Forum:Migrating from FANDOM to a new host

hello i think it is time for The Sims Wiki to consider migrating from FANDOM to a new host.

FANDOM runs an old version of the wiki software that is not updated anymore and forces extensions that you dont seem to want such as Related Videos.

FANDOM staff are not helpful, take a long time to respond, do not allow freedom for the community and only care about money.

if you move to a new host you will have freedom, you wont have to use extensions you dont want and you will have full control to do what you want with your wiki.

i am willing to donate $10 and if everybody here gives some money then this will be a success.

what do you think?LaVemNana (talk) 11:47, March 9, 2019 (UTC)

Discussion
I was hoping to try to keep discussion about this quiet for a bit, but I guess I should spill the beans...

While I am well aware of the arguments against migration (and they are still very valid and reasonable points), I was most put off by the migration of  to , which pretty much did it for me.

So, I would like to unofficially officially say that The Sims Wiki is currently working on a possible migration away from Wikia onto a new wiki hosting platform. We are planning on moving to a service called Miraheze, a non-profit wiki farm that runs on donations. We at The Sims Wiki don't need donations (although we do appreciate the support); however, Miraheze certainly does. If you would like to help support the future of The Sims Wiki, the best way you can do so is to donate to Miraheze. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 20:00, March 9, 2019 (UTC)
 * But Miraheze is very unstable with frequent outages and security issues. Why would you want to move your wiki there? 135.0.165.219 (talk) 19:30, March 10, 2019 (UTC)
 * Then do tell us about a better wiki farm if you know one. Miraheze allows for a lot of customizability and their support is better than ShoutWiki, which is why I chose them over ShoutWiki. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 19:34, March 10, 2019 (UTC)
 * The holocaust wikis has been added to the wikia.org migration list. When the first pass of wikis slated for wikia.org was done, that wiki did not get picked up in the filter. That has been corrected. MisterWoodhouse (talk) 16:58, March 11, 2019 (UTC)

Hey gang! I'm Will and I'm new on the Gaming Community Team here on Fandom, coming in from Gamepedia team as a result of the Curse acquistion. Wanted to discuss what we can do to help improve the situation. Cheers. MisterWoodhouse (talk) 16:53, March 11, 2019 (UTC)
 * I dislike being blunt, but one thing that can be made better is if Fandom allowed communities to leave its ecosystem and supported their decisions to migrate, say by allowing wikis to be redirected, and not simply buying out companies that are hosting wikis that have left so they can be reintegrated into the ecosystem. It is these kinds of malicious business practices that make me not want to continue contributing here anymore. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 17:21, March 11, 2019 (UTC)
 * I am in a pretty unique position to speak to this, having come over in the acquisition. Many of the identified Crossover games so far indicate that they wish to have the combined community reside on Gamepedia. While it's now part of the ecosystem, it's operating as normal, with community-focused improvement on the horizon. Part of what's happening with the company right now is that we're evaluating past mistakes and moving forward with this community-first focus. MisterWoodhouse (talk) 17:29, March 11, 2019 (UTC)

To clarify (this goes for everyone reading this) this thread and my above posted comments do not constitute an official or definitive statement. Details on this migration are still scarce and there is even the chance it may not actually happen. All I can say is that we do have plans to migrate, but there is no knowing when such an event will actually occur, if ever. The current plan is to stay on Wikia for now. However, personally I am supportive of migration due to a long history of grievances with Wikia that I feel have been consistently failed to be addressed. This does not mean that the migration will for certain happen. Of course, if Wikia improves themselves to the point that it is supportive of wiki communities and editors and not simply catering to fans under a "fandom" label, then yes, we can stay, but as of now I personally doubt the needed changes will happen. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 17:53, March 11, 2019 (UTC)


 * So, let's talk! Beyond Featured Video (program is being worked on to improve based on NUMEROUS points of feedback) and MediaWiki upgrades (no news on this), where are areas we can improve to make you happy? Right now, we're working on bad ad reporting, partnering with the Warframe wiki to see how we can improve the process (to report bad ads, click here ). We're also studying the admin workflows on Fandom and Gamepedia to see where there's room to improve the lives of our admin users. MisterWoodhouse (talk) 18:07, March 11, 2019 (UTC)
 * I don't know if it's really my place to be commenting here given that I retired almost 5 years ago and mainly just lurk on Discord nowadays, but hey be bold and all.


