User:Flcelloguy/Signpost/Board candidates

new candidates: AaronSw, Arnomane, Evrik, Zuirdj; - Cartman02au

Board of Trustees elections edit

Hello!

The Wikipedia Signpost, a community-newspaper in the English Wikipedia, is covering the Board of Trustees elections and will be featuring each of the candidates in next week's issue. As such, we would appreciate it if you would take some time to answer a few interview questions. Each candidate will be asked the same questions; by no means, though, feel obligated to answer any (or even) all of them, though we would greatly appreciate it if you did.

Some of the questions may be a bit redundant to the candidate information you have filled out already. This is both for convenience and for giving you the opportunity to expand on some of them a bit. However, we ask that you keep all responses brief, limiting them to no more than one or two paragraphs each.

You may leave replies to my English Wikipedia talk page, my meta talk page, or email them to me. I would appreciate it if responses are in on or before this Saturday, August 26; please have them in at the latest on Sunday the 27th in order for them to be included in Monday's issue.

As always, the Signpost reserves the right to re-distribute the questions and replies, shorten any responses if necessary, and take any other editorial action deemed appropriate.

Thanks again for your time, and please don't hesitate to contact me if you have any questions! ~~~~

  1. Your name:
  2. Your username most commonly used:
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?


Thanks again.


end meta code; begin candidates

m:User:AaronSw edit

Your name:

Aaron Swartz

Your username most commonly used:

AaronSw

Your current geographic location, along with your age:

Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, 19

Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions):

en.wikipedia, en.wikisource, en.wikiquote, en.wikinews, meta.wikimedia, wikimania2006

Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?

No.

Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?

No.

When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?

I started actively contributing in mid-2003 when I begun studying Internet and US constitutional law and wanted to write down all the things I was learning for others. I quickly got addicted and began contributing on more and more subjects and reorganizing other pages. I made Special:Random my homepage and tried to improve things whenever I saw an opportunity.

Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?

About six years ago, I built my first web application. I called it theinfo.org, but it was basically the same idea as Wikipedia. Not surprisingly, it didn't take off, but I never stopped thinking about the problem. Since then, I co-authored the RSS 1.0 spec, worked on the specifications for the Semantic Web, and was an early employee at Creative Commons. Most recently, I co-founded Reddit, which, after one year, is already in the top 1500 sites on the Internet (according to Alexa).

Throughout this I've learned about web technologies, building and managing democratic online communities, scaling a rapidly-growing website, the laws and politics of free culture, how to work in formal organizations, and the technologies appropriate for building free knowledge.

Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?

I think I have a clear, broad vision of the core values that have made Wikimedia successful and the long-term direction in which they head. I've described this briefly in my candidate's statement and plan to say more in a series of essays over the coming weeks.

A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?

It's essential that the community representative to the Board represent the entire community, across all languages. As a Board member, I would not only try to write up the details of what was going on inside the Board for the public, I would work to make sure these notes were translated into as many different languages as possible, so that everyone has a chance to follow what the Board is doing and provide their input.

What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?

Primarily, I hope to represent the community. That means telling the community about what's going on inside the Board, pushing the Board to delegate power to the community whenever possible, and working with the community to solicit input and direction for what they want from the Board. I want to make sure that things like Wikipedia remain community projects, with the Board's job limited to helping them achieve their goals.

Secondarily, I hope that my experience in organizations and technology can help the Board build the infrastructure necessary to do just that: ensure the projects survive, thrive, and grow.

What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?

I believe I answer this in the questions above.

Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.

A key issue is that the Foundation needs to move from a small group of people to a lasting organization that will be able to sustain and support the projects for the long term and do so in such a way that continues to respect the community's primacy. This is a fairly unique task -- few other organizations need to both last and not be in control -- but an essential one.

What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?

The Board's job is to set the scope and direction of the Foundation. Neither its members nor its structure is well-suited to having it run day-to-day operations. But this is nothing special -- few organizations are run directly by their boards.

As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?

The size of the community is enormous -- it goes beyond the community of admins, beyond the community that goes to meetups, beyond English, beyond Wikipedia -- and it would be absurd to think that any single person could single-handedly represent all their varied views and perspectives. Instead, the job requires facilitating communication between the Board and the community -- telling the community what the Board is doing, telling the Board what the community wants.

If I bring any special experience to that task, it's as someone whose experience of Wikipedia is more along the lines of an average editor, rather than someone deeply involved in the politics of the project. Quiet editors make up the core of our community, but precisely because they are quiet, their voices on most issues are rarely heard. As their representative, I will do my best to represent them as well, not just the active voices who dominate most current policy discussion.

What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?

It's hard to imagine a grander or more noble goal than giving every single person is free access to the sum of all human knowledge. Having spent time hanging out with many different parts of the Internet community, I can honestly say that I've rarely seen a group as far-sighted or as generous as the community around Wikimedia. The people involved in the projects are tackling the big issues; the Foundation's job is to get the obstacles out of the way and let them do it.

If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?

Definitely. My current job gives me enormous flexibility to devote time to Wikipedia and I think the next few weeks will demonstrate that I've been taking full advantage of it. In my past work as a representative to the World Wide Web Consortium, I was able to take the time necessary to participate in Working Group discussions and pay my way to fly to all the meetings; I expect to be even more involved as a member of the Board.

Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?

I've attended Wikimania and other Boston-area Wikipedia meetups and events. It's been wonderful meeting other Wikipedians and feeling the energy that we share for the project. But obviously it's a small subset of the community who attends such things, so I'd be careful about extrapolating too far.

Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.

I'll link to everything from meta:User talk:AaronSw.

What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?

Wait to see how the next few weeks unfold. We should take this election as a real opportunity to discuss the future of the project as a community, not just vote for someone to do that work for us. I hope to share my thoughts over the next couple of weeks; I hope you'll also share yours.

Is there anything else you would like to mention?

Perhaps it's just my background as a programmer talking, but I think that one thing I think we should discuss more is the power of the software. Code is law, as Lessig says, and more than any policy decision or Foundation decree, what the code that runs Wikipedia does has a profound impact on the site, in everything from who can easily contribute to the kinds of things the software makes it easy to say. When we're discussing big issues like these, I think that aspect needs to be considered.

m:User:ArnoLagrange edit

1. Your name: Arno Lagrange

2. Your username most commonly used: ArnoLagrange

3. Your current geographic location, along with your age: near Carcassonne, Aude, France. 50 years.

4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions) : esperanto wikipedia (sysop and bureaucrat), other eperanto projects or esperanto pages in common projects (wiktionary, wikiquote, wikibooks, wikisource, commons, meta, wikimediafoundation where I am sysop), small editor on fr, de, en wikipedias, accounts in more than 40 wikipedias projects.

5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one? : sysop since 2003 and bureaucrat since 2005 on esperanto wikipedia, sysop on the other esperanto projects since 2005, sysop on meta and wikimediafoundation since 2004, former steward elected 2004.

6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when? no more

7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join? 2002, after I found a wikipedia article as answer of a google request. I wondered to find an edit button and then I became a wikipedian geek.

8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member? : very different experiences : agriculture, massonery, maths teaching, theater actor, computing, non-profit activities. The most useful experience for the Board is (but computing) teh experiences as an actor and a theater director where I learned to manage human relations.

9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate? : I don't think i'm the best candidate. I read with attention the other candidates' statement (I translattted all of them to esperanto !) and I think there are some more valuable candidates than I am. I stand out because I emfase the linguistic problems in a multilingual community where english takes a disproprotionate place. I think it's very important WMF evolves its linguistic policy so that every wikipedian in every country with every mother tongue can really participate in the projects' direction.

