control any more.

    7. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kidding? Whenever I need to get off I just fire up wikipedia and there he is.

    8. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Haedrian · · Score: 1

      Uh no.

      It was a 'random blogger' or something. Spanish woman if I remember correctly. Was definably not 42 either. Will try to find an image and will get back to you.

    9. Re:Wrong person on the banner by cpghost · · Score: 1

      You mean someone like that godaddy girl?

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    10. Re:Wrong person on the banner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OP did not deliver.

  5. Go ahead and run banner ads... by NixieBunny · · Score: 0, Redundant

    AdBlock Plus will ensure that I don't see them.

    --
    The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
  6. Trust by mccalli · · Score: 1

    No, it shouldn't. At that point it loses trust - I can no longer consider the information to be free of commercial conflicts of interest.

    There's already enough problems with the editor model - let's not add more.

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:Trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen! I've had a few pages about organizations deleted, when some editor decided the organizations weren't large enough. It wasn't till a year or two later that I found out that editor had a put up a page about an organization a tenth the size, and didn't delete it because it was too small. Guys like me, who preached Wikipedia in its infancy, got burned by some stupid editors, and aren't about to donate a penny to Wikipedia. My money now goes to the EFF, which seems to be using it more to my liking.

      Making Wikipedia use ads will be the best thing Microsoft can do...at that point, they can both sell ads for Wikipedia AND successfully bring back their encyclopedia, ad free.

    2. Re:Trust by clarkkent09 · · Score: 2

      The same problem exists with the donations model. How do you know that large donors are not affecting the content? For that matter how do you know that the money they are asking for is even needed? Maybe they received enough already to run the site for a while and now they are pocketing the rest. The trust issue doesn't magically appear only when there is a for-profit (gasp) company involved, in an actual commercial transaction, free from "we do it for the people" bullshit. It exists all the time as long as there are human beings involved.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    3. Re:Trust by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      No, it shouldn't. At that point it loses trust - I can no longer consider the information to be free of commercial conflicts of interest.

      How much can you trust Wikipedia now? I go there when I want to look things up quickly, but I can't really trust articles on politics, religion, or famous individuals to be bias free. How many celebrities pages are edited by their talent agency? How many times was George W. Bush's page edited to include erroneous information? I went there one day and Wikipedia said he had a black belt in Judo.

      The way to handle this is to randomize the ads, so the only way a Coca-Cola ad shows up on a page about Coca-Cola (or Pepsi for that matter) is by coincidence, instead of allowing Coca-Cola to sponsor a page.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    4. Re:Trust by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Notability is always a slippery slope. It isn't really even the size of the organization, but being able to prove that whatever it is that you may write about on Wikipedia is something worth keeping on Wikipedia.

      There are some fanatics who really push the issue and get angry when you claim notability but they don't believe it.

    5. Re:Trust by demonbug · · Score: 1

      The way to handle this is to randomize the ads, so the only way a Coca-Cola ad shows up on a page about Coca-Cola (or Pepsi for that matter) is by coincidence, instead of allowing Coca-Cola to sponsor a page.

      That's my thought as well. No selling ads to specific articles, just something like x% of articles served will include your ad in a dedicated ad block that is in identical position on all articles regardless of content. Anything else and there is way to much motivation to modify specific articles to trigger more traffic. Maybe even just a small tag at the top of each page, something telling the user "This article brought to you by x". Yes, Coca Cola might get pissed off a little bit if a Pepsi ad accompanies their article, but if the model is straightforward and everyone understands what is happening they probably wouldn't mind too much.

      Of course, I have no idea what such untargeted ads would be worth, but given the popularity of Wikipedia I'd think you could cover a good chunk of operating costs.

  7. losing opportunities to involve qualified professi by commodore64_love · · Score: 2

    That's the whole point.
    It's the People's encyclopedia, not the elitists' encyclopedia. It is grown out of the generous volunteerism of billions, rather than those who are like Ebenezer Scrooge - only care about the money.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  8. User revolt by Gudeldar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wikipedia would have to pay a lot of people to edit it because a huge number of their volunteers would probably revolt and quit working on the site if there were ads on it.

    1. Re:User revolt by Fibe-Piper · · Score: 2

      Wikipedia would have to pay a lot of people to edit it because a huge number of their volunteers would probably revolt and quit working on the site if there were ads on it.

      There are ads on Slashdot though. We still come here and contribute. /. even rewards our patience and contributions with the means to turn these ads off.

      --
      I went to battle M.C. Escher, but drew a blank.
    2. Re:User revolt by AdmiralXyz · · Score: 2

      Revolt and go where? The other ad-free open-access Internet encyclopedia? There really aren't any alternatives to Wikipedia right now, so no matter how mad the purists would be there's nowhere for them to go.

      --
      Dislike the Electoral College? Lobby your state to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
    3. Re:User revolt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wikipedia would have to pay a lot of people to edit it because a huge number of their volunteers would probably revolt and quit working on the site if there were ads on it.

      I hate to play this meme in a story that's going to see this quite a bit, but [CITATION NEEDED].

    4. Re:User revolt by Stregano · · Score: 1

      A huge number of volunteers already quit once the elitist admins hopped in. In my eyes, the worst that would happen with editing is that the elitist admins would get all huffy and quit. Is that a bad thing?

      How many people in the comments of this alone say that Wikipedia is a reference, not a source? I bet a alot.

      If we dumped the current admins and brought fresh new ones in, or they thought of a better system for checks and balances (like an admin taking something out that was contributed, but multiple people can vote it back in), then it is possible to get even closer to a source. Sure, there will be jokes posted up there, but all in all, it would equal itself out in the end.

      For example: if I figured out why the theory of evolution was 100% incorrect and proved it on wikipedia, I would technically be my own source, and just chose to post it on wikipedia first. Now, since I am my own source, poof, admin cuts it. Some people in the world are smart enough to be their own source, but too lazy to write a book.

      Seriously, Wikipedia still has great potential, but they have lost hundreds, possibly thousands, of quality contributors. Them putting advertising on would help out and possibly scare off the current admins, or maybe Wikipedia will finally man up and do a once a month admin change or something.

      --
      The world is how you make it
    5. Re:User revolt by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia would have to pay a lot of people to edit it because a huge number of their volunteers would probably revolt and quit working on the site if there were ads on it.

      There are ads on Slashdot though. We still come here and contribute. /. even rewards our patience and contributions with the means to turn these ads off.

      And Slashdot is far from the only such site. I use two such on a daily basis: Lumberjocks (a woodworking site), and The Fresh Loaf (a baking site). In fact, I suspect that sites that rely on user content contribution that don't rely on ad revenue to keep the lights on are more the exception than the rule, doubly so if the site is of any size/significance.
       
      Heck, look at Wikia... An entire network of sites that rely on user contributions for content and ad revenue to keep the lights on.
       
      But, sadly, Wikipedia is different as the 'no advertising' mantra is written into it's very DNA. But, I can't see how a Wikipedia dominated by those willing to play the game and accept ad revenue will be noticeably different in the long run from Wikipedia as it currently exists. It's been demonstrated that folks will contribute to sites run by ad revenue.

    6. Re:User revolt by dargaud · · Score: 1

      Revolt and go where? The other ad-free open-access Internet encyclopedia? There really aren't any alternatives to Wikipedia right now, so no matter how mad the purists would be there's nowhere for them to go.

      Yes, there is conservapedia ! Sorry. At least it's worth going there every once in a while for a good laugh...

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    7. Re:User revolt by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is not (and my opinion should not be) a publisher of record. If you figure out an important scientific advance, you can't and shouldn't publish it first on WP. I think that admins who remove this kind of info are just following the guidelines for WP. Many folks on /. don't like this model and I guess there's a good argument both ways, but the fact is that WP is specifically and explicitly set up at this point to prevent this kind of "first posting."

      Publish your advance on your blog, tweet it and wait for NYT to come write a story about it. Then link to the story and put it on WP. That's what WP is for.

    8. Re:User revolt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Facebook continually gets worse, yet their userbase continually grows. You are wrong; people will continue to edit Wikipedia because they will shrug off the change as a minor setback no matter how extreme it is. After all, that's what our generation is trained to do with the Patriot Act, the TSA, anti-protesting rules on college campuses, and so on.

    9. Re:User revolt by Confusador · · Score: 1

      In 2003 there weren't really any alternatives to XFree86, either. It is entirely plausible that someone like Pierre Omidyar (e.g.) would seed a new foundation to support a fork, if they were dissatisfied with Wikimedia.

    10. Re:User revolt by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      There are ads on Slashdot though.

      If Wikipedia lowered its quality to match that of slashdot, both in terms of content (misleading summaries and dupes, anyone?) and contributions, I think it would kill the project faster than just about anything else possibly could. Frist post, anyone? GNAA? Apple sux/rules/sux/rules/sux/rules! Oh, and get your science from my blog where I misrepresent the facts, because that way, I may get some advertising bux!

    11. Re:User revolt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ORLY? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Alternatives

    12. Re:User revolt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YA RLY. Unless you want to point out the links to the other general purpose encyclopedias in your link.

    13. Re:User revolt by lorelorn · · Score: 1

      Yes but they would be replaced by people who are actually knowledgeable as opposed to merely opinionated.

  9. Advertisers are a bad idea by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They will end up with editorial control, and that would be a very bad thing. That's a big part of why our modern news media is so awful.

    Maybe they could go to a model in which people could contribute resources to handle traffic load instead of directly contributing money? The big problem here is the raft of centralized servers and databases needed to keep Wikipedia fast and responsive.

    1. Re:Advertisers are a bad idea by mrsteveman1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why wouldn't that be true of donors?

      You don't think Wikipedia would feel similar pressure if the founder of Ebay decided not to donate because of a specific article on the site?

    2. Re:Advertisers are a bad idea by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      They will end up with editorial control....

      Isn't that an easily solvable problem?

      That's a big part of why our modern news media is so awful.

      You sure that's because of advertising bias and not because modern media is chasing the almighty dollar to the point that they sensationalize?

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    3. Re:Advertisers are a bad idea by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Yes, that is a problem. The main thing however is that with donors the amount represented by a single donor can be minimized by simply having lots of smaller donations from a great many people and perhaps even putting caps on the size of donations which will be accepted precisely to stop that sort of practice. If the founder of Ebay offers a million dollars with the proviso that his assistant gets full editorial control over the article about Ebay, it would be tempting... but if you simply say "sorry, but donation over $1k are not accepted" also makes it easy to turn down such requests too.

      So far the WMF hasn't seemed to turn down such donations, so as a matter of practice I'd agree that at the moment the difference really is more of semantics than anything substantive.

    4. Re:Advertisers are a bad idea by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Advertisers are a bad idea. They will end up with editorial control, and that would be a very bad thing. That's a big part of why our modern news media is so awful.

      You and others keep saying that as if it were a natural law - but I'm not seeing it.
       
      Both Natural Geographic and Smithsonian magazines accept advertising, but there's not so much as a hint of editorial bias. PBS has been accepting ad revenue (excuse me 'donations' and 'sponsorships') for decades, with no hint of editorial bias. On a daily basis I use a number of special interest websites that rely on users for their content and advertisements to keep the lights on. Yet I regularly see reviews and posts taking issue with a particular vendor or product right alongside an advertisement for that vendor or product.
       
      Yes, Big Media has whored itself out and altered it's contents for advertising money - but that appears to be a result of their own choices, not an invariable outcome of accepting advertising money.
       

      Maybe they could go to a model in which people could contribute resources to handle traffic load instead of directly contributing money? The big problem here is the raft of centralized servers and databases needed to keep Wikipedia fast and responsive.

      They tried that back in the early days. The result was endless maintenance and operational headaches due to the numerous different configurations and performance levels of the donated machines and colocation space. (Some of that was also shooting themselves in the foot, at least back then the Wikimedia software was widely regarded as being nothing but a collection of kludges, patches, and improvisations.) That directly resulted in their first call(s) for money, so they could have standardized configurations and predictable performance by buying and setting up the boxen themselves.

    5. Re:Advertisers are a bad idea by etphonehome8706 · · Score: 1

      Why would ads imply editorial control? A system such as Google AdSense allows site owners to put ads on their website without ever even talking to the advertisers, much less agreeing to give up control to them.

      If Wikipedia adopted such a system, I would expect the existing community would only go along with it if strict rules were put in place to ban edits made for the purpose of affecting the profitability of the page in any way. Furthermore, there's no reason the Wikimedia Foundation would have to stop accepting donations and become a for-profit company just because they put ads on their site. They could use the ad revenue to supplement donation money, pay to keep their servers running, and divert any surplus directly to their existing initiatives to help bring knowledge and education to developing countries.

      The current system seems sort of like a PBS pledge drive to me. PBS chooses to solicit for donations at certain times of the year all at once rather than selling small chunks of air time for advertising throughout the year. Wikipedia, instead of devoting a small section of their site to advertising throughout the year, is throwing up a huge banner at the top of every page to beg for money. There's nothing inherently wrong with this strategy, other than it seems to annoy some users more than a discreetly-placed advertisement would. It also seems to be mostly ineffective.

  10. Just be super-upfront by drumcat · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Look, PBS has ads now. They still require donations, but they have ads. Just keep the bar very high, and the disclosure very clear. Maybe you make it so that companies can advertise, but cannot advertise with any product specificity, and that all images must carry a small (a) sign to signify it's an ad? It's not impossible. Look, many companies advertise on PBS to improve their image. Wikipedia can position itself the same way... as an image builder. Just get past the begging though. It's old. If your idea is *that* good, you shouldn't have a problem getting ad money.

    1. Re:Just be super-upfront by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      This episode of "wait wait, dont drill me was brought to you by BP..... We're sorry...."

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:Just be super-upfront by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Or have big banners at the top saying "This page made possible by a grant from the Soandso Foundation and Fnord Motor Company". Like you said, not an ad per se, but still extending those companies influence by showing they care about sharing knowledge.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    3. Re:Just be super-upfront by fyrewulff · · Score: 1

      PBS has -always- had ads. They just had fewer back then. I vastly prefer the calmly narrated ads for Sears and so on that air on PBS versus the loud obnoxious INSERT BAD SONG COVER AND GRAPHICS. Strangely, I can remember more PBS ads than I do mainstream ads..

      --
      "We need to get over this notion, that, for Apple to win... Microsoft must lose." - Steve Jobs, 1997
    4. Re:Just be super-upfront by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Look, PBS has ads now. They still require donations, but they have ads.

      Though they've become a bit more overt of late, PBS has had ads for as long as I can remember - and my memories go back into the late 60's. They call them sponsorships and donations, but "this program made possible by" is advertisement pure and simple.

    5. Re:Just be super-upfront by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2

      What I want to know is: Who is behind the mysterious "Viewers Like You" corporation, what do they manufacture, and why do they feel the need to sponsor almost every single PBS show?

    6. Re:Just be super-upfront by Seumas · · Score: 1

      PBS and NPR are commercial organizations. They just happen to be considered tax free charities. Most of their finances come from major corporations like Siemen's and Monsanto and other multi-nationals. They even refer to the "grants" as "advertising". And you can often see it reflected in the content they run. Siemen's has a pretty big tie to high speed railways and . . . would you look at that? Lots of stories all the time (especially on NPR) about how fantastic high speed railways are and how America should have them all over the place, just like Europe. (see: Siemen's Mobility).

  11. I used to donate. by Winckle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Every year I used to donate what I could, £5, £10, or £15 but I got so pissed off with the deletionist attitude of the last year or two I just won't give anymore. I'm sick of remembering articles, going to check them and they're gone and yet stupid shit like "List of Catgirls" manages to stay.

    The most annoying thing with deletionist attitudes is that it doesn't even make sense. The less popular an article is the less resources i.e. bandwith it uses

    1. Re:I used to donate. by vadim_t · · Score: 2

      Weird one. Minerva McGonagall is a catgirl? That's stretching it quite a bit.

    2. Re:I used to donate. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...] and yet stupid shit like "List of Catgirls" manages to stay.

      Congratulations! You've managed to lower my faith in Wikipedia's deletion policies even further! I do have to admit, after seeing things like articles on every single goddamned Simpsons episode, individually, as well as plot synopses of every Doctor Who story, also individually, plus articles on each individual Pokemon (surprise, each one individually!), the bar was set quite high, but you stepped up to the challenge and came through with flying colors! Kudos to you, Winckle!

    3. Re:I used to donate. by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      The most ideal thing they could do is to rank every article according to its importance. This way, even the most niche article can stay and have a place.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    4. Re:I used to donate. by booyabazooka · · Score: 1

      I don't know what you're talking about, because I've never seen anyone use "resources" as a rationale for deleting an article. Either you've got something wrong, you're trolling, or more likely, you've just talked with a few dumb Wikipedians. Deletionism is generally about keeping article quality high. If a subject isn't "notable" enough to have sufficient secondary sources of information about it, you end up with no way to verify disputes. The idea is that no article at all is better than an article that has no systematic way of ever becoming factually correct.

    5. Re:I used to donate. by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      Well, she *is* stretching quite a bit when she turns back, so...

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    6. Re:I used to donate. by Daetrin · · Score: 2

      "I don't know what you're talking about, because I've never seen anyone use 'resources' as a rationale for deleting an article."

      No one uses "resources" as a reason why an individual article should be deleted. They use "resources" as a reason why articles need to be deleted in general. (Certainly not the only reason, as you point out "quality" is another one.)

      "The idea is that no article at all is better than an article that has no systematic way of ever becoming factually correct."

      I've encountered multiple articles about subjects i'm interested in that were easily verifiable and yet were deleted as being "non notable" or some such. It's happened enough times that i'm certainly not interested in donating.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    7. Re:I used to donate. by Obyron · · Score: 1

      This isn't quite true. I've been doing research for a project I'm working on. It involves scraping a lot of data from the wiki pages for different Congressional districts.

