Collaborative Summitpost

Collaborative Summitpost

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Introduction

News, New Year's Eve, 2011:: Well, I guess we discussed this to death, and it was a literal death too. At the end of the day fear of undermining what makes Summitpost special prevented us from doing anything at all. It even came out that if some people optionally had the ability to "wiki-ize" their own pages...that would be a threat too. So...next time you think about a big change, maybe read this. Maybe it's a laundry list of what not to do, or how not to approach things, or what not to say. I'm not sure. I only know a lot of energy went into it, from probably two dozen strong voices on different sides of the issue. This was good! It did teach me that Summitpost will never change. That lesson has positive and negative aspects. Happy New Year 2012 :). --Michael


Note (November, 2011): Thanks everybody for the feedback and votes. BTW, I promise not to interpret a good vote for this page as support for the idea :D.

The central rationale for this idea:


As a technical climber, I deal in lots of small but important details. I don't have time to create full pages, and am more interested in up to date valid information. If I can provide small chunks of it here and there I would find the site more useful.



For years, we've recognized that the high bar for creating Summitpost pages keeps away many people with valuable information to contribute. Lately, we've recognized that technical/trad/advanced climbers are the most put off by this. There are several reasons, not completely agreed on but they might include:


  • Technical routes are poorly represented on SP. This makes SP unattractive for technical climbers.

  • The standard for a very good page on SP is high, and has risen over time. Technical climbers are less concerned with ownership than sharing and gathering information. They don't care to climb the "ownership" ladder and accumulate points. So they resist making "good" pages, and quit. Nobody likes to be a "bad actor" in a given environment.

  • Resistence to recording information available in books (topos, and copyright issues...it's hard to make your own topo).

  • Resistences to rulez, man!

  • Difficult to upload photos

  • Too much non-climbing content is off-putting

  • Other sites have more relevant and recent information

  • etc...



I think the 2nd reason above is something we can work on. This forum thread has a good member and technical climber saying goodbye after venting some frustrations, with a long discussion following that gave birth to these ideas below.

Largely, this idea represents what I've wanted for a long time in Summitpost. I'm not much of a page creator, though I have plenty to say and write. The problem is I'd rather contribute with little nuggest of information here and there on mountains and routes that I know. I don't want ownership. Somebody who values page ownership should have it. But with Collaborative Summitpost I would be able to add my 2 cents in a way that enhances the page, and allows me to contribute the relevant and recent knowledge I have, then get back out to climb some more.

What is it?

This list of features is not set in stone, it arises from an initial idea and a negotiation in the "Wheat vs. Chaff" thread.

Users with >= 20 Power Points can attempt to edit any page. When they press the edit button on a page they don't have admin rights to, they get edit boxes with the sections that are publicly editable. They can change these at will.

Collaborative edit featureHere is how the create/edit page would change.
The page owner gets an email notification that a change was made. He reviews the change if he likes. If he doesn't like it he could revert it and send a PM to the author explaining why. He could edit it a bit further, to maintain cohesiveness with the rest of the page if necessary. If the edit made him really unhappy, he could remove the section from edit. Finally, if this user is a real problem for him, he can add that user to the Content-Change-Ban list on his profile page.

Specifically, there would be:


  • A new Check Box on every page section indicating Public or Not.

  • A mode of the edit screen which only displays those sections which are publicly available for edit.

  • Notifications on page edits sent by email.

  • (Nice to have: a "diff" view to highlight differences between pages)

  • A new text field list of users in the Content-Change-Ban field of the user profile.



User Scenarios

Scenario A:

You just returned from a popular but remote climb in Red Rocks. You got your information from the climb from Summitpost combined with a xeroxed topo. You come back with some pictures and a story. You re-read the route description on Summitpost and notice that the 3rd pitch is described as needing large cams. As it turns out there is a bolt now at the wide crack, and you didn't need the #4 Camelot. You edit the page to add this remark.

Scenario B:

Very few climbers on Summitpost know about the Martinswand. You just discovered it, and did two 8 pitch wall routes, coming back with a pile of photos and good memories. You'd like to share them, but the thought of making a high standard page about it makes you decide to watch TV instead. But you are a good chap. You make a basic page, 3-4 pictures. You don't describe every route, just a decent description of the two you did, and a request for others with more info to add it here. Two Summitpost members take you up on it, each describing one more wall route. Over the next two years you curate new content, and eventually the page is very high quality, containing information you didn't know about before.