10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board? : I speak 4 languages and understand a ten of others. It can help to communicatre with different members of the community. A trustie has to be an ambassador of the vlunteers in the Board and when he/she speaks and understands only english it's difficult to communicate with people which can't english (yes they do exist, english speaking people don't hear them and use to believe that everybody in the world can easily communicate with english, but it's not true at all)

m:User:Arnomane edit

  1. Your name:
    Daniel Arnold
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    My only nickname is Arnomane. A friend of mine gave it to me sometime around 1998. It is build out of my family name Arnold and my nationality (German[e]).
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    I'm 25 years old and currently live next to Nürnberg, Germany.
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
    Wikimedia Commons, contributions: commons
    de.wikipedia, contributions: de.wikipedia
    More in detail below
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    I got admin in the german language Wikipedia on 25. June 2005 after a year and some months contributing to it. Later on 10. November 2005 I got as well admin in Wikimedia Commons. Recently on 1. April 2006 I got bureaucrat and shortly after on 20. Apr 2006 I got elected CheckUser there too.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    No.
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    I joined during the big de.wikipedia boost in March 2004. I got inspired by two press articles: One on Spiegel-Online (online offspring a popular German political magazine) and an article on heise.de (online news of a popular German IT magazine). I probably sat down at my computer after returning from university, did browse the news and inmediatly got addicted to Wikipedia (That time I was lurking around for quite some time searching for "my" inspiring free software project and had been in loose contact with people from various free software projects). You can see as well the effect of these two press articles in the Wikipedia statistics.
    My very first edit was probably that minor one as an IP: http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gammaastronomie&diff=840114&oldid=839166. Some ours later on 16. March 2004 at 0:01 CET I made my first edit with my user name in http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gammablitz&diff=843667&oldid=843626. Up to now I am still around in astronomy articles beside many other things.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    I was born in Magdeburg in the former GDR in september 1980. I finished school in 2000 with Abitur (qualifies for university studies) at Siebold-Gymnasium Würzburg. After one year of civil service in a social institution for blind people I started in 2001 my studies in Erlangen with physics and changed later to mechanical engineering. I have always been active in communities in real life, like school newspaper, choir, orchestra (violin, did sadly had not much time for it for some years), later in lower university boards ("Fachschaft"). I think that I have learned out of these experiences reasoning, patience and persistence among many other things that certainly will be a help for me.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    I was searching for a candidate that did represent my concerns but didn't find anyone (perhaps also due to the fact that I only know a fraction of the other candidates). One of my concerns is that we have quite some visions but sadly some important of them were hyped too early while there was nothing ready yet. So my main whish for all of us including myself is "Just do things and promote them later - not the other way round."
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    I'm a German so my mother language is German. I speak English at an advanced level and sadly only some French (did not pay too much attention in school although I have been in France several times, shame on me ;-). I think as long as a person is open-minded towards other language communities, language skills are not a must have but a nice to have. Language skills beside English are very helpful in order to understand a certain culture, habits and common mind - but most important is the ability to realize the own cultural bias.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    Currently many things get solved independently over and over again in our diverse wiki communities. I met quite some people who created nice stuff that just works in one community. Thatfor I want to increase cross-project communication so that the communities benefit from each other. My self-conception is that I want to be a community board member. I want to communicate problems and solutions out of our diverse communities to the board. Of course I can also contribute quite some own experience, like for example on "printed Wikipedia" - one of our main goals. So I don't want to be there in order to make "big politics" as I believe in division of work among board members and in open-minded (not group-think) meritocracy in online projects.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    An independent perspective from the grounds of de.wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons and hopefully many more other wikis as well. So I want to lower the gap between the board and especially the non English language communities, which has caused quite some friction in the past, so that the Foundation can priorize it's higly limited time better between the concerns of all communities. See also my previous answer.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    I believe that equality among our diverse language communities can only be reached by active participation and with the right free software tools. For me all languages and cultures are equally welcome but we cannot achieve working equality by board declarations. So IMHO the current main task of WMF towards equality of communities is (beside local chapters) to ensure that future MediaWiki versions take an even greater emphasis on features that enable people getting more easier in touch across communities and languages.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
    The board has done a huge amount of work and always manged it to solve emgerency cases, which can't be taken for granted given the breath-taking size of our projects. My vision for the future is that we don't spend so much time on defining procedures on formal issues where it is not legally or financially required. So for me the top of a hierarchy is where the most work is being done and this is in constant flux.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    Of course yes :o The "why" has been answered above.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    I am addicted to Free software and Free content much like all of us. SoI like the mission. ;-) Other parts see above. :-)
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    That was the hardest question for myself. Of course I hope so and will do my very best.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    I was at Wikimania '05 and quite some other local German meetups (21C3, Berlin '05, a documentary about Wikipedia and local informal meetings). At Wikimania and Berlin '05 I was staff (but not in the front row) during the documentary I was an interview partner (ok my interview had been cut out ;-( ), and on the other ones I was just participating and enyoing the atmosphere. :-)
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
    Up to now I didn't recive other questions in the wiki given my late candidacy. Hopefully in future at commons:User_talk:Arnomane/WMF_board_election_2006 people will just ask. :p
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    Just sit back think one more time go outside and take a break. If you really want to get influenced ask me. ;-)
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    Puh probably a lot of things will come into my mind later but not now. ;)

m:User:Cartman02au edit

# Your name: Nathan Carter

  1. Your username most commonly used: Cartman02au
  2. Your current geographic location, along with your age: Bathurst, NSW, Australia, 23 years of age
  3. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions): Wikinews - http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Cartman02au meta - http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Cartman02au. I would consider Wikinews to be my main focus and have won the 2nd International Wikinews Writing Contest and the News/Current Affairs award at Wikimania 2006.
  4. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one? I am an administrator on Wikinews, which I gained on February 22, 2006.
  5. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when? No
  6. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join? I first contributed to Wikipedia on 25 September 2005, I joined because I see Wikimedia projects with my belief on using the internet for advancing free knowledge.
  7. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member? I originally started out in IT whilst at technical college, I later went to university and continued along the IT path. Early this year, I fell into the education field, beginning to tutor students and provide professional development training as part of my job. At present I am studying Vocational Education and Training as a post-graduate.
  8. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate? Honestly, I dont think I stand out from the field. There are some impressive candidates, all of which have the wants of the foundation at heart.
  9. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board? I only speak English. I think that the language of candidates is largely irrelevant so long as the board can communicate and so long as we can understand the community at large.
  10. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations? My number one wish for the foundation is to improve communication and to establish Wikimedia as a pioneer in the free content community. I expect that the next 12 months will be very interesting for WMF as we transform into a different type of organisation.
  11. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation? I can bring a fresh perspective to the boards. I hope to contribute as much as I can to the WMF, but I would love to see us not only do the things I mentioned above but to push for more local chapters, spread into education and increase involvement in non-Wikipedia projects.
  12. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation? Right now we need to ensure the foundation is seen as a fairly reliable source of valuable information. We are often dismissed as a joke by many because of our openness, I think if these people delved into our projects they would soon see we have some damn good and accurate material.
  13. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership? I think the current foundation hierarchy works well, we just need to ensure that our communication processes work, especially as we grow from a small organisation to a large one.
  14. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why? I think I can represent the community and its concerns because I am of the community.
  15. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change? Ensure our communications processes are efficient and work as well as possible.
  16. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board? Of course, my only concern is my inability to travel.
  17. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play? I think meetups play a critical social role in the foundation. It would be great to meet and greet fellow Wikimedians, unfortunately I am yet to do so (there arent too many of us in rural Australia)
  18. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this. See my talk page.
  19. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now? Vote for the person who's views you best support.
  20. Is there anything else you would like to mention? The only thing I would like to mention is the fact that Wikimedia consists of more than Wikipedia. I would like to see our other projects enjoy the same success as Wikipedia has in the future.