      For most states, you can search for, say, "AL 3" and get taken to the page for Alabama's 3rd Congressional District. For California, a good majority of these redirects are taken by state highways. Search "CA 12". It redirects you to California State Route 12 with a link for the District. Compare the two pages. The state route has significantly more substantive data than the Congressional district (who is the largest employer there? what are the cornerstones of the district's economy?). I think it's hard to argue that the state highway is more important or more "popular" or "useful" than an article about the Congressional district, but the simple answer is that there's some guy out there somewhere with a hard-on for California's state highways.

      Incidentally, if anyone knows other good sources for more in-depth information on Congressional districts (and I mean all of them), let me know. Most of the places I've seen that release any kind of data are selling it for exorbitant prices.

      --
      --Obyron
    8. Re:I used to donate. by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a lot of pages that are created on wikipedia that should be deleted, go over the AfD page and give it a read. People that have very little idea what wikipedia wants on its pages, or that blatantly ignore it to promote their own music or sports team or as their personal myspace page, one line mentions in a publication, hoaxes and so on. Sadly I think it's much the same as if you try helping out newbies, with each newbie your patience wanes until it's just RTFM!!! Same if you try fighting the endless stream of trash pages, eventually everything that doesn't fit your strict reading gets a "Delete!". I remember back in the early days of wikipedia, I added a bit to it but it was mostly about just adding information that was factual in an encyclopedic style, since unsourced facts were better than no facts. Today I'm pretty sure they'd get deleted because that's not what they want anymore - perhaps they never did but there were a lot fewer who'd delete a reasonably sane article for lack of sources. In a way you're not looking for quality contributions, you're looking for people who knows how to quote someone else without adding anything of their own. Completely different model, really.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    9. Re:I used to donate. by mewsenews · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia deleted the article on ioQuake3 while allowing the article on John Miller (footballer born 1878)

      Wikipedia's bureaucracy is fucking retarded.

    10. Re:I used to donate. by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Can you give an example of an article that was deleted? Otherwise, it's hard to compare it to the inane one you cited. And why would an article's resource usage be the main consideration for whether to delete? I'd think its relevance to the site's goal would be the prime consideration.

    11. Re:I used to donate. by Tom · · Score: 1

      Deletionism isn't about resources, never was.

      Deletionism is about people deciding what is important and what isn't. The vast majority of disputed delete requests is about the notability point. And no, I'm not going to use WP slang outside of WP. I've had my share when I spent a month or two of my life checking the delete request page several times a day and weighing in on the discussions. Until I realized it's really a waste of time.

      Anyway, the point is that if you decide what is important, then you are important yourself. Or at least you can feel important. And that's what it's all about - personal grandeur.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    12. Re:I used to donate. by Tom · · Score: 1

      I'd think its relevance to the site's goal would be the prime consideration.

      I'd think its relevance to the site's readers should be the prime consideration.

      Ironically, the less notable something is, the more likely that someone needs to look it up. Having an article on the moon landing or Washington D.C. or Washington the president on Wikipedia only serves to fill it up, as anything you can find there is readily available in at least 100 other sources. You don't need Wikipedia for that. I don't know about you, but back when I was young it was the obscure things that I looked up in my parents dead-tree encyclopedia.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    13. Re:I used to donate. by noidentity · · Score: 1
      I use Wikipedia for its consistent, ad-free presentation. It's enjoyable to read about something in that format than some other awful format on another site. There's plenty about the moon landing that I don't know, as well as links to many OTHER Wikipedia pages about related things. I wouldn't get the latter from some other site.

      All this is irrelevant, though. What matters is what their goal for the site is. Pages should fit within that goal. If the goal doesn't match what readers want, then either readers are on the wrong site, or the goal needs to be updated. I'd rather visit a site that is based on the vision of a small group of people, rather than pushed in all the odd directions random readers want it to go. Coherency has value. Maybe they have good reasons for eliminating really obscure things, I don't know.

    14. Re:I used to donate. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2

      I would, but it was deleted.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    15. Re:I used to donate. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every year I used to donate what I could, £5, £10, or £15 but I got so pissed off with the deletionist attitude of the last year or two I just won't give anymore. I'm sick of remembering articles, going to check them and they're gone and yet stupid shit like "List of Catgirls" manages to stay.

      The most annoying thing with deletionist attitudes is that it doesn't even make sense. The less popular an article is the less resources i.e. bandwith it uses

      I hear you brother. Deletionisim is the single leading cause for the exodus of great contributors from the project. I've contributed to the Wiki for over 6 years now. I joined during the heyday of its renaissance, when new articles were gratefully accepted. Deletion debates were uncommon, as the community consensus was driven by fast expansion. While the important and much-viewed articles have continued to develop well in their accuracy and reliability in the open setting, the views on the periphery articles – those that are of interest to a limited number of individuals – is becoming increasingly politicized.

      Nowadays there are so-called "contributors", whose primary participation is to patrol the site and nominate articles they condemn too weak or too insignificant for deletion, even if they have been in the encyclopedia for years. Their claim to fame is being important community members, who are "enforcing" the Wikipedia policy. The problem is, how come has Wikipedia survived through most of its existence so well without people, whose contribution was policing? From 2001 to around 2006–2008, like it or not, Wikipedia was a de facto anarchy. Yes I know, Wikipedia is not an anarchy. But then again, why has Wikipedia's growth stalled since enforcing the notability guidelines became the hot potato around 2006–2008?

      If you look at the article histories, it's obvious that people who make positive contributions to the project (ie. start new articles) rarely participate in the deletion discussions, unless their own work in under threat. That is, IF they notice the deletion debate before it closes. So, the deletionists are winning on the long run, and each and every day many good articles/stubs get deleted. And now that the deletionists have basically evicted the positive contributors, less new articles are born each day. Living Wikipedia history is being wiped off to void each and every day for the sake of enforcing a policy.

      End conclusion: Wikipedia was fun and growthful until mid-2006, as can be seen from the linked picture. Growth has now stalled. Wikipedia has reached its limit. Maybe some day there will form a counter-culture, that will fork the project or start an entirely new popular wiki-encyclopedia from scratch, where there are no standards for inclusion – only standards against un-constructive editing such as vandalism. Inclusion standards have hurt many and will continue to do so, because the deletionists now rule the Wiki more or less.

    16. Re:I used to donate. by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia deleted the article on ioQuake3

      Never heard of it. Can you provide evidence of coverage by reliable sources?

      while allowing the article on John Miller (footballer born 1878)

      Yes? And? You don't think a footballer deserves to have an article for some reason? You think only stuff that interests you is important? Geeks hate sports, so we should all be outraged here? (Note, I'm both a programmer and a huge football fan.)

      In any case, I see no evidence that anyone has nominated that content-free stub for deletion, so how do you know that they're "allowing" it? Maybe they've simply overlooked it. But it is backed by a reliable historical record, which is presumably more than can be said for your obscure geeky minor variant game. IMO, Wikipedia shouldn't have either article, but ioQuake (whatever it is) could possibly be mentioned in the Quake article as a variant (I assume that's what it is), and the footballer could be mentioned in a list of footballers for that league and time period.

      But hey, outrage and posturing is a lot easier than trying to actually do something useful or productive.

    17. Re:I used to donate. by Ltap · · Score: 1

      "No original research", etc. The problem is that so many people have added so much factually incorrect (and unsourced) stuff to Wikipedia that had to be deleted, that they are simply trying to set the bar at "sourced". The idea is that, if you provide enough sources on a subject, they will balance each other out. The reality is that most editors with competing ideas or opposing points of view will just delete the additions made by people from the "other side", creating total pandemonium.

      --
      Yet Another Tech Blog
      (but so much more, including game and movie reviews)
      http://yanteb.peasantoid.org
    18. Re:I used to donate. by linhares · · Score: 1
    19. Re:I used to donate. by ErkDemon · · Score: 1

      I think Manga's still supposed to be a multi-billion-dollar industry, and people who work in or around the industry are expected to be conversant with this stuff. Being able to quickly find a relevant Wikipedia page when you need to check something can be really, really useful.

  12. Wikipedia will close on day XX-XX-XXXX unless ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the fundraising is enough to keep us going.

    Easy solution.

  13. Meh by Haedrian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was just telling my friend the other day - a giant picture of Jimmy or 'random blogger' is pretty much the same as an advertisment.

    If they put ads, they should do them themselves (no giving it out to other companies who will track me) - and they should instead sell spaces in articles. So you look up "mopping" and you get an ad of a mopping company.

    1. Re:Meh by Spazztastic · · Score: 1

      I was just telling my friend the other day - a giant picture of Jimmy or 'random blogger' is pretty much the same as an advertisment.

      If they put ads, they should do them themselves (no giving it out to other companies who will track me) - and they should instead sell spaces in articles. So you look up "mopping" and you get an ad of a mopping company.

      What's funny is that I e-mailed Jimmy Wales about this on Monday night. I said pretty much what you just said -- I just hope he reads it and that it might do something.

      SomethingAwful.com has their own advertising internally and they approve of the banner ads. Wikipedia could do something similar only more targeted based on the content of the page with keywords.

      --
      Posts not to be taken literally. Almost everything is sarcasm.
    2. Re:Meh by chdig · · Score: 1

      Your question/point of "what is an advertisement?" is likely the best one to focus on. I have no problem at all with advertising based on the content of a page, but have a huge issues with doubleclick, facebook connect and their like, who would track users and what they browse.

      Still, to create and manage a worldwide ad-server which can't be taken advantage of is not a simple task. One might even suggest they'd need to raise a very large amount of donation money in order to build and maintain it through the opening stages.

  14. First Customer by slag02 · · Score: 1

    I heard Encyclopedia Britannica wants to buy the first ad...

  15. The ads are silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've given Wikipedia money every now and then, some 30-40 $ per year.

    However, this time I'm boycotting until they put up a banner saying "Give us money, damn it." For some reason, I find the personal appeal ads really annoying (and I haven't bothered to even click them).

    Dear Wikipedia, just say you need money and I'll cough up some.

  16. No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is information.

    Then there is commerce.

    Whenever commerce touches information, information has a way of getting warped.

    It's really as simple as that.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by turtle+graphics · · Score: 1
      Wikipedia is a major educational resource, and should remain ad-free. Many educational media producers fight difficult (and often losing) battles against advertising and the corporate influence it brings.

      Through slashed state budgets, ad-supported textbooks have gained some traction in our schools. If educators saw no problem with advertising we would have had ads galore many years ago. The fact that most school textbooks are ad-free is a testament to a large number of intelligent people deciding that ads will erode the quality of information.

      Scientific journals are also nearly free of ads, sometimes with a page or two at the back selling other books by the publisher. Again, advertisements would give the impression (and probably the reality) that journal content is not free of interference from interested parties.

      As another model, consider PBS, which provides informational and educational programming. It, too, was once free of ads but has slipped on that front and now runs psuedo-ads before and after shows. Still, PBS runs massive pledge campaigns instead of a full slate of advertising. So again, there is huge pressure to gain revenue through advertising, but PBS has resisted.

      So, many organizations seem to agree that advertising is a bad thing for educational content. And I think Wikipedia has benefitted tremendously from its lack of dependency on the corporate world, because volunteer contributors feel like their work is being used for the public good, rather than as yet another way to enrich a corporation.

      Finally, Wikipedia has managed to make the volunteer/donor model work for many years. They clearly shouldn't give it up easily. Probably governments worldwide should contribute to their mission. If they are $7 million short, that's a drop in the bucket for even a single country. The gobal educational benefits of having a quality reference tool available anywhere, for free, are certainly worth national and international support.

    2. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by wmbetts · · Score: 1

      I think you have Wikipedia confused with something that provides 100% non-biased factual information.

      --
      "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". - stolen from Dan C alt.os.linux.slackware
    3. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 1

      I take it you've donated then?

    4. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      Isn't this a vital piece of data on how the Cloud works?

      Grow something "free as in beer" until people get used to it, then "monetize" it. But like a small country that can't float forever like the US can, it's whipping around to "needing money or it shuts down". I ought to download one of the static shots and look at it locally.

      I can't help thinking the whole Cloud theme is like a giant flytrap. Wikipedia is an early endgame result.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    5. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      I think you are confused that "100% non-biased factual information" is even possible.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    6. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Isn't this a vital piece of data on how the Cloud works?

      No, it has nothing to do with the cloud.

      Grow something "free as in beer" until people get used to it, then "monetize" it.

      That was a fairly well-worn business model long before the internet, and certainly has been particularly common on the internet, but has nothing special to do with cloud computing.

    7. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by wmbetts · · Score: 1

      I think you're confused if you think they even try to be non-biased.

      --
      "Ubuntu" -- an African word, meaning "Slackware is too hard for me". - stolen from Dan C alt.os.linux.slackware
    8. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      They do. And I'm not confused on that matter. You are.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    9. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by spads · · Score: 1

      Yes, but his current approach also has disadvantages.

      NPR does those pledge begging things, which is a major reason why I originally gave up on them. The other reason is as follows.

      Interestingly, that begging mode seems to morph into some strange power trip/mentality/appetite, which ultimately impacts the media, causing it to be less objective, and slanting towards philosophies of the presenters. At least, that is what I saw in NPR. Causal connection? Who knows?

      How could this happen? Perhaps these begging campaigns cause the beggars to believe they are some kind of rock star gods? And, not too surprisingly, the stupid management buys into it. Who knows? I just know the whole atmosphere puts me ill at ease.

      --
      Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
    10. Re:No, wikipedia has to remain ad free by Teancum · · Score: 1

      If you want to see what an advertiser-based Wikipedia would look like, go to the Klingon-language edition of Wikipedia, now hosted on Wikia since it got kicked out of the Wikimedia project circle. It isn't completely tasteless, although Wikia has gone the rounds with some really lousy advertisers and some significant defections of some of the contributors over the years in part due to the advertising. A slightly better representative would be to look at how advertising is currently being used on the World of Warcraft Wiki, which does include some targeted advertising based upon certain content pages too.

      There are some problems with advertisements, and Wikia certainly has had its problems with them too. Considering that Wikia was also set up by Jimmy Wales, the differences between these sites and Wikipedia is all that more interesting too, even more considering there is certainly a whole bunch of cross-pollination between Wikipedia and many of these Wikia websites including many common volunteers.

  17. Large images? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What images are you talking about?

    (ABP Rule: |*/w/index.php?title=*:bannercontroller )

  18. Whats wrong? by Steelwings · · Score: 0

    Pleading for donations works for PBS.

  19. No thanks. by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 1

    For one thing, it would exclude Wikipedia from certain sources of funding.

    For another, it would introduce conflicts of interest that would seriously tarnish Wikipedia's credibility (a topic it already has to fight for).

    Third, it would demotivate certain contributors who want to work on a free encyclopaedia but have no interest in developing a product placement platform.

    1. Re:No thanks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine. Then you can keep begging and working on your free platform until finally there is absolutely not enough money to pay the expenses no matter how you twist or turn it. Then someone who isn't completely delusional will probably show up with a competing platform that's more willing to compromise in order to ensure its existence.

  20. How about they just cut salaries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm sure Jimmy Wales doesn't need half a million a year for a website he doesn't even write himself. I don't know how much the other people make, but if it's anything like Jimmy's salary it could use some cuts.

    1. Re:How about they just cut salaries by ResQuad · · Score: 1

      You do know that he makes zero money from the foundation? He's on the board of trustees and it's unpaid. I don't think you could cut everyones salaries to zero and still have any staff at all.

    2. Re:How about they just cut salaries by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You do know that he makes zero money from the foundation?

      Yeah, right.

  21. Slashdot business model? by w1z7ard · · Score: 1

    Advertisements on the web may be the most common way to turn a profit online, but it's certainly not the universe anyone really wanted except for advertising firms. I would gladly pay $5 a month for wikipedia to exist without ads. In fact, I would almost always pay money rather than see ads for any service (as I eventually did on slashdot, incidentally). So perhaps wikipedia should adopt the slashdot model: No ads for special or paying members- everyone else gets non intrusive ads (by special, I mean long term members, frequent contributors, etc.). You could even adopt a system where contributors get "points" which allow them to not see ads.

    --

    "Recursive bipartite matching"- try it!

  22. Single advertiser / benefactor by Dan+East · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As much traffic as Wikipedia enjoys, it seems they could have a single large advertiser / benefactor that could be promoted in a subtle, unobtrusive manner because their "ad" would be visible on every page. To me that would be preferable to context sensitive ads (Google adwords type stuff) or rotating ads which have to scream for attention and thus are a constant distraction.
    PBS and other non-profit entities have been able to do similar "advertising" in a very tasteful manner for many decades (between programming - "the following is made possible by donations from..."). That seems most fitting for Wikipedia as well, which is different than flat-out commercial advertising.

    --
    Better known as 318230.
    1. Re:Single advertiser / benefactor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One advertiser means a close relationship. One big problem with ads is that it might warp the content, the extreme case being for fear of losing business. Google Ads (et al) provide an arms length deal, with text based as just at the bottom of every page.

    2. Re:Single advertiser / benefactor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sponsors instead of advertisers. No "call to action", just "Wikipedia brought to you by IBM" or whatever

    3. Re:Single advertiser / benefactor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BRAWNDO the thirst mutilator presents: wikipedia

  23. They've already got cash by arshadk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I thought about donating some money. I use wikipedia pretty regularly and I'd like to support it. The only problem is I don't think they need any money. Their financial statements are available and it looks like they've got enough cash on hand to run for the year without any more donations. I don't see the need to add to their cushion.

    1. Re:They've already got cash by Eil · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Care to link? Were you talking aout this?

