Daniel Mayer wrote:
--- Tony Sidaway <minorityreport(a)bluebottle.com>
wrote:
Wikipedia material is GFDL. Wikimedia Foundation
can and should employ
whatever fundraising methods it thinks are optimal. Anybody who doesn't
like the methods still gets to use the product on their own fork. Free as
in speech.
What if those ads contain bias toward strict intellectual property
rights to the exclusion of such efforts as those behind the GFDL? If
something is, by underlying assumption, opposed in principle to "free
and open content", that might change the tenor of the issue in the minds
of some people. Taking that recognition of the minefield of bias
involved back to previously passed-over issues might then shed new light
on the subject.
I'm not specifically arguing against AdCouncil ads on the site, mind
you. I simply believe that the clear biases of AdCouncil ads shuld be
recognized and viewed with attention to detail and concern, and all
ramifications of allowing advertising bias should be considered before
any such decisions are made.
This is not going to be an issue so long as donations of both money and hosting
keep us running. So far this has been the case - it just looks like we will
have to pay more attention to grants and hosting offers in the future than we
have been.
In fact one of the most remarkable things about Wikipedia and her sister
projects is the fact that they *fully* exist due to the good will and
generosity of the people who use them and the people who just admire them.
But yes - the choice between Wikipedia with ads and no Wikipedia is a
no-brainer for everybody except for the most ardent anti-capitalistic zealots.
Making that choice, however, does not at all seem to be something we need worry
about in the foreseeable future.
I agree, personally speaking, that the "no Wikipedia" option is to be
avoided, and that having ads with no strings attached would be
preferable (though I'd be more inclined to go with unobtrusive
text-based Google ads, whose only biases are "They pay us money!").
This is certainly not a particularly useful quibble, for this
discussion, but I feel it's worth mentioning: There are ardent
pro-capitalistic "zealots" who would also oppose advertising on a
project like Wikipedia, possibly to the point where the choice might be
made to drop Wikipedia entirely. Capitalism, itself, isn't merely about
making profit. It's about a complex, socially supported system of
economics wherein money ("capital") is used as a convenient method of
facilitating trade (and cooperation). In some respects, a
donations-only project that produces freely available output is a
perfect representation of capitalistic process: it proves that the value
of a thing can ensure its survival without resorting to any confiscatory
measures.
In any case, I'll let things get back to the on-topic now, I suppose.
--
Chad