 * There are many long-running issues that communities tend to have with Wikia, some of which are dating back years and despite their attempts to communicate their grievances across, they ultimately feel ignored and betrayed that their thoughts are seemingly not taken into consideration. I understand that it's impossible to please everybody, but I'll go ahead and list some key issues that communities, including but not limited to The Sims Wiki, have with Wikia:


 * Skin options - Wikia only has one skin available to use, which is the proprietary Oasis skin which was developed by Wikia. While I have no problem with the skin existing, users would like a choice. They want to use the Vector skin, used by Wikipedia, Uncyclopedia and pretty much every stock MediaWiki installation, but this is not and never was offered by Wikia. Monobook was removed allegedly due to GDPR violations (please enlighten me - this is not a problem for any other wiki on the internet whatsoever) and this move was extremely unpopular (Google "wikia monobook gdpr" and you'll see what I mean). Grievances regarding skin options also date back to when Monaco was deprecated back in 2010, so this is nothing new.
 * Forcing unpopular/unwanted extensions - Seeing this as the first thing when I load up the Community discussions forum speaks volumes. People tend to consider videos autoplaying on articles and following you as you scroll down to be a nuisance. There's also the fact that the Visual Editor is enabled by default unless users switch their Preferences to Source mode - not an option for anons and can make it easier to completely mess up an articles formatting as a result. Any requests to have these disabled per community consensus are denied, and if we use CSS/JS to disable them, we are reverted for breaking ToS. Even if Wikia gave communities more flexibility over what extensions they want to use - similar to what Miraheze has in place - it would at least be a step forward.
 * Preferential treatment of some wiki communities over others - When I was an admin, I often liased with Wikia staff to get new tools and features onto The Sims Wiki. They managed to meet me halfway on some of these issues - AbuseFilter (after multiple attempts), Gadgets, Bureaucrats flagging bots... I even enquired into the possibility for us to have local check users, even if it was just two or three admins, and I was declined every time citing privacy concerns, and while I can see why that would be a sticking point, other wikis seem to be exempt from this. We don't want these tools because we're power hungry or just for the sake of it - we want them so that we can work more effectively. So that we can better track problematic users. So that we can make our communities a better one to be a part of. I am a local check user on another wiki and the tool has been extremely valuable to me when it comes to dealing with problematic users. Same with Nuke, Revision Delete, AbuseFilter, you name it. I don't see why it is okay for some wikis to be granted these tools while others of similar sizes are left in the cold (I understand other hosts such as Miraheze and ShoutWiki also don't allow for local check users, but I'm not here to talk about those).
 * The direction of Wikia as a company - Look, I get it. Wikia wants to diversify and they've made that clear with the FANDOM branding. Fine. They can do what they want. What they need to understand is that in the process of moving towards more news outlet-like content, they are also alienating a significantly large portion of their userbase that know Wikia as a wiki host first and foremost. The rebranding has also been a major issue especially with URLs. Holocaust, Genocide, Terrorism... do I really need to explain what is wrong with this? A wikifarm that previously enabled you to write about anything, whether it be books, gaming, films, music, medical advice, historical events, stock trading, really isn't a suitable candidate for re-branding into a pop culture-influenced entertainment site.
 * Outdated software - Wikia runs on a frankenstein of MediaWiki 1.19 which is ridiculously out of date. New extensions won't work and security fixes have to be backported, and even then it doesn't always work because the base is so antiquated. The current stable build of MediaWiki is 1.32. Routine software updates are not only great for adding new features to the site but also contain vital security updates which are a must in this day and age.


 * These are just a few of the reasons why communities are looking to jump ship. People are generally passionate about the subject matter of their wiki, hence why they work to make it a better source of information. Whilst a more open minded approach towards what editors are saying as well as perhaps a more flexible approach to allow communities to tailor their wikis to what they want, such as with extensions and user rights, would be a step forward, I feel that ultimately the Wikia/FANDOM platform in its current state is not an optimal solution for hosting a wiki that wants to evolve on their own communities' terms.


 * May I suggest that if Wikia really does want to move towards being an entertainment site before anything else, then maybe consider spinning the wikifarm part of the business out and let developers and volunteers who are passionate about wikis and want to have the most technically forward, most secure and most flexible wiki platform manage this themselves? -- Lost   Labyrinth  [[Image:Flag united kingdom england.svg|20px]] • (c) • (b) 01:03, March 12, 2019 (UTC)
 * Most of these concerns have been on our radar for a while and either are in process of being resolved or being looked into.


 * The inappropriate subject matter + Fandom combination issue is being resolved with a migration to wikia.org domains. Those two examples you gave are basically dead wikis, so they did not get picked up in our filter for wikia.org conversions.