      I find it somewhat surprising that less than half of their money is spent on servers and infrastructure. (On the other hand, it could be a lot less if they were willing to set up a secure mirror system rather than try to serve everything themselves.) Also interesting is that 21% of their total budget ($4.2 million) is planned to be spent on Community Programs. I thought delivering the world's most comprehensive encyclopedia to the masses for free was already something of a community program?

      I just get the impression from Wikipedia that they're trying to run this non-profit a little too much like a business. Sure, the company itself doesn't turn a profit in the traditional sense, but I'd be very interested to know how much the staff makes and how that had scaled over time in relation to their annual budget.

    2. Re:They've already got cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for that. Do you have a link to that financial statement?

      I have been thinking for weeks now, "Hey Jimmy, where's the transparency? Show me the actual financial situation and I'll show you some cash." If their financial information really is already available to us, then he would do himself a favor by linking to it.

      But the other point well taken on this discussion is about the often-broken system of edits. For example, what happened to the Helsinki Atheist page? Apparently it was voted out of existence by the majority of its contributors.

      How did that happen, one has to wonder: Did some group of religious people all get together and join as "contributors" only so that they could get the page completely removed?

      Has Wikipedia got any mechanism to counter that kind of undemocratic tyranny-of-the-majority? If not, then the reliability (and therefore value) of all their information is questionable.

    3. Re:They've already got cash by ResQuad · · Score: 1

      Any forward thinking group worth it's weight will have enough money in reserves so they can run for a decent amount of time without any income. In this case, I believe the amount on hand is about 6 months worth which isn't bad. If the foundation kept too much more than that on hand - the contributors wouldn't be happy because their money wouldn't be going anywhere.

    4. Re:They've already got cash by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Someone upthread points out this isn't really about Wikipedia's financial need - they're using Wikimedia's most visible project to [stealthily] advertise for money to support other Wikimedia projects.

    5. Re:They've already got cash by Seumas · · Score: 2

      Like most other large charities, they need to continue significant fund-raising to pay for the corporate-CEO level salaries they pay each other. The actual cost of running a bunch of cheap servers on open source software and feed some bandwidth to it can't compare to the expense surely involved in paying themselves ridiculous salaries and/or bonuses.

    6. Re:They've already got cash by MobyDisk · · Score: 1
  24. TFA hasn't thought this through by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 1

    From TFA's summary:

    > Wales attempted the same request for donations last year

    Dude, it's an end of year fundraiser! (And it worked very well, they raised plenty of money.)

    It's about as surprising as trains being cancelled in Autumn because of "leaves on the tracks".

  25. If they do ads... by forkfail · · Score: 1

    ... hopefully they do subscriptions, too, that would allow for no display of ads (sure, adblock, etc, would take care of that - but I'd still buy a subscription just on GP).

    --
    Check your premises.
  26. set up a wiki trust? by shooteur · · Score: 1

    Can't these wiki assholes just set up a trust and over time use it to fund the site?

    1. Re:set up a wiki trust? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Uhhh...how does that solve the problem of lack of money? You need money to fund the trust in the first place. That's like saying the solution to being poor is to get a bank account.

    2. Re:set up a wiki trust? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      It does seem to be that the more money that the Wikimedia Foundation seems to get, the more places they seem to find to put it. They now get donations on the order of several million per year, and it certainly exceeds the basic needs for running the basic infrastructure such as the server farms (yes, plural) and dealing with network hosting costs. In theory they certainly could be building up such a trust funding account, even if it is just a few thousand dollars per year at the moment they would be receiving. The point would be to grow that trust fund in such a way that it could be perpetual and diminish the need for additional fund raising in the future, at least for basic services.

      A few organizations have been able to pull off something like that, but it is rare.

    3. Re:set up a wiki trust? by Seumas · · Score: 1

      You misspelled "line their pockets with donations intended to fund the actual site itself" wrong.

  27. Front page ads only? by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 2

    How about ads on the main page. Ads for free use and no ads if you donate. Ads shouldn't be related to the page you are viewing.

    1. Re:Front page ads only? by dasdrewid · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen the front page of Wikipedia in...I don't even know how long. I use the google search bar, and if the wikipedia article isn't near the top of the results, I throw "wiki" in. If that doesn't get me pretty much straight where I'm going, then I generally don't even bother looking at Wikipedia. I think their search tool is awful, personally...

      --
      No trespassing. Violators will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.
    2. Re:Front page ads only? by ResQuad · · Score: 1

      Lets be honest. Google has spoiled us with a masterful search. Every other search that isn't google... sucks (Have you tried Thunderbird's search?)

  28. Because of a minor annoyance? by serutan · · Score: 1

    I agree if it's a survival issue, but I don't think they should make such a major policy decision based on some highly vocal people being annoyed. If begging for money works, it works. It doesn't have to be wildly successful, it just has to work barely enough.

  29. Re:Wikipedia will close on day XX-XX-XXXX unless . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The prisoner's dilemma would like to have a word with you

  30. WikiHostage by AndyAndyAndyAndy · · Score: 1

    Just waiting for it to happen again... where they purposefully cut back on bandwidth and make Wikipedia really really slow. Nothing quite like wanting to read all about every MLB earned-run average champion ever but having it take more than 5 seconds to get there to make people feel like donating.

    --
    It's always confirmation bias!
  31. They already have advertising... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

    How isn't the big splash banner with Wales mug all over it already advertising? They are just advertising themselves.

    1. Re:They already have advertising... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm sure Jimmy gets all the girls now.

    2. Re:They already have advertising... by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      It's in the worst possible place, too, and I think they screwed up the presentation somehow (no size properties in img tag? Just a guess, haven't checked). Even though it ought to be cached by now, the damn thing always loads last, and I keep trying to click on or highlight (I highlight crap when I'm reading it online, not really to help me read--just a nervous habit, I suppose) text near the top of the article and ending up at the damn appeal when it manages to load and push the text down just in time to take my click.

      Real banner ads would almost certainly be less annoying than this even if I didn't adblock them, as they likely wouldn't push shit around when they load.

  32. More TFA summary stupidity by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 2

    Another snippet from the summary:

    > failed to meet the company's goal until

    Until. So, they *did* meet their goals. What are you complaining about??

    (This is just the stupidity from the summary. There's nothing there to suggest it would be worth clicking through to the actual articles.)

    1. Re:More TFA summary stupidity by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

      It is complaining that they didn't enough enough donations.

      It did meet its goal but it didn't meet it enough, like it should have met them more!

      --
      But... the future refused to change.
  33. Ad blocking technology by michael_cain · · Score: 1

    If Wikipedia included ads, would I even know? I regularly visit a number of sites that I know have ads, but I know only because of the occasional user comment that a particular ad is offensive. I don't see the ads because my browser blocks them. I started blocking ads not because I found them objectionable, but because waiting for six different overloaded servers to deliver the d*mned things slowed things down a lot. Is there reason to believe that Wikipedia's ads would be resistant to blocking?

  34. Wikileaks doesn't help by Yuioup · · Score: 1

    And all the negative press that Wikileaks has been getting recently does not help their cause.

    Remember, a lot of people do not know the difference between Wikipedia and Wikileaks.

    1. Re:Wikileaks doesn't help by ADRA · · Score: 1

      I doubt these people would be donating anyways...

      --
      Bye!
    2. Re:Wikileaks doesn't help by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      The people who confuse Wikileaks and Wikipedia are the same people who have barely touched a computer in their lives, much less regularly browse Wikipedia. Not exactly the people most likely to donate...

    3. Re:Wikileaks doesn't help by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      Besides which, any confusion would certainly make me more likely to donate..

  35. I Think There Are Other Ways... by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    For one, I think they could pull in some money by working on regular "static" releases - probably on CD or DVD. They could even do these for specific levels; for example elementary school library releases might not have entries on anal sex. Something like that could be useful for establishments who either don't have good internet connectivity, or don't want to allow completely unfettered access to things like wikipedia in its current form.

    I think they could also look into allowing companies to "sponsor" ads. This could be done intelligently if they try, so that sponsors can't change the message referring to their own entries. For example, they could allow McDonalds to sponsor entries on space exploration, but not on food or food-related matters. The sponsors could pay the professional editors directly for work on permitted entries and then be recognized at the end of the entry.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  36. Yes, use ads. by chemicaldave · · Score: 1

    You don't even have to track users. Just display relevant ads depending on the page they're looking at. So simple. There's nothing wrong with a few banner ads. And if they add an option for users to "donate/subscribe" to get rid of the ads, then they'll have all the money they need. If people wont donate for such a wonderful, free product then just unleash ads until they start donating.

  37. Wikipedia wants cash, advertisers want eyeballs.. by Dynamoo · · Score: 1

    Wikipedia wants cash, advertisers want eyeballs to look at their ads and many would dearly like to advertise on Wikipedia. Surely bringing those two things together is an obvious fix. The caveat is that the content must remain neutral, even if ads are running on it. But heck, many other publications manage to have an NPOV while accepting ads!

    --
    Never email donotemail@WeAreSpammers.com
  38. I used to donate to noble causes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But then the economy crashed and I lost something like 60 percent of my wealth.

    Ill start donating again once I have achieved complete financial security. Until then, altruism is for the rich.

  39. Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 2

    1. Take ads. Lots of ads.

    2. Hire real experts, real writers, professional editors. Toss the agenda-driven wankers and college kids.

    3. Regain Credibility.

    4. Profit!

    1. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by RDW · · Score: 5, Funny

      Pepsi, the Choice of a New Generation! - CITATION NEEDED.

    2. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They will never pay writers/ editors/ photographers. Just like a real media company. And just like a real media company, they're struggling and undergoing the same criticism: "there's no good content!", "It's a rehash of the AP/ Reuters/ wire news", "It's too liberal/ conservative bias!"

      Content creators are just a commodity these days. Wiki will never pay for *quality* content, figuring the community will police/ edit itself.

      Makes me wonder who at Wiki really gets paid and for doing what.

      Yes, I am a former journalist who finally realized that working for company PR is what really pays the bills.

    3. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Pepsi, the Choice of a New Generation[1]

      [1] Certified Pepsiologists at the Pepsi Foundation determine scientifically that Pepsi is freaking awesome.

    4. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by eleuthero · · Score: 1

      1. Take ads. Lots of ads.

      2. Generate ire in the public using said ads, thereby increasing publicity and public interest.

      3. Sell to Google to replace dead knol (or however they spell it).

      4. Profit.

      5. Re-invest in competing industry after the non-compete clause expires.

      6. ????

      7. More profit.

    5. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by datapharmer · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is to follow the aol business model? That's been working well (except for 3 and 4)

      --
      Get a web developer
    6. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      2. Hire real experts, real writers, professional editors. Toss the agenda-driven wankers and college kids.

      Sanger tried that. It didn't work. Doesn't mean he hasn't given up yet. (NB: RationalWiki is NOT affiliated with Wikipedia; it was started as a response to Conservapedia (a large group of nutjobs with a wiki, also unaffiliated with Wikipedia)).

      --
      $ make available
    7. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by jte · · Score: 1

      Bad plan - the whole appeal of Wikipedia is that the public can write something informative about relatively obscure topics - those topics would disappear. For example, Cleveland Clinic has a great entry because they're huge, but I wouldn't be able to create an informative article about an exceptional research hospital that's small and unknown. I doubt paid writers could handle even 5% of the material.

    8. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by jte · · Score: 1

      Ooops - comment misplaced.

    9. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Unequivocal · · Score: 1

      He tried it without all the eyeballs and google juice that WP gets. Everything looks different when you're building a business model from nothing than when you're extending one like WP.

    10. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ad money leads to corporate influence on the site and eventually calls into question its agenda. You'll have advertisers who threaten to pull their ads because they don't like a scathing (yet honest) fact in their own wiki entry. And if Wikipedia becomes desperate enough, they'll comply and we'll all be worse off.

      Just look at the newspapers that have been corrupted by real estate propaganda, spewing fictitious and misleading stats giving some alternate-reality outlook on the state of the industry, printing advertisements disguised as news, citing so-called experts who have a massive bias and stake in the market. All because they get a huge portion of their income from RE market advertising.

      I'd hate to see Wikipedia head down this road.

    11. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by morari · · Score: 1

      That doesn't sound too bad. I mean, I can't even recall the last time I had to see an internet ad. Anyone not already blocking ads in their browser deserves what they get!

      The internet has, over the past several years, become less and less interesting. You know why? Because it has become more popular, more commonplace. Every idiot in the world is on it, and now so is every corporation. The internet is quickly turning into little more than one huge advertising network. You don't see people putting up personal websites a lot nowadays, instead they just get online so that they can consume ads. I guess it was inevitable though... just look at how television and radio turned out.

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    12. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by sco08y · · Score: 1

      Pepsi, the Choice of a New Generation[1]

      [1] Certified Pepsiologists at the Pepsi Foundation determine scientifically that Pepsi is freaking awesome.

      Proceedings of the Pepsi Foundation ... And to summarize, we've determined that Pepsi is freaking awesome. This conclusion is based on a thoroughly researched article by the New York Times article on how awesome Pepsi is.

      NY Times, Febtober 13, Is Pepsi Really Freaking Awesome?

      So, we all want to know, is Pepsi awesome? Dear reader, I had the same question, and being the responsible journalist I am, I looked it up on Wikipedia. You can sleep soundly knowing that, in fact, Pepsi is freaking awesome.

    13. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1
      --
      $ make available
    14. Re:Here's Your Cocktail Napkin Business Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Any* strategy is much, much easier to implement when you have the user volume of wikipedia - you can find arguments as to why every one of these strategies is flawed - it doesn't matter. Wikipedia has aggregated the users and can pick the strategy they like. Others can pick the same or different strategies, but it doesn't mean they'll have anywhere near the success of WP.

  40. Adblock the donation banner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I got so fed up of the endless begging banners that I stuck in my Adblock

    ||wik*.org/w/index.php?title=*:BannerController

    I'm sorry, but don't bang on about something being free and then pester me for money. The moment I pay is the moment it stops being free for me.

  41. Freenet by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1

    Since Wikipedia is a community driven project, put it on community resources: Freenet.

    - no ads
    - guarantees Wikipedia's wealth of information won't be lost for financial reasons
    - helps to further Freenet adoption

    Disclaimer: I've never used Freenet.

    1. Re:Freenet by ADRA · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't trust an anonymous node to consistently host a given page to be the latest and greatest iteration of a given topic. Imagine all the politically slanted host providers that just host their given slant on one politician or another. I'll pass on the idea thanks.

      --
      Bye!
  42. AdBlock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Setup ads already, so my AdBlock browser plugin can do its work.

  43. Obligatory jwz by chebucto · · Score: 4, Funny

    A personal appeal to Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales (Dear Jimmy: fuck off.)

    Also, was I the only one to notice that Jimbo is calling himself the Founder (ie not Co-Founder) in his Personal / Urgent appeals?

    --
    The English word fart is one of the oldest words in the English vocabulary.
    1. Re:Obligatory jwz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you weren't the only person to notice that former-soft-core-pornographer Jimbo Wales was not calling himsef co-founder.

      (For those that don't know, wikipedia was originally funded (apparently) by money from 'bomis.com', a soft-core porn (well, attractive women in skimpy attire) type website-with-mailing-list.

      There's a photo of Jimmy Wales on a boat with two not unattractive young women - it's not a photoshop.

      He sees himself above the rule-of-law - he happily edited the page about himself in the past, and when called on it simply excised the edits from the history. (Other notable figures, such as Will Wheaton, simply did not edit their page *ever*, and asked others to make corrections on their behalf.)

    2. Re:Obligatory jwz by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 2

      Uncyclopedia:How To Be Funny And Not Just Stupid - Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia. Featuring various appeals of their own from founder "Jimbo Wales." I like the look of the suggestive one.

  44. politics warp things more than ads; be open by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

    Wikipedia's bias issues are deeply rooted in its structure, as noted elsewhere. I find it very hard to believe that being ad-free makes Wikipedia neutral; in fact, it's not neutral, especially with regard to controversial issues, and these political issues dwarf the potential ad ones.

    Surely the sort of oversight and openness needed to correct the editorial problems could target ad revenue as well. I'm afraid a donation model -- which I call a "tax on the nice" -- penalizes people of good intentions (over the 99% who grab freebies and run) and doesn't provide reliable revenue. Wikipedia has proven its point that it can be a critical resource -- if one is researching ball bearings and not some politician. Wikipedia deserves our investment.

    Now if Wikipedia is going to start tracking which articles I read, screw them. :) Again: Transparency, accountability. I don't think they're there yet, funding or no.

    1. Re:politics warp things more than ads; be open by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anything written by human beings is biased. You can't scrub the bias out of Wikipedia, ever. All you can do is minimize it, and I think Wikipedia does a good job at that.

      Look at the "discussion" tab: when it comes to politically charged issues, the concept of bias is simply bombed, stabbed, nuked, and otherwise blown to smithereens. Neutrality is simply impossible.

      So when I see people like you, uncomfortable with Wikipedia's "bias," I have to think that you are expecting the impossible. That you don't understand what it means for an issue to be contentious and emotional, and therefore impossible to scrub of bias.

      You are somehow expecting Wikipedia to solve a problem no one can solve. So do you not have a Wikipedia entry on something like abortion or palestine? No, you have a page on those issues. And you will never satisfy everyone, and someone will always be screaming bias. C'est la vie. Get used to it.

      Basically, you have to stop talking about Wikipedia's bias, it has none. The truth is, on some subjects, everyone has a bias, including you. And this shows on the Wikipedia entry, in what is written, or your reaction to it. Some issues are just deeply charged. So say something in the dicussion tab, or edit a Wikipedia entry. You can't do any better than that. This applies to all of life, not just Wikipedia: go out there and let your voice be heard. You can't passively sit back and expect Wikipedia, let alone ANY media source, to somehow be magically unbiased on issues which are deeply emotional and contentious.

