wikimedia foundation

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Wiki­me­dia: matur­ing and professionalising

Wiki­me­dia pegs future on edu­ca­tion, not profit (24 August 2008, San Fran­cisco Chronicle)

Sue Gard­ner, Wikimedia’s exec­ut­ive dir­ector, expresses sur­prise at the mis­un­der­stand­ings that people have about Wiki­me­dia. As a char­ity, Wiki­me­dia is not seek­ing to profit from the bil­lions of dol­lars that some say could be earned from pla­cing advert­ise­ments on its pro­jects’ web­sites. Recently, Wiki­me­dia moved its headquar­ters to San Fran­cisco, and the move, Gard­ner says, was because of the area’s “tech tal­ent”; the organisation’s core staff has now increased to 21. Jimmy Wales cred­its Gard­ner with pro­fes­sion­al­ising Wiki­me­dia, insti­tut­ing com­pet­ent and sound man­age­ment. Gardner’s goals for the future include increas­ing par­ti­cip­a­tion, improv­ing qual­ity and mak­ing Wiki­pe­dia avail­able in a vari­ety of formats. On the other hand, Ed Chi, the cre­ator of Wiki­Dash­board, says that there has been a decline in interest in edit­ing that does not bode well for the community.

US Vice-​​Presidential can­did­ates with groomed articles

McCain camp touts Biden praise ahead of speech (27 August 2008, TheHill​.com)

Blog­gers have noticed changes to Joseph Biden’s Wiki­pe­dia art­icle as news of his Vice-​​Presidential nom­in­a­tion was leak­ing out. For instance, blog­gers say that the sec­tion about his involve­ment in the 2004 pres­id­en­tial cam­paign was deleted. Also, details of Biden’s under­gradu­ate stud­ies and alleg­a­tions of pla­gi­ar­ism were said to have dis­ap­peared from his Wiki­pe­dia bio­graphy. The art­icle raises the ques­tion of whether Bar­rack Obama’s cam­paign or the Demo­cratic National Com­mit­tee changed the art­icle, given the tim­ing of the edits.

Don’t Like Palin’s Wiki­pe­dia Story? Change It (31 August 2008, The New York Times)

A Wiki­pe­dia user called Young­Trigg made a num­ber of edits to Sarah Palin’s art­icle before the announce­ment of her nom­in­a­tion as the Repub­lican Vice-​​Presidential can­did­ate; the user­name is a ref­er­ence to her infant son Trig. The edits, which added com­pel­ling stor­ies about her upbring­ing and pos­it­ive com­ments about her polit­ical career, were in fact rewar­ded with a Barn­star, and the editor made con­tact with other Wiki­pe­dia edit­ors. In par­tic­u­lar, Young­Trigg asked an anonym­ous editor where he or she had heard about Palin being McCain’s choice, pos­sibly because, as the art­icle sug­gests, Young­Trigg had an interest in whether the news had leaked already. How­ever, later, another user came along to tone down the addi­tions that seem biased. Ulti­mately, Young­Trigg, who denied rela­tion to the Palin fam­ily, has now retired from Wikipedia.

Other men­tions

Other recent men­tions in the online press include:

From the Wiki­pe­dia Sign­post.

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High-​​school stu­dents study course on Wikipedia

HSC stu­dents to get Wiki­pe­dia course – As of next year, the Eng­lish cur­riculum for stu­dents sit­ting for the Higher School Cer­ti­fic­ate, which is taken in New South Wales, Aus­tralia, will incor­por­ate an elect­ive called “Global Vil­lage”, which will include the option of study­ing Wiki­pe­dia. Explain­ing the choice of Wiki­pe­dia, the Eng­lish inspector at the Board of Stud­ies, which over­sees the HSC, said that Wiki­pe­dia reflects “notions of the global vil­lage”, and that the course will allow stu­dents to exam­ine com­mu­nic­a­tions on a global scale. There has been a pos­it­ive response from edu​ca​tion​.au, a not-​​for-​​profit edu­ca­tional organ­isa­tion that brought Wiki­pe­dia co-​​founder Jimmy Wales to Aus­tralia on a speak­ing engage­ment last year. The CEO of edu​ca​tion​.au, Greg Black, said that young people need to learn how to under­stand and con­tex­tu­al­ise the inform­a­tion they gather on the Inter­net and to determ­ine “whether there’s an altern­at­ive view”.

Other men­tions

Other recent men­tions in the online press include:

  • Clinton’s entry in Wiki­pe­dia has a watch­dog – One of the edit­ors watch­ing over Hil­lary Clinton’s Wiki­pe­dia bio­graphy has been brought unex­pec­ted celebrity and is pro­filed by this article.
  • The Wiki busi­ness plan – Sue Gard­ner and Kul Wad­hwa talk about growth plans for Wiki­me­dia, the busi­ness side of the found­a­tion, and future opportunities.
  • REPN TRI to the FULLEST!!! – “[A]s a model of dis­course, it’s a kill­joy”; this author believes that the style of the prose on Wiki­pe­dia is apt to lead stu­dents to believe that intel­lec­tual dis­course is “leaden” and “spiritless”.


As pub­lished in the Wiki­pe­dia Signpost

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The SUITS sem­inar series aims to provide a cas­ual lunch­time chat about inter­est­ing top­ics and cutting-​​edge research, and I had the priv­ilege of tak­ing the first one… and I took the chance to talk about Wiki­pe­dia, everyone’s favour­ite wiki. The audi­ence is inten­ded to be under­gradu­ate level, but there weren’t any under­gradu­ates there…

I gave a brief insider’s look at Wiki­pe­dia, show­ing off some of the admin­is­trator tools that ordin­ary users can­not see. I went over some of the parts of the web­site (com­munity portals, the Sign­post, policy pages, spe­cial pages) that are import­ant tools for reg­u­lar con­trib­ut­ors, espe­cially in keep­ing track of van­dal­ism. I also men­tioned the efforts under way to form the local chapter of the Wiki­me­dia Foundation.

Because if I talk for too long, people might die from bore­dom (!!) so I brought along some light enter­tain­ment. I played a bit of Eben Moglen’s lec­ture on GPLv3 – the part about the arith­metic shop. I was going to play video from Wiki­mania 2007, but the lazy bug­gers haven’t put up any­thing yet, so I had to be con­tent with 2006 stuff – but it turned out to be a good choice. Lawrence Lessig is a fant­astic speaker – he speaks with con­vic­tion and there’s no one who can match his slides. Finally, I played a bit of audio from the Wiki­pe­dia Weekly, broad­cast­ing from Taiwan dur­ing the conference.

Some of the ques­tions I hadn’t really pre­pared for – e.g. a ques­tion on pat­ents. I should know more than what I man­aged to mumble out… and no, I still haven’t learnt that present­ing without much sleep isn’t good.

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