
This happens so often, and on so many occasions it has little to nothing to do with the WMF's core competency/responsibility (fundraising, server maintenance, legal issues, strategic partnerships), and so often it is actually for something that is related directly to this basic grunt work of building, curating or maintaining the 'knowledge', that you really have to wonder if there's anyone in the lower ranks of Wikiland who appreciates what the actual business model is.
You, the dumb volunteer now addicted to the cult, you're the one who is meant to be doing everything related to content. If you can't do it alone, you're meant to collaborate. If you don't know how to do it, you're meant to recruit someone who does. If all that means you have to actually pay for something, it's your love and passion for the idea of free knowledge, that is meant to induce you to pay for it. The "free" refers to the service provided to users, it does not imply being all the Wikipediot you can be, isn't meant to cost you money. So stop you're mooching!
They do this in part because they're ignorant, but also because they know fine well the WMF is sitting on a pile of donor cash, so much so they're now able to fund the essentials just off the interest on an endowment. They're trying to burn the excess with an ever-larger payroll, and assorted grants and initiatives, but that's really no reason just to needlessly waste it by paying for stuff the plebs should be forking out for.
Kicking us off, is this example, which relates to the medical videos controversy thread posted in Content.
Cash, cash, cash!Is there no funding for us to make theses vids? Don't think we would need to ask for much cash.....some cash for hosting software so Wikipedia editors could collaborate on making videos of this nature. Having a third party doing this no matter who they are looks bias on our part.--Moxy (talk) 18:03, 26 March 2018 (UTC)