      Have your bullshit meter on at all times, and don't hold Wikipedia to impossible standards. That's the best it can ever get, with Wikipedia, and in life.

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    2. Re:politics warp things more than ads; be open by locallyunscene · · Score: 2

      There's top down bias, and then there's bottom up bias.

      The original bias of Wikipedia was mostly bottom up bias. Lots of users could edit Wikipedia, but only certain demographics are actually interested editing a given article.

      Lots of people don't like the new editing system because it can introduce a top down bias. A small group of editors or even a single editor and effectively control the tone of an article. The goal of this is to be slanted towards encyclopedia-style objectivity, but it is a bias that didn't exist previously.

      People fear that advertising could introduce another top-down bias as it has in other organizations. The higher ups at Wikipedia might be worried about an advertiser pulling income from the site if it disagreed with one of their articles.

    3. Re:politics warp things more than ads; be open by MacAndrew · · Score: 1

      Amen. And so I referred to the "bias problem" and systemic warpage not any particular institutional bias. Saying bias will happen no matter what, well, we might as well be talking about auto accidents. Yes, it's inevitable, but safety counts tremendously.

      I'm thinking also of that incident a couple years ago with the Wikipedia "editor" who was aggressive but had utterly bogus credentials. I'd like to know more how this is kept in check. (Part of the answer, btw, is to hire and retain good talent -- and that takes money. If they're going to fund that, kudos.)

      I use Wikipedia all the time, but if I don't know much about something, presumably the most likely reason I'm looking it up, how likely am I to detect well-written nonsense?

    4. Re:politics warp things more than ads; be open by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      It is one thing when you talk about the discussion tab. What about all of the fast-deletes? Even when there are multiple sources? No debate, not notice to the user that created the page, just *BAM*, your page is gone when you check back on it a month or so later.

      Who would even want to screw with arguing with someone so dense as to take such a stupid action, then have to re-create the page and hope another power-tripping admin didn't do the same thing?

      Censorship is best done by making it look like there is nothing to discuss, and I've personally seen that multiple times.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
  45. Ads are better than begging by crow · · Score: 1

    I prefer ads to begging.

    I think the concern about advertisers having editorial influence is overblown. Certainly if they're using an outside placement network, like Google, then there's a nice buffer between the advertiser and the site.

    One thing that I think would be really cool is if they would accept ads, but only if the ads to not include cookies.

  46. Related links? by SharpFang · · Score: 1

    IMO, Wikipedia shouldn't go after classic banners and such, but instead allow for paid "related services" sections of articles. Say, a technology, a product, a branch of art or such is shown. Allow for links to companies that sell this kind of product, offer or heavily utilize this technology, to people who produce this kind of art on sale, and so on. Page on hot-stamping print? Add a company that does it. A page on some rock band? Add a link to a shop that sells their albums. Some book? Amazon link to this book's purchase page.

    This would actually add to the value of the site.

    --
    45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  47. $20 Million a year? by DogDude · · Score: 1

    I don't donate to Wikipedia. I won't donate to Wikipedia. They are spending $9.8 MM/year to pay 58 people. That's an *average* of $168K/person. That's simply absurd. I'm not "donating" to an organization so that their management can live like royalty. If they were truly interested in their mission, there's no reason to pay themselves such outrageous salaries.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:$20 Million a year? by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 1

      Does all that money go to salaries? I'm guessing that they're paying for equiptment too. I'd be more likely to give them money if I thought they *really* needed it.

    2. Re:$20 Million a year? by DogDude · · Score: 1

      Yup. $9.8 million just for salaries for 58 people.
      http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/d/dd/2010-11_Wikimedia_Foundation_Annual_Plan_FINAL_FOR_WEBSITE.pdf The entire budget is $20.4 million.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    3. Re:$20 Million a year? by chdig · · Score: 1

      You link is correct, but your statement is 100% wrong.

      If you'd read the document you linked to, you would see the real figure for 2010/11 is 8.9 million for 91 people, including the costs of recruiting and benefits, which would be somewhat significant. In 09/10 there were only 47 employees.

      Regarding the 9.8 million, this includes 1.8 million for their data centers, and 3.3 million in building out the data center in new capital expenditures, and most of the rest for what seems to be quite normal developer and IT salary costs.

    4. Re:$20 Million a year? by chdig · · Score: 1

      No, don't pay attention to the FUD artists. 9.8 million goes to "technology" costs, including 1.8 for existing hosting costs, and 3.3 in new capital expenditures on their data centers.

      I think everyone knows Wikipedia has its issues with the editing process, but their overall management appears very transparent and well-intentioned. Any organization that grows so fast is going to have problems along the way, but I don't understand why some people need to go out of their way to make wikipedia itself seem evil.

  48. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right. So whatever it is that you should do best, no matter how much your education cost, you should do it for free instead, otherwise you only care about money, right? Most people are passionate about a particular area of knowledge and spend years and countless dollars in pursuit of that knowledge. However, most people aren't independently wealthy, and have to support themselves by leveraging that knowledge into a marketable skill. By giving away that knowledge for free, it lessens the value of that knowledge and their opportunities to make a living.

  49. Bar Bets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My ideas:

    - Anytime someone uses Wikipedia to win a bar bet, they have to give Wikipedia a cut.

  50. content aware advertisements by zill · · Score: 1

    The thought of content aware ads on wikipedia cracks me up. Too many people take wikipedia as the singular universal truth, and now for a low low price of 0.005 cents per page view advertisers can append their own versions of the truth on there.

    Don't like a person/political party/country/nation/race/ideology/historical event? Easy! Just put up a banner ad that says "This article is full of filthy lies" on their wikipedia article.

  51. What fundraising goal? by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    I am hesitant to contribute to Wikipedia because I don't want them to get paid editors. If they succeed in their fundraising goal, then we should consider forking the project just in case it goes bad. This sounds like a case of taking something that works perfectly fine, then hiring a CEO with a "vision" that is completely different from the intended purpose of the project. If Jimmy Wales wants to become CEO of a commercial encyclopedia, then go register JimmyWalesApedia.com.

  52. No. by bipbop · · Score: 1

    No.

  53. Blame Jimbo by billcopc · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think a lot of people have grown annoyed with Jimbo Wales over the years, myself included, over his reactionary tendency toward censorship. All it takes is for one semi-famous person to criticize some aspect of Wikipedia, be it drugs, sex, or religion, and Jimbo would go in and radically truncate a bunch of pages. Nevermind that he was redacting factual information, he just wanted to "save face". Quality of information seemed to matter less than it's potential for scandal, which is a fantastic way to piss off the liberal-leaning intellectual elite (and by liberal I don't mean the imbecilic U.S. political label).

    From day one, he's treated Wikipedia like his own politically-correct version of the truth, alienating countless key supporters in the process. Take him off those freakin ads and maybe, in a few years, people will forget that this megalomaniac took a big crap all over their masterfully crafted articles.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
    1. Re:Blame Jimbo by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've also grown irritated by him, not just over his reactionary tendency toward censorship, but how he now completely takes the credit for what Larry Sanger did. Even the 'urgent appeal for funds' message, with his carefully-preened PR-agency-screened smug look, includes him bragging deceitfully about being "the founder", as if he was the only one, when in reality he never had the idea, didn't think of the name, didn't create the first implementation, didn't build the first community, and had to be convinced by Sanger of the idea. I've met people like him over the years, they latch onto someone else's creation (someone who doesn't market themselves well) and parade around taking the credit, marketing himself as some kind of "visionary" and now charging a small fortune just to hear the great Wales talk about "he" created Wikipedia. Right. Call me irrational, but it doesn't make me feel like I want to donate, it just irritates me more every time I see his mug.

    2. Re:Blame Jimbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop using the word "truth" it doesn't mean what people think it means.

    3. Re:Blame Jimbo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note: This article uses weasel words.

      I think a lot of people have grown annoyed with Jimbo Wales over the years, myself included, over his reactionary tendency toward censorship. All it takes is for one semi-famous person to criticize some aspect of Wikipedia, be it drugs, sex, or religion, and Jimbo would go in and radically truncate a bunch of pages. Nevermind that he was redacting factual information, he just wanted to "save face". Quality of information seemed to matter less than it's potential for scandal, which is a fantastic way to piss off the liberal-leaning intellectual elite (and by liberal I don't mean the imbecilic U.S. political label).

      From day one, he's treated Wikipedia like his own politically-correct version of the truth, alienating countless key supporters in the process. Take him off those freakin ads and maybe, in a few years, people will forget that this megalomaniac took a big crap all over their masterfully crafted articles.

      [Citation needed.]

      (Captcha: edition)

  54. The information is already warped by snowwrestler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Commerce is not the only thing that can warp information. It can also be warped by individuals willing to spend their time pushing their own opinions, and excluding others.

    Wikipedia editing has become increasingly bureaucratic and exclusive, which IMO is one reason that they are having trouble raising money. Personally, I'm not going to give to Wikipedia as it exists now: the personal playground of Jimmy Wales and his anointed administrative minions.

    Wikipedia is already serving ads--they feature Jimmy's puppy-dog eyes begging for money. Broadening the ad base would do a lot to make the organization grow up and break out of the near-cult it has become.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:The information is already warped by D+Ninja · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is already serving ads--they feature Jimmy's puppy-dog eyes begging for money.

      I don't know if I would call it "puppy-dog." I actually get a little freaked out every time I see his face on Wikipedia. I have kind of stopped visiting anymore because the eyes just follow me...

    2. Re:The information is already warped by Seumas · · Score: 1

      The Wales banner is only comparable to "advertising" in that it takes up the dimensions that an obtrusive advertistement might. It doesn't include any of the nasty little strings and potential conflicts that actual advertising would. Commercial support corrupts. Look at the history at Game Spot, for example. Or the fact that the financial assistance by the government (and tax payers) to GE were not covered by GE owned news agencies. Convenient, eh? The answer to a corrupt non-profit organization's administration is not to throw more corruption by way of commercial advertisement onto the fire.

      And, again, I have a bit of a problem with the whole "you can copy our entire database and use it for any purpose for absolutely free!" thing . . . with "but if you want to look up information on what a laser is, you have to either pay or be bombarded with ads". That seems backwards as fuck.

    3. Re:The information is already warped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just get organisations to sponsor pages and put the name of the sponsor right at the top. Heck, auction the page off on Ebay. Sponsorship doesn't convey any privilege. No need for an ad. A mention would be enough.

    4. Re:The information is already warped by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

      Commercial support corrupts. Look at the history at Game Spot, for example. Or the fact that the financial assistance by the government (and tax payers) to GE were not covered by GE owned news agencies.

      You mean like the time Wikimedia Foundation Chairman Jimmy Wales edited his own bio, in direct contravention of Wikipedia COI guidelines, to make himself look like the sole founder?

      Or how Wikipedia editors increasingly invent new rules and revert new content, which serves to depress new authorship, and bias the material toward the preferred point of view of those editors?

      It does not take money to corrupt an organization. But it does take money to run an organization--over $5 million per year for Wikipedia. So whether we like it or not, commerce is already playing a part and always will. IMO the big question is whether Wikipedia runs fairly and objectively, and answer is already no.

      --
      Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  55. You know how to get more people to pay attention? by killmenow · · Score: 1

    Add a <blink> tag to show how urgent and important your plea is. People love that.

  56. I agree by swillden · · Score: 1

    Google has shown us all how advertising can be done so that it's not intrusive and even occasionally useful. Wikipedia could provide article-relevant text-only ads that would really be a lot less bothersome than the huge beg-banners and would give them all the money they need. They could also use the slashdot model and suppress the ads for users who make a small annual donation.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  57. about.com by Dalroth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You want to see what Wikipedia will look like if they start accepting advertising and basing their revenue model on that? Go to about.com. No Thanks,I like Wikipedia just the way it is.

    1. Re:about.com by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      You want to see what Wikipedia will look like if they start accepting advertising and basing their revenue model on that? Go to about.com.

      I use About.com just as much as I use Wikipedia - and have no particular problems with About.com.

    2. Re:about.com by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I can't believe people want a non-intrusive banner asking for donations that actually fits in with the site replaced with Flash advertisements that take over the whole screen whenever your cursor happens to glide over them. Wikipedia is the largest aggregate of human knowledge ever compiled. Whatever minor issues people have with the way it's run or the way they ask for donations doesn't justify abandoning its current structure. Nothing has been more successful at providing more information to more people than Wikipedia.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
  58. Wikipedia already warped by bias and politics ... by perpenso · · Score: 1

    There is information.

    Then there is commerce.

    Whenever commerce touches information, information has a way of getting warped.

    It's really as simple as that.

    No. There is commerce, politics and personal bias. All three of these warp information. Wikipedia is already warped by 2 of the 3 to some degree. Its unclear as to whether letting google or some other third party feed ads is more or less warping than politics or bias. Also all the arguments made about the corrupting influence of ads can also be made for non-anonymous donations, especially those big ones that currently save wikipedia from financial collapse.

  59. I'll donate when Jimmy Wales ... by GrantRobertson · · Score: 2

    ... honestly and completely reveals his salary, other compensations, and expenses. Non-profits are supposed to report expenses but his are hidden in vague, general categories.

    P.S. I posted a similar message on Huffington Post and they deleted it.

  60. I might be tempted to donate if it was anyone else by sirwired · · Score: 4, Informative

    Okay, I get that Wikipedia doesn't run for free. But plastering a big picture of "Jimbo" at the top of every page is precisely the wrong way to go about it. If I'm going to donate money, it won't be because Jimmy Whales himself asked, it'll be because Wikipedia is a mostly-reliable resource of knowledge.

    This should have been a "We, Wikipedia, need money" campaign, not a "I, Jimmy Whales, want you to give money to Wikipedia" campaign. And showcasing the unpaid contributors doesn't make me want to give money either. Personal appeals for money work if the person is a celebrity, and they don't actually run, or work for, the charity they want you to support. Otherwise, stick to appealing to ideas, principles, and projects, and leave the individual out of it.

  61. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

    Well obviously those billions weren't generous enough to keep the site running without asking for more. What Wikipedia needs is to get lucky with a handful of really large donors, who are the kind that usually finances most free public institutions, museums, galleries etc. Universities are in part financed that way too. They might wanna put their name on it through, so it will be known as "Wikipedia courtesy of Mr. and Mrs. Scrooge".

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  62. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It is grown out of the generous volunteerism of billions"

    And a healthy dose of megalomania amongst the involved

  63. Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone know what are Wikipedia's major expenses - I can think of Servers, bandwidth, sys admins, Jimmy and Sue. How much do they require every year and have they been completely open about expenditure? I donated $35 after seeing Jimmy's terrorizing face - it was almost like gun of sensitivity placed against my head - but since I applaud what they are doing I did not complain.

  64. It's the tracking that I don't want by hawguy · · Score: 1

    I don't care if they play unobtrusive ads, but it's the tracking that worries me -- Google already knows enough about me, I don't want them tracking every article I visit on Wikipedia. If Wikipedia runs their own ad network I'd be fine with them playing ads. If they use someone else's ad network I'd probably block the ads.

    I think ads would do quite well on Wikipedia -- often I'm browsing Wikipedia when I don't have anything else to do -- if I was looking up helicopters and saw an ad for model helicopters, I'd probably click over to it and check it out.

  65. If there's no ad, it's more likely fair use by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Wikipedia occasionally makes unlicensed use of copyrighted works under fair use (17 USC 107), such as using an image that identifies the subject of the article if the subject is a non-free work of authorship. A use is more likely to be considered a fair use if it is non-commercial, and if there's no ad, Wikipedia qualifies as "non-commercial".

    1. Re:If there's no ad, it's more likely fair use by city · · Score: 1

      Here is your citation (17USC 107): http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107

      It doesn't use the term "non-commercial", it says "(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;".

      I don't see that it matters how they are suppored, ads or donations, it's nonprofit.

      --
      I am a v1ral sig. Plse c0py me and h3lp me spread. Thank y0u?
    2. Re:If there's no ad, it's more likely fair use by abcjared · · Score: 1

      They could disable ads on pages containing "unlicensed use of copyrighted works under fair use."

  66. Desensitization? by dragonhunter21 · · Score: 1

    Maybe the donation requests are just to get us used to having huge, annoying banner ads at the top of Wikipedia pages.

    --
    Sent from my CR-48
  67. WIkileaks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok. Why not just put up ads. You can filter them as though the ads aren't there and it'll look the same without the ugly face.

  68. I'd pay for a yearly subscription by eepok · · Score: 1

    I'd pay for a yearly subscription that would entitle me to full access. What full and free access would be is up to them, but I'd happily throw down a $5-10 fee. Of course, adding in a fee system adds cost in and of itself, so it's not a fix-all solution. I don't like the idea of ads, either. Wikipedia is distracting enough with all its links distracting me from my original research goal which was... Oh ya, so flash, gif, audio, and video ads would just make it worse. If they could allow some charity/non-profit banner ads only (Red Cross, Child's Play, etc.) with a guarantee of no flashiness, I could support it.

    1. Re:I'd pay for a yearly subscription by hawguy · · Score: 1

      They have that system now. It's called a donation. Give them $5 - $15/year and you can have full and free access. (which coincidentally is the same access that you get if you do not subscribe).

      If a small percentage of their userbase did this - they claim 400M people/month visit the site - then they would have all the money they need.

    2. Re:I'd pay for a yearly subscription by odysseus_complex · · Score: 1

      For comparison I looked up what Encyclopedia Britannica charges for a year-long subscription and they ask for $103.48 US. Just in case anyone wants a comparison.

