The foundation that runs Wikipedia has finally agreed to pay contributors to the online encyclopedia a modest fee for their work. But it won’t pay the thousands of people who participate in creating the wiki pages — just artists who create “key illustrations” for the site.
The payments are made possible by a $20,000 donation from Philip Greenspun, who said he was moved to give the money because of his experience seeing technical books he had originally published online appear in print.
“In comparing the Web versions to the print versions, I noticed that the publishers’ main contribution to the quality of the books was in adding professionally drawn illustrations,” he wrote in an e-mail message. “It occurred to me that when the dust settled on the Wikipedia versus Britannica question, the likely conclusion would be ‘Wikipedia is more up to date; Britannica has better illustrations.’”
In fact, this is entirely in keeping with the open source model, where it is well established that hackers do the big, interesting bits for love, but you must pay for the tiny boring bits if you want the job finished. Indeed, this forms an important part of the service offered by open source companies, whose job is essentially rounding out the free offerings.
Hmm...
ReplyDeleteEither:
- Decent illustrations are a key differentiator between encyclopedia.
Or:
- Decent illustrations are 'tiny boring bits' you need to pay for to round off a project.
I'm not sure these arguments are consistent...
FWIW I think wikipedia's agreement to pay illustrators says something a bit more profound about:
- the relative scarcity of decent illustrators (or rather, decent illustrators who'll work for free)
- the relative benefit of having consistent illustration leading to a desire to use fewer illustrators
- illustration benefiting less than text from co-creation and peer editing.
Either way, I'm delighted, since I better illustrations will make Wikipedia even more compelling.
I'm delighted too - it's just that I regard illustrations as akin to printer drivers....
ReplyDelete