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some more refactoring of the "what are you doing" section, still not happy with it (such a hard question to answer well)
dramatic rework of "what are we doing" section, using pictures, some reordering (order and overall structure still need swork)
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[[File:2010-07-11-gdansk-by-RalfR-183.JPG|thumb|300px|Wikimedia community meeting in Poland in 2010]]
[[File:2010-07-11-gdansk-by-RalfR-183.JPG|thumb|300px|Wikimedia community meeting in Poland in 2010]]
[[File:Wmf sdtpa servers 2009-01-20 20.jpg|thumb|300px|Wikimedia Foundation servers]]


=== If I donate to Wikimedia, where does my money go? ===
=== If I donate to Wikimedia, where does my money go? ===


The Wikimedia Foundation exists to support and grow the vast network of volunteers who write and edit Wikipedia and its sister projects -- more than 100,000 people around the world.
To people and technology. Even though Wikipedia and its sister projects together reach {{COMSCORE-UNIQUES}} million people every month, we employ only {{STAFF-COUNT}} people; see our [[staff]] overview. Roughly half work on technology, a small team supports our public outreach and volunteer cultivation activities, and the remaining staff work in fundraising and administration. In addition, your support helps to pay for the technology infrastructure (servers and bandwidth) that keeps Wikipedia running and growing.


Money you donate pays for staff salaries and technology. Even though Wikipedia and its sister projects together reach {{COMSCORE-UNIQUES}} million people every month, we employ only {{STAFF-COUNT}} people; see our [[staff]] overview. Roughly half work on technology, a small team supports our public outreach and volunteer cultivation activities, and the remaining staff work in fundraising and administration. In addition, your support helps to pay for the technology infrastructure (servers and bandwidth) that keeps Wikipedia running and growing. If you donate to a [[local chapter]] in your geography, your donation supports both the Wikimedia Foundation, and program activities in your country.
Fundamentally, the Wikimedia Foundation exists to support and grow the enormous network of volunteers who write and edit Wikipedia and its sister projects -- more than 100,000 people around the world.


=== In a nutshell, what is Wikipedia? ===
=== In a nutshell, what is Wikipedia? ===
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The '''2008–2009 Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report''' covers the previous fiscal year (July 1, 2008 to June 30, 2009) with a look-ahead to the next. This is our second annual report. The Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report is a summary of the organization's financials, program activities, milestones and accomplishments.
The '''2008–2009 Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report''' covers the previous fiscal year (July 1, 2008 to June 30, 2009) with a look-ahead to the next. This is our second annual report. The Wikimedia Foundation Annual Report is a summary of the organization's financials, program activities, milestones and accomplishments.

Highlights include:
* Launch of Wikimedia's Usability Initiative
* Wikimedia joins the Creative Commons
* Wikimania conference in Alexandria, Egypt
* Wikimedia's open strategy planning process begins
* Successful fundraising and expansion of core operations


The '''2010-11 Annual Plan''' is our budget for the current fiscal year. It contains a summary of our strategic goals, financial details on spending and revenue, and detailed explanations and risk analysis.
The '''2010-11 Annual Plan''' is our budget for the current fiscal year. It contains a summary of our strategic goals, financial details on spending and revenue, and detailed explanations and risk analysis.
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=== Is the Wikimedia Foundation a charity? ===


=== What are your plans? Where is this going? ===
Yes. The Wikimedia Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit organization with offices in San Francisco, California, USA. You can review our [[:File:501%28c%293_Letter.png|letter of tax-exemption]] and our [[financial reports|financial reports and annual filings]].


As Wikimedia founder Jimmy Wales put it: "Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge."
=== Why should I donate to the Wikimedia Foundation? ===


We're serious about this vision. Every month, more than {{COMSCORE-UNIQUES}} million people around the world already use Wikipedia. It's available online, on your mobile device, on DVD, in books, and many other forms. We aspire to reach everyone, and to continually provide more and better information.
The job of the Wikimedia Foundation is to provide easy access to information for people all over the world—free of charge and free of advertising. We are a non-profit that depends on your financial help to do that. Your donation directly supports some of the most popular collaboratively-edited reference projects in the world, including Wikipedia, one of the world's top five most-popular sites and the largest encyclopedia ever compiled in human history.