Withdrawn


m:User:Charles Matthews edit

  1. Your name:
    Charles Matthews
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    Same
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    Cambridge UK, 52
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
    English Wikipedia, where I have one of the highest edit counts.
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    enWP admin (2004), Arbitrator (2006 election).
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    N/A
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    2003. Drawn in via Meatball Wiki. I was already very active on the go wiki, Sensei's Library.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    Academic mathematician to 1989, since then volunteer, writer, househusband, parent.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    If one thing, it would be breadth of background. I also think I'm an effective communicator, as writer and public speaker.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    I speak decent French, studied Russian (a little rusty, but I understand spoken Russian OK). Bits of Japanese, several European languages (can read some technical German). Monoglot doesn't mean lacking in cultural sympathy, necessarily, but when cultural issues come up languages are going to be in play.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    I would be expect to be busy learning, but there are a few things (see Anthere's questions to me User:Charles Matthews/WMF Board Election 2006#Anthere's questions).
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    I have wiki and world experience, time, ability to communicate.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    We have to get on top of the 'biographies of the living', and defend the whole project from defamation litigation. Some attention has to be paid on the software side for tools to do that.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation hierarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
    So far, things have been handled fine. 'Leadership' in such a broad, even diffuse voluntary project has to take account of atmosphere and intangibles, as well as the obvious pragmatic issues.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    I'm an old-school Wikipedian, with wiki roots going back further than that. No mystery about the 'community'.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    I have said that internal communications need a review. Maybe we need more focus on things other than mailing lists, and in any case we might need clearer routing (complaints this way, general policy discussion over there, that kind of thing).
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    Yes, though that would cut into editing time.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    Unforunately not: bad timing this year.
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
    The Meta page User:Charles Matthews/WMF Board Election 2006 is the designated place for questions related to my candidacy.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    I'm not a tech person, I'm a 'human factors' person.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    My efforts in Uganda to raise the profile of WP.

m:User:Cimon Avaro edit

  1. Your name: Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
  2. Your username most commonly used:Cimon Avaro
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:Neighbourhood of Merihaka in Helsinki, Finland; 40 years and a half old.
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions): english wikipedia, english wikiquote, finnish wikipedia
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one? - Admin on english wikipedia since the summer of 2003 and bureucrat since 2005, appointed mediator by Jimbo (currently retired from mediation committee)
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when? None.
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join? - April 2003, found site by accident, noticed something I could improve, and stayed.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?Skipping school, I would go to read Encyclopaedia Britannica in the library, having already read the paltry Finnish encyclopaedia at home cover to cover. After studying translation into english and simultaneus interpretation for a year and math and physics for another year in university, I delivered newspapers for fifteen years, which gave me access to daily editions of newspapers accross the political spread, and while waiting for the newspapers, the people in our work group would argue everything under the sun, from current affairs to politics and deep philosophical questions. Personally I mostly argued for the middle ground. I would say that I learned more about Neutral Point of View there than on wikipedia. Last winter I "herded cats" in a Sciences oriented "magnet school" library with the patrons being 16-19 year old hyper-intelligent nerds, very similar to the current wikipedian demographic.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate? - I have a record of never getting embroiled in controversy, but always acting constructively to the best of my ability even in difficult situations, and walking away instead of edit warring, if that proved impossible. I would like to think where ever I have been involved, I have been a moderating influence. Characteristic of my involvement is the en:Wikipedia:Do not bite the newcomers page, which I started.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board? - While I don't think language skills beyond being able to communicate with the other board members is essential, I do speak at a useful level in Finnish, Swedish and English, and studied German for four years in school, including private lessons, and if elected, would certainly brush up on my language skills, having a good natural linguistic ability. I would say that experience from the full evolution of a virtually non-existent to a middle sized wikipedia (Finnish) is a useful perspective I can bring to the board.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations? - Be a trustworthy custodian of wikimedian assets, and through active communication, make the foundation relevant for the communities, and participate in the setting up of a functional organizational structure for the foundation.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation? - A moderating influence, and unflinching integrity (all false modesty aside).
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation. - Scaling up the organization to match the enormous workload. Delegate, delegate, delegate, and stand back.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?- Oversee, act in a legal capacity, and delegate. I have an abiding faith wikimedia will always continue to have leadership that is competent and of high integrity.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why? - Yes. With humility and a listening approach, everything is possible.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change? - The board itself is now the bottleneck now, and this aperture must be opened up both in terms of accountability through transparency, and by expansion.
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board? - Naturally.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play? - Both Wikimanias (2005 and 2006) and a couple of smaller meetups. Putting faces to usernames is vital for creating trust, and the Wikimanias taught me more about the backround of the projects and the foundation than I have learned in toto elsewhere. Meetings should be about education, not backroom dealing.
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now? - If you want integrity and a moderating influence on the board, I doubt you can do better than voting for me.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention? - Information wants to be free.

