Jimmy Wales's Open Source Collaboration Tips 129
destinyland writes "In a new interview Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales acknowledges his debt to Richard Stallman's Free Software Foundation and discusses his new open source search project. He applauds the way Open Source developers work around their ideological differences, acknowledges that he's an Ayn Rand objectivist who's skeptical of the wisdom of crowds, and blames Slashdot for his grandstanding comment that Wikipedia would bury Encyclopedia Brittanica within five years."
Article and title don't match... (Score:4, Informative)
http://producingoss.com/html-chunk/index.html [producingoss.com]
OSS idealogical differences... what a crock! (Score:4, Insightful)
I know of no successful open source software projects run that way. On all the successful open source projects only few are granted write access to cvs/svn and most open source projects are run by one or two very opinionated people who do not accomodate others on a whim. In most cases, people finding a problem submit a patch and onte of the trusted few will apply it. In many cases, the patch will not be applied directly, but will be rewritten to achieve the desired effect better.
Sure people can take all the code and fork the project, but that is very different to having control over the document. You very seldom get wikipeia-style edit wars in OSS code bases because "the boss" does not tolerate it. Abuse the privaledge of write access and you lose it.
To draw a parallels between Wikipedia (which is uncontrolled) and Open Source (which is controlled) just does Open Source a disservice. There's enough anti-Open Source FUD out there and we don't need people thinking that any dummy with a chip on their shoulder can modifyt open source.
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As an aside, we run Catalyst [catalystframework.org] the same way (but with a little bit less bureaucracy, and fewer core contributers).
svn is not "anybody edits" (Score:2)
Thus, drawing parallels between Wikipedia content and OS projects is misguided. Perhaps if Wikipedia pages were controlled by "patc
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To draw a parallels between Wikipedia (which is uncontrolled) and Open Source (which is controlled) just does Open Source a disservice.
Well, first off, Wikipedia isn't uncontrolled, and what you are focusing on seems to be a fundamental difference in release cycles rather than development models. In an open source project of sufficient scope to map to Wikipedia, there are typically a core of "admins" who do not write code nearly so much as they make sure the various sub-projects are working together. Wales and the Wikimedia Board do this for Wikipedia et al.
Then you have the various projects that make up the whole product. Look at the Lin
If you don't believe in the wisdom of crowds (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe the problem is that wikipedia, as it is currently designed, doesn't tap into that wisdom as effectively as a market does.
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Dude, that's what the crowd does.
KFG
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you should throw all your money at the stock market, because if you have any brains whatsoever you can get rich. You should certainly be able to predict better than those stupid crowds whether the stock will go up or down.
Hmmm.... Am I to take it that you believe that the crowds "predict" the stock market?
That's a fallacy, and is akin to saying that voters predict the outcome of elections. Just as the voters determine the winner of an election, the crowd -- the market -- steer the value of stocks.
HAL.
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Try something simpler, like prediction markets (example: intrade.com). The crowd predicts the chances of whatever happening. For example right now it is predicting that the chance of Obama being the democratic candidate is around 19%. Do you think you can consistantly predict more accurately? If you can, you can make a ton of money.
Stock markets are basically the same thing. Calling it a "fallacy" is ridiculous....its just a way of looking at things, and a valid one.
Stock market vs. betting parlor (Score:2)
If you bet on whether Obama is going to be the next Democratic presidential candidate, your bet doesn't directly influence the outcome (except perhaps in some very indirect, butterfly-effect-like fashion, but we'll ignore that). The two are independent. It's just like betting on a horse race, or a footbal
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Note that you can play the prediction markets the same way, betting on the price of the shares (selling prior to the date of the election/game etc)
In any case, if it makes it easier to see the point, just talk about prediction markets. You are left with one of two logical conclusions: 1) the crowd is remarkably accura
Re:If you don't believe in the wisdom of crowds (Score:4, Insightful)
On that basis predicting the weather should be easy, since molecules in the atmosphere are dumb as rocks, even dumber that dumb people.