  69. Charge for API? by psyclone · · Score: 1

    There seems to be a few 3rd party services that rely on Wikipedia's data. I'm sure there are many commercial services too (I've seen many pay-per-click sites simply barf wikipedia content surrounded by ads).

    Instead of ads, could Wikimedia charge for a it's APIs to allow access to Wikipedia's data? Like most services, you get your developer key for a limited number of queries, but as the request volume goes up, you pay more. Bulk-exporting several pages? Pay a small fee. If the fees are low and reasonable, maybe businesses would pay for them and not result to screen-scraping?

    The data itself is still covered under CC/FDL licenses; the charge is just for friendly access to it.

    Just a thought.

    1. Re:Charge for API? by ADRA · · Score: 1

      A nice thought, but I'd be afraid that some cheap and careless outlets would just go back to scraping directly off the web site vs. the API which would cost more to host in the long run. Of course you could always attempt to ban the scrapers, but that as well is always an up hill and not terribly cheap solution.

      --
      Bye!
  70. Anyone Else Getting Tired of Wales' Vanity Shots? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

    The pretentious quality of Jimbo's vanity shots rankles me every time I see them on Wikipedia since I am at best ambivalent about Wales himself, and some of the ways he uses Wikipedia. At least they are mixing it up now with images of other folks (all of them lacking that pretentious quality).

    If Wikipedia had logins and subscriptions like Slashdot, that would make pictures of Jimmy Wales disappear forever I'd been in on that in a heartbeart.

    --
    Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
  71. By all means, do by it5complicated · · Score: 1

    If ya don't like it, just Adblock it. Hope they won't get desperate and turn to those nasty persistent cookies. By the way, Wales looks a bit like Daniel Craig from an angle, no?

  72. The Texas Tribune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia should follow the example of the Texas Tribune. They're a statewide newspaper that started up about a year ago and does a great job of reporting each side of an issue and doing in-depth, investigative reporting (they uncovered an abuse scandal in children's facilities last year that the contractor tried to cover up).

    They also do not take ads. They allow private donations and memberships (I kicked them fifty bucks and they sent me a tshirt) and "underwriting," allowing whoever coughs up the cash to take a bow, essentially, and put their logo and name in the sidebar. They far exceeded their fundraising goal for this year using this system. It works, and I think it could work for Wikipedia. They've certainly got more exposure than a statewide paper.

  73. Really? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    (professional you-get-what-you-pay-for like with Microsoft)

    You mean I could pay more, and get a less stable product? Where do I sign up for that?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  74. Re:Wikipedia already warped by bias and politics . by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    Its unclear as to whether letting google or some other third party feed ads is more or less warping than politics or bias.

    The question is irrelevant, since adding commercial bias through ad-dependence wouldn't eliminate personal bias ("politics" and "bias" aren't, contrary to your presentation, two separate sources of distortion, its two different ways of referring to the personal biases of editors) unless it also involved eliminating community editing completely.

    So it doesn't matter if advertising is, on its own, more distorting than the existing sources of distortion, since advertising adds to, rather than replacing, those sources.

  75. Not if it just pays the cost of running it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    their volunteers would probably revolt and quit working on the site if there were ads on it
     
    Why would they get pissed off that the site has a means of paying for hosting?

  76. Underwriting vs. standard advertising by traindirector · · Score: 3, Informative

    Look, PBS has ads now.

    PBS uses underwriting, which is a rather limited form of advertising. Non-commercial television and radio stations are limited to giving sponsors underwriting spots in the U.S. You can call them "ads", but they really aren't as obnoxious (although some I've seen recently push the distinction to the limit), and they only appear at the beginning and end of a program.

    Wikipedia's article on underwriting is okay, but not really good. The PBS information is clipped from elsewhere, and there is no mention of specific restrictions for non-commercial radio.

    In any case, I just donated $35, seeing as how the plea is now urgent. Personally, I usually ignore the banners when I see them, as I assume a lot of people are donating to Wikipedia as something that is of interest to everyone. I generally make my donations to organizations that serve niche interests that don't see as much traffic. A lot of people probably take the same approach. If Wikipedia really needs the money, I hope they have a plan to make it quite clear to these people. This /. article did the trick for me.

  77. Re: Should Wikipedia Just Accept Ads Already? by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

    ....No.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  78. You can keep Lilaroja, though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    She's kind of cute and Spanish.

  79. Better idea... by metrometro · · Score: 1

    Let users opt in to advertising, as a conscious choice to support Wikipedia..

    Hell, let them choose which ad network(s) to serve. Do it by IP address, no authentication necessary, but make the choice persistent. In exchange, the Jimmy Wales appeal goes away. An upgrade, seriously, and one which neatly avoids many ethical issues, as it's at the whim of the users, not the Foundation or editors, which products get advertised. As a result, it's harder to see how the advertisers would have leverage on the content creators.

    1. Re:Better idea... by ADRA · · Score: 1

      I'd totally stand up for that. Slashdot gave me the opportunity to turn ads off years ago and sometimes they're on, and sometimes they're not. That is a really great idea, though you will probably have to tweak the idea to make it cookie based instead. The user of an IP is not always static, but you can be pretty sure that a cookie is at least tied to a given machine. You -could- make it based on login, but that drastically reduces the number of people who would turn it on.

      --
      Bye!
  80. That face haunts me by pinkeen · · Score: 1

    I think the whole appeal for donations would work way better if not jimmy's face plastered all over wikipedia

  81. fake choice... by at_slashdot · · Score: 1

    It's like the TSA choice, do you want to be radiated and be seen naked or do you want to be groped?

    Here is like: do you want ads or do you want to be constantly bombarded for donation pleas. I don't see a big difference between ads and donation pleas, oh and if you donate you'll still see the pleas in about one year...

    --
    "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
  82. Boycott by BigBadBus · · Score: 1

    I would give generously, but Wikipedia blocked my website and removed all links to my research articles, so why should I bother?

    1. Re:Boycott by kriston · · Score: 1

      Are you sure you were following the "No original research" policy?
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:No_original_research

      --

      Kriston

  83. Working on Commission? by jda104 · · Score: 1

    I often stumble across some product on Wikipedia that I'm interested in buying (album, book, etc.). I actually would find it very convenient if such pages had a "Purchase this Item" link. I'm sure Amazon would kick in a few million for that privilege, or you could use their pre-existing referral program. I think most users would view those links as added value to Wikipedia.

  84. Wikimedia foundation budget ? by inefab · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one here amazed of what the spendings are ? According to http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Annual_Report page 4 :

    There are 45% of technical spendings, including technical staff. But 20% to Management, Finance, Administration.

    And 10% for "Fundraising". That's 1 in 10 you donate that's wasted in making you spit that money. I wonder if this is regarded as a sustainable business plan for a foundation ?

  85. micro-payments...$.01/article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    micro payments are the way to go.

    register with your paypal account.

    charge your country's equivalent of $.01 USD per article read.

    even let students opt out with a valid .edu email address if you're feeling especially nice.

    it's cheap enough that no one will give a shit. wikipedia usage will not drop.

    divide half of that money amongst the article contributors, in amounts relative to their contribution.

    the other half goes to wikipedia.

    1. Re:micro-payments...$.01/article by pipatron · · Score: 1

      Great! Now if just everyone would get your mandated paypal account, we're almost there. Another bonus is that paypal will know exactly everything you read about. Too bad about the people behind wikileaks though, but I guess they are not important enough to care about here. Besides, paypal wouldn't have shut them out if they weren't doing anything wrong, right?

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    2. Re:micro-payments...$.01/article by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia would be dead within a month if they put up a paywall of any kind, even $0.01.

  86. Wish I could donate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish there was another way to donate, as I will gladly pay to prevent ads. However, due to recent events I am boycotting Paypal permanently, and I wouldn't be able to use them anyhow since I also cancelled my VISA card.

  87. No ads ever. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although it has been said before, I would like to reiterate:

    No advertisements on Wikipedia, ever.

  88. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by KublaiKhan · · Score: 1

    In theory, perhaps.

    In practise, it's more the encyclopedia for obsessive/compulsive agenda-driven basement dwellers who love to play politics over what is and isn't allowed in 'their' encyclopedia.

    --
    In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
    A stately pleasure dome decree
  89. Am I the only one...? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

    ...that subconsciously thinks it's Jimmy Wales that wrote each article whenever his pleas are at the top? For some reason, having a giant image of him at the top instantly makes me interpret it as an image of the author, just as you'd see pictures of authors at plenty of publications, and I start to think of the articles I read as being written by him. It's very weird, and I keep having to snap myself out of that thinking every time they run these requests for donations. That may also be why I've had this nagging feeling that Wikipedia is suddenly a whole lot less respectable and authoritative than the used to be, now that I think of it...

  90. Something in return? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would love give wikipedia some money but they really pissed me off. Some time ago I did some (imho) interesting research and put it on my non-commercial, no-ads website. Then, I found corresponding subject on wikipedia and added just a few sentences (that actually contributed to the site) and put a reference to my website with more about that research. Shortly after, link to my website (including reference) was removed.
    So maybe /. crowd can help me with this one: was 1 no-follow link too much to ask for?

  91. Re: typos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you made a typo in Scrooge McDuck

  92. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by vxice · · Score: 1

    I would argue that many people do think about the money. The money it would cost them to buy an equivalent encyclopedia, or contribute a fraction of their time in an area they are good at to gain access. Or more likely to just read and not contribute anything.

    --
    every anarchist is a baffled dictator. Benito_Mussolini
  93. He's not getting a dime from me! by Suzuran · · Score: 1

    I would consider donation to Wikipedia if you didn't treat us like shit over on Wikia. Serving spyware via drive-by downloads is one thing, you can claim you didn't know about it, but disabling the accounts of wiki editors when they talk about moving off Wikia because of it? Making malicious edits to the new wiki after they move? Playing games with Google to keep wikia's pagerank above the pagerank of the departed? That's childish and immoral. You can make WIkia the "Roach Motel" of wiki if you like, but remember, eventually the motel is full and gets thrown away.

    As far as I am concerned you can't go bankrupt quickly enough. It's a pity that wikipedia must die with you, but I absolutely refuse to feed your ego or reward your dishonest behavior.

    1. Re:He's not getting a dime from me! by Liam+Pomfret · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Jimbo should just give up the farce that Wikipedia and Wikia are separate organisatons already. While Wikipedia is a wonderful idea (even if it is a pain for me as an academic with idiot students citing it as a reference), it's link to Wikia will only continue to drag it down in my eyes. Realistically though, if the Jimbo owned Wikipedia dies, you just know someone with more money is going to make use of its open licensed content to resurrect it. I'm honestly surprised we don't already have a Googlepedia (unless you count SideWiki maybe) or Bingpedia.

  94. They certainly would make money if they did by DanCentury · · Score: 1

    They could probably make enough money off of Google ads for "mesothelioma" on their mesothelioma page to give books to millions of children.

    Problems arise when advertisers ask Wikipedia to censor content to suit the position of the advertisers. No doubt that would happen.

    If ads to show up on Wikipedia, and you don't like it, Google the topic and click the links below Wikipedia -- that's where the Wikipedia editors probably scraped the content from in the first place.

  95. Maybe they should use Amazon EC2 by kriston · · Score: 1

    Maybe they should stop wasting all the time and resources hosting their own systems and move to Amazon EC2. I'm sure Amazon can promote this as a strong gesture of philanthropy, too.

    --

    Kriston

  96. It already has Adverts on it by definate · · Score: 1

    What are you talking about? It already has adverts on it. For the past month or so, they've been running a huge advert for this "Jimmy Wales", which as far as I can tell is a sex offender registry or something.

    --
    This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  97. just add paid memberships already by PJ6 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The donation system isn't working out because it's not INTEGRATED with the Wikipedia workflow. What is it with the pleading picture that pops up everyone once in a while? How stupid can you get? Just give users the opportunity to become "paying members" while they are going about their normal business. Put a link for "become a paying member (it's cheap!)" at the header of every edit page. Make the cost small, like $5/month, and automatically recurring. You wouldn't need to offer any privileges to being a paid member other than allowing users to show it in their status. I bet you nearly every single one of those 1%'ers that do most of the work would member up, and many more besides.

  98. Just click the cross by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... and it will stop bothering you!

  99. I agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've thought the same thing lately, perhaps an opt-in service?

  100. No, no, no by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Terrible idea. If Wikipedia starts running ads, the better volunteers will quit. Who wants to work for someone else for free?

    Look what happened to Wikia. It was supposed to be the commercial version of Wikipedia, with ads. So what's on Wikia? The Star [Trek|Wars|Gate|Craft] wikis. The "Cocktails" wiki. The travel wiki. The coffee wiki. Wikia does junk culture. Nobody serious goes there, and it doesn't make much money.

    Wales thought he could take the Wikipedia concept and monetize it. He was very wrong. He thought he'd get a private jet out of the deal. He was wrong. He thought that Wikia Search would rival Google. That shut down in 2009.

    Everybody else who's tried to monetize this idea has failed, too. Citizendium, Google Knol - all flops.

    It takes an incredible amount of volunteer effort and organization to keep Wikipedia from turning into junk. Lose those volunteers and you're toast.

  101. It wouldn't concern me if... by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Ads on Wikipedia wouldn't concern me if:

    1. The ad network was separate from Wikipedia, so there would be less likelihood of advertisers asserting editorial control. This is how most online ad networks work anyway, so it's not hard.

    2. The ads were non-tracking, non-obtrusive, non-interstitial, etc. A simple Google-style text ad, or non-animated image. This is probably the hard part. The wrong kinds of ads on Wikipedia will turn it into another About.com. Whenever I get an About.com result returned in a search, I ignore it because I know that it will be full of obtrusive ads, with one page chopped up into 10 to increase pageviews.

    3. That reminds me. Don't chop up articles to increase pageviews. That would be, as they say, not very encyclopedic...

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  102. The Only Successful Model.... by MuChild · · Score: 1

    that I know of to run an organization with a purpose other than making money is to have it run, as much as possible, by non-professionals and user donations. Otherwise, the amount of bloat within the organization goes nuts and, of course, the money starts influencing the editorial process. Just look at the difference between traditional AA-like programs vs. the Catholic Church. How much of what a cardinal or whatever does is about helping people with their spiritual lives and how much is meta-crap about the organization itself? Whereas, in AA, all of that shit is kept to a bare minimum since there's very few people who are part of AA infrastructure professionally. And yet, there are millions of AA members in hundreds of countries.

  103. It's all bullshit. by moxley · · Score: 1

    There is no reason why they should need THAT MUCH MONEY on an annual basis.

    I lovew the idea behind Wikipedia, and I love the site itself - but it's grown increasingly political as far as editing goes - other posts have made that point already.

    I think ads are a bad idea, it would just compromise the site faster than size, egos, and donors with agendas already have.

  104. Funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just today i added adblock rules to stop jimbo from staring into my soul every single time i open a wikipedia page.

  105. Actually by Paspanique · · Score: 1

    It make Wales arguably the single most ignored individual on the planet...

    After so many years of being blasted with side & top ads all the time, most surfers have an ability to not notice them anymore. I know a lot of people like this...Not to mention the ad blockers...

    --
    I don't have an intelligent phone, so I need to be.
  106. HOSTS files are superior to AdBlock & DNS even by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    20++ ADVANTAGES OF HOSTS FILES OVER DNS SERVERS &/or ADBLOCK ALONE for added layered security:

    1.) Adblock blocks ads in only 1 browser family (Disclaimer: Opera now has an AdBlock addon (now that Opera has addons above widgets), but I am not certain the same people make it as they do for FF or Chrome etc.).

    2.) HOSTS files are useable for all these purposes because they are present on all Operating Systems that have a BSD based IP stack (even ANDROID) and do adblocking for ANY webbrowser, email program, etc. (any webbound program).

    3.) Adblock doesn't protect email programs external to FF, Hosts files do. THIS IS GOOD VS. SPAM MAIL or MAILS THAT BEAR MALICIOUS SCRIPT, or, THAT POINT TO MALICIOUS SCRIPT VIA URLS etc.

    4.) Adblock won't get you to your favorite sites if a DNS server goes down or is DNS-poisoned, hosts will (this leads to points 4-7 next below).

    5.) Adblock doesn't allow you to hardcode in your favorite websites into it so you don't make DNS server calls and so you can avoid tracking by DNS request logs, hosts do (DNS servers are also being abused by the Chinese lately and by the Kaminsky flaw -> http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/082908-kaminsky-flaw-prompts-dns-server.html for years now). Hosts protect against those problems via hardcodes of your fav sites (you should verify against the TLD that does nothing but cache IPAddress-to-domainname/hostname resolutions via NSLOOKUP, PINGS, &/or WHOIS though, regularly, so you have the correct IP & it's current)).

    6.) HOSTS files protect you vs. DNS-poisoning &/or the Kaminsky flaw in DNS servers, and allow you to get to sites reliably vs. things like the Chinese are doing to DNS -> http://yro.slashdot.org/story/10/11/29/1755230/Chinese-DNS-Tampering-a-Real-Threat-To-Outsiders

    7.) AdBlock doesn't let you block out known bad sites or servers that are known to be maliciously scripted, hosts can and many reputable lists for this exist:

    GOOD INFORMATION ON MALWARE BEHAVIOR LISTING BOTNET C&C SERVERS + MORE (AS WELL AS REMOVAL LISTS FOR HOSTS):

    http://ddanchev.blogspot.com/
    http://www.malware.com.br/lists.shtml
    http://www.stopbadware.org/
    http://blog.fireeye.com/
    http://mtc.sri.com/
    http://news.netcraft.com/
    http://www.shadowserver.org/

    REGULARLY UPDATED HOSTS FILES SITES (reputable/reliable sources):

    http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
    http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/
    http://hostsfile.org/hosts.html
    http://hostsfile.mine.nu/downloads/
    http://hosts-file.net/?s=Download
    https://zeustracker.abuse.ch/monitor.php?filter=online
    Spybot "Search & Destroy" IMMUNIZE feature (fortifies HOSTS files with KNOWN bad servers blocked)

    And yes: Even SLASHDOT &/or The Register help!

