Wikimedia Discovery/Knowledge Engine FAQ/ja

= 知識エンジン =

Note that there was a discussion with the community and previous Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation on this topic: Knowledge Engine/FAQ

What is the Knowledge Engine?
"Knowledge Engine" was an early term used to describe a number of initiatives that related to search and discovery of content across Wikimedia projects. It was referenced by the Knight Foundation under ("What we fund / Journalism / Knowledge Engine By Wikipedia"), and stated: "To advance new models for finding information by supporting stage one development of the Knowledge Engine by Wikipedia, a system for discovering reliable and trustworthy public information on the Internet."

助成金の詳細を開示するように要請があり、 Lila Tretikov から個人の見解と助成事業の内容と成果を共有しました. ナイト助成基金（The Knight Foundation）よりFebruary 2016年2月付で助成申請書の公開に承諾を得ています.

コンセプトが進化するにつれて、さまざまな発想が含まれ多くは不採用となりました. 助成そのものは当初「ウィキペディアの進める知のエンジン」（"Knowledge Engine by Wikipedia"）を「インターネットの透明な検索エンジン第1号」（"the Internet's first transparent search engine"）と定義し、用語として「知のエンジン」（"Knowledge Engine"）も新企画の説明としてではなくそれを用いて発見チーム（Discovery team）の目指すところの説明に充てています. ウィキメディア財団は混乱が生じたとして、2015-16年次予算第三半期以降はこの用語の使用をやめています.

Regardless of what "Knowledge Engine" may have meant to different people at different times in the past, this page reflects the current thinking and plans, as understood by the Discovery department.

Are you building a search engine to compete with Google?
No, as we said when this FAQ was created in early November 2015, we are not creating a general internet search engine. The team has been tasked with improving a search function for Wikimedia sites.

In the sense that every site on the Internet competes for attention, and especially as a "go-to" resource for users, Wikipedia and its sister sites compete with Google and other search engines for certain kinds of inquiries. Namely, people who want to learn. Our visitors are people who want information and knowledge, and our mission is to serve them well. Our current search function does not serve our users well, so we are improving the existing CirrusSearch infrastructure with better relevance, multi language, multi project search and incorporating new data sources (like Maps) for our projects. We want a relevant and consistent experience for users across searches for both wikipedia.org and our project sites. Looking farther forward, we will explore including other sources of open knowledge. We remain fully committed to the movement's vision and values.

In the past some within the WMF talked about building a noncommercial search engine. The WMF thought about that direction but that did not go anywhere as an actual deliverable. By the time this page was created the focus was on the search function of Wikimedia projects and the joint announcement with Knight noted that the focus of initial research was improving the in-house function. That announcement also leaves open the possibility of broadening the reach of the program as it develops to include other publicly available sources of information. In February 2016 the management of the WMF clarified that the WMF is "not building a global crawler search engine."

Nobody at the WMF intended for the search function at WMF sites to do things to help you find things to buy, as Google does, and there is no evidence that the WMF wanted to do all the many, many things that Google/Alphabet does.

Could search results in Wikipedia include more information from its sister projects?
The Wikimedia movement's vision is to make the sum of all human knowledge freely available to everyone. Wikipedia is our largest and most well-known project, but there are many other projects like Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata that move us towards making our vision happen. These projects have millions of users every month! So, can we make a search system that's good and meets the needs of our users and show content from around our movement? We think people would use it. As a result it would bring more attention to the great work in projects across the movement by using one of the larger, more well-known places people visit.

What licenses will those new data sources be under?
This will need more discussion as we want to be able to conform to the standards and policies of the Wikimedia projects they would need to serve. Our first exploration was with OSM licensing and legal and we'll want to learn from that in any further work.

Does that mean we are looking to shift search traffic away from third parties?
We love all the third party traffic that we get and we hope that it increases over time.

What we want is to improve people's ability to find what they want, once they are here. Too many times, users experience this:


 * 1) Search on Google, Bing, etc
 * 2) Follow Wikipedia Link
 * 3) Read
 * 4) Leave and search Google, Bing, etc again because you are specifically looking for more information but couldn't find it using the on-wiki search (CirrusSearch).

We want people who come to the Wikipedia and Wikimedia projects to find the information they want, and the more effective we are at serving them, the more they will come and the more they will stay. This means we are better serving our mission.

In addition, the WMF survives on donations, and the more people come directly to us, and the more they find what they need here, the more likely they are to donate.

これはどういうものですか？
ナイト助成基金（The Knight Foundation）はウィキメディアのプロジェクト群における検索の実態計測と改善に関して、ウィキメディア財団に予備調査（exploratory）の助成をつけました.

これは目的限定型の助成事業であり、助成契約に特記された成果物に対して発見チームのみがこれを用いることが認められます.

This grant does not increase the team's budget for this fiscal year.

リンク：
 * 助成契約書、末尾に事業の趣旨（scope-of-work）あり - 支給決定は2015年9月18日、ウィキメディア財団の受領日は2015年11月20日
 * Joint press release - Knight Foundation web site, 2016-01-06
 * "Exploring how people discover knowledge on Wikipedia and its sister projects" - Knight Foundation blog, 2016-01-06
 * "Wikimedia Foundation to explore new ways to search and discover reliable, relevant, free information with $250,000 from Knight Foundation" - Wikimedia Foundation blog, 2016-01-06
 * 助成事業の募集 - ナイト助成基金のウェブサイト、掲載日不詳、支給期間の定義は2015年9月1日から2016年8月31日
 * Knowledge Engine FAQ with Lila

Who is the Knight Foundation?
The Knight Foundation is a philanthropic organization dedicated to supporting media, journalism and fostering communities and the arts.

As part of their efforts, they have previously given grants to the Wikimedia Foundation to support Wikipedia Zero.

What are the activities the WMF said they would conduct under the grant?

 * Answer key questions:
 * Would users go to Wikipedia if it were an open channel beyond an encyclopedia?
 * Can the Wikimedia Foundation get Wikipedia embedded via carriers and Original Equipment Manufacturers?
 * Use Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to inform product iteration, and establish key understanding and feature development for the prototypes
 * Conduct tests with potential users
 * Create a public-facing dashboard of key KPis


 * Measure:
 * User satisfaction (by analyzing rate at which queries surface relevant content)
 * User-perceived load time
 * No results rate
 * Application Programming Interface (API) usage

deliverablesとは何か？

 * Test results exploring relevancy of content surfaced
 * Test results from research and user testing
 * An improved search engine and API for Wikipedia searches
 * A public-facing dashboard of core metrics used in product development
 * A sample prototype on a small dataset to showcase possibilities
 * User testing and research on current user flows to understand the search and discovery experience