And yet... weather forecasting requires supercomputers.
You're confusing dumbness with predictability. They're not the same thing, although dumb people can be predictable sometimes.
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First, this is a non sequitur. One could be able to significantly out-predict the market, but rationally choose no
skeptical of crowds (Score:1)
Yeah, well (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, according to Wikipedia, the number of years in which Wikipedia will bury Encyclopedia Brittanica has tripled in the last six months.
Re:Yeah, well (Score:4, Funny)
Reality (Score:2)
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Audio version of the interview (Score:4, Informative)
No, he does not blame Slashdot. (Score:3, Informative)
Come on, summarizer! This is the guy from Wikipedia, who discusses the importance of distinguishing a channel from its content just a bit higher up in TFA, for crying out loud. Read the damn thing!
Crowds always make good decisions (Score:4, Funny)
Reply on Ayn:Crowds always make good decisions (Score:2)
Yes, I agree Ayn Rand was an objectivist; However, as an objectivist the story/philosophy must be equally skeptical of the wisdom of self and crowds. As an existentialist, you decide for only yourself (no others). As an objective existentialist, you may decide for only yourself (no others) which (self, crowd,
Ayn Rand the existe
Two more (Score:5, Interesting)
Claim that anyone who isn't in the groupthink (Score:5, Interesting)
Advocate banning "trolls" whenever possible, especially when they threaten to expose malfeasance on the part of your worst employees.
Call one of your detractors a "disease" in your IRC channels, then deny you said it (even though it was logged) and create an entire "biography" on the person devoted solely to libeling them, in violation of publication laws and your own "standards" for biographical entries.
Suggest in your logged, publicly available email lists for the project that "lone wolves" should start filing dishonest "complaints" with the hosting ISP against a site critical of your behavior.
Take the money donated for "the project" and build a new house with it.
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No, I didn't need Wikipedia to teach me that. I think coders are the most gullible people on earth, because they have an automatic assumption that what's put down to text is representative of perfect logical truths. Must explain the Rand thing too.
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No Sight of the Cite of the site (Score:3, Funny)
Do what I do (Score:3, Funny)
I just shrugged... (Score:1)
The secret to not being a lame-o Objectivist. (Score:4, Insightful)
Then I realized that there aren't all these super-human man-god objectivists that are being held down by the evil-evader looters. Really the world is a big soup of mediocrity, confusion, uncertainty and incompetence and everybody just tries the best they can. Even people who are genius architects are probably about average as track atheletes or at writing poetry. Thus the need to co-operate with other people who are good at different things and the need for humility, listening to people, etc.
Really Rand is a reflection more generally of Russian thought which is that everything is either perfect and godlike or low, despicable and corrupt. Look at the characters in the Brothers Karamozov for example. The real world is a lot more ambiguous.
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Just poking good-hearted fun at it, not flaming
But seriously, The Fountainhead may be the most overrated novel ever. The worst part of the experience of reading it is when you realize that she's not really going anywhere with this, and that the "lesson" from the first episode (and every. single. subsequent. episode.) is actually the only thing she's trying to say. Possibly a salvageable situation if you throw in some interesting and
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One project too many? (Score:3, Interesting)
And Rand's article gets polished nicely (Score:2)
gratitude (Score:2)
JW: Oh yeah. We really owe Richard a debt of gratitude for all that.
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Rand would look at Wikipedia and shudder. Wikipedia is the embodiment of altruism. People helping people for reasons other than to further their own status
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We are all free to engage in behavior which we find pleasing. Please don't call yours altruism when in fact, you derive plea
Re:Ayn Rand? The fan dancer? (Score:5, Interesting)
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So by "not entering into it," you mean "is the single biggest reason people do anything." Got it.
