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Volume 4, Issue 35 | 25 August 2008 | About the Signpost |
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This week's WikiWorld comic uses text from "George P. Burdell". The comic is released under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 license for use on Wikipedia and elsewhere.
Arbitrator Paul August resigned from the Arbitration Committee on Thursday, August 21. His term was scheduled to end in December 2009. Paul has indicated that he will continue to edit Wikipedia, however: "One final self-quote: For me, contributing to Wikipedia is a noble act. Knowledge is power. We can all feel justifiably proud that the words we are helping to write, will help to empower untold millions of people, all over the world. This is why I contribute to this project, and why I will continue to do so -- my dedication to this noble endeavor remains undiminished. I'm very much looking forward to the pleasures of being a simple editor again, to once more experience the joy and satisfaction of writing the encyclopedia."
This edition of "In the news" covers stories from July and August.
Virgil Griffith's WikiScanner tool is being revamped and expanded into a suite of tools he dubs WikiWatcher. Griffith is being assisted by three students through Caltech's Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships program.
Griffith announced the planned updates to his project in mid-July and has been rolling out new features intermittently, with more expected in the coming weeks. The biggest change is that WikiScanner 2.0 will be able to automatically identify some potential conflict-of-interest edits: any edit by organization's IP to that organization's article or to any article that links to that article is flagged, as well as any article on a trademark controlled by the organization (based on the trademark database of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office). Neither this feature nor that of an expected update of the database (which is current only through August 2007) is yet live.
Griffith has also trawled the Wikipedia database for every instance of a "signed" IP comment being replaced with a username (as happens, for example, when a user make a comment while logged out, then removes their IP and replaces it with their name). He dubs this feature the Poor Man's Checkuser, which covers 17,000 IPs and 13,000 usernames. These include, according to the Wired coverage, "most of the Wikipedia administrators".
Griffith has also assembled a Potential Sockpuppetry page listing all the matches between IP-linked usernames and organizations.
Griffith, who is a graduate student at California Institute of Technology, has combined WikiScanner with a detailed list matching IP addresses at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to specific sites on the MIT campus to create Beaver Scope, an attempt to stir up trouble at MIT, which is considered Caltech's rival school.
Two other tools yet to go live are WikiGanda, which is "designed to uncover edit wars between two factions", and Vote Early Vote Often, a tool for detecting "voting fraud" during requests for adminship (and possibly other processes).
Google's long-anticipated Knol project, which was widely expected to be Google's attempt at creating a "Wikipedia-killer", went live on July 23. Although the flurry of media coverage examined Knol in terms of a potential competitor to Wikipedia, observers within the latter community have pointed out that several major differences between the two projects make direct competition unlikely.
Andrew Lih put the case succinctly:
Have you heard of Associated Content, Squidoo, Helium or WikiHow? No? If you haven't, you shouldn't be writing about Google Knol. These are exactly the working models that Google Knol is up against, not Wikipedia's.
To see exactly why Wikipedia is such a bad comparison, consider the main aspects of Google Knol 1 2:
- Goal: "first thing someone who searches for this topic for the first time will want to read".
- Articles are controlled by a single author, who has to use a real name.
- Collaboration is at the discretion of the lead author; that is, "moderated collaboration".
- Opinions are allowed and encouraged in articles, and there can be competing articles about the same subject.
- Knol may include ads at the discretion of the author, profits of which are shared.
- Licensing of content is varied: It can be CC-BY, CC-BY noncommercial, or traditional copyright
- "Google will not serve as an editor in any way."
- "So what subjects can I write on? (Almost) anything you like. You pick the subject and write it the way you see fit."
As a result, most of the content that has emerged so far resembles the "practical" content sites as listed above:
How-to guides, health and medical advice, consumer and buyers guides, business and career pointers. These are exactly the things Wikipedia has insisted it does not want to include.
As the New York Times noted, the best place to go for more on the Knol project is Wikipedia's Knol article. For a range of opinions on Wikipedia and its weaknesses, Knol is a good place to look (although some of the most stridently anti-Wikipedia knols appear to have been removed). But for a fair and balanced treatment of what sets Knol apart from Wikipedia, The Onion is the best source.
A wiki-based expert-only medical encyclopedia called Medpedia (official site) will launch at the end of 2008. Supported by several major medical schools, it will use the Gnu Free Documentation License (GFDL) for its articles, meaning that Wikipedia will be free to incorporate Medpedia content. According to early coverage, the NIH, CDC, FDA, and other government organizations may also contribute to the project.