 * I will look into VEditor default settings change for the entire wiki.


 * When I have more news on other concerns, I will report back or you'll see an announcement. - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 01:13, March 12, 2019 (UTC)
 * No, the easiest solution to this was to not have started with the migration in the first place. There was no good reason to change the name of the entire site to Fandom when Wikia, a tried and true original name, worked well for so many years. Wikia evidently showed the company to be a wiki hosting service; Fandom does not. The rebranding to Fandom was setting out to fix a great mighty problem that didn't exist, and it has clearly created more problems than it has "fixed". Is there a reason why the entire ecosystem needs to have two domain names now? What does that even accomplish? Everything was fine being under wikia.com. Why on earth are wikis suddenly now either on fandom.com or wikia.org? The reasoning for this rebranding? And it clearly does not "reflect what we do as a community". The Sims Wiki is a wiki. Our primary goal is being a wiki, a knowledge base containing information about The Sims. We are not a "fandom" or a "collection of fans"; we may all be fans of The Sims series, but that doesn't make us a "fandom". We are here because we want to build a knowledge base, not to be a social gathering of fans. That is not our main purpose. Wikipedia editors are not necessarily fans of whatever they are writing about, so if a Wikipedia-like wiki existed on Wikia, what is even the rational basis on migrating them to the "Fandom" brand? Are you seriously going to tell me that the Bible Wiki (which got migrated to fandom.com, inexplicably) exists because of a gathering of people who were fans of the Bible? Madness! The main page of the wiki even writes: . I don't see how "fandom" fits in with that mission, and Christians do not refer to themselves as "fans" of their religion. If it doesn't work for the Bible Wiki, it doesn't work for us. See too on our own Main Page: . We are first and foremost an encyclopedia, not a fandom.


 * The solution is not to provide the wikia.org solution as an opt-in basis... the "fandom.com" migration should never have been a thing. This whole migration is an absurd waste of time that makes me feel like the company as a whole is having an identity crisis in that it doesn't know what it wants to be. It wants to be a "fandom" entertainment website hosting "fan" articles (look at [//www.fandom.com/ https://www.fandom.com/] and you'll see what I mean) while also trying to be a wiki farm that hosts different wikis of a wide variety of topics ranging from more than just entertainment and gaming. If the company does want to start hosting fan articles, fine—I have no objections to that. Just make "Fandom" a subsidiary of Wikia (or even better, its own separate company) rather than a full-on rebranding; the wiki farm remains Wikia and isn't dragged into this "Fandom" nonsense, which is incompatible with what we're trying to do building an encyclopedia of The Sims series here. The company can go ahead with building "fandom.com" as a totally different enterprise; just keep it away from the wiki communities where it evidently doesn't belong.


 * I am not simply talking about The Sims Wiki alone (and as such, granting us the exemption from fandom.com by allowing us to get a wikia.org domain while everyone else remains stuck on fandom.com doesn't sell it for me); I'm referring to the wiki farm as a whole. I edit actively on at least one other wiki that had its URL changed (not the domain name, but the wiki name) silently by staff without consultation or even a notification, and I am still furious about that. I'm still furious that we had autoplaying featured videos forcibly plastered onto the top of select pages without editor input (there is a forum thread where the general consensus to have them completely disabled, and I would say they should be disabled on all of Wikia, not just The Sims Wiki, because even readers dislike it—I've asked people on other Sims-related Discord servers and they don't like the videos either—and it clearly isn't just us that are annoyed by them too). I'm still furious over the same "We're listening to your feedback" spiel that has been repeated numerous times over the years, which should in theory have resulted in better service, but in reality has resulted in this "Fandom" nonsense that makes me feel like the Wikia of today has devolved into an absolute mess compared to the Wikia I joined back in 2011. As such, telling me more about how "Staff are listening" doesn't convince me anymore, because I'm being tired of being constantly deceived and lied to, or be told that my feedback hasn't been actioned on at all (I sent in two technical support tickets reporting bugs that were acknowledged but neither has had any technical progress made on them. By contrast, I've reported bugs on Miraheze in their Discord server—not even using Phabricator—and they had fixes being rolled out the next day. On Miraheze I feel like I have a much more direct access to their staff, and the fact that their development is entirely open, open source, and easy to see as code changes are announced on IRC, is one of the reasons why I'm starting to like them a lot more).