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It's difficult to say there's no expectation of reciprocity in most situations, since we know there's a socially implied expectation. If Steve buys you a lunch today, you're socially expected to return the favor when you can, and if you don't, Steve may well be offended, or at least disappointed, neither of which would be possible if there wer
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Doing things for others that you benefit from indirectly is called 'enlightened egoisms.'
As opposed to the brute egoism of those who can't see the indirect benefits.
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Rationalization (Score:3, Insightful)
Weird. Normal people rationalize away their greed and selfishness. I never realized that Rand's followers rationalized altrusim, instead...
I'm not complaining, mind you--I'd much rather you were altrusitic than some greedy asshole--but I confess that the notion of rationalizing it seems odd to me. You usually only rationalize bad things
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This must be some alien, non-clique ridden, Wikipedia that I've never seen.
TWW
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Have you actually been to Wikipedia lately?
At any rate, I agree that Rand would hate Wikipedia, but only because of its "everyone has a say" open-source traits. Though of course Wikipedia is now making some people "more equal than others."
Rob
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I don't think there are people making sacrifices in their own lives to write Wikipedia entries, nor are there people holding guns to the other group making them write Wikipedia entries.
Rand would have loved Wikipedia, IMHO. It's the embodiment of *selfishness*, as she saw the meaning of the word:
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Why would Rand care about something done for this nebulous "everyone", especially when no one pays for it?
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Good point :)
Let's try phrasing it this way:
People with knowledge are creating a resource by which any individual who seeks knowledge may find it, and people are donating the fruits of their labors (money) to the WikiMedia Foundation because they value the dissemination of knowledge to those who value and crave it.
Wow...sounds wordy enough to be from the pages of Atlas Shrugged.
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Of course Rand also believed that anyone who liked Strauss as opposed to Rachmaninov was also "denying reality" and directed exactly the same vitriol that way. Same went for painters, actors, and so on. Really goofy boid, that Rand dame.
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I think the word "altruism" doesn't mean what you think it means. I've seen plenty of people on Wikipedia attacking others to further their own status - some editors attack too, not just "vandals". Wikipedia is an exercise in vanity as much as it is even approaching altruism. As to Jimbo exploiting people... certainly not ob
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That sounds pretty "selfless". Now some of the individuals who make up Wikipedia might be assholes, but I don't really do much work there, so I don't know. I contribute because I want to make things better for others. I want everyone to have access to correct information, not because I get a hard-on for having more edits than som
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Rubbish. As well to say that Rand (or any Objectivist, for that matter) would disapprove of someone volunteering to help out on the local library council. Or promoting an effort to build a new library, for that matter.
Rather, the "exact oppposite"
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http://www.boingboing.net/2007/01/23/neuroscience
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You sound like you were beaten up by an Objectivist in college.
"Really, whenever someone professes such hostility toward an old dead woman who wrote turgid novels, I can only assume that it is out of indolence, a mere reading of Walker's book, and a lack of any real training in Objectivism, etc..."
Lighten up. Or you'll get Piekoff on your case.
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Because a lot more people know about Rand and what she wrote than actually understand the implication of the term Objectivist. It's the easiest way of explaining it to most people.
Re:Ayn Rand? The fan dancer? (Score:4, Funny)
You're a brilliant innovator. Really. You'd show us... but we're not worthy of benefiting from your genius.
You replaced your subscription of Penthouse with the Wall Street Journal and read it for the same purpose.
Whenever you visit a national park you lament all the sky scrapers that should have been built there instead.
You day dream about escaping to Galt's Gulch, even though the male\female ratio is something like 10:1. Hey, it worked for the Smurfs.
It takes you 20 minutes to explain to people the concept of "A thing is itself" and wonder why people think you are condescending.
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Is enough to fry your brain into a mass of undifferentiated goo.