John McCain gave a speech on August 11, soon after the outbreak of the 2008 South Ossetia war, on the politics and history of the Georgian–Ossetian conflict. On a tip from a Wikipedia editor, Taegan Goddard of CQPolitics.com blogged about possible plagiarism from this revision of the Georgia (country) article, and highlighting three passages of similarity between the speech and the article. The story spread from there, mostly among blogs and other new media, and was mentioned on The Onion and The Colbert Report. This report became a minor controversy for the McCain camp, which denied the allegations.
Wikinews Wikinews investigates claim McCain plagiarized speech from Wikipedia investigated the claim further.
As Wikipedian SEWilco points out, the site state.gov uses similar phrasing for some of the allegedly plagiarized passages.
Longtime Wikipedian Mav is one of the English Wikipedia's most prolific writers; according to the List of Wikipedians by featured article nominations (WBFAN), Mav is currently the 11th ranked editor in terms of overall successful nominations of Featured articles (FA), and among the top seven when disregarding inactive editors and FAs that have been defeatured at Former featured articles; according to a 2007 study by the University of Minnesota, Mav was at the time the top contributor in terms of how many times words he added to articles were viewed by Wikipedia users (see also this Signpost story). Mav has also been a major force restoring older FAs to current standards at Featured article review (FAR). In August 2008, David Fuchs interviewed Mav about his contributions to the project for The Signpost, slightly paraphrased for readability.
The Signpost Mav, you've been a Wikipedia editor since 2002; what initially drew you to the project in general, and to featured article creation in particular?
The Signpost Your first FAC (which passed) was Yellowstone National Park, back in 2004. How did the process of promoting the article compare to your more recent FAs?
The Signpost You've been a tremendous force at FAR, assisting in improving articles which would today have a hard time passing GAN, let alone FAC. What motivates you to improve these relics of an easier FA process?
The Signpost You spoke earlier of helping mold the FA criteria; why, in your opinion, have FA standards slowly drifted up over time?
The Signpost In an interview with the List of Wikipedians by featured article nominations (WBFAN) maintainer Rick Block, Rick spoke about how he was unsure the list had contributed to more FAs, or a motivation for more FAs. Has the list encouraged you in any way?
Three users were granted admin status via the Requests for Adminship process this week: Choess (nom), Ice Cold Beer (nom), and Moni3 (nom).
One bot or bot task was approved to begin operating this week: Nixbot (task request).
Fifteen articles were promoted to featured status this week: Conan (2007 video game) (nom), SummerSlam (2003) (nom), Pat Nixon (nom), Janet Jackson (nom), Panzer I (nom), Tropical Storm Barry (2001) (nom), Made in the Dark (nom), History of Bradford City A.F.C. (nom), Congregation Baith Israel Anshei Emes (nom), White-breasted Nuthatch (nom), Alzheimer's disease (nom), Pride and Prejudice (1995 TV serial) (nom), William de St-Calais (nom), Anti-tobacco movement in Nazi Germany (nom), and Amateur radio in India (nom).
Ten lists were promoted to featured status last week: Timeline of the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season (nom), List of submissions to the 74th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film (nom), List of UEFA Cup Winners' Cup winners (nom), List of Brotherhood episodes (nom), National Basketball Association awards (nom), Opeth discography (nom), List of Sunderland A.F.C. players (nom), List of former Football League clubs (nom), List of USAF Test Pilot School alumni (nom), and Timeline of the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season (nom).
Two topics were promoted to featured status this week: Seasons of 30 Rock (nom) and Dwarf planets (nom).
No portals were promoted to featured status this week.
The following featured articles were displayed this week on the Main Page as Today's featured article: Borobudur, Madman Muntz, Poliomyelitis, Rongorongo, and Planet.
Three articles were delisted this week: Eifel Aqueduct (nom), Helen Gandy (nom), and The Cantos (nom).
Three lists were delisted this week: Indian national cricket captains (nom), IWGP Tag Team Championship (nom), and List of districts of India (nom).
No topics were delisted this week.
The following featured pictures were displayed this week on the Main Page as picture of the day: Caligo eurilochus, Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler, Red-eyed Tree Frog, Beater (weaving), Northern Elephant Seals, Greater Yellowlegs, and Polish cavalry.
No sounds were featured this week.
No featured pictures were demoted this week.
Twenty pictures were promoted to featured status this week and are shown below.
This is a summary of recent technology and site configuration changes that affect the English Wikipedia. Note that not all changes described here are necessarily live as of press time; the English Wikipedia is currently running version 1.44.0-wmf.8 (f08e6b3), and changes to the software with a version number higher than that will not yet be active. Configuration changes and changes to interface messages, however, become active immediately.
The Arbitration Committee did not open or close any cases this week, leaving three currently open.