On 7 August 2015 at 10:52, James Alexander <[email protected]> wrote:

> For the record, since it's an enormous pet peeve of mine ;). We don't need
> to get in a huge conversation here, I'm happy to talk off list or in
> person, but want to say it for the record.
>
> Founder.... founder not co-founder :). There is no doubt that Larry and
> some of our critics have been successful at getting it in enough reliable
> sources that you will see co-founder frequently but I would really prefer
> that WE as the foundation not give into it. Larry did a lot of work for WP
> but that's what he did it as, work, he was an employee who left as we
> didn't have the money to pay him and always expressed how it was Jimmy's
> encyclopedia, Jimmy's website. He never really believed in what we were
> doing at Wikipedia, He believed in an expert run and scrutinized project.
> That project never worked out in nupedia and it never worked out when he
> tried to capitalize on his Wikipedia history to start up multiple different
> projects that wouldn't have open editing and would have expert "control".
>
> I don't want to denigrate the work he did, it wasn't nothing, but it
> wasn't as co-founder and (in the end) I think we should make sure we
> continue to use the proper term when referring to someone who (despite a
> large number of <s>misteps</s> times I disagreed) did an amazing job at not
> only helping to create and nurture what this project became but ceding the
> power as it became necessary.
>

​+1; "co-founder" is ​both cumbersome and inaccurate.

J.
-- 
James D. Forrester
Lead Product Manager, Editing
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.

[email protected] | @jdforrester
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