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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias]

 

 

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nemowiki at gmail

Jul 8, 2008, 8:50 AM

Post #1 of 9 (591 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias]

Anthony, 8 luglio 2008 17.01
>As an ob-on-topic question, have any of the other projects managed to
>define "consensus" in some reasonable manner? Is an equivalent term
>even used in the non-English projects?

See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Consensus&action=edit&section=8 .

Nemo
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wikimail at inbox

Jul 8, 2008, 12:43 PM

Post #2 of 9 (558 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 11:50 AM, Nemo_bis <nemowiki [at] gmail> wrote:
> Anthony, 8 luglio 2008 17.01
>>As an ob-on-topic question, have any of the other projects managed to
>>define "consensus" in some reasonable manner? Is an equivalent term
>>even used in the non-English projects?
>
> See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Consensus&action=edit&section=8 .
>
For those of you following at home, who may be as confused by this
response as I was, I think Nemo's referring to the list of interwiki
links for [[Wikipedia:Consensus]], implying that yes, many projects do
have an equivalent concept.

I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.

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nemowiki at gmail

Jul 8, 2008, 1:57 PM

Post #3 of 9 (556 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

Anthony:
>I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.

[[it:Wikipedia:Consenso]] was translated from en.wiki. It does not actually define what "consensus" means, implies that there is consensus when nobody changes your edit (on the article, policy or whatever) - i.e. there is no edit war -, and focuses on what can be done to achieve this, referring to concepts like NPOV, Wikipedia is not a democracy, Assume good faith and - about polls and surveys - «Non correre alle urne» (lit. «do not run to the polls»: [[m:Don't vote on everything]], [[m:Polls are evil]]).
[[fr:Wikipédia:Consensus]] quotes this message: http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikien-l/2005-July/026513.html.

Nemo
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thomas.dalton at gmail

Jul 8, 2008, 3:06 PM

Post #4 of 9 (558 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.

Consensus doesn't need defining. Consensus decision making isn't
something you actively do, it's what happens automatically when you
don't impose any other form of decision making and everyone has the
power to undo any change.

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wikimail at inbox

Jul 8, 2008, 5:25 PM

Post #5 of 9 (555 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 6:06 PM, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton [at] gmail> wrote:
>> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
>> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.
>
> Consensus doesn't need defining. Consensus decision making isn't
> something you actively do, it's what happens automatically when you
> don't impose any other form of decision making and everyone has the
> power to undo any change.
>
That may be your definition of "consensus", but it's certainly not the
only one. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus_decision-making suggest that
there is much more to consensus decision making than just letting
everyone do whatever they want. In fact, what you describe sounds
more like anarchy than consensus.

The model described at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rough_consensus
seems somewhat close to the practice I've seen on the English
projects, at least in those areas that have decisionmakers who
formally declare whether or not consensus has been reached (e.g. AfD).
Interestingly, [[Wikipedia:Consensus]] doesn't even seem to link to
that page or point to the IETF model.

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thomas.dalton at gmail

Jul 8, 2008, 5:42 PM

Post #6 of 9 (554 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

2008/7/9 Anthony <wikimail [at] inbox>:
> On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 6:06 PM, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton [at] gmail> wrote:
>>> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
>>> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.
>>
>> Consensus doesn't need defining. Consensus decision making isn't
>> something you actively do, it's what happens automatically when you
>> don't impose any other form of decision making and everyone has the
>> power to undo any change.
>>
> That may be your definition of "consensus", but it's certainly not the
> only one. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus and
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus_decision-making suggest that
> there is much more to consensus decision making than just letting
> everyone do whatever they want. In fact, what you describe sounds
> more like anarchy than consensus.

I didn't say consensus was just letting everyone do what they want,
it's what naturally evolves out of letting everyone do what they want
(or, rather, letting everyone stop anyone else doing what they want,
which is subtly different). Since anyone can just undo anything it
requires people to stop and talk about anything controversial and
discuss it until they reach a compromise that everyone agrees not to
undo (not the same as everyone supporting it, that's unanimity rather
than consensus). You throw in a little peer pressure which prevents a
tiny minority being overly stubborn (they're allowed to be a little
stubborn, otherwise you have a tyranny of the majority, not
consensus), and you have consensus decision making.