Scenario C:

You own a very important page: Mount Fuji. You don't have much time for it these days, and the page has gotten stale. You hope to come back to it but just don't have the time. You heard about Collaborative Summitpost, so you go and open the page up to edits. Coming back two weeks later, you are appalled: the page is a mess! The problem is the page just has more activity than you care to keep up with. Sadly, you revert most of the edits, and lock the page back down again. Sigh. It's important that an owner can opt out.

Scenario D:

Two climbers on the site are great contributors, but they hate each other. High in Power Points, they create page after page, but snipe at each other in the forums. One of them gets the idea to make subtle and sarcastic changes to the other ones public page sections. "Heh!" Eventually the transgression is discovered. They end up banning each other from making edits to each others pages via the new edit box on the profile settings page. This is the correct outcome: an "edit war" has been nipped in the bud.

Special thanks

Thanks to Bob Sihler, ExcitableBoy, Mrchad9, and Fletch for helping develop the ideas!

Comment Integration

I've received comments on this page chock full of ideas, here I'll try to incorporate them in a way that the ideas can be browsed and considered. I'd like to orient them towards action, perhaps like a menu of implementation choices. That said, some of the comments are rather negative on the whole idea. I'll try to preserve the gist of those complaints, so they can be considered as well. I don't want to sweep concerns under the rug, I'd like everyone to have the full story in order to decide. At the same time I have to make clear that I have a bias towards action and change.

Subject Area Idea Instigator Support Detraction
Overall idea Support wiki-like editing on pages where the owner allows it mvs, many > 3 (rationale: I don't have time to create full pages, and am more interested in up to date valid information. If I can provide small chunks here and there I would find the site more useful) > 1 (ownership is the central idea here. It sets us apart from wikis. It's responsible for high quality.)
Defaults Default for a new route page: open Bruno 1
Barriers Minimum Power points to edit = 20 mvs 1
Copyright/ownership Owner becomes Maintainer, public domain copyright Bruno 1
Public pages with public content can't be deleted by the maintainer mvs
Upgrading Existing route pages become open after 1 year, unless marked private Bruno 1
Any route page can remain private indefinitely mvs 1
Granularity Individual sections are public/private mvs 1 1 (too complex)
Start with routes only as an option for public/private Chugach mtn boy 1 (increments are safe) 1 (not bold enough?)
Not only routes, but mountains, areas, etc. can be publicly editable Bruno 1 1 (some caution on rollout is required…don't alter the sauce too much)
The whole page is public/private Bruno 1 1 (some text is special, should be immune to change)
Internationalization Route grades in UIAA, French, British, etc. with conversion between them all ? lots (>3)
Metric or English unit of measurement as a preference Bruno 1 (This whole feature likely involves a db change for more preferences, why not do this too)
Reality checks This isn't our problem. Unrelated albums, too much hiking content, that is the issue ? considerable, I think Also considerable
Ownership is what drives this whole thing. Wreck that, and wreck Summitpost ? Unknown, but strongly felt This comes up again and again, there must be an issue here
Content creators will be nitpicked to death by uneducated, petty edits Redwic > 1 1 (The feature is optional, and the nightmare scenario is overdrawn for the size of the site and the nature of > 20 pp contributors)
"Scenario C" is plausible, likely (ie, good content creators fighting unseemly turf battles in page edits) Redwic ? 1 (It will happen, but most people are reasonable.)
If people would use Additions and Corrections we wouldn't be here. Why not focus attention there instead? rgg 1 1 (Personal (mvs) opinion: on any web site the opportunity to submit additional feedback just seems like an opportunity to waste time. You can't expect it to be acted on in any kind of near time frame)
Why not just make Routes be technical climbing only (YDS >= 5.0)yatsek 1 (former member knoback?) 1 (doesn't address the central point)


Comments on the table:

  • When I use the phrase "not bold enough," what I mean is that if we limit the scope to this action, then it'll just be like a small wave at the beach...quickly forgotten and the basic problem might remain. I also recognize we can be too bold and wreck something important.

