Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2013-07-10/Op-ed
It's time to stop pretending the English-language Wikinews is a viable project
- Adam Cuerden, an image restorationist and stalwart at the featured picture process, has been a Wikimedian since 2007.
- The views expressed in this op-ed are those of the author only; responses and critical commentary are invited in the comments section. The Signpost attempted to find a Wikinews editor to trial a "Room for debate"-style opinion article, but invitations to four prominent editors and a Water cooler post were rebuffed.
After a Request for Comment on English Wikipedia's Main Page, a strangely-prominent link to the English-language Wikinews was removed from the "In the News" section, a section of the Main Page dedicated to promoting articles on Wikipedia that have been updated to reflect sudden new events.
"In the News" does a very good job at constantly providing new material, with about one or two new, updated articles every day, covering events in an encyclopaedic manner, and helping to keep Wikipedia updated. Its existence encourages Wikipedia articles to be kept up-to-date, and, by insisting the new material is well-referenced, it also helps maintain quality, and therefore can be considered a successful addition to Wikipedia. Even if "In the News" didn't update every day, Wikipedia would still have a lot to offer. Its archives remain a useful resource, and the various other Main Page sections provide new content. Even updates to articles that attempt to get onto Wikinews and fail to be accepted likely represent an improvement to the encyclopaedia.
However, Wikinews is a rather different project. Wikinews attempts to substitute for a newspaper or news magazine, and thus needs to update quite regularly, but does not update on any specific day more than one-third of the time,[1] and there are often gaps of three days between news stories. If a story is not accepted, it is deleted, losing all work done. As news reports often only represent a tiny sliver of the main story, or are mere trivialities in the larger scheme of things (e.g. "Duke of Edinburgh leaves UK hospital following exploratory surgery", "Air Pacific re-brands as Fiji Airways"), most of Wikinews' archive is likely of little value.
However, Wikinews' biggest problem is that it has so few editors that it has essentially become a vanity project. The active users list gives just 133 users who have made any edits at all in the last month, including 6 bots. As seen in the pie chart leading this article, one user has 45.8% of all non-bot contributions, and it rapidly tails off after that. That's a few users' vanity project, not a viable project in itself.
Wikinews includes some shockingly bad content, such as San Fermín de los Navarros church in Madrid celebrates patron day, a seven-sentence article followed by a few poorly-composed snapshots that show little more than people dressed in white and red, mainly facing away from the camera, and fail to illustrate anything about the festival other than that (see example, right). In the meantime, important news stories aren't covered.
And that's the fundamental problem of Wikinews: it's not a good newssite, regularly missing out important stories that affect large parts of the world, but including events of very localised importance. For comparison, have a look at Portal:Current events, a fairly obscure little Wikipedia-based side-project, which actually does a really good job at noting current events. Up until this week, they included Wikinews, interleaved between their own coverage; however Wikinews updated so rarely, and missed out so many of the main stories, that they have now removed Wikinews from their portal, stating that "[i]n the few articles that appear in a timely manner, except for occasional interviews of debatable interest, no substantial information is provided above Wikipedia coverage or what is found in primary sources. It has been given its chance, more than any other sister project, but ultimately the same reasoning behind the external links guideline applies, and on the merits there is no justification for automatically linking to Wikinews." And they're right. They do a far better job covering the news at that portal than on a project that has been given every possible chance to grow and flourish.
This is Wikinews' fundamental problem: it can neither do a good job providing a summary of world news, nor does it have any special focus that it does well. It's a collection of random articles, with only the occasional, passing resemblance to important current events.
And if Wikinews cannot even come close to fulfilling its core mission, it's not a viable project.
Discuss this story
Past proposal
In 2012, the main author of this Signpost article made a proposal for closing Wikinews, which ended up rejected. --Felipe (talk) 09:39, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Benefit
I buy your premise that it has been mostly unsuccessful in fulfilling its remit, but is there any real benefit to closing it? Gigs (talk) 13:52, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I never actually called for it to be shuttered in the article, but see response one section above for reasons why a project might need to be shut down. Adam Cuerden (talk) 20:48, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Sofixit
{{sofixit}} — Feel free to submit an article. I'm happy to review articles from new contributors. —Tom Morris (talk) 14:32, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Vanity project
These are interesting facts thanks for bringing them up. I would vote for Wikinews closure if I knew it had come up, based on this. While you're at it, Wikisource has degraded into a technobueracrcy that is unfriendly to all but the most determined and dedicated user able to muster the time and energy to learn and implement an arcane system that is frankly hard work and not very fun. And they are extremely conservative in outlook squelching attempts to do things like annotations (last I checked). This is what happens when you have a small rural town run by a few obsessed users, and not a city like Wikipedia. These smaller projects need freedom to experiment and encouragement of users who want to try different things because one never knows where it may lead in building up interest in the project. The goal of these projects should be number of editors and edits (and page views), not some hardline preset ideological mandate that may or may not be what actually works in terms of encouraging users to contribute. -- Green Cardamom (talk) 15:20, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding a specific point, Wikisource actually had an RfC about annotations (and similar stuff) recently. I even left you a message about it. I still need to sort out the policy page a bit, to be fair, but we're working on it. Annotations are going to be limited in the future and we might ask Wikibooks to provide a home for some of the existing annotated works but this is due to the project's scope and aims (which are not the same as Wikipedias', or Wikibooks' obviously). Wikisource's goal is to make all literature open to all people; that's our part of allowing people to "freely share in the sum of all knowledge". This means faithfully reproducing works, and some annotations can undermine that by altering either the original text or the reading of it. Even a simple wikilink can draw attention to a specific word and potentially influence the reading of the whole peice. We have (now) agreed that some annotations are OK (there was strong support to keep wikilinks FYI) but a significantly annotated and amended work is more within the scope of Wikibooks than Wikisource.