m:User:Eloquence edit

  1. Your name:
    Erik Möller
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    Eloquence
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    Berlin, Germany, 27
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
    In descending order of significance: en.wikipedia, en.wikinews, commons (+two bots), meta, de.wikipedia, de.wikinews. I've also made contributions to MediaWiki development since 2002.
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    I'm an admin on the English and German Wikipedia, English Wikinews, Commons, Meta, and the MediaWiki site. I'm also a bureaucrat on the English Wikinews.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    I have Subversion, shell and database access. I used to be active in server administration around 2003-2004, and managed the creation of Wikinews language editions through most of 2005. When the steward role was invented, I argued that developers should not be stewards at the same time, and have therefore never sought stewardship.
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    I joined the English Wikipedia as a registered user in December 2001; the other projects followed.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    I have a computer science degree and attended a two-year school of economics. I've worked as a freelance writer for various magazines and newspapers since I was 17 years old, and I have written a book about weblogs, wikis, and open source software (see my German homepage for details). I currently work as a project manager and developer on the WiktionaryZ project. I also run a small wiki hosting company. I'm an international speaker and workshop moderator. Google me, but note that there are quite a few Scandinavians with the same name, including a popular Swedish recording artist. ;-)
    I think in fully formed sentences, which means that it's relatively easy for me to write long texts or to communicate freely. These communication skills are useful for a Board member, as they help me to represent the organization at conferences, in discussions or in other venues, and to prepare detailed activity reports. As a technologist and former Chief Research Officer of the Foundation (just a title, no salary ;-), I believe I can lead the effort of preparing a roadmap for future innovation.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    I should let other people answer this question. Angela, whose resignation has opened up the Board seat which is contested in this election, has endorsed my candidacy with the following words: "I strongly support Erik's platform in this election and I believe he is the best candidate to represent the community in the development of the Wikimedia Foundation over the coming year. Erik has shown a continued commitment, not only to Wikipedia but to the Wikimedia Foundation as a whole. Erik's commitment to the sort of openness that will ensure the community will have an influence in ensuring the Foundation meets its goals makes me happy to endorse him as the person to replace me on the Board." Please also see the other endorsements I have received.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    I speak German natively and English as a second language. I believe that our processes need to facilitate multilingual interaction, but any individual person is only ever going to speak a tiny subset of languages present in the Wikimedia communities. I think awareness of the issues of internationalization, localization and translation is more important than specific language abilities. Through my work on WiktionaryZ, I have become very familiar with these issues, and have spent considerable time thinking about ways to make communication processes multilingual.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    The term only lasts until July 2007. Given that the Board has only held two meetings this year, we're talking about a small time window to make a difference. The most important upcoming event is the Board retreat in October, which is where I hope to raise some of the issues described in my platform. I will seek dialogue with the other Board members and organizational staff beyond scheduled meetings, and try to promote certain initiatives, such as open community meetings for individual projects and a Foundation roadmap.
  12. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    The Foundation is in a critical phase of transition. It was entirely governed by its Board of Trustees for 2 years and has only recently launched formal committees and hired an Executive Director, Brad Patrick. I believe it is crucial that, in this organizational transition, we establish a high level of transparency and low barriers to entry. Committees need to allow new volunteers to participate, and only confidential information should be kept secret. The Board has also stated its desire to add more members (our Board has 4 active members, while the average non-profit Board in the United States has 17 members). I strongly believe that the majority of the Board should be elected by the community, and that Board appointments should target experts from particular fields (e.g. developing nations) rather than "big names" or wealthy donors. The question whether the organization should have legal membership remains undecided, and I want us to carefully weigh the pros and cons of that proposition.
  13. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy?
    The Board sets the mission of the Foundation and the long term planning, rather than being responsible for day to day operational activity. It ensures that the organization operates in line with its stated mission and in compliance with law and ethics. In the context of Wikimedia, I think the Board has a special role to guarantee a harmonious relationship between paid staff and volunteers.
  14. How do you feel about the current leadership?
    I have met them all personally, and I can testify that they are, without exception, good people who have the best interest of the Foundation at heart. :-)
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    I regard myself as an international candidate. Much of my involvement has been with projects that are not language-specific, such as Wikimedia Commons, which I proposed in March 2004, or the MediaWiki software. I believe I can represent all languages and all project communities. As a candidate, I have a strong commitment to make the projects beyond Wikipedia succeed through partnerships and constant innovation -- see my platform for many ideas in that area.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    I identify strongly with the charitable goal of giving all human beings free access to human knowledge. I think we need to clearly define the organization's scope beyond this. We are not the Internet Archive, for example -- Wikimedia is about practical collaborations around knowledge. I also strongly feel that there is a fantastic untapped potential for partnering with academia, non-profits, governments, and other organizations in the development of our projects, our technology, and our communities.
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    Of course. :-) I will reserve a minimum of 6-8 hours per week for Board responsibilities.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    I've been a speaker at both Wikimanias and was on the program committee of the first one. Beyond that, I've been to meetups in Germany, England, Austria, the Netherlands, and South Africa. I love meeting people in person, and believe it is an extremely important part of comunity interaction, not to mention that face-to-face meetings have a lot more bandwidth than text on a screen. ;-)
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
    User talk:Eloquence/Platform 2006
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    Please carefully review the platforms of all candidates, and also the Wikimedia Foundation website and its history. This election is about the future of an organization that operates many projects in many languages (a point cleverly made by Delphine Ménard in her anti-platform), not just the English Wikipedia. Don't just pick the person you like the most or know the best -- vote for the candidate who you think brings the best ideas and abilities to the table, who has the strongest commitment to our values, and the deepest understanding of the organization and the communities.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    I've been passionate about making a difference in the lives of others since I was a child. With the Wikimedia Foundation and its projects, I have found a group of peers who believe in changing the world through knowledge, and who have built some of the most amazing resources in the history of humankind. I could not imagine a better group of people to work with, and would be deeply honored to represent our community in facing the challenges we have set for ourselves. I want the Wikimedia Foundation to be a model of openness and integrity. I'm asking for your support, and promise that I will do my best not to disappoint you. Even and especially if you do not want to support my candidacy, please tell me what you think about my platform and my ideas. And thanks for reading so far! :-)

m:User:Evrik edit

  1. Your name: Bruce Andersen
  2. Your username most commonly used: en:User talk:Evrik
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, 42
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions) commons - contributions and English Wikipedia - en
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one? No
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?No
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join? July, 21 2005 with first recorded edit John Doe. First anon edit (Urbanization) on January 21, 2004. I joined because after editing anonymously for a while I thought I would be get more from editing by registering.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member? In my real life, I am an Investigator for the federal government. Outside my work, I have served on volunteer boards and worked in community agencies since 1990. I have been creating web content for more than 10 years.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate? I have been working with computers for 30 years, and on the Internet since the early 90's when I used to surf using Mosaic. I have a historical perspective on the development of online information services.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board? I am fluent in Spanish. I believe that language is important, and that more work needs to be done to make interlingual work easier. Operations of the board require that everyone be able to understand each other, but more important than language is a multi-cultural perspective that being multilingual brings.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations? I think that the wikimedia work is profound, and that I want to be able to contribute to that work. This is a great opportunity and I want to involve myself because I think I'm qualified, but also think it's a great learning experience.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?An inquisitive mind, negotiating skills and an ability to problem solve difficult situations.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation. Creating a financial foundation that supports its work, and the work of its volunteers, and allows it to continue to grow and meet new challenges. A firm financial footing is the basis of growth, success and survival.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation hierarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership? I think that the Board sets the direction that the Foundation should go, and creates the environment that lets the volunteers succeed at making the goals of the foundation work. I feel that the current leadership has done a good job, and see this election at a chance to add new blood – which is always good!
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why? After having worked at creating pages, WikiProjects and Portals; after having been involved at trying to save pages from deletion; after having contributed time and money - I think i understand the concerns of the communities.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change? I think the Foundation has done a great job of creating a community to benefit all of humankind
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board? Yes
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play? No I think that it is important for people to meet face to face as it improves the workings of the foundation. A lot of misunderstandings occur in the virtual world that don’t when people meet face to face. The more we get to know our fellow editors, the better we work together. If you’re ever in the neighborhood, 39°56′56″N 75°12′35″W / 39.94885°N 75.20973°W / 39.94885; -75.20973 look me up!
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this. N/A
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now? I hope to continue my involvement for a long-time to come. I would appreciate your support.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention? I see the wikis as a great example of the possibilities of the Internet to disseminate knowledge and to build civil society.