Supported by an intense community-driven planning process, the Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees has set "big, hairy, audacious goals" for Wikimedia. These [[Media:Wikimedia Five-Year Targets.pdf|five-year targets]] (PDF) include increasing Wikimedia's global reach to '''1 billion people''' and the number of articles in Wikipedia to '''50 million'''. We're also setting out to dramatically increase and diversify '''participation''', and to measure and improve '''quality''' of all Wikimedia content.
=== What are your plans? Where is this going? ===


Wikimedia is not a traditional organization. It's a global movement. The core of the work is done by thousands of volunteers world-wide. This volunteer community is supported by a network of organizations, with the Wikimedia Foundation at its center, working in partnership with geographically focused [[local chapters]] in {{CHAPTER-COUNT}} countries. It's our volunteer community that enables us to accomplish so much with so little.
As the organization's founder, Jimmy Wales, put it: "Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge." That’s where it’s going — and we need your help to get there.


These are some of the activities we're focused on right now:
Every month, more than {{COMSCORE-UNIQUES}} million people around the world use Wikipedia. It's available online, on your mobile device, on DVD, in books, and many other forms. We aspire to reach even more people, and to continually improve the quality of information that we provide. We've set five "big hairy audacious goals" for July 2015:


{| class="wikitable"
* Increase the total number of people served to 1 billion
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* Increase the amount of information we offer in Wikipedia to 50 million articles
| [[File:Wmf sdtpa servers 2009-01-20 34.jpg|300px]] || '''Operating the world's fifth largest web property.''' At its heart, Wikimedia requires operational excellence to continue to exist. As of 2010, we're operating several hundred servers in two locations, and we're adding a third location for additional redundancy. While our global traffic continues to grow, our aim is to provide the best possible site experience to everyone in the world, to maximize uptime, and to ensure that all the information in Wikimedia projects is safe and secure.
* Increase the percentage of material assessed to be of 'high' or 'very high' quality by 25%
* Increase the number of active editors to 200,000
* Double the percentage of female editors and the number of Global South editors to 37%


''Photograph: Wikimedia servers in our Florida hosting facility.''
It will take us lots of hard work, experimentation and research to achieve these goals. Here are some of the concrete projects we're working on right now:
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| [[File:Wikipedia-Affinity.jpg|300px]]
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'''Giving Wikimedia's volunteers the best possible tools to do their work.''' The core technology that makes Wikipedia and its sister projects possible, the wiki, was invented in 1995. Things have changed quite a bit since then. Wikimedia projects run on an open source wiki software called MediaWiki, which we develop and improve. Our goal is to make it as easy as possible to contribute knowledge, and to give volunteers and readers great tools for assessing and improving article quality. In some areas, we lead and innovate. At minimum, we must keep up with key trends in the ever-changing web we're part of. Because our software is open source, everyone can use and improve it.