  • My personal opinion colors the rationales on the support and detraction of an issue...it's not too hard to tell where my sympathy lies. I'll try to be aware of this and try to be fair. Ultimately, we have to rely on the Elves and Matt to sift these ideas and deploy something that balances competing needs. If we can present cohesive visions that can be accepted or rejected because their true content is fully visible then we've done our job. That is the goal of this page.



Comments

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Viewing: 41-59 of 59
mvs

mvs - Oct 25, 2011 4:22 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Old Content

Hi Reboyles, makes good sense. Bruno said something along those lines above. I agree that there should be a way for apparently abandoned content to make it's way into the public domain. There might be real ownership/copyright issues though. I don't know for sure, but I guess if somebody added a mountain in 2002 and went away, his understanding at the time that the content was only and entirely his own must be respected. I think moving abandoned content towards collaborative editing is the right way to go, but if we can't prove that the member has been notified then we probably can't ever move the page.

We might just have to create a new page and argue for it to displace the abandoned content in those cases.

reboyles

reboyles - Oct 25, 2011 7:35 am - Voted 10/10

Re: Old Content

In the U.S. a photo does not become public domain unless it was taken prior to 1928 I believe. Written material is probably similar. You do not want to get into a copyright war, it can get real ugly. What we did in my former business (software) was to maintain our old versions, but not present them as the primary choice. We used a timeline (day, month, year) for version control and maintained links to the older version if that's what someone wanted. The photos and summit log could stay as is but the body of the main page could simply become a link that the original owner could still get to. Voting keeps the good stuff up front so I wouldn't change that feature.

nartreb

nartreb - Oct 25, 2011 10:11 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Old Content

Forget about "public domain", all that MVS meant was that the content should become editable by SP users. For that all SP needs is a license (explicit or implied). SP policy from the very beginning has allowed for this: see the sentence starting "Note however" in the relevant section of the SP FAQ; similar language has been part of SP since before I joined.

reboyles

reboyles - Oct 25, 2011 10:56 am - Voted 10/10

Re: Old Content

Oh, I agree with you. I mentioned copyright because I'm involved in that issue in more ways than one. To add to my reply about "versioning" old stuff, if I saw a new and improved route or mountain description published I'd unlink my photos, TRs and albums from the old page and link to the new in a minute. I wouldn't add any new SP features to an old page either. We used to call it a "code freeze" and everything old stayed the way it was for evermore.

reboyles

reboyles - Oct 25, 2011 11:15 am - Voted 10/10

Re: Old Content and more

I'll give you an example here. The primary description of Idaho's most visited summit had a route photo that was incorrect and more than one party ventured off-route because of it. A few people got into trouble. The page had not been updated for about 5 years and all I could do was post a new picture with the correction and leave a message for the owner. I was frustrated and considered pulling all of my content off SP for good. We have a local board that is much easier to work with and that's where I'd go or I'd just build my own site where I have 100% editorial control.

mvs

mvs - Oct 25, 2011 12:01 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Old Content and more

Over on the new Collaboration thread people are pooh-poohing the idea that a page owner doesn't keep the page spick and span with great alacrity. This is an excellent story which I fear is closer to the norm than the stories of attentive and industrious page owners.

dmiki

dmiki - Oct 25, 2011 11:36 am - Voted 10/10

Excellent food for thought

Great ideas. Thanks for structuring and presenting it all.

Marcsoltan

Marcsoltan - Oct 25, 2011 2:23 pm - Hasn't voted

Unless I'm mistaken,...

this whole discussion started when a technical climber, knoback, got pissed because some "Trail" pages were listed under "Route" category, including one of my own. I hope he comes back because I deleted that page. My apologies to all who voted for it. Then, people wanted to bring more technical guys to Summitpost. Now, we are talking about giving edit rights to other people to mess with the pages that have been put together with great care and investment of time. I see the point with page owners who resist updating their pages. But, they need to be notified that someone has added something to the "Additions & Corrections." I have over 140 M&R pages and just don't have the time to go through all of them everyday to see the contents of the "additions & Corrections."

Here is what I suggest:

1- The page owner should be notified by "Private Message" and a link to the page where something has been added. I have added, history, and optional descents suggested by other SP members. I made the necessary changes very quickly. But, these people made a "Comment" that I could respond to, although I prefer a PM for my screw ups. Some people love to show off what they know or may think they know.