m:User:Hadraj edit

m:User:Improv edit

  1. Your name:
    • Pat Gunn
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    • Improv (my older account was Pgunn)
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. I am 28 years old.
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
    • I have only significantly contributed to en. See my statement for the links.
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    • I became an admin on EN in February 2005.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    • No
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    • I started contributing in late 2002, first anonymously. I got an account in late 2002 because I was becoming interested in keeping track of my edits.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    • My career is not all that relevant. I am a systems administrator/programmer and a psychology researcher. It is possible that my extensive computer experience may be of use in understanding technical issues, and it is possible that dealing with the paperwork tied to universities and serving on some university committees over the years has prepared me for effective ways to communicate over a variety of forii.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    • I won't claim to be the best -- there are many types of members who might contribute productively to the board in different ways. As for me, I'm culturally from the opensource community and the academic world, I'm skeptical of corporate ways of doing things and want to sacrifice as little of the open/informal as possible while still meeting our ends. I also care about getting input, on appropriate topics, from people from any project and language.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    • I am a native speaker of (American) English. I can speak German or Spanish (much better at reading them) to the extent of making myself understood, although I'm a bit clumsy in both and often need a dictionary. I can speak a bit of Japanese as well (can read Hiragana/Katakana), can read Cyrillic (but speak very little Russian), and can say a few odd phrases in Hebrew. I can often understand written Italian and French based off of my understanding of Spanish. I think language is a nice bonus in an otherwise qualified candidate.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    • I expect to serve on some committees and do a lot of uninteresting but necessary work as well as participate in some of the larger steering issues.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    • I can provide my judgement, my effort, and my time.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    • I think defining the goals and form of the Foundation is the most challenging issue. I'd approach it by entering a discussion on it, listening and contributing as needed.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
    • The board governs the foundation. It is the source of the committees that do most of the work, and is the final authority on what happens. I don't know enough of the private details of the foundation to judge the present leadershi.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    • I disagree - to come from the community as a long-term user gives the board someone who understands the culture and shares certain concerns with the experienced community at large. Any representativeness comes from the selection process, and is not a duty to represent as a delegate. I've been in the community for a very long time, but my judgement and words are my own. If the community likes me, it should be for what I say and the judgements I have made, not because I will be a delegate in some way.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    • I think the foundation manages projects that are one part of a larger cultural renaissance (in openness and collective action) brought about by enabling technologies and increased educational levels. I believe we should have foundation "ambassadors" for each sufficiently large wiki to translate concerns and iron out legal issues.
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    • I believe so.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    • I went to Wikimania 2006 as well as an east coast meetup. I feel these are helpful in building community and providing ways to more rapidly and deeply share ideas.
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    • It will be difficult for you to find enough information to vote sensibly. No offense meant to younger candidates, but I suggest you focus on people who are older and have had life experiences that are helpful in managing the business and large-scale direction of the foundation in ways that maximally preserve integrity without leading to a failed process. Good judgement is not an easy thing to estimate without a lot of work, and it, more than anything any of us have said in our candidate statements, is what the foundation needs.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    • In case any of my statements have been trimmed for length, please check my talkpage for meta for the full versions.

m:User:Kelly Martin edit

  1. Your name:
    • Kelly Martin
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    • Kelly Martin
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    • Niles, Illinois, United States. I am in my late 30s.
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    • I am a administrator on the English Wikipedia, and I also have checkuser and oversight rights there. I am a former member of the English Wikipedia Arbitration Committee. I also am currently a guest checkuser on the English Wiktionary.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    • Not currently.
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    • I started contributing (anonymously) to the English Wikipedia in October of 2004. I first started using Wikipedia as a resource more or less by accident because results from Wikipedia would come up occasionally on Google searches. A professor friend of mine mentioned Wikipedia to me in the spring or summer of 2004 and I started using it more often, mainly to read up on mathematics concepts that I find fascinating. Eventually I came across an article that was just so atrocious that I had no choice but to edit it. I don't remember what article it was, but the problem was almost certainly either a spelling error or an apostrophic catastrophe. What started out as typo correction slowly grew into a whole lot of other stuff, and before long (mid-March 2005) I was addicted.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    • I am currently a network administrator for a financial organization; in this role I do a lot of project management, as well as both evaluating proposals from others for business merit and preparing proposals for review by my superiors. These are all skills that are likely to be useful on the Board. I also have experience with non-profits large and small; my previous employer was a non-profit advocacy organization with a membership of several million, and several years ago I volunteered in the office of a small soup kitchen where I worked as an assistant to the Executive Director and got a lot of exposure to the details of running a nonprofit organization (including dealing with the Board). I've also run small businesses (with mixed success).
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    • I am not going to tell people that I'm the best candidate. I think they can make that judgment for themselves. I would rather say that I believe that I am a good candidate, without trying to claim that I'm better than any of the others. One of the advantages of multiple approval voting is that voters can choose to approve of more than one candidate. I encourage all voters to make their approval decisions on each candidate independently, rather than to choose to support only one candidate as the "single best" candidate.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    • I have an extremely poor knowledge of German, bad enough that it would be impolite of me to inflict it on someone else. I do not believe that this is a critical consideration for the Board, however. The "lingua franca" for the Board is and will remain English for the indefinite future. There are too many languages represented in the vast diversity of Wikimedia for us to reasonably hope to find five, or even ten or fifteen people, who can represent all of them. Finally, the Foundation, through the Translation subcommittee of the Communications Committee, has managed to mass a sizable corps of translators who can help out in the event that some communication is received or needs to be made in a language nobody on the Board speaks. I see a belief in multiculturalism as being far more important than a belief in multilingualism; but one can be multicultural without being multilingual. The only reason I am not polylingual is that my parents saw no value to expose me to other languages as a child (a side effect of growing up in the American midwest, I fear). It is simply too hard for most people to learn additional languages as an adult. I suspect that putting too much weight on this factor will result in a less-than-ideal Board. I simply don't see a close nexus between being a polyglot and being a good Board member.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    • I expect that I would be extremely busy dealing with the endless issues that parade through the Foundation on a regular basis. I have made good friends with Danny and a number of other people of importance in the Foundation and talk with them daily; I therefore have some small clue as to what goes on at the Board level. I'm sure that what I've seen is only a tiny bit of the full picture. However, I believe that the commitments are within my capability to make. I think it is important that the Board develop more structure within the Foundation to be able to better delegate work outward so that it doesn't have to do as much work itself, and I would imagine that this would consume much of the Board's attention for at least the next several months. I'm quite familiar with business process review concepts (business process management is becoming a major issue for IT people, since IT resources are invariably used to implement business process changes), and would probably play a significant role in any such review and restructuring.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    • I bring, more than anything, my willingness to make difficult decisions when they need to be made. I am known in the English Wikipedia for my boldness. This boldness has irritated people on many occasions, but I believe that in almost every case where I have acted boldly, my actions have been proven out to have been the right thing to do in the situation. There are times that we need to act boldly, and I am willing to do so in the right situation.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    • Organizational communication. We are bad at talking to one another internally. There are too many "silos" within the organization. This isn't really a turf war issue, because people don't really seem to be staking out turf; rather, there just isn't a culture of communication within the organization. Nobody is proactively working to ensure that everyone has the knowledge they need to make the decisions they need to make, and as a result things don't get done in a timely manner or at all. As a member of the internal communications subcommittee of the Communications Committee, I hope to be involved in developing some methodologies for this, but it's going to require commitment from people at all levels, from the Board on down.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
    • There has been a lot of discussion on how to restructure the Foundation. I have seen several proposals and all of them have both positive and negatives. I haven't decided which approach is the best one yet. I have nothing but respect for the current Board; while I have disagreements with all of them on various issues all of them have struck me as reasonable people with whom I am sure I could continue to work collegially.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    • As a member of the English Wikipedia Arbitration Committee, I was a representative of the community, so I think I understand that. Representing other communities, especially one with which I have relatively little contact, is harder, since I know that different projects have different cultures and interests. I made a point at Wikimania 2006 to try to meet with people from other projects and find out about their cultures. The time I've spent recently as a guest checkuser at the English Wiktionary has been interesting; their culture is different in many ways that have occasionally surprised me.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    • I think the Foundation needs to adopt a more professional approach. The wild and loose way that it has run for the past few years is no longer appropriate for an organization that has an annual budget in the millions and a net worth that may very well exceed one billion dollars. The Board needs to, relatively quickly, recruit skilled people to take care of the very important organizational tasks that have been largely handled by well-meaning but basically underskilled volunteers, or by the Board itself. That worked when Wikimedia was relatively small; it cannot continue to do so now that it's not.
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    • I believe so, although it may be difficult at times. I think one of the consequences of professionalization will be to reduce the time commitment of Board members to an amount more in keeping with the usual expectations of the member of the board of a nonprofit organization, but it may take us a while to get there.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    • I was able to attend Wikimania 2006 thanks to the generosity of a couple of anonymous contributors. I have also arranged one meetup in Chicago and am trying to arrange another one (hopefully for sometime in mid-September). I think these gatherings are extremely important and would like to see them happen on a more frequent basis. I would especially like to see more regional gatherings to complement the annual international gathering, so that people who are unable (due to expense or time) to travel to the Wikimania site can nonetheless get together and meet others.
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    • You still have a couple of weeks.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    • Not really. :)

m:User:Linuxbeak edit

email received; in progress

m:User:Mindspillage edit

  1. Your name:

Kat Walsh

  1. Your username most commonly used:

Mindspillage

  1. Your current geographic location, along with your age:

Herndon, VA (just outside Washington, DC); 23

  1. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions): English Wikipedia, Meta, English Wikinews
  1. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?