    (Via articles on security (when the source articles they use are "detailed" that is, & list the servers/sites involved in attempting to bushwhack others online that is... not ALL do!)).

    2 examples thereof in the past I have used, & noted it there, are/were:

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1898692&cid=34473398

  107. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  108. Go ahead and host ads. by Lilith's+Heart-shape · · Score: 1

    I won't see them, because I use AdBlock, and therefore have no reason to care.

  109. Just made the connection by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    Call me slow today, but Jimbo Wales is the same guy started/ran the old Bomis.com site... As I recall it was mostly populated by webrings devoted to mostly... ah... artistic photographic content (and I use artistic in the most base sense). Funny to see such a great thing as Wikipedia come from such a sordid background. I guess porn does drive innovation.

    --
    -- $G
  110. HOSTS files are superior to AdBlock &/or DNS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    20++ ADVANTAGES OF HOSTS FILES OVER DNS SERVERS &/or ADBLOCK ALONE for added layered security:

    1.) Adblock blocks ads in only 1 browser family (Disclaimer: Opera now has an AdBlock addon (now that Opera has addons above widgets), but I am not certain the same people make it as they do for FF or Chrome etc.).

    2.) HOSTS files are useable for all these purposes because they are present on all Operating Systems that have a BSD based IP stack (even ANDROID) and do adblocking for ANY webbrowser, email program, etc. (any webbound program).

    3.) Adblock doesn't protect email programs external to FF, Hosts files do. THIS IS GOOD VS. SPAM MAIL or MAILS THAT BEAR MALICIOUS SCRIPT, or, THAT POINT TO MALICIOUS SCRIPT VIA URLS etc.

    4.) Adblock won't get you to your favorite sites if a DNS server goes down or is DNS-poisoned, hosts will (this leads to points 4-7 next below).

    5.) Adblock doesn't allow you to hardcode in your favorite websites into it so you don't make DNS server calls and so you can avoid tracking by DNS request logs, hosts do (DNS servers are also being abused by the Chinese lately and by the Kaminsky flaw -> http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/082908-kaminsky-flaw-prompts-dns-server.html for years now). Hosts protect against those problems via hardcodes of your fav sites (you should verify against the TLD that does nothing but cache IPAddress-to-domainname/hostname resolutions via NSLOOKUP, PINGS, &/or WHOIS though, regularly, so you have the correct IP & it's current)).

    6.) HOSTS files protect you vs. DNS-poisoning &/or the Kaminsky flaw in DNS servers, and allow you to get to sites reliably vs. things like the Chinese are doing to DNS -> http://yro.slashdot.org/story/10/11/29/1755230/Chinese-DNS-Tampering-a-Real-Threat-To-Outsiders

    7.) AdBlock doesn't let you block out known bad sites or servers that are known to be maliciously scripted, hosts can and many reputable lists for this exist:

    GOOD INFORMATION ON MALWARE BEHAVIOR LISTING BOTNET C&C SERVERS + MORE (AS WELL AS REMOVAL LISTS FOR HOSTS):

    http://ddanchev.blogspot.com/
    http://www.malware.com.br/lists.shtml
    http://www.stopbadware.org/
    http://blog.fireeye.com/
    http://mtc.sri.com/
    http://news.netcraft.com/
    http://www.shadowserver.org/

    REGULARLY UPDATED HOSTS FILES SITES (reputable/reliable sources):

    http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm
    http://someonewhocares.org/hosts/
    http://hostsfile.org/hosts.html
    http://hostsfile.mine.nu/downloads/
    http://hosts-file.net/?s=Download
    https://zeustracker.abuse.ch/monitor.php?filter=online
    Spybot "Search & Destroy" IMMUNIZE feature (fortifies HOSTS files with KNOWN bad servers blocked)

    And yes: Even SLASHDOT &/or The Register help!

    (Via articles on security (when the source articles they use are "detailed" that is, & list the servers/sites involved in attempting to bushwhack others online that is... not ALL do!)).

    2 examples thereof in the past I have used, & noted it there, are/were:

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1898692&cid=34473398

  111. Re:Charge for API? : good idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would they also enforce anti-scraping? Would attribution be required?

  112. Pull an NPR by GeneralSecretary · · Score: 1

    Call the advertisers "sponsors".

  113. I donated. by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

    I donated, for the second time this year.

    And for you "anti-elitists," tons of Wikipedia article contributors and editors are college students, grad students, and some professors (like me).

  114. Nope by Tangential · · Score: 1

    They can't have it both ways.

    Either be independent and (theoretically above the fray) and survive on donations or become a fully commercial entity and give up that independence,

    If they can't generate enough value to survive on donations then perhaps there's not a lot of real value there. If so, why bother doing it?

    --
    Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of congress. But then I repeat myself. -- Mark Twain
  115. a business. like GM, bear stearns, enron, lehman? by hildi · · Score: 0

    i think the best thing wp did is to not hire a bunch of MBAs to suck money out of it for their own benefit. it should allow 'underwriting' like NPR not ads.

  116. Just say no to ads.. by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    I can live with PPL begging for money for a few weeks if it means no ads for an entire year.

    The problem of annoying Wales ads is easily solved by taking all of his ads out of rotation and keeping Lilaroja :)

  117. Ads = more bias by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Once you need the ad money, they will start to want you to make changes. Like, let them post their own articl;e, sanitize discussion of complaints and so on.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  118. Multi Tiered System by RudyHartmann · · Score: 2

    Why not take ads that only appear to the freeloaders? If you get a paying subscription or donate, they can set it up so you won't see the ads.

    --
    Oh, yeah! Wise guy, huh? Woob woob woob woob! Nyuk! Nyuk!
  119. Thanks for reminding me... by rafial · · Score: 1

    ...to donate to Wikipedia!

  120. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah those professors and researchers are really raking in the big bucks!

    A People's Encyclopedia would be great, but it should be as correct as possible. This means accepting the opinions of informed subject matter experts. They are a member of the "People" after all.

  121. Simon Winchester by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    He should write a biography about Wikipedia and Whales as a companion piece for his book The Professor and The Madman.

  122. you cant' cite yourself when editing by hildi · · Score: 0

    and if you keep doing it, you are a spammer.

  123. Yup, go for the ads by FridayBob · · Score: 2

    There's a whole corner of Wikipedia, a science subject, that owes almost its entire existence to over 20,000 of my edits contributed over a 3-year period. I learned a lot during that time, which I think is reflected in the quality of the articles I worked on, but sadly Wikipedia did not. In the end I was spending way too much of my time defending the way those articles were written from complete debutantes who had less of an idea what they were doing than when I started. I felt like a blade of grass in somebody's lawn: wanting to grow higher, but regularly being cut back down to size.

    I suppose one of my main problems was that there has always been considerable public interest in the subject I was writing about, but at the same time there has always existed a lot of fear and misunderstanding. Consequently, after I had carefully researched the subject of each page, filling it with facts and tagging every sentence and paragraph with one or more references, others would often come by and, totally unimpeded by any knowledge of the subject, just start making changes as they saw fit. I could argue with them, typically regarding the quality of their sources, but they were often stubborn and refused to understand. I could point out that they were not following Wikipedia's own guidelines, but they didn't see it that way. The administrators and arbitrators didn't have any knowledge of the subject either and figured we just had to remain civil and reach a consensus.

    It's been almost two years since I stopped contributing and many of the articles I worked so hard on are now steadily decaying, reflecting less fact and more public ignorance. The admins should be looking for better ways to preserve good edits and prevent bad ones. However, not only does Wikipedia lack an effective mechanism to counter quality deterioration, they aren't even looking for one. The current approach was probably more correct five or six years ago, when any information was better than no information, but now they need a new strategy, or else they stand to lose as much as they gain.

    Oh, I still visit the site often enough, as most of us probably do, but as a result of my experience I no longer have the respect for Wikipedia that I once did. If Jimbo thinks advertising on Wikipedia's pages would be degrading, I don't see how that would be worse than the way the project is currently being managed. So go ahead, rent out some banner space; it won't make a difference to me anyway.

  124. Annual Report from 08-09 by arshadk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I might've been looking at the 08-09 annual report, that's all they've got up: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Annual_Report But saying they need $16M urgently, when their expenses were only $5.6M in 08-09 seems sketchy.

  125. Wikipedia itself has plenty of funding by bzzfzz · · Score: 1

    The technical, legal, and administrative costs of Wikipedia are not the problem. There's plenty of funding for that, and if the site were truly in jeopardy there would be a long line of institutional donors ready to support it.

    The problem is that there's a bloated global administrative organization that doesn't actually help the core projects, and which drives up costs immensely. There are people in charge of partnerships who fly around the world looking for the next great thing, trying to get the foundation's foot in the door so that the empire will expand. There's money spent handling administration, legal matters, and software maintenance for projects like WikiNews, WikiBooks and WikiSpecies that, after using up more runway than Wikipedia did before it went aloft, still don't show meaningful signs of growth and relevance. There is money and effort being spent to maintain an egalitarian spirit and level playing field by supporting Wikipedia projects in dying languages, even though there is ample evidence to show that beyond the top 100 or so languages worldwide (maybe fewer) there aren't going to be enough contributors. There is money being spent on international staff travel that serves no useful purpose beyond demonstrating that the staff is globally engaged.

    Perhaps these are all laudable projects and the effort is worthwhile. But the major institutional donors don't agree, and so the money isn't coming in.

    If a foundation were created with a mission limited to supporting the largest 10, 20, 50, or 100 Wikipedias plus the commons image hosting platform, using a small administrative and technical staff in a single location with a token travel budget, there would be plenty of money. There would be enough money to build an endowment.

    The smaller Wikipedias, the side projects, the partnerships, the in-country "chapters" could all be spun out to succeed or fail on their own merits. But that's not the way the foundation wants it. They want something bigger.

    As though Wikipedia isn't enough of a success to be worth maintaining.

  126. lose-lose proposition by Tom · · Score: 1

    Ads would be the final straw for me to leave Wikipedia behind. Right now it's still useful for a quick overview of most mainstream culture or geeky topics, and an easy way to get a rough idea of most other topics.

    Ads would drive me away. But so does this huge banner. Maybe it's timing, because right before the holidays you are drowned in fund drives all around. Suddenly, everyone digs out starving children (are they not starving the rest of the year?), disabled dogs, disenfranchied plants or whatever this years guilt-ridden topic is. And Wikipedia right now looks a lot like that crap.

    A less in-your-face attitude, like the "progress bar" thing they had last year (or the one before?) would have better chances with me, but maybe I'm strange.

    But ads? Yeah, sure. Write "we sold out" all over the site while you're at it. As far as I'm concerned, if you run ads, you have given up all pretense of being objective. Because sooner or later, someone will offer you a really nice deal if only...

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:lose-lose proposition by doom · · Score: 1

      But ads? Yeah, sure. Write "we sold out" all over the site while you're at it. As far as I'm concerned, if you run ads, you have given up all pretense of being objective. Because sooner or later, someone will offer you a really nice deal if only...

      I share your skepticism about advertising-supported media, but it's important to realize that wikipedia already has no mechanism for resisting well-funded attempts at subversion. They're all proud of themselves for being able to fend off teenage vandals who want to insert "is gay!" after every proper name, but there's nothing they can do against the, uh, hypothetical case of hired propagandists pretending to be "neutral".

      I bring up this scenario about once a month, no one seems to have an answer to it: suppose a Karl Rove type hires a dozen people, who each open a dozen accounts, which they then use in a half-way reasonable manner to build up reputations as good citizens. Then when there's a need for it, there's 144 Rover-boy identities that all have the apparent idea that "consensus" is defined by one politician's list of talking points.

      (Note, in the slashdot version of this scenario, the Rover-boys all mod each other up).

  127. Google rankings by Xugumad · · Score: 1

    I keep finding myself on Wikipedia for information that's readily available elsewhere, because it the first/second link in Google. It might be time for them to either see if they can get Google to help them down the rankings a little, or start trimming information that's easily found elsewhere (e.g., TV show episode listings).

  128. Companies love making themselves look charitable.. by gmarsh · · Score: 2

    Sort of like the Maxwell House "brew some good" ads. Which don't really advertise coffee, they just show a can of coffee with a backdrop of some charitable work that the company donated to going on in the background. I'm sure the cost of airing the ad exceeds the cost of the charitable work by a huge amount, but at least they're doing something. There's plenty of other ads like that airing on TV right now with the same theme.

    I'd say let companies do the same sort of thing with Wikipedia. If a company donates above a certain minimum amount, let them have an unobtrusive ad display every so often where they can brag about donating to the site. Let them show a cup of coffee, box of KD, a server rack or whatever the company's product is, let them make a small reference to their product, etc... but the main theme of the ad has to be "We donated to this place.". Clicking on their ad wouldn't bring them to their site, it'll bring them to a page within Wikipedia which has more information about the donation(s) they've made.

    If I logged in and saw a small "Wikipedia runs on Dunkin' - Proud supporter of this site." image in the upper right corner of the screen, I'd honestly be pleased to see that - while I've never donated to Wikipedia, and feel somewhat ashamed about it because I do spend a fair bit of time on there, I've got huge respect for people and companies that do. And unlike the aforementioned Maxwell House ad, 100% of their advertising cost goes to Wikipedia. Can't knock that.

    But if I saw a "Announcing the new MochaLatteChocoChino from Dunkin Donuts!" image in the middle of the screen, halfway through an article, I'd be seriously pissed off at that.

  129. Why not make a GreaseMonkey plugin by Portal1 · · Score: 1

    For all those that want wikipedia to serve adds instead of begging

    Why not make a GreaseMonkey plugin that replaces the beg add for a real add for the page.
    and donate the add money directly to wikipedia

    Beg add gone and money coming in, all problems fixed.

    and adds will only be shown to people who want them, no add block needed.

    No time to make it myself, but it should be easy to make.

    --
    There are no stupid questions, Just a lot of inquisitive idiots. (from a good friend)
  130. Don't let it die by koan · · Score: 1

    I love Wikipedia, used it all through school and that information was correct and up to date, seems to me instead of ads Google should take over funding, a few million is nothing to them and it would be a great public relations.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  131. Advertisers will be in danger! by Paracelcus · · Score: 0

    Advertisers would be considered "enemy combatants" and would be guilty of "giving aid and comfort to the enemy" and would be candidates for "extra judicial rendition" "targeted assassination" and "confinement for an undetermined period". Still wanna advertise?

    --
    I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  132. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess most qualified people in the sciences don't care so much about the money as they do care about the fact that they need to pay the rent, buy food, insurance, etc. It's only fair to pay people for their work. That has nothing to do with elitism or money grabbing. You probably also think that musicians, film makers, book authors, painters and other artists should not be reimbursed for their hard work, but instead give everything for free to people like you who probably don't contribute a single meaningful thing to the rest of the world.

  133. Re:HOSTS files are superior to AdBlock &/or DN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, this spam message claims hosts are superior, while they can't do what the GP suggests :+

  134. Where did Wales blow the $4 mil already? by bl8n8r · · Score: 1

    $2 meg. from Ebay founder
    $2 meg. from google

    Where'd it blow^H^H go? Seems like 4 million should be enough to last a while.  They're not doing DARPA research for chrissakes.

    --
    boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
  135. WikiExperts? by Syniurge · · Score: 1

    If an incredible resource like Wikipedia cannot even raise 16 tiny millions then the world can burn for all I care.

    And what is this WikiExperts thingy? Keep your crappy suggestions to your crappy site/business and please stay away from Wikipedia's future.

    1. Re:WikiExperts? by shallot · · Score: 1

      And what is this WikiExperts thingy?

      My thoughts exactly... a bit of a pretentious name, that. That particular article seems to be a self-written advertisement by that group - a group so niche that it doesn't even have an article on Wikipedia :) I wonder if someone will try to create it now... imagine that flamewar :D

  136. I donated money to wikipedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because I don't like ads, wikipedia doesn't need ads, but it does need people to give money. If you use wikipedia just once give it at least 3 dollars, because you'll be coming back.

  137. People don't donate by brit74 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's the secret truth of the internet: people like to imagine that they (the crowd) are more generous than they really are. The fundraising goal this year was 10.4 million dollars, and 4 million of that came from EBay and Google. That's 6.4 million from everyone else. For comparison, the Encyclopedia Britannica had revenue of $650 million in 1990 (their peak year). That's a hundred-fold more money than 6.4 million.

  138. Pay by the link, links at bottom of articles by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Seems to me this could be win-win for everyone. Let owners or manufacturers of a given product buy links at the bottom of relevant articles (limit of one link per company per page). Charge them by the impression, so much per link per impression, or if that's too open to fraud or cost uncertainty, let a link on each page be charged by a flat rate based on the previous year's worth of hits for that page. That way costs are proportional to benefits.

    Then I can immediately find vendors of whatever product I just looked up in Wikipedia, the vendors might make some sales, and Wikipedi gets ad revenue -- all without annoying users at all, since the only ad is an ordinary link to an external site, at the bottom of the page where you don't have to look at it unless you want to.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  139. Advertising not required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia doesn't need advertising. All they need to do is replace the site with a "Sorry, we're closed until we have enough money to pay the bills" page and a donation link for one day. They would probably get enough money to run the site for the next decade.