 * I feel like this is starting to devolve into a rant, and I should definitely stop as this has gone well off-topic from what this thread originally was started for (as an interesting side note, if you look at the OP's contributions, this thread should've been closed as a troll thread given how they haven't contributed anything but nonsense) (plus I've written too much for past 11pm having been up since 5:30 in the morning), but if Wikia really is community first, why are we not allowed to, as a community, leave Wikia and allow for our old site to be redirected to the new one if we feel it will be better for our wiki? I'd like for this question to be answered, brutally and honestly, and I am well aware that this may be a difficult question for Staff to answer, but I want them to answer nonetheless. If it's community first (and believe me, I feel like it's the shareholders who are first around here), why are we essentially being imprisoned into this ecosystem? — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 03:50, March 12, 2019 (UTC)
 * If you talk to the Gamepedia editors community, you'll find that I'm a straight shooter and don't overpromise or say more than I should.


 * All of the branding decisions you've referenced were made before I joined the company, so I cannot answer questions about their making with any authenticity. I do, however, have more info on the status of the two wikis you've mentioned which are bad branding examples. The terrorism wiki was created after the Fandom merges began, so it was never a Wikia domain. The genocide wiki was made in 2007 and has 5 pages. It looks to be a good candidate for deletion.


 * I understand your anger, as it is something which has been repeated by other communities. We're working to make the platform better and I understand if that will ring hollow to you until you see the results.


 * As for off-site forks, when we say community first, we have to focus on the communities we serve and can continue to improve for. When a community of editors decides to move off site, they are no longer a community we serve and our obligation belongs to the community remaining on the site. - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 17:02, March 12, 2019 (UTC)


 * Now let's say we do fork, but that we continue to edit the old wiki here on Wikia/Fandom and thus continue to remain members of the community here. Are we allowed to link to the new wiki in any way or form? I have seen instances where entire ranks of administrators have been desysopped and even globally blocked when they tried to put up links to the new wiki, which seems overly aggressive and completely unlike the collaborative spirit that a wiki should be (definitely has painted onto Staff an extremely negative and antagonistic connotation that will require a lot of work on Staff's end to mend). In what ways are we allowed to link the two wikis together? At the very least the "External links" section should allow for links between the two wikis. If we remain part of the community and the community consents that the two wikis should be linked together, for Staff to overrule that would be going against community consensus (and thus not being "Community First", and the argument that Staff cannot serve forked communities is invalid because we have not left the platform and the community still on the platform has arrived at a consensus to do so). And whatever the case may be, I would argue that such rules should not apply in our fanon namespace, where fanon authors are free to request the deletions of their fanons at any time; they should be 100% completely allowed to replace their fanons with links to the forked wiki if they so choose to do. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 19:21, March 17, 2019 (UTC)
 * Let's cross bridges when we reach them. Exploring every possible hypothetical is not productive when we could be working to improve the situation and make them all moot. - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 13:23, March 18, 2019 (UTC)

As someone who has no idea what's going on behind the scenes I would like to know how this migration would affect regular users? Do we get a say in this? Would we have to sign up to a new site? What about the Sims Wikis in other languages?

Personally, I don't mind the rebrand too much but I think it's very inapropriate for Wikis that aren't popculture related. Also, I agree that it should be possible to remove the videos that are added to some pages. Things like this are just annoying.

Lastly, I've noticed an offensive Wiki that's not really active but I still think that should be removed completely but I don't know how to report it. — Gvaudoin  💬 20:23, March 17, 2019 (UTC)


 * @Gvaudoin: Details are still scarce about the migration (if it ever happens) but rest assured that another forum thread (more properly detailed than this one) will be created to get community input. — k6ka  🍁 ( Talk ·  Contributions ) 20:30, March 17, 2019 (UTC)


 * I understand the frustration of FANDOM, and a lot of things (if not all) you're pointing out I agree with @ k6ka  🍁, but I do think that migrating to another host will cause more problems (right now) than it will solve them. I know you said nothing is definite, but I do think that having a conversation with the people from Wikia/FANDOM might be a better move than moving hosts. Just simply thinking about editors/audience on this wiki you might lose by transferring to another one. Then there is also the interwikis...


