Community Wishlist
The Community Wishlist is a forum for Wikimedia project contributors to share ideas or "Wishes" to improve our product and technology, and then collaborate with each other and the Wikimedia Foundation to prioritize and solve these opportunities together. In order to build sustainable, multi-generational software, the Wikimedia Foundation needs to hear from, and collaborate with volunteers about challenges and opportunities to improve our product and technology.
How it works:
- Volunteers can submit a wish (feature request, bug fix, system change) at any time. We encourage users to submit a wish in their native language.
- Submitted wishes can be reviewed, commented, and edited by fellow volunteers, and accepted by the Foundation.
- The Foundation will connect the dots between wishes and suggest focus areas back to the communities. Focus areas help us identify and solve as many of the biggest, most impactful problems as possible.
- Contributors may vote and comment on focus areas, which will then by adopted by WMF teams, Community Tech, affiliates, or volunteer developers.
Focus areas
[edit]Below is the first batch of focus areas. Each focus area is comprised of three or more wishes that share an underlying problem.
Help content reviewers more efficiently manage their repetitive tasks
Template recall and discovery
Make it easier for patrollers and other editors to prioritize tasks
Help newer contributors understand the status and rationale behind a moderation decision
Recent wishes
[edit]These are the recently submitted wishes. You can learn more about each individual wish, and see other wishes in the same focus areas. If you don't find what you are searching for, you are welcomed to submit your wish for consideration.
Title | Focus area | Type | Projects | Date (UTC) | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Add an AI image filter to MediaSearch | Unassigned | Feature request | Wikimedia Commons | September 19, 2024 | Submitted |
Add namespace filtering to the options of Logs | Unassigned | Feature request | All projects | September 19, 2024 | Open |
Simplify the creation of route diagrams | Unassigned | Unknown | Wikipedia | September 19, 2024 | Open |
Global Signature | Unassigned | Feature request | All projects | September 18, 2024 | Open |
Centralized Incident Management | Unassigned | System change | All projects | September 18, 2024 | Open |
How to write a good wish
[edit]While there is no official rubric for writing a "good wish," we encourage wish proposers to articulate a problem they face without providing an explicit solution, so that volunteers and staff have space to problem-solve together.
Wishes that demonstrate empathy and show a user's challenges and goals avoids the pitfalls of being too niche or specific, and where other users may nitpick the solution.
In the example below, both the problem-led and solution-led wish examples hint at improving "new editor" experiences. The problem-led example leaves the solution open-ended and invites collaboration, whereas the solution-led example might receive negative feedback from contributors who resist renaming a user sandbox. Thus, the problem-led wish might have a higher chance of being assigned to a focus area.
Problem-led Wish (encouraged) | Solution-led Wish (discouraged) | |
---|---|---|
Title | Make it easier for newcomers to create their first article | Rename sandbox to “Draft editor” |
Description | Especially for new editors, it can be hard to find a user sandbox. Once they find their sandbox, new editors see a number of disclaimers that make it hard to gain confidence in writing a good quality article. This impacts a newcomer's ability to onboard to Wikipedia and feel confident as a contributor. This is in part by design – we need to be mindful of patroller workflows – but the experience hinders our ability to onboard new editors. | The term “Sandbox” is confusing to new users. Let's rename it to “Draft editor” so that people are more likely to draft an article. |
Type | System change | Feature request |
Project | Wikipedia | Wikipedia |
Users affected | New editors and, downstream, patrollers who review new edits | Editors |
Phab tasks | optional | T123456 |
Frequently asked questions
[edit]How long do I have to submit wishes?
[edit]The Community Wishlist will remain open. There is no deadline for wish submission.
What are "focus areas"?
[edit]The Foundation will identify patterns with wishes that share a collective problem and group them into areas known as "focus areas." The grouping of wishes will begin in August 2024, based on wish submissions from July 2024 and onward.
How do we influence prioritization?
[edit]Participants are encouraged to discuss and vote on focus areas to highlight their importance.
How will this new system move wishes forward for addressing?
[edit]The Wikimedia Foundation, affiliates, and volunteer developers can adopt focus areas. The Foundation is committed to integrating two or more focus areas in 2024–25, and will incorporate even more focus areas into our Annual Planning for 2025–26.
Focus areas align to hypotheses (specific projects, typically taking up to one quarter) and key results (broader projects taking up to one year).
How do I submit a wish? Has anything changed about submissions?
[edit]You can submit wishes at Community Wishlist/Intake .
There have been changes to made to what we would like to see in wishes. Please see the above guide for more information.
What is a wish status?
[edit]Below are descriptions of our current wish statuses. We will continue to review wish statuses on an as-needed basis, based on community input.
Status | Description |
---|---|
Archived | The wish typically relates to a policy change, is too specific in nature, or does not make sense. Most often, these wishes will not be acted upon through the Community Wishlist. |
Submitted | The wish has been submitted and will be reviewed by the Foundation. The wish is editable by others for collaboration. |
Open | The wish describes a problem and is sufficient without additional context or editing. It is translatable, generally uneditable, and under consideration for a focus area. |
In progress | The wish is incorporated in a focus area and/or has been adopted by the Foundation, affiliates, or volunteer developers. |
Delivered | This wish has been fulfilled. |