  140. Voluntary ads by rgbe · · Score: 1

    I propose (and I presume I am no where near the first):
    wikipedia.org = like today, but without Jimmy's face in your face.
    wikipedia.com = ad supported, for those, like me, who don't mind supporting Wikipedia with ads

    Everyone wins: Jimmy does, Wikipedia does, the Internet does and the advertisers do.

    QED

  141. But what if... by Gaian-Orlanthii · · Score: 1

    But what if you want to donate to Wikipedia... only you don't have a credit card, you wouldn't piss on PayPal if it was on fire and Jimmy Wales has apparently never heard of cash drafts, international money orders or even plain old postal orders?

  142. No they shouldn't accept ads by egell · · Score: 1

    http://donhall.blogspot.com/2010/07/new-fundraisingadvertising-model.html Jeffe Otte, begging maintains dignity and is infinitely cooler than selling out your principles. It's called laziness when you don't want to fundraise yourself. Our society is forgetting the human aspect of a public cause. Administrative work can be outsourced, but what is lost is integrity and neutrality of the organization. Moderators may have biases, but no organization should have a dominating influence on an encyclopedia, the largest repository of knowledge in existence. The above link shows why a bunch of theatre companies in Chicago would rather say great things about a bank they know very little of by having their logo on their Facebook page for a measly $20,000 award to the theatre group with the most votes. Instead of theatre groups asking for donations themselves, it became about Chase bank at every theatre group in Chicago that participated. Suddenly, off-loop theatre seems a lot less soulless. That was one little idea. I'd rather stare at Jimmy Wales's face for an urgent appeal than listen to advertisements abuot how great such and such product is when there's 20 wikipedia entries of better products. Guess which entries would be removed if such an organization bought rights to those pages? Does it happen elsewhere? Certainly Could it happen here? Certainly.

  143. Its not human nature by unity100 · · Score: 1

    humans are by nature, sharing. however, if you force them into a scarcity economy through capitalism, and place them in a place in a dog-eat-dog hierarchy of income, with the futures of their children, their lives 2 months after, their food, their shelter, depending on how much they keep to themselves, then they will have to act selfish. else, they cant get by.

    its as simple as that. its just like how all people become bellicose and warlike in a situation they are forced to fight for their lives in an arena.

  144. Money for Services by theamarand · · Score: 1

    I love Wikipedia because it's free. I also love Slashdot because it's free.

    Why do I pay Slashdot $5 every once in awhile? Because of the cool benefits! I mean, I get a special asterisk, am allowed to see things a few minutes before they're actually posted to the rest of the site, and it just feels cool to donate money to a geeky/techie site. If everyone here donated $5, it would change the face of Slashdot, or something.... I like supporting a community that I believe in.

    Why do I not pay Wikipedia anything? Well, I just don't see the benefit. To me, Wikipedia is a community managed product. We're already spending our time keeping things accurate and up-to-date. Why pay to work?

    While editing an encyclopedia feels like work, moderating Slashdot actually feels like I'm accomplishing something important. I'm helping other people filter junk, and they are (conversely) doing the same thing. Everyone loves power, but as we know, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. So if you give a BUNCH of people a little power, they'll enjoy it, but not really be able to abuse it in any real sense.

    If Wikipedia wants my money, they should consider adding cool features like Accomplishments, and making it easier to "moderate" the content. Anyway, more important than all that: Rob Malda is simply more cool than Jimmy Wales. What Mr. Wales needs is a cool name, like CmdrTaco, and then we'll talk. Also, just gut feeling, if I had to choose a guy to fix my computer, or hang out and geek with, it'd be Rob. I wonder if Jimmy is a PC, and Rob is a Mac? Just saying!

  145. Re:Wikipedia already warped by bias and politics . by perpenso · · Score: 1

    "politics" and "bias" aren't, contrary to your presentation, two separate sources of distortion, its two different ways of referring to the personal biases of editors

    No. Politics can make one say things they do not believe, things contrary to their bias, or to withhold things they do believe. There is an intersection between politics and personal bias but it is only a partial intersection.

  146. Advertising won't have a negative impact? by stewski · · Score: 1

    Advertising will have a negative impact on the impartiality of information. [1] [1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_model

  147. Re:Wikipedia already warped by bias and politics . by perpenso · · Score: 2

    Its unclear as to whether letting google or some other third party feed ads is more or less warping than politics or bias.

    The question is irrelevant, since adding commercial bias through ad-dependence wouldn't eliminate personal bias unless it also involved eliminating community editing completely. So it doesn't matter if advertising is, on its own, more distorting than the existing sources of distortion, since advertising adds to, rather than replacing, those sources.

    The problem with your argument is that politics, bias and advertising are not equivalents. Politics and bias can not save wikipedia but advertising may. If wikipedia fails no good is served. In its failure it would not even achieve a philosophical victory given that it is already tainted. Its a negative/negative decision. The lesser negative of an incremental and possibly inconsequential(*) tainting versus the far greater negative of complete failure.

    (*) Ads are not negotiated or served directly by wikipedia. A third party aggregates and serves targeted ads. Google for example, an organization that already has an influence on wikipedia via its multi-million dollar donations.

  148. So Google can censor it? by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Did we learn nothing from what happened to TVTropes earlier this year?

  149. Paid Advertising Destroys Independence by Jim+Ethanol · · Score: 1

    The source of funds is very important. Paid Ads would implicitly mean corruption and sponsor controlled information.

    What's important here is not "Jimmy's Begging Mug vs. Ugly Teeth Whitening Ads". Both are unpleasant to look at but the Ads implicitly cause corruption. Period...

    Thanks about it: Pepsi spends a lot on advertising, Pepsi owns Taco Bell. If Taco Bell uses an ingredient which is suspected to cause cancer, I'd like to read about that on Wikipedia! I WONT BE ABLE TO if PepsiCo is funding Wikipedia! Then Wikipedia is just like every other 0wned source of information. Untrustworthy.

    Wikipedia isn't perfect. As some have said, humans are flawed. We all try to make it go our way. We all try to "game" the system. Maybe Wikipedia's information is biased by editors with an agenda, but adding the automatic corruption of corporate sponsorship is not the answer.

  150. "of a commercial nature" by tepples · · Score: 1

    It doesn't use the term "non-commercial", it says "(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;".

    As I understand it, the U.S. IRS defines "nonprofit" to refer to organizations that pay no dividends. If WMF were to put AdSense units below the toolbox on Wikipedia pages, non-free images would still be used "for nonprofit educational purposes", but the use would also be "of a commercial nature", so the first factor would likely be a wash instead of strongly in WMF's favor.

    1. Re:"of a commercial nature" by city · · Score: 1

      I don't see how the first factor is a wash? They either pay dividends or they don't. And from what I know they don't, so running ads doesn't have anything to do with it.

      --
      I am a v1ral sig. Plse c0py me and h3lp me spread. Thank y0u?
  151. Tasteful yes, otherwise no by markdavis · · Score: 1

    I could deal with ads, but only if they were:

    1) Small compared to the page/content size
    2) Non-moving or animated in ANY way (no scrolling, flipping, blinking, sliding, motion, video, etc)
    3) Non-Flash (which pretty much goes with #2)
    4) No mouseover interaction other than it just being a link
    5) No sound
    6) Clearly indicate they are an ad
    7) Fast loading and not requiring pre-loading before other content

    THAT is a tasteful Ad. The kind I would never be compelled to block or push off my screen because it distracts from my reading. Unfortunately that kind of ad is extraordinarily rare. Could Wikipedia really do that, and never give in to pressure? I don't know.

  152. Others say otherwise from /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Funny, this spam message claims hosts are superior, while they can't do what the GP suggests :+" - by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 16, @02:15PM (#34577740)

    See these testimonials from this week, by other /. users then below, next!

    (As to their good experiences using HOSTS files for added speed, & added security):

    ---

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34532122

    "Ever since I've installed a host file (http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm) to redirect advertisers to my loopback, I haven't had any malware, spyware, or adware issues. I first started using the host file 5 years ago." - by TestedDoughnut (1324447)
    on Monday December 13, @12:18AM (#34532122)

    &

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34532298

    "I've used mvps' hosts file for years. No plugins to deal with and they block ads in all programs, not just the browser. HOSTS files are the way to go. It's the second thing I setup after MS Security Essentials" - by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 13, @01:25AM (#34532298)

    ---

    They seem to state the reverse of what you have, & seem to "2nd'ing my motion" above...

    APK

    P.S.=> What points in my reply on HOSTS files do you think are in error, since you state the HOSTS file cannot do what I state it can then? apk

    1. Re:Others say otherwise from /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your hosts file can't selectively block the appeal banner from wikipedia while letting the rest of the site through. try reading what you're replying to before spamming your bullshit next time.

      hah, the captcha is subrange. go slashdot.

  153. I donated to Haiti, the ACLU, and did reddit by darpo · · Score: 1

    Secret Santa this year. But the thought of donating to Wikipedia never entered my mind, despite that I use it daily. Why? Because I've never seen the deletionism issue seriously addressed by the organization. I have a fundamental disagreement with how the site is run.

    As well, I don't believe Wikipedia is all that unique. While it may have been (one of?) the first wiki encyclopedia, and obviously now it has a huge amount of content, there's nothing inherent in Wikipedia that couldn't be recreated if necessary. I don't think the Internet would implode if Wikipedia vanished tomorrow. Would I be inconvenienced? Yes. Would it take years to build a new Wikipedia? Yes. But it's not so vital to the Internet. Whereas if Google had never existed, I think the Internet would be far different.

  154. Re:Wikipedia will close on day XX-XX-XXXX unless . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The prisoner's dilemma said your a poser.

  155. What does Wikipedia need $7 million dollars for? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If all their volunteers are free, what in the world do they need that much money for? Their bandwidth and server costs surely cannot be $7 million dollars a year.

  156. Wikipedia is flawed; worth saving? by PeterWone · · Score: 1

    Notwithstanding the issues surrounding what might be described as Cliquipedia (Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?) I have to object to some of the fundamental philosophy underpinning "acceptable" content.

    They don't accept original work, and they don't accept speculation. Now, I agree that original work should be called out as such. It ought to reference or contain methodology and details of any supporting lab work from which the assertions were derived. But a properly documented and checked primary source is worth a thousand unchecked but published and thoroughly referenced learned opinions.

    As for speculation, all of science is speculation. The only certainty in science is that the body of "knowledge" is more of a body of current best guesses that's as internally consistent as we can make it and makes predictions that check out when checking is possible. If you really want to omit speculation then the article on cosmology would have to be limited to "There are lights in the sky. Spectral analysis yielded (table of values). Parallax effects suggest great distance."

    Wikipedia is not, we are told, the place to publish your work. But why not? Is there any good reason not to use it like this?

  157. What about user donating AD-space by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lately I have been thinking about a system that would allow the users to donate x% of the screen real estate to showing adds letting the proceeds go to the site owners.

    Or put more simply opt-in for adds for sites that you want to support.

    And If you try to patent this, I will call prior art on *ss

  158. Coprophagia by tantaliz3 · · Score: 1

    You are our favorite way to waste time on our smartphones, the first thing that comes up when we type "coprophagia" into Google

    Ahahaa, that's almost as bad as a goatse link.

  159. Why I will not donate to Wikipedia by Christian+Marks · · Score: 1

    My attempt join the Wikipedia community was prematurely cut short when an admin blocked a range of 8192 Verizon IP addresses. I found this out when attempting to edit my user page. My attempted appeal was summarily dismissed--there is no mechanism for distinguishing legitimate users from vandals. To add insult to injury, Wikipedia requires that the appeal remain on my talk page until the range block is lifted some time in 2011. Until then, I will not be donating to Wikipedia. There are plenty of other worthy causes.

  160. PBS has been beggin for years by Beeftopia · · Score: 1

    PBS has always done the begathons. They interrupt programming and plead, passive aggressively, for the ungrateful sods leeching off the free service, to please, for the love of all that is good and holy, GIVE US CASH.

    There is a long and rich tradition of the free-service types pleading for shekels.

    1. Re:PBS has been beggin for years by neminem · · Score: 1

      My favorite radio station does this, too. Only difference is, I willingly listen to it; they even actually convinced me to send them a nontrivial amount of money. Why? Because they're *good* at it. They don't just repeat "please send us money because we're broke" over and over, all day - they tell amusing stories, they talk about comments donators have written, they play songs from the various gifts donators can receive; one time a couple years ago, someone said they donated because the station had just finished playing O Fortuna... so they laughed, and played O Fortuna again immediately.

      If Wikipedia had a sense of humor about their campaign like that, instead of just begging, maybe I'd give them some cash, too. (Bonus gifts help, too; even if I was aware that I could buy the same cd for about a sixth the cost, there's just something different between "buy an overpriced item for charity" and "give money for nothing".)

  161. Re:I might be tempted to donate if it was anyone e by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It comes from last year observation that the picture of Wales induced a large surge in the amount of money given. This year, professionnals were asked to run the fundraiser and these smart people thought they would reproduce last year surge from day 1. On other words, they had a strategy.

  162. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by pipatron · · Score: 1

    If you spent years learning something that you think someone can learn from a well written wikipedia article, maybe you should try to get a refund on those years missing from your life.

    --
    c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
  163. Re:Companies love making themselves look charitabl by bloodhawk · · Score: 1

    The problem is the reverse is also regularly true on WP. Someone who is more opinated than knowledgable spends a great deal of time sitting on articles ensuring their views are the ones put forwards regardless of correctness, then someone knowledgable comes along but doesn't have the time to sit on that page and defend themselves against the incombant moron has his usefull contributions lost and more often then not won't bother to contribute further.

  164. $4 million? by slapout · · Score: 1

    And they still need more?

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
  165. Micropayments? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    Charge 0.01 (US) cent per page view. The Wikipedia article on Wikipedia says they get 25,000-60,000 page requests per second depending on time of day. If they average 25,000 page views per second (yes, I know not every page request results in a page view) that amounts to over $78 million per year.

    But, I wouldn't object to the level of advertising I see on /. either.

  166. I don't WANT the banners @ all: Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject - adbanners have had malwares!

    HACKERS USE ADBANNERS ON MAJOR SITES TO HIJACK YOUR SYSTEM: -> http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/2007/11/doubleclick [wired.com]

    THE NEXT AD YOU CLICK MAY BE A VIRUS: -> http://it.slashdot.org/story/09/06/15/2056219/The-Next-Ad-You-Click-May-Be-a-Virus [slashdot.org]

    NY TIMES INFECTED WITH MALWARE ADBANNER: -> http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/09/13/2346229 [slashdot.org]

    MICROSOFT HIT BY MALWARES IN ADBANNERS: -> http://apcmag.com/microsoft_apologises_for_serving_malware.htm [apcmag.com]

    ADBANNERS SLOW DOWN THE WEB: -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/11/30/166218

    2 MAJOR AD NETWORKS FOUND SERVING MALWARE: -> http://tech.slashdot.org/story/10/12/13/0128249/Two-Major-Ad-Networks-Found-Serving-Malware

    ---

    See subject - adbanners take up CPU time & online bandwidth, bigtime!

    Plus, Adbanners "soak up" the speed I pay for, for my online time to my BSP.

    Sorry - I want that speed, & I don't want malware infestation, and I want all that's in my post on HOSTS ("The Lord of HOSTS" post).

    (Others appear to want the same per my last post)

    HOWEVER - You're forgetting above all else though - I recommend using ALL 3 in HOSTS, AdBlock, & NoScript (this especially w/ HOSTS) - for "layered security"

    APK

    P.S.=> Hosts are just more versatile & useful, by far, vs. other solutions (like AdBlock), and they even correct the flaws of others (DNS) like poor security, and speed, + added "anonymity" even & more... see here -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1913212&cid=34576388 again...

    1. Re:I don't WANT the banners @ all: Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're a leech and a spammer. How lovely.

  167. Visit counter and nudge might work by brent1023 · · Score: 1

    User pay makes sense.

    Possibly a little reminder would help.

    The html for the page could track your usage, saving the counts in the cookie. Perhaps visits per month for the last 12 months.

    Once a year, different times for different people, it could nudge with a suggestion based on usage - say 1 cent per visit or topic.

    They serve billions of pages. If 1% of visitors donated 1 cent a page, they might make their goals.

  168. No by marjancek · · Score: 1

    It shouldn't.

  169. But why would you donate money to wikipedia? by doom · · Score: 1

    A question I've been wondering about lately is "why would you donate money to wikipedia?". I read things on wikipedia now and then, I spend time contributing to articles... but you often hear people say things like "wikipedia is good for technical stuff, but you can't trust the political articles", in other words, it's acting as a forum for fanatics and professional propagandists. Why would you volunteer to support a platform for these people?

    Effectively anonymous, free accounts are clearly not conducive to anything like a robust information architecture... someday we're going to look back on sites like wikipedia (and slashdot) and phrases like "rope of sand" will come to mind.

  170. originality considered not harmful by doom · · Score: 1

    "I find a lot of complaints around WP are about someone's inability to insert something they value but which isn't widely known or reported in the media." And I find that a lot of the defenders of WP generally seem to miss the point of a lot of the criticism.

    Since it's bad to be "original" on wikipedia, you're stuck with "consensus opinion" as the only guide toward the truth. This "family feud" criteria seems pretty silly when you feel you can prove that the consensus is wrong.

    A modest proposal: wikipedia should incorporate a mechanism for evaluating original material. Jimmy Wales reason for rejecting this is pretty lame: "we don't have the resources". So create the resources, already.

    1. Re:originality considered not harmful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally like the fact that WP doesn't permit original material, but I understand what you're saying and I can appreciate that this is a really valid position as well - just not one that WP permits today.

      I agree that if WP/JW wanted to they could apply all their surplus wealth towards this issue and most likely change it to the way you want (it's not that expensive to run WP, all the money goes to expansion projects).

