WEEK 6 - after reading materials

      The writer of this article discusses leadership in Wikipedia. Wikipedia's early leaders were Welsh and Singer, who dealt with strong leadership and soft leadership. Authoritative leaders are often early authors of community content and therefore take analytical positions on the behavior of these two. Afterwards, he goes beyond the founding leader and mentions the manager and board members. According to him, the need for "dictatorship" stems from the difficulties inherent in decision-making in large, voluntary, consensus-oriented communities. To some extent dictatorship is allowed in the context.


     I would like to talk about the leadership set out in the article, including Singer's withdrawal from the community, reflection, and the role of Wales. I didn't think a leader could exist in Wikipedia, which is free to come in and out, but there was a leader. Even the word benevolent dictator showed a pretty good match.

     Were you aware that Wikipedia has a leader? When did you get that feeling, or when the leader was exposed to the surface, would people feel free to edit it?

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

W10 : Can we think of some example of how Internet has changed our culture? / 박소민(SOMIN PARK)

W7: Review of Good Faith Collaboration / Suyoung Han

w9: Its often said by teachers that “Wikipedia is a good place to start, but a bad place to finish” why? LiuXinlei