Admin on en.wp (April 2005), meta (September 2005), en.wn (March 2006); arbcom on en.wp (appointed October 2005, elected January 2006). I am also a press contact for the Foundation and a member of the OTRS subcommittee of the Communications Committee.

  1. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?

None, though I am an OTRS admin since late 2005.

  1. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?

June 2004. I joined after searching for information on the contrabassoon, which I was learning to play at the time, and found a fairly short article in the search results. After reading a few dozen information pages to be sure I really could "edit this page", I made an edit. It's still there, and I was hooked.

  1. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?

I was recently employed by Wikia, Inc. as community staff, in which I both brainstormed and implemented ideas for making the Wikia user experience a better one, assisted users with the projects, and did general maintenance. I am currently a law student at George Mason University, where I am focusing on technology law.

My Wikia experience gave me insight into the workings of wiki communities other than the English Wikipedia, where most of my wiki experience had previously been, particularly new and growing wiki communities. Interacting with users of many different types (and in many different languages) all trying to get new projects off of the ground, with varying degrees of success, was a valuable source of information on the possible challenges faced by Wikimedia projects. My legal education will, I hope, give me a framework for understanding the legal issues faced by the Foundation and how to best assure that we can continue going forward.

  1. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?

One of my key strengths is my skill at communication and dispute resolution, and there are few areas of the project I am not at least acquainted with. I have given presentations and spoken to representatives from other organizations about Wikimedia and our goals, practices, and needs. Also, I am familiar with many of the Foundation-level activities, both from my experience handling the mail and talking to the press, and from talking to other Wikimedians about their activities and projects.

  1. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?

I am only fluent in English; I know basic Spanish but do not write well in it. (I wish someone had told me when I was younger that I would be putting all my free time into a large international project and I would really want to know more languages, but alas, no one did!) This is unfortunate, and the ideal candidate would be multilingual. However, it seems that the vast majority of the Foundation's business and activities is conducted in English, and so it is not critical for a candidate to be fluent in another language. I do have contact with many editors from other languages, particularly people from local chapters and admins on their projects, whom I trust to ask for information when I would like to know about something happening in a language I cannot read. No one can speak all of the languages with communities Wikimedia serves, and so the ability to communicate with others from different projects and cultures is critical.

  1. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?

My expectations are first of all to do a lot of reading on the internal details of Wikimedia, and of similar organizations to compare ourselves to: what are they doing, what should we be doing better? I also expect to make contact with a lot of people, from many different places, both asking for help and spreading information about us. We're a young organization, and rapidly changing, so any expectations I have may well sound ridiculous in six months; I expect and hope that we will move toward becoming more professional and organized in our operations.

  1. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
Primarily, my time, my skills, my commitment. No one can stick around doing this without believing that it's important work... and without having a lot of patience and understanding. I am not the ideal candidate but I believe my skills complement those of the current members; I do not have Michael Davis's financial expertise, Anthere's understanding of other cultures and communities, Jimbo's charisma, vision, and connections. What I do have is the ability to learn quickly, to resolve conflict, to make considered decisions, to connect to many different people, and to bring in my current familiarity with the day-to-day workings of the projects.
  1. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.

Right now it seems that one of the most pressing issues is communication. Though it has improved with the creation of the Communications Committee there is still a great deal that needs to be done to see that everyone knows what they need to know, that no one is surprised by something that they should have known, that information which should remain private stays so and that which shouldn't remain private is spread around more effectively. We are a project built around information; we can't function without making sure everyone has the information they need. We need to be able to know who is doing what, who is responsible for certain areas and what has been accomplished, to keep people from spreading misinformation or feeling as though things have been hidden from them when it was simply a problem of communication.

  1. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation hierarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?

My vision of the board is that it gives direction and oversees the functioning of the projects, making sure that we are adhering to our mission, and using our resources wisely. (And has very little input into the day-to-day policy issues and contribution to individual projects; this is something I will miss if elected!) I believe the current leadership is a mixed bag; part of the reason for Angela's resignation was that she no longer felt that the environment was one she wanted to work in, and Tim will be leaving soon as he has not been active; I would hope that the new members brought in will revitalize the functioning of the Board.

  1. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?

I hope so. I have tried to be approachable and keep up with what is going on around Wikimedia, and to talk to people who agree and who disagree with me on various points. I think one of my skills is understanding the positions of those I don't agree with, and my mind has been changed by solid arguments in the past.

  1. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?

If I weren't convinced that the mission were a great thing that needed to be done, I wouldn't be doing this! This is an important mission and becomes more important as more media is created and locked up where no one can access it, as more people rely on the internet as their first stop for reference material, as it becomes more of a reality that people are able to actually get materials out to the poor areas where traditional commercial reference materials are too expensive to purchase. One thing I would change is the organization. It's currently not functioning as well as it should; quite often it's difficult to find out who is supposed to be doing something, or who to tell when something needs to be done.

  1. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?

Yes, I can do that. Though school does take up a fair bit of my time, it's no worse than if I were holding a full-time job; I'm not currently employed outside of that and had planned to spend most of my free time working on Wikimedia. (I should mention that I will, if elected, resign from the Arbitration Committee; in addition to the time commitment, it would not be appropriate for me to continue to hold the position.)

  1. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?

I attended this past Wikimania and have been to meetups in Florida and Delaware (and have an open offer to let traveling Wikimedians crash on my couch!) It's nice to communicate face-to-face, in real time, without typos; communication is often quicker and better in person, and for group meetings to accomplish something I'd prefer to meet in person whenever it is practical. Additionally, the people I interact with here for the most part are also people I would want to spend time with socially; I've had a great time just sitting around in restaurants chatting with other editors. It's a dual bonus of seeing a more human and social side of people and conducting business more efficently; I'd encourage anyone who can do so to hold or attend a local meetup.

  1. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.

All comments on my candidacy should go to my Meta subpage for it at m:User talk:Mindspillage/Board candidacy.

  1. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?

I'd advise any voter to research all of the candidates thoroughly before making a decision. In particular, don't just vote for the people you know, and look into people who participate outside your home wiki; consider how people would fit into a Foundation role and not just how they do as admins on an individual project; the roles are very different.

  1. Is there anything else you would like to mention?

Not at this particular time.


m:User:Oscar edit

Email received; in progress.