''Photograph: [[w:Affinity diagram|Affinity diagram]] created based on Wikipedia usability research.''
* '''Technology:'''
|-
** We're continually making it easier to contribute knowledge. Earlier this year, we completed a first [http://blog.wikimedia.org/blog/2010/05/13/a-new-look-for-wikipedia/ redesign of Wikipedia's user interface]. We are also working on an [http://blog.wikimedia.org/blog/2010/08/07/prototype-upload-wizard/ improved media upload interface], and we are piloting [http://blog.wikimedia.org/blog/2010/09/22/article-feedback-pilot-goes-live/ new ways for readers to give feedback about article quality].
| [[File:Great Feeling.ogv|300px]]
** We're developing new technologies and processes for quality assurance that do not conflict with Wikimedia's fundamental openness. For the technically interested, this includes technologies for [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Extension:FlaggedRevs flagging edits] and for [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Edit_filter detecting potentially problematic changes].
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** We're working with partners to make Wikimedia project content available in many forms beyond the website, especially targeting digital offline distribution using formats like DVDs, smartphones and USB sticks, suitable for people with limited or no Internet access.
'''Developing recruiting resources for new volunteers.''' Wikimedia is made of people. To grow our global community, we need to excite people about the prospect of being part of it -- and help them with their first steps. To this end, we develop and maintain a library of outreach resources, such as videos and screencasts, but also printed "how-tos" and other more targeted resources (for teachers, librarians, students, and others). See the [[outreach:Bookshelf|bookshelf of outreach resources]].
* '''Outreach:'''
** Creating [http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/Bookshelf a central library of learning and training resources] to recruit more contributors: teachers, professors, students, photographers, filmmakers, scientists, librarians, archivists, curators, hobbyists, and many others.
** Using the above resources, supporting Wikimedia's network of {{CHAPTER-COUNT}} [[local chapters]] in the development of innovative on-the-ground programs in their geographies. For example, Wikimedia Indonesia ran a comprehensive multi-university writing competition supported with a small grant of the Wikimedia Foundation ([[m:Grants:WM ID/Free Your Knowledge Project 2010|more about the project]]), one of more than a dozen such grants to chapters around the world.
** With grant funding, working with a growing network of universities across the United States to improve articles with relevance to public policy (the [[outreach:Public_Policy_Initiative|Public Policy Initiative]]).
** Starting to develop a presence in high priority growth regions like India and Brazil. We will start by opening a very small office in India to begin catalyzing outreach and community efforts there.
* '''Operations:'''
** Improving site availability by establishing a secondary data-center; improving site monitoring and problem response; guaranteeing backups and publicly available copies of all key data.
** Building a rich dashboard of metrics to support the work of the Wikimedia movement. See our [http://stats.wikimedia.org/reportcard/ monthly report card] and our [http://stats.wikimedia.org/ statistics portal].


''Video: Wikimedia volunteers speak about their motivations, shot at the Wikimania 2010 conference (best played in Firefox).''
Above all, we're not an excited start-up company that will fade away in two years -- we're in this for the long term. Our efforts are aimed at maximizing the public benefit and the long term impact of our projects.
|-
| [[File:Pelatihan Peserta di Universitas Mercubuana.JPG|300px]]
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'''Staging outreach and community events world-wide.''' Once a year, hundreds of Wikimedia volunteers come together at [http://wikimania.wikimedia.org/ Wikimania], in a different location each year. (You should come!) Wikimedia's chapter organizations have staged dozens of additional events, competitions and conferences around the world. Some of these events are targeted at recruiting new volunteers (making use of the aforementioned resources); some are targeted at giving the community space to think about its work, and to do it. In both cases, recognizing the value of people coming together because they are passionate about Wikimedia's mission has been key to our success. In 2011 we'll place special focus on India and Brazil as priority outreach regions.

''Photograph: Participants of the "Free Your Knowledge" student competition in Indonesia listening to an introductory partnerships (2010).''
|-
| [[File:Backstage Pass at the British Museum 18.jpg|300px]] || '''Partnering with cultural institutions.''' Galleries, libraries, archives, and museums protect and make available the world's history, culture and knowledge. Their mission is to serve and inform the public, just like Wikimedia's. We've successfully partnered with cultural institutions around the world -- not just in working with them to make digital reproductions available for free, but also in improving Wikipedia articles and other content related to their collections and archives. Wikimedia chapters are playing a lead role in organizing conferences and meetings targeting the cultural sector, and executing partnerships.

''Photograph: Wikipedia volunteers at a "backstage pass" event organized by the British Museum (2010).''
|-
| [[File:IndianaPPIclass.jpg|300px]] || '''Working with the educational sector.''' In the age of the open web, there's the potential for student projects to be more than throwaway papers. Pioneering professors have long assigned Wikipedia writing as coursework to their students. Supported by a grant, in 2010, the Wikimedia Foundation is running the largest-ever partnership program with university professors across the United States (the [[outreach:Public Policy Initiative|Public Policy Initiative]]), resulting in student improvements to hundreds of articles. Wikimedia chapters have also reached out to schools to develop media literacy and to promote responsible use of Wikipedia in the classroom.