 * I might not have a lot of right talking here, since I've been highly inactive on TSW for a few years now, but as an admin on the Dutch Sims Wiki and often checking out other interwikis of TSW too I did feel like I have to say something here. FANDOM is a relatively new company, it still needs to figure out quite a lot (you kinda pointed this out too). If FANDOM is ready to have that talk with TSW I would definitely sayhave that talk first before just moving the whole Wiki and perhaps losing a great part of your members.   D e   S ims       (talk)   02:02, March 18, 2019 (UTC)


 * While I have not been active in my administrative duties in recent times, or engaged with Wikia Staff in any way, I can say that those who have, in particular k6ka, have tried to initiate dialogue with Staff for quite some time. They have had this kind of conversation numerous times over the years as Wikia gradually slid into its current state. The response from Staff across the board has been arrogant and dismissive at best.


 * Thinking about the members of The Sims Wiki community is precisely what motivated the proposal of migration to begin with. It does not seem that Wikia is prepared to have a frank and transparent discussion about the direction of TSW as a part of the Wikia network now, or indeed anytime soon. Their recent activities really are not helping our perceptions of Wikia's intentions.


 * It is interesting that you think of FANDOM as a "relatively new company". That's what it feels like, isn't it? Wikia as it is now seems to be an entirely different platform to what it was before the transition to the FANDOM brand. But FANDOM, legally speaking, is the same entity founded in 2004. Its change from network of collaborative databases to a focus on popular culture and entertainment news to me seems to be a diversification of the company's business in an entirely unnecessary attempt to compete in an industry that, before the change, it had nothing to do with.


 * The change in Wikia's focus means they will no longer be able to pay attention to the needs of its wikis' editors (they'd be too busy managing FANDOM publications). We are seeing this happen, with the indiscriminate, clumsy and careless migration to fandom.com; the lack of updates to MediaWiki; and the introduction of features the userbase neither asked for nor like (Exhibit A: Featured Videos). I believe that Wikia for this reason is no longer the right host for The Sims Wiki, which is why I wholeheartedly support migration. I am open to changing my mind, but the way things are going now, I don't see anything happening on Wikia's part to change my opinion anytime soon. —  THE TIM TAM  IS MY   SPIRIT ANIMAL  (TSW • AH • MGW • Contribs ) 16:25, March 18, 2019 (UTC)


 * Stay tuned. We're very refocused on the core wiki business and we'll be demonstrating that quite a bit in upcoming projects. - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 16:31, March 18, 2019 (UTC)


 * Why can't you give the answer now? Why do you give answers that seemly work around answering the questions that people are answering? It seems like you don't care much about this wiki from the perspective of other users on the wiki. Matthew Cenance (talk) 01:57, March 20, 2019 (UTC)


 * I can only answer questions for which I have answers ready for public eyes. - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 15:48, March 20, 2019 (UTC)


 * They're still tired of how you run this website, you know. It's almost as if you're trying to emulate Amino's bad reputation. Matthew Cenance (talk) 21:23, March 20, 2019 (UTC)
 * I've been here for about 7-8 weeks. You've yet to see what I can do :) - MisterWoodhouse (talk) 15:50, March 21, 2019 (UTC)

I figured I'd weigh in here as well.

First, I want to thank you, MisterWoodhouse, for your willingness to talk with us regarding the grievances spelled out above. I understand that you are not necessarily in the position to immediately address 100% of what is listed (and I can appreciate that, as Lost Labyrinth above said, it's impossible to please everybody) but the fact that you're willing to engage in a dialogue and not just dictate what is and will be, gives me some measure of comfort. I also want you to understand that (and I'm sure I speak for everyone here) I want to hear you and communicate with you in good faith, as long as you are willing to do the same. Please understand that so much of the anger that seems to jump out of what is written above is not directed at you personally; it is anger born of frustration and a feeling of hopeless futility, over years and years of top-down decision-making by people who do not seem to understand or do not accept the fact that each wiki community is different and wants different things from their host. These fires have been burning for quite a long time, and the whole subject is a pretty emotional one for many of us who have sunk literally years into building this project (for instance, this year marks my 10th anniversary editing The Sims Wiki). I think it only makes sense that we would be angry, but again I want you to know that we're not angry at you.

A big problem we as a community have had is that there are so few members of staff who seem to be able to act as you are acting. We on a local wiki level (and this applies to most wikis, not just TSW) only become aware of corporate-level ideas once staff as a whole have already decided on a course of action, so response from staff in the past has tended to be of the "we hear your concerns, but we're doing it anyways," variety, which despite assurances to the contrary, does little to convince us that staff is actually hearing us. For what it's worth, I don't interact with staff on a regular basis, but the interactions I've had with individual members has for the most part been positive or, at the very least, diplomatic. But at the same time, staff members are not regular contributors to on-wiki dialogue; most staff contact tends to be between a single administrator and a single member of staff via Special:Contact. On the occasions when staff have tried to start discussions or participate in discussions on The Sims Wiki, they demonstrate how little they understand our community: posting discussions in the wrong locations; directing questions that require community consensus to individual administrators instead; Expecting an administrator to take unilateral action on a particular proposal, when said proposals require at the very least a community dialogue, if not outright consensus. This again goes back to the top-down operating style that staff tends to operate by, and a lack of understanding the unique properties of individual communities under the Wikia/FANDOM umbrella.