  1. Your name:
    • oscar van dillen
  2. Your username most commonly used:
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    • rotterdam, netherlands - born june 1958
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    • bureaucrat on nl.wikipedia, elected admin by the admins in may 2004, promoted bureaucrat in feb 2005; promoted bureaucrat and co-founder with GerardM of nl.wikimedia mar 2005, elected admin at meta apr 2005, promoted admin on nl.wiktionary aug 2005, promoted bureaucrat on nl.wikibooks aug 2005.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    • steward since june 2005 (elected).
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    • i believe i indicated this already in my candidates' statement (see #5). i am used to always think professionally about whatever i undertake and have quite some professional experience in dealing efficiently with pending difficult decisions and developing long-term policies.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    • well, let me try to list some things about myself. i am a very serious candidate, but i don't think of myself in terms like "the best candidate" ;-)
      1. i am a professional artist (composer) and a creative person in general
      2. although a specialist in certain musical fields, i am an open-minded person with a broad knowledge in general
      3. i have some years experience as a professional manager - i am used to working hard and getting things done
      4. i have a good working knowledge of several languages
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    • this too i addressed in my candidates' statement ("i am a native speaker of the dutch language, but a near native in english and german, fluent in french and some working knowledge of spanish, swedish and italian. basic knowledge of turkish, spoken cantonese and written egyptian hieroglyphs"). in learning different languages one basically acquires an ability to more easily become familiar with different cultures and ways of thinking.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    • i expect to be allowed to contribute to improving the board's ability to act, especially where nasty or unpopular decisions have to be made. i hope to have the board meetup for at least 4 times a year irl, somewhere on this planet, with other meetups or small conferences in its wake.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    • next to my expertise and professional experience, i hope especially to bring in my knowledge of and experience with other projects than in the english language.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    • how to maintain growth and remain true to the key mission of the projects without losing their typical character, as an organization as well as financially. the wikimedia foundation should always be and remain independent of its (potential) business partners.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
    • too few people are being burdened with too many tasks: but we are all learning. as for now, too many things are left unclear or undecided, a more clear structure of organization is needed, with a larger number of professional people. i blame no one in particular, but things must change if we are to survive i am afraid.
  15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    • i trust i can because of my gift to bridge differences without compromises as well as because of my international network of connections.
  16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    • in my candidates' statement i have been rather particular about how important i consider the foundation's mission. i would furthermore propose to organize an additional elected body representing the projects (though different from the "parliament" and "wikicouncel" as proposed by others), see for my proposal from june this year my email to foundation-l.
  17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    • i would be more than happy to, of course.
  18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    • yes, here again i refer to my candidates' statement, see #6. i was also at wikimania in boston, but couldn't make it to frankfurt in 2005 due to family circumstances.
  19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
    • my meta and should be the main pages where i can be reached.
  20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    • know what you vote for: knowledge is power only if you are well-informed.
  21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    • i apologize for the delay with these answers because of my holidays and my computercrash :-(

m:User:Ross.Hedvicek edit

  1. Your name:

Ross Hedvicek

  1. Your username most commonly used:

Ross.Hedvicek or Rosta

  1. Your current geographic location, along with your age:

Florida, USA, age: over 50

  1. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)

They are listed on [2]and on [3]

  1. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?

No.

  1. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?

No.

  1. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
  2. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?

Briefly: 30+ years of management experience.

  1. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?

Experience and multi-language and multi-cultural knowledge.

  1. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?

Language is critical. Actually Board needs somebody who speaks Mandarin, but is not living in China.

  1. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?

I will help with whatever I will be asked to. I will do my share.

  1. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?

Soberness.

  1. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.

Complete anarchy on Wiki language branches in Eastern Europe and inability of Board to do anything about it (due mostly to language barrier).

  1. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?

I have no suggestions for change as of now.

  1. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?

Experience.

  1. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?

I would crack on abuse of power by admins and sysops.

  1. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?

Yes, otherwise I would not be submitting my candidacy.

  1. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?

No.

  1. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.

No other pages.

  1. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?

My election slogan is: The crap has to stop - vote for me - it is your chance for change. I have a reputation to uphold!

  1. Is there anything else you would like to mention?

No.

m:User:UninvitedCompany edit

  1. Your name:
    Steve Dunlop
  2. Your username most commonly used:
    UninvitedCompany
  3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
    Minneapolis area, 40
  4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
    English Wikipedia [4], Meta [5], Commons [6]
  5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
    On ENWP, I have admin (since April 2004), bureaucrat (since October 2004), checkuser, and oversight rights, and am a former member of the arbitration committee.
  6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
    No
  7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
    In March 2003, I was introduced to Wikipedia by a coworker who used it as an example of how our internal corporate Wiki could work. I became intrigued and have remained involved both because of my interest in online communities in general and because of the value I see in the content we are producing.
  8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
    I've worked as a software developer and in various related management and IT roles for approximately 20 years. One recent employer was a small startup firm made up of four individuals, where I was involved in organizational matters and fundraising in addition to writing software and building a larger technical team. The software work I have done gives me a good deal of insight into the technical side of the Foundation's projects. I believe that the management and organizational work I've done in my career gives me some insight into the funding, organizational, financial, and legal issues that the Foundation faces now and will face in the coming years.
  9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
    Like several other excellent candidates, I have long involvement with Wikipedia and the Foundation and also have the real-world expertise to make a strong contribution to the board.
  10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
    I do speak some Spanish, having grown up bilingual and travelled in Spanish-speaking countries, although I don't attempt to contribute in that language.
    No candidate for the Board is fluent in all the languages used by the Foundation's constituent projects, something that would be nearly impossible for anyone to achieve due to the fact that we have projects in substantially all of the world's languages. I believe that the Foundation has to be structured in a way that makes up for this, and I have suggested designation of two "Foundation contacts" for each project as one way to do this.
  11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
    I expect to participate in scheduled meetings, where I will come prepared. I believe that the board should be active in fundraising and selection of officers and would hope to spend a good deal of time in those areas. I hope to have the opportunity to provide informal advice to others involved in the Foundation's leadership. I am prepared to speak publicly about the Foundation's work if requested, and plan if elected to attend Wikimania as well as any meetups that coincide with my itenerary. I want to be accessible and involved and to that end plan on maintaining as much involvement on the Wikis as counsel will consider prudent.
  12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
    I have addressed this in earlier questions.
  13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
    I think that Foundation decisionmaking is widely peceived to be slow and unresponsive to the community. Part of this is due to the board being involved in too many areas that would be better delegated to other individuals or groups, and part of it is due to the board lacking effective communication with each project. I also think there's a lack of clarity as to the boundaries between Foundation matters and Project matters. I've mentioned above the need for "Foundation contacts" for each project to try to address some of this, and some of it is best addressed through structural changes which I'll address in the next question.
  14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy?
    I think that the board should set up a decisionmaking structure rather than make individual decisions itself. The proper role of the board is to select officers and review financial, legal, and personnel matters on an ongoing basis. There is also a fundraising role and an advisory role. The board should respect the independence of each project and language, and refrain from major changes that could jeopardize the success we've achieved already.
    More specifically, I believe that the subcommittees on things like special projects should be moved out from the board and instead be responsible to the executive director. I think there should be greater use of specific positions in the Foundation that have well-defined responsibilities, that can be staffed on a paid or volunteer basis.
  15. How do you feel about the current leadership?
    I have worked with Anthere, Angela, and Jimbo for a long time and have a great deal of respect for each of them. I've exchanged emails with Brad Patrick and Danny Wool a few times and find them to be knowledgable and easy to work with.
  16. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
    I've been involved at ENWP for a long time, and have been involved in community issues here as long as I've been around. I don't think there's any serious question as to whether I can represent ENWP to the Foundation. The other communities differ and I know that, and I'm willing to listen to them and understand their concerns. And unlike some candidates, I've been involved in smaller projects outside the Foundation, like MeatBall, and I was at ENWP while it was still fairly small. Therefore, I understand the differences that have to do with scale.
  17. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
    I support the mission as it exists today. If it were completely up to me, I think that I might make a very slight change in emphasis away from creating new projects and toward caring for the core of successful, established projects.
  18. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
    While I cannot allow the Foundation to become my full-time job, I have enough flexibility in my various other commitments to participate at an appropriate level.
  19. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
    I've attended a meetup in the Minneapolis area. Such meetups are valuable in that they humanize the interaction in a way that text can not. On the other hand, they favor Wikipedians who have the ability to travel and who have the necessary spoken language skills. The Foundation's projects are really about web collaboration and there is a very real risk of alienating contributors if much decisionmaking occurs at meetups where there are practical barriers for many participants.
  20. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
    m:User talk:UninvitedCompany
  21. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
    Vote for someone who you can work with, who understands how corporations work, and who is serious about the Foundation and its projects -- even if it's not me.
  22. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
    The Foundation isn't structured like its constituent projects and it's important to keep the differences in mind when considering candidates. The Foundation is a corporation that has nontrivial legal and financial obligations, and it is structured accordingly. There is paid staff, and a great deal of interaction with people outside of Wikipedia, who as a rule are unfamiliar with the "way we do things." The decisionmaking model is different, and the best candidates are the ones who can deal with that well.