KFG
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There are a small number of people (a few dozen worldwide, maybe) who don't fall into that category, and Jimmy is one of them. Although his background is primarily in economics and I wouldn't accuse him of being a deep philosophical thinker, in the mid-90's he organized and ran th
Only collectivism creates individual freedom (Score:4, Insightful)
Collectivism can be dangerous too (Score:3, Interesting)
Individualism allows the group to pursue its goals. Without the hard w
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All natural resources were originally shared by any who could use them. What gives a person the right to steal from us all for his own personal gain? Before a person works land, t
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I'm no philosopher, but perhaps there's something inherently wrong with a sociopolitical theory that, despite hundreds of earnest and large-scale attempts across the many years and places, hasn't been judged to have risen to the level of even having been tried, let alone accomplished.
Or maybe the "true XYZ has never been done" rationalization is just a variant on the No True Scotsman fallacy.
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It is always easier to praise the book-writers than the people who do the dirty work of histor
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Elizabeth Nietzsche was an ardent Nazi (no, Hitler did not invent them) and presented her brother's works personally to Hitler, who expressed an admiration for them. Presumably she cut out the parts where he praised the Jews for being "the strongest purest race in Europe", plus his numerous excoriations and vilifications of the Nazis. One imagines that if Hitler had actually
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How, pray tell, does one sell oneself into slavery? Where I was raised, we just called that work.
Wow. You are
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Virtually everyone in the western world is doing much better than merely surviving. In point of fact, they're living much longer than at any other point in history. Survival has never been guaranteed, but thanks to the ingenuity and hard work of a great many individuals the overwhelming majority of us live quite comfortably.
Nonsense. People have been fighting over resources as long as ma
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As this is hardly an obscure reference on slashdot (it comes up almost as often as "give a man a fish and he is fed for a day...") would it really be that much effort to quote it accurately?
Oh, and the original by Pastor Martin Niemöller is about the need for collective politica
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There is no "one" definitive original quote that anyone can point to and actually prove [ucsb.edu]. The point it conveys is the same regardless.
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I love all those things up til you get to Ayn Rand. She's a poor writer, a hateful polemicist, and a shoddy philosopher. I don't find it the least bit inconsistent that her vile bilge is inconsistent with my own philosophies, even if they overlap halfway.
If you can
Objectivism: comic-book reality (Score:3, Insightful)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Rand [wikipedia.org]
Usually I end up not liking that person very much. .
We might get along.
KFG
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Like you, I have to admit to a experiential distaste for her adherents. I have found that th
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Compare and Contrast the Turner Diaries and Atlas Shrugged.
If you can complete this project without your brain melting, you get a free straight-jacket.
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Have you been successful in getting it to work? Because I was about to try that app as soon as I had the chance...
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Well, they didn't work for me anyway, on Ubuntu. I did go around installing things. Finally I found a repo that would let me install it; if I were booted into Linux right now I'd look it up and tell you what it was. Suffice to say that you can find binary packages and this is definitely the method I'd suggest for trying out cinelerra. I noodled around with the build for quite a while and fina
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so you expect people to test thier build on every version of every linux distro or even every unix-like system out there?
that is one of the downsides of a system like linux, all the distros are different so you can't gaurantee that what works on one will work on all of them.
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Re:If you don't have the time, don't do it (Score:5, Insightful)
You use software that you didn't pay for, in terms of support you deserve exactly what you paid for. If the authors happen to be kind enough to return your e-mails instead of snickering 'RTFM', that great, but a FOSS author is under no obligation to support anything. If he wants his project to succeed, he will have to support what he's written for at least some time, but nobody's gonna put his feet to the coals for dropping support for a project he no longer has time for.
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Based on what legal theory?
"You will be sued for negligence."
What did I "neglect" to do?
"You're obligated to support what you put on the internet, whether or not the GPL says "no warranty"."
Bullshit. I'm not 'obliged' (that's the word you are searching for) to provide anything for free) to do anything unless you pay me. That is called a 'contract'. You provide me something
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Just like /. (Score:2)
As someone who tries to do something about it, I often don't bother, because some articles are that badly written.