I'm not going to spend a whole lot of time bemoaning the various changes that have taken place on this site in the last 10 years. I think the people above raise very valid points and grievances. I could add a few to the pile: the locking of MediaWiki page editing to local admins; the overzealous push to "mobile"-ize wikis, often to the detriment of the wiki's look and feel on traditional desktop/laptop screens... but again, I don't want to pile on the complaints. Bottom line, I understand that businesses and websites need to evolve in order to survive. I understand that Wikia/FANDOM is a for-profit operation and relies on ad revenue to survive. I understand that nothing that Wikia/FANDOM does will ever satisfy everybody. And I understand that there are occasions when staff must take unilateral action or implement changes for the good of the whole website, even if such actions/changes work to the detriment of local communities.

The problem is that Wikia treats its individual communities less like volunteer partners, and more like property. Wikia seems to forget that it is nothing without its wiki communities.. We are not just little subsets of a larger website; we are thousands of autonomous, industrious communities who want to see our wikis thrive, and want to see our host thrive, too. All the editors here are unpaid, and contribute and collaborate out of a shared love of the subject matter and a love of the community we've created. But Wikia doesn't see this; it only sees subsets of its larger domain, there only to generate ad revenue and to create new content for free. Eventually, communities like The Sims Wiki will be fed up with the status quo and they will splinter off, either with or without Wikia's approval. The end result of that will be almost certainly be a weaker community and a weaker Wikia. Wikia does not have enough staff - could never hire enough staff - to maintain the thousands of wikis it hosts if all the volunteer editors decided to jump ship. Wikia needs us. We don't need Wikia.

Now, on the occasions in the past when forking from Wikia/FANDOM has been brought up, I've been staunchly opposed to leaving, not because the relationship between TSW and Wikia is rosy, but because the act of leaving is so onerous and fraught with problems, that the end result of doing so would almost certainly be incredibly detrimental to TSW. I can't say that my opinion has changed much; I still think leaving would be detrimental to the long-term success of the project. But that doesn't imply in any way that TSW is dependent on Wikia, but rather gets to the fact that we as a community are held as prisoner; we can't dissolve TSW and redirect it to an external wiki. We cannot collectively decide to leave and then relocate the fruits of our labor to a new host without Wikia propping up TSW's former empty shell. Because ultimately, Wikia views us as property, not as partners.

I can't begin to tell you how this problem gets solved. I think it must involve a real re-evaluation of how Wikia conducts itself, and a re-orientation of priorities in favor of supporting local community needs and wants, ensuring that the volunteers who work on those communities - who are the communities - are happy (or at least reasonably content). Happy volunteers won't want to leave; they'll pour even more heart and soul into these communities, and the end result will be wikis that are more engaging for the readers (drawing more eyeballs for the "necessary evil" ads) and more engaged with the topic's broader internet fandom. I don't know that Wikia/FANDOM truly can undo the damage it has done. --  LostInRiverview talk · blog  ·  contribs 21:29, March 20, 2019 (UTC)
 * As much as I understand the frustrations that various users have been having with the changes to Wikia/FANDOM in the past couple of years, I have always felt that migrating to another site would be going a step too far. Indeed I have always disliked how we Administrators have lost the ability to edit all MediaWiki messages. But I have always felt that switching sites would be more work than is beneficial.


 * That could be simply because I've always felt myself to be rather attached to the Wikia/FANDOM network, but still. I'm not saying "Don't migrate". I'm just saying that I can't really see enough upsides to migrating to really see the genuine need to do it. And even if it does happen, I would still prefer it if those who would sooner remain on Wikia/FANDOM stayed behind and kept this wiki active.


 * If the said migration were to happen, then I probably would end up contributing to both wikis. But I would almost certainly remain more active here, since it would feel more consistent to remain editing on the same site that holds most of the other wikis that I contribute to. But for the community's sake, I would contribute to Miraheze in addition to Wikia/FANDOM. ― C.Syde ( talk  |  contribs ) 11:27, March 24, 2019 (UTC)