[HOT] NB: Organised Editing Guidelines | Re: Final Request: Volunteers Needed for Global Mapathons!

Pierre Béland pierzenh at yahoo.fr
Thu Mar 28 17:15:39 UTC 2019


Providing tools sophisticated or not to Newbies is not the only problem with quality. See my response about quality for the ticket https://github.com/hotosm/tasking-manager/issues/1373 
With the advent of the MissingMaps project in 2014, the organizations that sponsor that project did not only organize mapathons but regularly advocated for groups around the world to organize mapathons. Since Nepal 2015, all the major OSM disaster Responses have suffered from massive participation of newbies with bad quality edits. The same with the various actions to help for humanitarian NGO's vaccination campaigns and other projects.
The TM let's escalate mapping for the Good or the Bad (Quality).  The major role presently is to distribute tasks.  What can be done to offer more Coordination functions with a more complex Mapping Network with brokers like MissingMaps and unknown mapathons organizers ? 

Pierre 



 

    Le jeudi 28 mars 2019 11 h 16 min 16 s HAE, Blake Girardot <bgirardot at gmail.com> a écrit :  
 
 I gave it everything I could to get an iD editor buildings tool
completed and finally gave up after a few years.

This might be a good use of HOT's tech money or another partner who
has experience developing for iD.

How much effort and problems would be alleviated with an iD building tool?

