Changes

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Saturday April 27, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 35: Line 35:  
<blockquote>''They <nowiki>[the Wikimedia Foundation]</nowiki> approached us and asked if they could rent space on a temporary basis.. and I think it ended up being 4-6 months give or take.  I thought about giving it to them for free and I wasn't sure which was worse... getting accused of bribing a non-profit for giving it away, or getting accused of stealing for a non-profit for charging... so we ended up asking them to get competitng (sic) quotes from other landlords so that THEY could feel comfortable with the decision.''</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>''They <nowiki>[the Wikimedia Foundation]</nowiki> approached us and asked if they could rent space on a temporary basis.. and I think it ended up being 4-6 months give or take.  I thought about giving it to them for free and I wasn't sure which was worse... getting accused of bribing a non-profit for giving it away, or getting accused of stealing for a non-profit for charging... so we ended up asking them to get competitng (sic) quotes from other landlords so that THEY could feel comfortable with the decision.''</blockquote>
   −
First there is a request to rent space from a hand-picked bidder, and only ''then'' a suggestion to get competing bids from other landlords?  It sounds like someone at the Wikimedia Foundation wanted to make sure that Jimmy Wales' for-profit company had the inside track on that bid, worth many thousands of dollars.  (Wikia would [http://www.dmwmedia.com/news/2011/10/13/wikia-names-ex-gracenote-craig-palmer-as-ceo replace its CEO] in 2011.)
+
First there is a request to rent space from a hand-picked bidder, and only ''then'' a suggestion to get competing bids from other landlords?  It sounds like someone at the Wikimedia Foundation wanted to make sure that Jimmy Wales' for-profit company had the inside track on that bid, worth many thousands of dollars.  (Wikia would [http://www.examiner.com/wiki-edits-in-national/wikia-deletes-ceo-gil-penchina replace its CEO] in 2011.)
    
Meanwhile in August 2009, Matt Halprin, [http://www.omidyar.com/team/matt-halprin  Partner of the Omidyar Network], was asked to join the Wikimedia Foundation board of trustees.  Halprin is charged with an Omidyar team that "pursues investments in Social Media", and Omidyar invested part of $4 million into Wikia, Inc. in 2006.  So, his company succeeds if Wikia makes a nice return on investment.  It looks very fishy to have a new Wikimedia Foundation board member who's a partner at a firm that invested some portion of $4 million into the privately-held firm of the "Emeritus Chair" of the Foundation.  In fact, you'd be hard pressed to explain how this is just a "coincidence", being that there were probably more than a thousand other equally-qualified stars of social media who could have been selected, who have not a single tie back to funding Wikia, Inc.  What are the odds?  At the Wikimedia Foundation, the double-dealing simply defies the laws of probability.
 
Meanwhile in August 2009, Matt Halprin, [http://www.omidyar.com/team/matt-halprin  Partner of the Omidyar Network], was asked to join the Wikimedia Foundation board of trustees.  Halprin is charged with an Omidyar team that "pursues investments in Social Media", and Omidyar invested part of $4 million into Wikia, Inc. in 2006.  So, his company succeeds if Wikia makes a nice return on investment.  It looks very fishy to have a new Wikimedia Foundation board member who's a partner at a firm that invested some portion of $4 million into the privately-held firm of the "Emeritus Chair" of the Foundation.  In fact, you'd be hard pressed to explain how this is just a "coincidence", being that there were probably more than a thousand other equally-qualified stars of social media who could have been selected, who have not a single tie back to funding Wikia, Inc.  What are the odds?  At the Wikimedia Foundation, the double-dealing simply defies the laws of probability.

Navigation menu