2- The discussion seems to have changed, but there is really no reason to attract more technical climbers to summitpost. If they come in to join, they would be welcome. This is summitpost not "Wallpost" or "Rockpost." Rock climbing is only an extension of mountaineering/hiking/peakbagging. We should have a separate classification for "trail hiking" so that the "Route" people would not get pissed.


Except for periodic slowness, I really don't see much point in changing too many other things here. I like the way summitpost is running with the "Forums" "comments" and "Private Message." We try to fix too many things all at once and the whole thing may come down crashing like a house of cards.

mvs

mvs - Oct 25, 2011 3:19 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

Thanks for your comments Marc. Although I'm sorry to hear you deleted your trail route page. I looked it up, and out of 10000 route pages, only about 10% of them are technical (that is, they have a YDS rock climbing grade associated with them). You are well in-line with Summitpost procedure for having a route page that happens to be on-trail for all or most of the ascent.

You present a strong defense of the status quo. And actually it's the first time I heard the argument "so what about the technical climbing folks?" It's a completely valid point. Others have argued that they are valuable, providing cachet or atmosphere that is an important aspect of site desirability. That is, "I want to contribute because the cool people contribute here." I am laughing as much as you are at this idea, but for generations there has been a rough hierarchy in the outdoor world and climbers sit higher in it than hikers. If you don't believe me just go to some tourist overlook with an ice axe and prepare for some group photos! :p

Marcsoltan

Marcsoltan - Oct 25, 2011 3:57 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

Thank you for the response to my comment, mvs. Believe me, I know all about tourists watching in awe and snapping photos of climbers scale sheers cliffs. I have been climbing mountains and rocks for the past fifty years of my life, and I've had my share of big walls, sport routes and everything in between. Once a lady got sick to her stomach watching me solo a 120 foot, 5.6 route. The majority of my M&R pages are "Rock" pages, but by no means would I put myself on a higher ground than any everyday hiker. Are we not offending the average summitpost user by going after "The Cool People?"

mvs

mvs - Oct 25, 2011 4:10 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

I agree with you Marc! I have my own, different reasons for wanting to encourage a wiki-style approach. Believe me, they are not because I'm interested in chasing whatever fantasy that might bring more "technical" climbers to the site. However, the traction and energy behind those ideas is what got this latest campaign for collaborative editing started.

I started as a hiker, and will end as a hiker. In fact I begin every climbing day as a hiker, and some days I stay that way the whole time (goddamn rain :D). Nobody is on a higher plane than a hiker in my book. In Bob's thread I just tried in a garbled way to explain why I think technical climbers (sometimes, not always) might have a harder time on Summitpost. It's really central...has to do with the notion of "ownership" and the nature of those routes. I'm really just attempting to explain this puzzle to myself, of course!

Marcsoltan

Marcsoltan - Oct 25, 2011 4:53 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

I'm smiling at your comment "I started as a hiker, and will end as a hiker." Thank you for having both feet on the ground. I am also having the vision of of two climbers talking about a route. You've been around the scene long enough to know. I think it will go something like this: "hey dude, that's only a 10c man, no way that an 11a!" And, "you should've put a yellow Alien there man, not a TCU!" I wonder if this guy is going to comment on my "Route" or "Rock" pages. That's okay, I'm still smiling.

mvs

mvs - Oct 26, 2011 4:48 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

Thanks I'm laughing too, imagining that situation (I'd go with the Yellow Alien, EVERY TIME!) :D.

I think to a certain extent, this kind of "chatter" or "noise" in a technical route page would add to the credibility of Summitpost as a place where discussions among technical climbers are held. But if it's a sore spot the page author can address it by adding the text (many have written to say a TCU fits better in the narrow crack, personally I like the Alien better because I'd bring it anyway for pitch 4 where it's essential). I dunno! :)

Marcsoltan

Marcsoltan - Oct 26, 2011 9:15 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

Thank you Michael. I'm all with you on the Aliens. I own three sets of them, but not a single TCU.
I have not yet decided how I feel about the proposed changes. Chad wanted me to put in my two cents and I did.

Happy climbing,
Marc

mvs

mvs - Oct 26, 2011 10:05 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Unless I'm mistaken,...

