Beyond opening up the black box: Investigating the role of algorithmic systems in Wikipedian organizational culture
R. Stuart Geiger

TL;DR
This ethnographic study explores how Wikipedia's organizational culture is shaped by algorithmic systems, emphasizing the importance of local expertise and socialization in understanding and managing automated infrastructures.
Contribution
The paper provides an in-depth ethnographic analysis of Wikipedia's automated systems and highlights the sociocultural processes involved in algorithmic governance and newcomer socialization.
Findings
Wikipedia's automated tools are integral to governance and workflow.
Veterans' expertise shapes the use and development of automation.
Sociocultural factors influence how automation is adopted and understood.
Abstract
Scholars and practitioners across domains are increasingly concerned with algorithmic transparency and opacity, interrogating the values and assumptions embedded in automated, black-boxed systems, particularly in user-generated content platforms. I report from an ethnography of infrastructure in Wikipedia to discuss an often understudied aspect of this topic: the local, contextual, learned expertise involved in participating in a highly automated social-technical environment. Today, the organizational culture of Wikipedia is deeply intertwined with various data-driven algorithmic systems, which Wikipedians rely on to help manage and govern the "anyone can edit" encyclopedia at a massive scale. These bots, scripts, tools, plugins, and dashboards make Wikipedia more efficient for those who know how to work with them, but like all organizational culture, newcomers must learn them if they…
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