zlacker

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1. jefftk+(OP)[view] [source] 2022-09-14 19:42:11
Sounds like most of the direct support to communities is the work of salaried Wikimedia employees? Which seems plausible to me!
replies(1): >>akolbe+46
2. akolbe+46[view] [source] 2022-09-14 20:10:20
>>jefftk+(OP)
Is that what most people would understand by the term "direct support"?

"Direct support to communities", to me, is when you give something "directly" to a community member, such as a travel grant, or a grant for equipment, or pay for reference material.

The Wikimedia Foundation does things like that too, to be fair, but it accounts for about 3% of its expenditure, not 32%.

It's in the $9.8M "Awards and grants" item here:

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/foundation/1/1e/Wikim...

However, $5.5M of that $9.8M is money the Foundation paid into its own Endowment (which, by the way, has never published audited accounts). So only a little over $4M are left for "direct support to the communities".

replies(1): >>jefftk+c8
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3. jefftk+c8[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-09-14 20:22:08
>>akolbe+46
They list as examples "grants, projects, trainings, tools to augment contributor capacity, and support for the legal defense of editors". I agree that it's a bit misleading to put 'grants' first if that's only a small part of what they do.

I'm not sure what they intend to communicate with the word 'direct', either in "Direct support to communities" or "Direct support to websites".

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