  171. wikipedia is too much work. So what's next? by doom · · Score: 1

    Consequently, after I had carefully researched the subject of each page, filling it with facts and tagging every sentence and paragraph with one or more references, others would often come by and, totally unimpeded by any knowledge of the subject, just start making changes as they saw fit. I could argue with them, typically regarding the quality of their sources, but they were often stubborn and refused to understand. I could point out that they were not following Wikipedia's own guidelines, but they didn't see it that way. The administrators and arbitrators didn't have any knowledge of the subject either and figured we just had to remain civil and reach a consensus.

    Amen. The way I would summarize it is that working on wikipedia articles just isn't any fun, and they expect an insane amount of dedication from their volunteers.

    But I hardly see how running ads is going to help this, unless part of the deal is paying editors and writers...

    So let's say wikipedia is up against it, and a few years hence it will be in an obvious state of decay. What are we going to replace it with? (I don't have a lot of hope for citizendium, somehow, I suspect it goes a little too far in the opposite direction, the control is a little too tight.)

  172. "Jimmy" Wales is a cunt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Jimmy" Wales is a cunt.

  173. Jimmy's warm and friendly beautiful Face by CuteSteveJobs · · Score: 1

    500+ comments in this so I know my little post here will be lost, but what the heck...

    Wikipedia is pretty awesome. For many things it's the cleanest way to find facts and get useful links.

    But I agree with you on the source taste left by contributing. I used to contribute, but I just got so sick of having my changes reverted. I remember one article camped on by a tin goddess who reverted my changes which were just a few sentences, useful, relevant and sourced. She reverted it. I reverted it back. She threatened to report me for vandalism. I tried talking but she was haughty and nasty. She wasn't too hard to find her elsewhere on the web; I think she had "issues;" An empty social life she countered by pretending to be someone big and important on the web. Well I gave up. I've had similar experiences. There's only one article I've managed to contribute to successfully. It was a lot of work, and at the end of the day I decided all the grief and hassle wasn't worth it. I still use Wiki, but I can't be bothered contributing. Why waste an evening to make a contribution which some tin god can turn around and revert? (I used to contribute to Bruce Schneier's blog but stopped after I found he was deleting what he saw as controversial posts without telling the authors. Was half an hour on a well thought out post only to have it disappear. Why bother? I didn't harbor ill-will against Bruce but at the same time I found I drifted away from his community too.)

    For donations there are more deserving charities and I don't really know that my buck to Wikifoundation will go where it's needed or into some hanger on's dinner. But certainly the above tribalism from wikicampers turned me away from developing closer links with the so-called Wikipedia community.

    So there you go: If you don't listen to people, they will still turn up to the free beer nights, but don't expect them to support your wider agenda.

    But Jimmy's banner ad is awesome. Such a warm friendly face. That's a face you could trust with your newborn. Lovely work.The photographer who came up with that deserves a prize.

  174. No adverts, please by jandersen · · Score: 1

    I don't agree with the sentiment, that everything on the internet is/should be a business. Wikipedia is a public service - it is the only real online encyclopedia that is free, and for most parts of good quality. Advertising would completely ruin this aspect; it would certainly open up for suspicion about the neutrality of the articles. As an example, how about the accuracy of articles about drugs, if the medical company that produces them is a major advertiser? The perception of neutrality is orders of magnitude more important for an encyclopedia than for a newspaper; how can one ensure that its information is trustworthy is there are financial interests that influence it?

  175. You're a malware maker, webmaster, or advertiser by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So you're a leech" - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @01:13AM (#34584428)

    Ahem/AGAIN: I don't want malware on my system from adbanners, again, per this links as evidences thereof:

    ---

    HACKERS USE ADBANNERS ON MAJOR SITES TO HIJACK YOUR SYSTEM: -> http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/2007/11/doubleclick [wired.com]

    THE NEXT AD YOU CLICK MAY BE A VIRUS: -> http://it.slashdot.org/story/09/06/15/2056219/The-Next-Ad-You-Click-May-Be-a-Virus [slashdot.org]

    NY TIMES INFECTED WITH MALWARE ADBANNER: -> http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/09/13/2346229 [slashdot.org]

    MICROSOFT HIT BY MALWARES IN ADBANNERS: -> http://apcmag.com/microsoft_apologises_for_serving_malware.htm [apcmag.com]

    2 MAJOR AD NETWORKS FOUND SERVING MALWARE: -> http://tech.slashdot.org/story/10/12/13/0128249/Two-Major-Ad-Networks-Found-Serving-Malware

    ---

    AND I PAY FOR MY ONLINE TIME, I WANT ALL THE SPEED I PAY FOR (& NOT FOR HAULING DOWN & PROCESSING ADBANNERS (ESPECIALLY INFECTED ONES)):

    ADBANNERS SLOW DOWN THE WEB: -> http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/11/30/166218

    ---

    "and a spammer." - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @01:13AM (#34584428)

    I don't get infected, so my system cannot be used as a spam mail sender... period!

    I used this guide I wrote, & others see the same from it (no infestations for YEARS and uptime that's unbelievable too):

    http://www.bing.com/search?q=%22HOW+TO+SECURE+Windows+2000%2FXP%22&go=&form=QBRE

    to be that way... &, IT WORKS!

    So - What's the "arc reactor" HEART of that guide (that's the MOST VIEWED across the web for securing Windows, & has been made a "Sticky/Pinned Thread", "5/5 star rated", &/or "Essential Guide" on 15 forums across the internet, as well as having had 600,000 views (when I stopped counting in 2008 no less))?

    THE HOSTS FILE!

    ---

    "How lovely" - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @01:13AM (#34584428)

    Well, time to tell YOU, what & who I think YOU are then, "tit 4 tat"...

    You're obviously either a:

    1.) Malware maker - who doesn't like seeing testimonials such as the ones I put up in my reply to you of others' enjoying malware-free operations for YEARS, due to HOSTS files:

    ---

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34532122

    "Ever since I've installed a host file (http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm) to redirect advertisers to my loopback, I haven't had any malware, spyware, or adware issues. I first started using the host file 5 years ago." - by TestedDoughnut (1324447)
    on Monday December 13, @12:18AM (#34532122)

    &

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34532298

    "I've used mvps' hosts file for years. No plugins to deal with and they block ads in all programs, not just the browser. HOSTS files are the way to go. It's the second thing I setup after MS Security Essentials" - by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 13, @01:25AM (#34532298)

    ---

    2.) Disgruntled webmaster - who is losing profits gained by "leeching" off the content others (users) provide, via adbanner views (that might poison said users' system), like the example from arstechnica in my 1st post here http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1913212&cid=34576388 !

    3.) Advertiser - for obvious reasons: You can't make "easy money" off of people, & for nearly the same reasons as #2...

    APK

    P.S.=> Ad hominem attack me all you like, but you only show your "true colors" to the rest of us, and show your hand @ WHO YOU REALLY ARE (per the list of the 3 types just above), obviously!

    (Yes, it's AMAZING what folks will do, "for the love of money")... apk

  176. Follow the (dirty) money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1913212&cid=34585838

    You were correct when you stated that the offtopic trolls here replying and giving you a hard time are either malware makers, webmasters, or advertisers and possibly even techs that make their money off of others' misfortunes in being malware laden (off of infected malscripted ad banners on websites).

    All they have is their weak unjustified mod downs and trolling off topic ad hominem attacks on your style of writing (to which you put up 150 upward moderated posts of yours, good job), versus your facts.

    That result of them having to use unjustified mod downs and ad hominem attacks directed at you only means you've done as good a job as is possible when you reduce the trolls to that much.

  177. Got a patch to hide images by category? by tepples · · Score: 1

    They could disable ads on pages containing "unlicensed use of copyrighted works under fair use."

    If the most popular pages have non-free content on them, then ads wouldn't help much. That would invite a bunch of infighting as to whether the most popular pages are allowed to have non-free content at all. If it were to be implemented, one would first need to make a MediaWiki extension to hide images by category, as detecting whether a page includes images in Category:All non-free media would use the same code.

  178. jennycakes by Jennycakes · · Score: 1

    They should stop holding the campaigne so close to Christmas (too many other charities to compete with, like toys for tots and the salvation army. They should also hire an experienced development officer to run the micro-lending campaigne, throw together an annual benefit or event to raise money, get a bunch of volunteers to run that and call it a day... They begging is not so much a problem, as is the manor in which he chooses to beg... No one wants to read some long sobby story about why we should donate, just put the donate now button at the top, bottom, and middle of the page with the $5, $10, $20 option, paypal or credit card...boom. Moreover, they should be mindful of the whole macro-environment and stop asking for more money every year...everyone is broke--if you rely on donations this means you are broke too. Adds are not the answer, cos then they'd have to hire someone to administer, select, run the adds, another headache that is bound to get out of control, plus it definitely would compromise the neutrality of the whole project. This article seemed too snarky, with no sense of pragmatic knowledge of the non-profit world... and also as many others alreay mentioned it was a bit elitist, sounds like someone doesn't appreciate the democratic nature of wikipedia.

  179. Since you "down modded" my post? ROTFLMAO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Per my subject-line above, what with you trolls always down-modding my posts about HOSTS files & their superiority over other methods (such as DNS servers & all their flaws, which HOSTS files MORE THAN MAKE UP FOR in added speed & security - AND ADBLOCK (since it doesn't do nearly as much for a user for security OR SPEED online also))?

    Well, I decided to "grace you" & with a "theme song" (and video too, bonus):

    I call it "THE DOWN-MOD SQUAD" (of trolls)!

    See below... LMAO!

    APK

    P.S.=> I also made DOUBLE SURE it was especially "cheesy", to fit you, in fact... take a listen (lol):

    "THEME FOR THE 'TROLL DOWNMOD SQUAD'":

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kd85Qim_Z6A

    ROTFLMAO!

    Hahaha... Man, I can just see it now - the people running @ the start (replace "The MOD SQUAD" logo with "The DOWNMOD SQUAD" (of trolls)", instead... lol!) are people afflicted with viruses and slowness + tracking from adbanners...

    The 1st white fellow runs into the black fellow & the girl, and they all tell one another about HOSTS files or other security-related topics vs. malware etc. (& other measures to protect themselves)!

    Then, OUT COMES "CAPT. TROLL" from outta the woodwork (when TIGE ANDREWS APPEARS, lol), but you have to place a "thought balloon" in there over his head, saying:

    "Oh nooooes: Users are 'getting wise' to how to protect themselves vs. my leeching their money in online speed slow ups due to adbanners, and they are also getting away from the malware that come in adbanners too, taking away my malware monies or repair fees I get as a tech for something they ought to never be seeing! I have to TROLL THIS!" - Capt. TROLL!

    (ROTFLMAO!)... apk

    1. Re:Since you "down modded" my post? ROTFLMAO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I modded it redundant because you posted the exact same thing multiple times. Offtopic would also have applied, as you hijacked the thread to promote your bullshit.

  180. The subfactors of purpose and character by tepples · · Score: 1

    I don't see how the first factor is a wash?

    Fair use itself has four factors that must be considered. I read the purpose and character factor as itself having two subfactors: "whether such use [A.] is of a commercial nature or [B.] is for nonprofit educational purposes". Currently both A and B are in WMF's favor: A because the absence of paywalls and ads means that the use is not "of a commercial nature", and B because WMF pays no dividends. But if Wikipedia had ads, it would be nonprofit yet commercial; B would be in WMF's favor and A would be in the copyright owner's favor. Or does there exist case law against my interpretation?

  181. The latest episode of the "down-mod squad" (LMAO!) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "as you hijacked the thread to promote your bullshit." - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @03:41PM (#34592258)

    Sure, sure (sarcasm) - Adblock wasn't posted about, multiple times, too? UNFORTUNATELY THOUGH?? ADBLOCK ONLY DOES A FRACTION OF WHAT HOSTS CAN DO FOR YOU THOUGH!

    (Don't LIKE THAT? Ok - then disprove & debunk all 20++ POINTS I POSTED IN FAVOR OF HOSTS FILES HERE THEN -> http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1913212&cid=34576388 )

    Good luck, you'll NEED it - entire "flocks" of trolls, better than you in the computer sciences no less, have tried... not a single one has succeeded!

    ---

    "Offtopic would also have applied" - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @03:41PM (#34592258)

    Hmmm, I replied to a post on adblock here, and showed everyone reading how much more HOSTS files do than Adblock can (and that they even help w/ DNS server deficiencies as well as a bonus)... that's NOT "off-topic" - it's in keeping with what was posted!

    Additionally, since the topic of the article here was ad banners? Well, what takes care of those better than the combination of HOSTS &/or AdBlock??

    (No - you're full of it, & anyone here reading can see the same!)

    Of course, there are others who know WHY more than just a FEW posts are "modded down" by "the down mod squad" (lol) as I do... let's use Mr. Bruce Perens of Open Source fame to do the telling on that note, shall we? Ok:

    ---

    FROM -> http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1738364&cid=33092398

    "I have been offered the online-perception-management services I'm talking about while managing at HP and Sourcelabs. If you are not aware of companys concern for their online perception and what they do about it, and won't take my word for it, there isn't much point in arguing about it with you." - by Bruce Perens (3872) on Friday July 30, @09:27PM (#33092398) Homepage Journal

    &

    FROM -> http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1738364&cid=33089192

    "It just takes one Ubuntu sympathizer or PR flack to minus-moderate any comment. Unfortunately, once PR agencies and so on started paying people to moderate online communities, and to have hundreds of accounts each, things changed." - by Bruce Perens (3872)
    on Friday July 30, @03:55PM (#33089192) Homepage Journal

    THAT ABOUT "SUMS IT UP" FOR ME, PERFECTLY, IN REGARDS TO YOURSELF & "THE DOWNMOD SQUAD" (lmao) AROUND HERE, & I'M NOT THE ONE "DOING THE SAYING" EITHER!

    ---

    "I modded it redundant because you posted the exact same thing multiple times." - by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 17, @03:41PM (#34592258)

    Well, well: Meet the world's 1st AC w/ mod points! Will wonders NEVER cease, lol...

    ---

    APK

    P.S.=> So, all the "down mods" in the world don't make a difference - besides, I have scores of posts on HOSTS files that were "modded up" here as well:

    ---

    http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907266&cid=34529608

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1901826&cid=34490450

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34535412

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1907528&cid=34532574

    ---

    So 1 "mod down" by t

  182. Not so awesome, check this instead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  183. The elephant in the room by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is what happens if Wikipedia abandons enough of the principles it was founded on: a fork. Given its recent history, if Wikipedia takes ads, then I believe this would be enough of a catalyst for change that a viable free alternative will appear and take the exiled userbase with it.

  184. Re:losing opportunities to involve qualified profe by ErkDemon · · Score: 1

    Yep, it's partly the =absence= of qualified professionals that made Wikipedia so great.

    Wales still seems to have trouble understanding this. It's like, he still wants Wikipedia to be a "proper", legitimate, "official" encyclopedia that he can be proud of when he talks about it at dinner parties, staffed by proper academics and proper encyclopedia professionals. He wants it to be a certified, corporate, properly quality-controlled enterprise. Like Microsoft, or Disney, or , uh, Fox News.

    Trouble is, if you take a successful and thriving volunteer programme, and you get a chunk of money and hire a bunch of academics to "sort it out", the project dies. The guys you hire won't be as involved or as dedicated or as knowledgeable or enthusiastic or as involved as the people they replace, because if they were ... they'd already be contributing.
    Wikipedia is huge. Any academic who isn't already a serious contributor isn't worth hiring, and any academic who already //is// contributing, you already have for free, so ... why spend donor's money fixing what ain't broke?

    The other problem is that Wales sometimes seems to be fairly reeking disdain for the Wikipedia project. If he starts hiring-in "proper" academic editors from "outside" in an attempt to change the culture, then by rating those individuals as more important than the people who actually built and maintained Wikipedia, he'd be basically pissing in the faces of the people who made WP such a success. How do you stay motivated as a contributor, if the organisation basically declares you to be inferior to some newbie outsider who's going to get all the credit, and public glory, and superuser priveleges, and get paid for it too?

    Wikipedia does have some serious issues that need sorting out, but those are arguably partly Wales' fault. For instance, he keeps complaining about the lack of serious researchers contributing to WP, and cites this as a reason why the WP project has failed, and why other encyclopedia projects are necessary.
    Truth is, the reason why more experts don't contribute isn't just because of WP culture, it's because one of Wales' own favourite WP rules expressly ==prohibits== anyone from adding or editing information that relates too closely to their own original research. A lot of good technical info seems to be added to WP by people breaking this rule, and editing under aliases. If Wales wants more expert-written articles, the obvious thing to do (without spending any money!) is to relax the current rule that explicitly bans experts from writing about their own specialist fields (on the grounds that they're biased). Or maybe to accept that WP actually has a large number of articles written and edited by known experts, who are smart enough to do it anonymously, because their priority is that the article be great, and that it not be turned into a political debating forum between people with something to lose. Articles should be judged by their content, not their authors' reputation. Using named experts means that article debates become personalised.

    Another problem with hiring academics who aren't already contributing is that some of them won't be prepared to put up with being edited by less qualified folks, and some of them, although they might be top-notch as experts, are likely to absolutely suck as encyclopaedists. A world-class organic chemist or mathematician or particle physicist may have no idea at all as to how to write a coherent Wikipedia article. They may not have ever used Wikipedia. They may not have used any encyclopedia at all since they were kids. They may be completely clueless about what an encyclopedia is, and what people use it for.

    Wikipedia, when it's working well, it a ruthless meritocracy. Edits and articles live and die purely on perceived quality and usefulness. It doesn't matter what your qualifications might be, or how many years you spent studying a subject, or whether you won the subject's Nobel Prize last year ...