Cheers,
Blake

On Thu, Mar 28, 2019 at 10:40 AM john whelan <jwhelan0112 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> To draw a rectangular building in line with another takes two clicks in JOSM using the buildings_tool plugin.  Correctly labelled and square.
>
> To correct a building drawn in iD that is untagged and the wrong shape takes considerably more effort and time when validating.
>
> If you catch the mapper early then you end up with fewer buildings to correct.  If they map say five buildings in a mapathon that's not too bad but some map a couple of dozen and come back to map a couple of dozen more and that becomes a problem.
>
> I've taken new mappers in a mapathon and just shown them the buildings_tool they did fine and mapped fifty buildings each easily.  The buildings even passed Pierre's guidelines.
>
> At the back of my mind is the suspicion that for some charities engagement is important and a mapathon might well be seen as engaging with potential donors.
>
> I don't think there are any simple answers.  Many of the points Emmor mentioned are valid but there is to my mind a justification for spending time with students but a problem can be teachers who have little experience with OSM.
>
> Cheerio John
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 28, 2019, 10:19 AM Rebecca Firth, <rebecca.firth at hotosm.org> wrote:
>>
>> Hiya,
>>
>> Just to follow up on this, the mapathons will be supporting Missing Maps projects. Validation activities to support the mapathons are already planned for the following week, as well as other activities such as training and this effort to find local experienced mappers who are interested in supporting the mapathons and providing additional OSM expertise & also contributing to improving quality.
>>
>> Missing Maps groups are very aware of OEG but are still working on how best to create documentation to fit best with both OEG suggestions and practicality. Much of this information is presently available in slightly different forms (such as the events list on the Missing Maps website), which need to be linked to/synthesized differently to fit with OEG. For additional information, HOT-specific work in progress towards the OEG is available at: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Organised_Editing/Activities/Humanitarian_OpenStreetMap_Team
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Rebecca
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Mar 27, 2019 at 8:59 PM Vao Matua <vaomatua at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Mikel et al,
>>>
>>> I agree that we need to change the way we do mapathons, the credibility of HOT and OSM is at risk.
>>> I have observed some characteristics about the OSM mapping through HOT tasks being done by mapathons, primarily ones done by corporate sponsors.
>>> It appears that often these efforts are not well led, or at least not led by individuals that have a good level of OSM experience and skills. The results are that very common mistakes and errors are created.
>>> 1) The instructions are not followed, nor even apparently read.
>>> 2) Individuals assume that a tile must be completely mapped and will add features that are not called for in the instructions such as landuse or highways.
>>> 3) The tagging of features is not done based on OSM guidance, for example a path in Tanzania is often tagged as "motorway", "primary", "secondary" or other type of highway.
>>> 4) Additional tags are added without local knowledge such as railroads, traffic cameras, and businesses that are not apparent from imagery.
>>> 5) Using iD with the default image (Bing) without changing the background image leads people to mark a tile as "bad imagery" when the Digital Globe or Esri imagery in that location is fine.
>>> 6) Sometimes mappers will assume that OSM is a game like Sim City or Minecraft and create their own imaginary features
>>> 7) One characteristic of many of these mappers is an apparent hurried to try to finish a tile. The buildings are over-generalized by either combining buildings, creating polygons much larger than the actual building, often the shapes are very crude and are not carefully formed with right angles, many buildings are skipped or overlooked, many are overlapping with other buildings or roads, and in many cases create self-intersecting polygons
>>> 8) Once a mapper starts with these bad habits the habits are picked up by others working at the same time which expands the problems
>>> 9) It appears that after a small number of edit sessions the mappers from these efforts do not continue with other HOT tasks, and presumably go a way thinking they have done their feel-good-humanitarian-service.
>>>
>>> The net result of these mapathons is that rather than contributing to the completion of mapping in an area, there is actually more work required to clean up the messes than there would have been to properly trace the features from scratch.
>>> I do not believe this is a validation issue, but is an issue with leadership. The individual organizing the event for the corporation or group may have little or no OSM experience, and have been giving the task of setting up the mapathon  and do not have the skills or expertise to help newbie mappers.  I also have seen people that claim to have OSM experience or skills often are very inexperienced and have very slight exposure, There is a lot to learn about OSM, and we do ourselves a disservice by saying that it's easy and anyone can do it. We should be happy to teach people, but I don't believe any of us doesn't have more to learn.
>>> I have led several corporate mapathons in person and remotely, they are hard work. The same can be said for tertiary school effort.
>>>
>>> Perhaps HOT should establish a test or a vetting process for potential mapathon leaders?
>>>
>>> Emmor
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Mar 27, 2019 at 2:06 PM Mikel Maron <mikel.maron at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Important to note the guidelines are suggestions not enforced requirements of the OSMF. More on that in the blog post
>>>> https://blog.openstreetmap.org/2019/02/09/organised-editing-guidelines/
>>>>
>>>> My opinion is master list of mapathons is a very good idea. I don’t think the wiki is best system suited to be the place for that primary list. Another tool could mirror to the wiki for archiving purposes.
>>>>
>>>> I agree with Pierre. Data quality needs to become a primary focus of these and other mapping activities asap. Otherwise it’s not valuable experience for those present or everyone else working with OSM data. I think that will take more than trend, but a substantial direct investment by HOT, Missing Maps and others in systematically operationalizing data quality improvements across through training, monitoring, etc.
>>>>
>>>> Mikel
>>>>
>>>> On Wednesday, March 27, 2019, 11:22 AM, Pierre Béland via HOT <hot at openstreetmap.org> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Shoud I insist, we also need a new trend where such projects take responsability to produce quality data.  Badly, too often, this is not what we observe.  For the Ebola response in North Kivu, the coordinators, we had to restart the mapping of Butembo in december since the data produced by newbies was so imprecise, so incomplete.
>>>>
>>>> Adequate training material and mapathon procedures need to be developped for Live data monitoring, interaction with newbies, and correct immediately quality problems.
>>>>
>>>> Pierre
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Le mercredi 27 mars 2019 10 h 40 min 07 s HAE, Rory McCann <rory at technomancy.org> a écrit :
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> The OSM community & Foundation has recently adopted the Organised
>>>> Editing Guidelines, to guide events like this. The community wants to
>>>> help you make this a successful mapathon.
>>>>
>>>> In emails like this, and in accordance with the OEG, you should link to
>>>> the wiki page(s) describing your mapathon.
>>>>
>>>> https://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Organised_Editing_Guidelines
>>>>
>>>> https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Organised_Editing/Activities
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Rebecca Firth
>> Director, Community & Partnerships
>> rebecca.firth at hotosm.org
>> @RebeccaFirthy
>>
>> Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
>> Using OpenStreetMap for Humanitarian Response & Economic Development
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-- 
----------------------------------------------------
Blake Girardot
OSM Wiki - https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Bgirardot
HOTOSM Member - https://hotosm.org/users/blake_girardot
skype: jblakegirardot

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