Hopefully this will forestall a series of Op Eds attacking every sister project in turn. - AdamBMorgan (talk) 17:47, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Statistics
For context, statistics for all the Wikinews projects and a summary of those for the English Wikinews. --LukeSurl t c 15:21, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Both are crap
Is Wikinews a disaster? Yes. Is Wikipedia's In The News section any better? No. When you peek behing the curtain and see how items are selected for posting, you soon realise it's a total basket case. Despite the name, it doesn't simply select items based on the fact they are in the news that day (check your local provider to see how much doesn't make it). But what criteria it does use to select items? It's a complete mystery. There is no logic to it at all, maybe because people can't even seem to agree on what the hell the section is for. Take a look at the recent suggestions, you can see people claiming that the first human powered helicopter is worthy of posting, but the first landing of a drone on a carrier is not. What the hell is that based on, exactly? Further down the page there are some utter retards opposing the posting of the British Lions rugby tour result because it was just an exhibition tournament, and they appear to have succesfully torpedoed that suggestion even thought it's totall bullshit, and in spite of the fact the last test result in 2009 was posted! It doesn't matter how far you go back either, you find examples of utter stupidity on a daily basis at ITN. It also seems to be the only place on Wikipedia where you can get away with being a total asshole too, which possibly explains why so few people are active there (the same problem applied to Wikinews, at least as far as Brian is concerned). In The News is just as bonkers and idiotic as Wikinews ever was. Neither should be anywhere near the Main Page. Mission Twelve (talk) 18:35, 12 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I'm disappointed that the removed text has been put back in here. These needlessly personal comments add nothing positive to what could otherwise be a worthwhile and constructive discussion. Pandering to behaviour like this that lies miles outside the standards of conduct that Wikipedia sets does nothing for the good of the projects. These standards are more important in meta discussions like this, not less. AndrewRT(Talk) 21:04, 14 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Template for deletion
Maybe someone needs to nominate Template:Wikinews for deletion and remove these links from all Wikipedia articles. Or perhaps less radically, establish a threshold for including a wikinews link higher than simply 'it exists on wikinews'. AndrewRT(Talk) 18:39, 13 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
So why did it fail?
An interesting problem. So - why did Wikinews failed? --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 18:46, 13 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I've always thought its biggest challenge was the serious personality issues effecting its oldest and most prominent members. When the project "leaders" are apt to viciously berate other contributors, and suppress both dissent and new ideas, it's only natural that few others will happily join or remain in such an environment. (I should clarify that this is why I think it hasn't succeeded at the level of other niche projects within the Wikimedia sphere; for success beyond that it would need to offer something unique and valuable, but since free news of extremely high quality is widely available on the Internet the basic consumer offer was never very compelling. Nathan T 15:43, 18 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
What Wikipedia can do
If Wikipedia wants to help finish off Wikinews, it needs to accomplish all of the following:
Until we find the institutional vigor to make such reforms, best to let Wikinews struggle on, hope someone gets interested enough to revitalize it. Wnt (talk) 03:33, 14 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Obsolete
I would contend that the project is obsolete because news articles are created within Wikipedia. Within minutes of a major breaking news story someone creates a stub. Within a few hours or less it can be a start-class article. These current event articles are usually well-sourced, have plenty of editors and watchers and are superior to anything WikiNews could produce. - Shiftchange (talk) 13:27, 14 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Sofixit mk 2
I'm a little loath to start providing unwanted advice to a project I know little about, but is there anything constructive to be done to improve Wikinews? If the problem is the lack of volunteers, which prevents it keeping up to date, perhaps it would help to modify the scope to move away from attempting to mimic the immediacy of a daily newspaper and become more of a news magazine/sunday edition. More news review and analysis, taking a wider look at events, rather than just simple "X happened today" reports. Differing from a Wikipedia article on the same subject becasue it could use concepts like synthesis, original research, etc; and still be "fixed" at a certain date, rather than in a permanent state of revision. Op Eds of its own are a potential problem, they risk the project being used as a blogging platform, but they probably have a place there too. I'm not sure how the review system works but placing artificial delays on top of the structural problems doesn't seem productive at this time; perhaps en.wn could take a risk and suspend them for a while. (The long term solution would be to get more volunteers, of course, but that comes afterwards.) Are there other options that might work, or opinions from wikinewsies? - AdamBMorgan (talk) 17:07, 15 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Serving as a neutral clearinghouse for freely-licensed news produced elsewhere: A great way to fixit would be to start rebroadcasting and sharing translation efforts with groups such as GlobalVoices, which publishes news in dozens of languages every week, under a free and WN-compatible license. I think this is the fastest way to both expand the community, take advantage of WN's current visibility on the web, and broaden the scope of articles covered. Trying to create all new article from scratch under news-cycle deadlines doesn't make that much sense, when there are many other freely-licensed news sources out there. Providing a central place to track those existing sources, helping to translate news across languages and cutlures, and helping to counter systemic bias in a few areas, makes more sense to me. – SJ + 20:28, 16 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]