''Photograph: Indiana University students of Barry Rubin's Seminar in Urban Economic Development are improving Wikipedia articles as part of their coursework.''
|-
| [[File:PSP using the new interface for Wikipedia mobile - 2.jpg|300px]]
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'''Providing access to Wikipedia everywhere.''' The next billion people will discover the web using mobile phones, most likely without ever having touched a laptop. We need to make sure that our sites and services work both on modern smartphones and (to the extent it's possible) on lower-end devices. Our current mobile gateway is a start and we'll continue to improve it (moving beyond the read-only experience). For those with no or intermittent Internet access, we're supporting copies of Wikipedia that can be used completely offline, including projects like [http://thewikireader.com/ the WikiReader], offline readers for desktops and smartphones, and printed versions of Wikimedia content.

''Photograph: Wikipedia's mobile gateway works on the PlayStation Portable -- and on your smartphone.''
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[[File:QOTW 12-21.png|300px]]
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'''Informing our decision-making with facts and data.''' Analytics, research, experiments and forecasts are essential to make good decisions in a complex environment like Wikimedia. The [http://stats.wikimedia.org/reportcard/ Wikimedia Foundation Report Card] and the [http://stats.wikimedia.org/ Statistics Portal] provide a wealth of up-to-date analysis which helps us understand the impact of our work. The [[strategy:Main Page|Strategy Wiki]] is a public planning space where longer term trends are analyzed. [[m:Research/Projects|Research projects]] provide us with in-depth analysis and experiments, supported by the volunteer-driven [[m:Research Committee|Research Committee]]. We're data nerds -- what else would you expect from the kinds of people who love working on an online encylcopedia?

''Illustration: Projection regarding availability of mature language editions useful to different segments of the world's population.''
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We're not an excited start-up company that will fade away in two years. We're in this for the long term. Everything we do is aimed at providing you, and the world, with free and immediate access to the world's knowledge.

=== What exactly is the Wikimedia Foundation? Is it a charity? ===

Yes. The Wikimedia Foundation is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit organization with offices in San Francisco, California, USA. You can review our [[:File:501%28c%293_Letter.png|letter of tax-exemption]] and our [[financial reports|financial reports and annual filings]].


It's the parent organization of various [[Our projects|free content projects]], most notably [http://www.wikipedia.org Wikipedia], the award-winning online encyclopedia. Jimmy Wales founded Wikipedia in January 2001 and created the Wikimedia Foundation in June 2003. From the beginning, we have existed for one reason: the free and open sharing of knowledge. We don’t sell information and we don’t accept advertising. Your donation makes our work possible.
=== What is the Wikimedia Foundation? ===
The '''Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.''' is the parent organization of various [[Our projects|free-content projects]], most notably [http://www.wikipedia.org Wikipedia], the award-winning online encyclopedia. Jimmy Wales founded Wikipedia in January 2001 and created the Wikimedia Foundation in June 2003. From the beginning, '''we have existed for one reason: the free and open sharing of knowledge. We don’t sell information and we don’t accept advertising. Your donation makes our work possible.''' We bring the educational content from these projects to people in as many forms as possible. In particular, we help disadvantaged communities with limited connectivity to access and contribute free educational content.


We own more than 400 servers used to run our projects, along with all the associated domain names and trademarks. We support strategic software development on the MediaWiki software and related tools, which allow more people to participate and the existing volunteer community to work more effectively. This includes tools specifically related to ensuring high quality. We develop learning resources, support workshops and strive to think intelligently about other ways to bring in new contributors and to grow Wikimedia as an international movement for free knowledge.
We own more than 400 servers used to run our projects, along with all the associated domain names and trademarks. We support strategic software development on the MediaWiki software and related tools, which allow more people to participate and the existing volunteer community to work more effectively. This includes tools specifically related to ensuring high quality. We develop learning resources, support workshops and strive to think intelligently about other ways to bring in new contributors and to grow Wikimedia as an international movement for free knowledge.

Revision as of 02:32, 17 November 2010

Wikimedia Foundation - Frequently Asked Questions
Last revision: November 2010