Yep, much appreciated.
--Michael

Vic Hanson

Vic Hanson - Oct 30, 2011 3:11 am - Hasn't voted

Routes vs trails

I've been thinking about adding some more hiking trails as I'm doing more hiking than climbing now. I think it would be great to have a distinction between the two. Could routes be for tecnical ones and trails be added for hiking (or something similar)?

I've also been feeling guilty because since moving back to the US from Peru about 1 1/2 years ago I haven't had the time, or first hand info, to keep my mountain pages there up to date. A wiki approach would be a help in keeping the info current.

I have also had a couple of problems with photos that used to show up properly, now just the technical info (number, size, location, etc.) shows up on the page, but not the photo, and I hadn't made any changes to the page. Anyone know why?

Cascade Scrambler

Cascade Scrambler - Nov 4, 2011 8:32 pm - Hasn't voted

Late to the party

So I'm a bit late to the party, but I just wanted to concur with some of the points made in this article, particularly items mentioned by rboyles and Marcsoltan.

Rboyles suggested being able to sort by class/difficulty, and I think that's a great idea. I'm not too keen on removing the route feature for non-technical routes though. Not all summits are as simple as trail all the way or no trail at all. It certainly is by no means black and white. I think, though, that some kind of guideline ought to be determined (at some point further down the road) in regards to when a summit needs a separate route page and when it does not. When your route page mirrors the "getting there" section, you didn't need a route to begin with, right?

I pretty much agree with everything Marcsoltan said in his entry dated Oct 25, 2011 2:23 pm. I agree that a page owner should be notified when an update is made. However, I also don't understand why it's so hard to just click the additions/corrections link. In my opinion, A/C should be kept unless we change over to an instant wiki format. Sure, I can PM a page owner about a change, but if they're out all weekend, or if they only check in weekly, or monthly, it may take time to have that A/C added. That's why I do appreciate the A/C link- because real time changes can be made that don't need approval, but it doesn't inherently change the original vision of the page owner.

I also pretty much agree with Marcsoltan's "so what?" approach. I don't think anything here inhibits strictly technical climbers from contributing to the site. We already HAVE technical climbers that contribute to the site, some of them in big ways. If they don't have a problem contributing, then why would a new person have a problem?

Marcsoltan also touched on one other thing that I think is important- if you have 140+ M&R contributions, as in his case, you'll spend the bulk of your time making sure they don't "time out" as opposed to getting out. Yes, there are pages that have sat unedited for 5 years and need updating. There are also pages that have been here for two weeks that need updating, and pages that are indeed 5 years old and need nothing changed.

It's probably too much of a PITA, but would it be possible to roll this out in a very, very limited fashion for a few months to see how it works out? I'm not even thinking just route pages- I'm thinking about just using a couple of the most popularly visited/used SP pages as beta test pages.

Great collaborative discussion all the way around. I appreciate that.

mvs

mvs - Nov 5, 2011 1:09 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Late to the party

Thanks for your thoughts! I think the membership chewed over these ideas pretty well and came to the conclusion that they like the way SP works right now pretty good. For me, the central point is that more people will be attracted to contribute to the site if they can do so in sub-page chunks. I know *I* would contribute a lot more. But the membership sees too many problems with that: to list a few, "point grubbers" who create clearly deficient pages and hope to boost power as editors come along later (reminds me of penny stocks), edit wars, content loses it's personality or spark as "just the facts, ma'am" editors come along, spammers, etc!

There is truth to all of those objections, for sure. But I'm surprised they carried the day so overwhelmingly.

But I agree with you, very, very good discussion with enough civility that people were able to use their imagination well, rather than be in attack/defense mode. On the thread that Bob started, there were many tangents and potential consequences explored. I think the idea got a very good hearing!

dadndave

dadndave - Nov 6, 2011 4:03 am - Voted 10/10

Great discussion

It certainly saddens me to see that, time and time again, serious technical climbers get frustrated with what the site offers and leave. I'm certainly no fan of spraylords and it truly pisses me off when people put down other peoples' preferences for outdoor experiences, but having said that, I also think that providing better space for real up to date beta on routes of interest to true technical climbers has to be a good thing.

Other than saying the above, I'd prefer to stay out of it and hope that this whole discussion results in making more people happier with SP.

Viewing: 41-59 of 59