that's the main reason i pushed the community to accept a wiki format for the lexicon.
here's the deal with the lexicon. the original owner still owns the domain, but isn't interested in maintaining it. i can check my emails with him, but he might have offered to point it to an IP of our choosing. but that would mean we have to have a server to host the content on. alternatively, he offered to give me space on his server to continue hosting it, so long as he didn't maintain it.
he reluctantly gave me an account on his personal (or professional maybe) service so that i do some minimal care and feeding. my goal has been to ask as little from him as possible. i think this is really the ideal situation.
as for the wiki, i knew there would be many more edits than i would be able to keep up with. in fact, i don't think i've done a single edit since i translated all the .html lexicon pages into wiki. squatting monk and some others have done a LOT of further cleaning and even fixing mistakes.
i don't know how many wiki admins there currently are, or how many of them are truly active. if there are some leaders in the community that want to be a wiki admin, then i'm sure it won't be a problem to add them. i guess the other admins would want to vet them, i don't know the process.
as far as other people having local admin accounts on the lexicon owner's web service, i'd rather not ask for that (trying to not be a pest), and i don't really see the point of it. there's nothing that really needs to be done on that end now that the wiki is set up. of course, it's truly not my decision - if the community wants to ask for more then we can.