> The model described at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rough_consensus
> seems somewhat close to the practice I've seen on the English
> projects, at least in those areas that have decisionmakers who
> formally declare whether or not consensus has been reached (e.g. AfD).
> Interestingly, [[Wikipedia:Consensus]] doesn't even seem to link to
> that page or point to the IETF model.

Most decisions on the English Wikipedia are made using true consensus.
Bold-Revert-Discuss is basically a description of consensus decision
making, and that (and slight variations) is what's used for the vast
majority of content decisions. It becomes increasingly difficult to
reach a true consensus as the number of people involves increases,
which is why things like RfA and AfD end up using rough consensus,
which is somewhere between consensus and democracy (basically, you
accept that you aren't going to please everyone and just ignore
stubborn minorities - although RfA tends to just ignore all minorities
due to the lack of any real discussion). True consensus, by its very
nature, doesn't require someone to determine consensus, it just
requires someone to think there's a consensus, perform the action and
observe that no-one reverts it (at least, on Wikipedia it's generally
one person, in other situations it may be a group effort to get things
rolling).

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andreengels at gmail

Jul 8, 2008, 6:58 PM

Post #7 of 9 (550 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

On Wed, Jul 9, 2008 at 12:06 AM, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton [at] gmail> wrote:
>> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
>> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.
>
> Consensus doesn't need defining. Consensus decision making isn't
> something you actively do, it's what happens automatically when you
> don't impose any other form of decision making and everyone has the
> power to undo any change.

Which implies that Wikipedia consensus is actually the power of the
person with the longest breath...


--
Andre Engels, andreengels [at] gmail
ICQ: 6260644 -- Skype: a_engels

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Wing.Philopp at gmx

Jul 9, 2008, 12:11 AM

Post #8 of 9 (551 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

> For those of you following at home, who may be as confused by this
> response as I was, I think Nemo's referring to the list of interwiki
> links for [[Wikipedia:Consensus]], implying that yes, many projects do
> have an equivalent concept.
>
> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.

The chinese version was originally a translation from an earlier english version. It was later customized a little. It says basically in the best situation a consensus is a result of a discussion when no one opposes that result. But in most cases such an ideal consensus is not possible so a pole is needed in such a situation. The result of a pole is not a consensus, but it most likely reflects how the majority of the community see the problem and thus a mean to find a consensus. In most cases if 2/3 of the voters are in agreement then it is considered a quite good consensus. In some cases a more higher percentage is needed (for example for admin an agreement of 85% is needed and for bureaucrats an agreement of 90% is needed).

Ting
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thomas.dalton at gmail

Jul 9, 2008, 6:24 AM

Post #9 of 9 (543 views)
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Re: Consensus [was: Top 10 Wikipedias] [In reply to]

2008/7/9 Andre Engels <andreengels [at] gmail>:
> On Wed, Jul 9, 2008 at 12:06 AM, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton [at] gmail> wrote:
>>> I haven't been able to figure out whether or not any of them have
>>> managed to define that concept in a reasonable manner, though.
>>
>> Consensus doesn't need defining. Consensus decision making isn't
>> something you actively do, it's what happens automatically when you
>> don't impose any other form of decision making and everyone has the
>> power to undo any change.
>
> Which implies that Wikipedia consensus is actually the power of the
> person with the longest breath...

Don't underestimate the power of peer pressure - most people will give
in if everyone else disagrees with them. Also, most people are
concerned more with the bigger picture of making an encyclopaedia
rather than with the exact wording of one particular sentence in one
particular article, so will willingly concede in the interests of the
project because they recognise that people's time could be better
spent. When they won't, consensus has failed and some other method of
making a decision is required (eg. blocking the edit warrior and doing
what everyone else wants).

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