The Signpost

News and notes

Ant images, public outreach, and more

Contribute  —  
Share this
By Phoebe, Durova, Blargh29 and Pretzels

AntWeb donates images to Commons

Ants on parade: Commons now features 30,000 high resolution photos of ant specimens like this blind worker of an endangered species of ant from Madagascar, Adetomyrma venatrix. This particular specimen was collected from a rotten log near Toliara in 1993. The species and the genus was formally described in 1994.

AntWeb, a project to catalog and illustrate all the species of ant in the world, has released its content under the Creative Commons ShareAlike 3.0 license. The project currently has images of 4400 species of ants and information about over 187,000 individual specimens. The AntWeb content was previously under a CC-By-NC license, as explained in a guest post by Waldir on Brianna Laugher's blog.

After prompting from Waldir and internal discussion, AntWeb decided to change their license to CC-by-SA. The AntWeb staff then uploaded over 30,000 of their images to Wikimedia Commons, using a bot. The images are high-quality, with metadata including image date and species information.

Waldir writes that there is still work for volunteers to do on the images:

AntWeb is a project of the California Academy of Sciences, and is funded by private donations and grants from the National Science Foundation.

Bookshelf project and public outreach wiki started

The Foundation has officially kicked off its "Bookshelf Project", which aims to develop educational materials about the Wikimedia projects. According to the Foundation blog post, the project aims to


A list of the planned materials to be developed includes a welcome brochure; several leaflets, including "Wikipedia for Teachers", "Wikipedia for Journalists", and "Wikipedia for Corporate Communications Professionals"; several videos; and lesson plans for secondary school and university teachers.

The project timeframe aims to have materials developed and rolled out by Fall/Winter 2010. Marlita Kahn is the newly hired project manager. There are several volunteer opportunities associated with the project as well.

The project is hosted on a new Outreach wiki, which also currently hosts the best practices documentation project, as well as beginning documentation of other outreach efforts, such as the Bundesarchiv cooperation.

Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts, not Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener

The Library of Congress research staff have confirmed that Wikipedia editor Roger Davies spotted a significant error regarding a British World War I recruitment poster. The LoC bibliographic record had identified the subject as Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener, but other reliable sources claimed it was actually Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts. Roberts had earned the Victoria Cross pictured in the poster, but Kitchener had not. Both men were British field marshals who died during the first two years of World War I. The Library of Congress has confirmed the correction and will be updating its online record within a few weeks. A restored version of the Roberts recruitment poster was promoted to featured picture on 27 October 2009. This is believed to be the first time that a reliable source has misidentified the subject of a Wikipedia featured picture. More details are available at Durova's blog.[1][2]

"Four award" made official

Following a proposal by User:TonyTheTiger at the Wikipedia:WikiProject Council, a new form of recognition for dedicated users has been created: the Four Award.

The Four Award
The award was originally created by User:TomasBat in February, but has remained in userspace until being made official this week. The award is given to users who successfully complete the entire article production process: starting a new article, having it featured in "Did you know?", bringing it to Good Article level, and finally achieving a stable Featured Article.

The award was approved for wider use with no opposition. However, there was consensus for the award not to appear on article talk pages; it will be awarded on user pages instead, much like a barnstar – but with criteria to be met. A table of all winners is maintained on the project page, along with the dates they achieved each stage.

Tips for preventing linkrot

Over the last week, several editors have rewritten Wikipedia:Linkrot into a comprehensive "how-to guide" on ways to prevent the phenomenon known as link rot, where external links, often used as references and citations, gradually become irrelevant or broken. The essay describes strategies to prevent or mitigate link rot through the preemptive use of web archiving services or by judiciously using the quote= parameters in citation templates.

Briefly

This week in history


+ Add a comment

Discuss this story

These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.
Further to this, I looked at the printed DNB to see if this error had been printed there. It had; furthermore it had its origin in the relevant volume of the first edition of the DNB which was published in 1890. So this 109 year old mistake has finally been spotted! Sam Blacketer (talk) 18:57, 11 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]



       

The Signpost · written by many · served by Sinepost V0.9 · 🄯 CC-BY-SA 4.0