m:User:Zuirdj edit

1. Your name:
Juan David Ruiz
2. Your username most commonly used:
Zuirdj
3. Your current geographic location, along with your age:
Santiago, Chile, 30
4. Projects with significant contributions (please both name the language and project, and link to your contributions)
es-wiki, Commons, Meta, en-wiki.
5. Do you have any rights (i.e. admin, bureaucrat) or positions (i.e. dispute resolution, CheckUser, etc.) on any of those projects? If so, which ones? When did you get elected or promoted for each one?
Bibliotecario (administrator) in spanish wikipedia since april, 2003. Bureaucrat in the same project since 2004.
6. Do you hold any universal rights (i.e. steward, etc.) for Wikimedia Projects? If so, since when?
No.
7. When did you first start contributing to Wikimedia projects? Why and how did you initially join?
March 27, 2003, at spanish wikipedia. I don't remember exactly how I knowed about Wikipedia, but I think that I did read about Wikipedia and Enciclopedia Libre at Barrapunto, a slashdot-like website in spanish.
8. Briefly describe your career ("real-life"). How do you think this will help you be a successful Board member?
I studied law between 1999-2004. Since 1997, I'm developing online contents projects. I was the founder, chief editor, and technical contact of hardware-technology website 'Mapocho Valley', well-known in usenet chilean groups and gamers bulletin boards, developing a hardware price guide that offered information that powered purchase options of many hardware enthusiasts who created the website ChileHardware.cl. I am a GNU/Linux user since 2002, being beta and development tester, and documentation translator of Redhat and Fedora distributions. Since May 2005 I've participated in several conferences in Chile and Argentina, giving keynotes and leading workshops and BoFs about open content and the use of wikipedia and mediwiki content. I've contributed in free software and open content educational projects Gleducar (Argentina) and Educalibre (Chile), like sysop in their wikis, and as consultant about wikimedia project contents.
9. Of all the candidates right now, why do you stand out from the field? What makes you the best candidate?
With my candidacy, I want to express the new age that is upon us, concius of my coming from a diverse project, with language barriers that cannot be disputed and with a geographical gap that could be seen as a hardship, but that it's also an advantage because it lets me see the project from a different perspective.
10. A knowledge of several languages has been cited as a key requirement for a Board member. Do you speak any other languages other than English? Why do you think language is or isn't critical to the Board?
I'm native in spanish and have intermediate level of english, especially written; intermediate level of portuguese, especially spoken and I can read with no problems; I can understand some italian and french. I'm native in spanish and have intermediate level of english, especially written; intermediate level of portuguese, especially spoken and I can read with no problems; I can understand some italian and french. Although english is the de facto language in meta and in other comunications between contributors from diferents projects, it's necessary that good ideas and projects from users who cannot learn English or another auxiliary language, doesn't forget by that cause. In my case, for example, I don't have a very advanced level of English, but my interest and my vision on the free knowledge and the projects that Foundation can develop, makes me participate trying to save that language barrier. Improving my english is already a high-priority task for me, specially spoken.
11. What do you expect to do while serving on the Board? What are your expectations?
The term for this position is not very long and we can't avoid high-priority tasks and that must be defined before the bureaucracy and the lack of communication begin to penetrate our organization. One of those tasks is to hire a staff person to be in charge of the finances of the Foundation, because by its sensitivity it is not a task to fill by a volunteer. The second task is to support the community and mediawiki developers to improve tools and procedures to solve the problem of communication in the Board, between the Board and the committees, and of all these with the community. Only one part of this problem is that communications are preferred in english, being the rest make a clear agenda of tasks and recurrent discussions, so different groups can solve them.
12. What can you bring to the Board? What can you contribute to the Wikimedia Foundation?
See question number 9. I'm also concerned that there isn't much diversity that must represent us: almost all of the candidates come from the anglo-saxon or european world. If our ideal is to create content that can benefit all the corners of the world, then, is it too far away to dream with representing a community from one of these corners?
13. Describe the one issue that you think is most pressing and pertinent to the Foundation right now, and how you would approach the situation.
See question number 11. I hope to be able to solve the problems and expectations of the Foundation, that also must be my expectations.
14. What is your vision of the Board in the Foundation heirarchy? How do you feel about the current leadership?
Jimbo's leadership is unquestionable and I believe that this situation is not going to be different in the medium term. I believe that the idea of an advisory board is necessary for bring new ideas that can be decided in executive form by the Board. I believe that other companies or foundations can be taken like organizational examples that have been much successful in the scope of free software, including the clear boundaries between the contributions of the staff and the community. WMF must be who will support innovative ideas of the community. Without our community, WMF would be called Numedia Foundation : -)
15. As a Board member, you will be serving as a representative of the communities. Do you think you can represent the community and understand its concerns? Why?
I come from a great community with a project of medium size and whose history has been of much effort to grow and to have quality contents. I have seen the development of the projects since 2003 and I think that I know which are the main bottlenecks and the things that participants of different projects can offer to the community.
16. What do you think of the Wikimedia Foundation and its mission in general? If you could change one thing about the running of the Foundation, what would you change?
I believe that the mission of the Foundation and the vision that had Jimbo when conceiving Wikipedia, is clear. I believe that we can think about many projects or missions that could have the Foundation. But if we did not fulfill the mission and the original intention, we will not be being faithful to those who contribute day to day in our projects.
17. If elected, can and will you devote the appropriate time and other resources needed to serve on the Board?
I believe that the future of the Foundation is so promissory and important for the education and the knowledge in the world, that to serve the time that the Foundation and the community requires will be an honor :-)
18. Have you ever attended Wikimania or any other meetup? What role do you think these meetups play?
Yes. I attended Wikimania 05 in Frankfurt and Wikimania 06 in Boston, both occasions receiving a scholarship from Open Society Institute. In addition I organized the second meetup of "wikipedistas" in Rosario, Argentina. In addition I have participated in different conferences and workshops, spreading the projects of the Wikimedia Foundation and recruiting new contributors.
19. Please list (and link) any other pages where you have gotten questions and comments pertaining to the Board elections; we are compiling all of the questions and would appreciate this.
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20. What would you say to a potential voter who is undecided right now?
That she/he reads the statements of all the canditates and that she/he vote by who has the most global proposals and who made a statemnet that involves all the projects.
21. Is there anything else you would like to mention?
Wikilove for all!