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Foundation reports on research, Kenya trip, Mumbai Wikiconference; Canada, Hungary and Estonia; English Wikinews forked

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By Jarry1250 and Skomorokh

Foundation report for August published

The Wikimedia Foundation's report covering its activities during the month of August has been published on the Wikimedia blog. Among those items not to have received coverage in earlier editions of The Signpost is the publication of a final list of projects completed as part of the Wikimedia Summer of Research (WSoR) scheme, which ended in August (a Summary of Findings has since been compiled). In similar news, an update was given about the Kaggle Data competition, where teams were asked to "predict the number of edits a Wikipedia editor will make, based on a training dataset" in order to share in a cash prize (see previous Signpost coverage). According to the report, the competition, which is drawing to a close, has attracted "79 teams, 167 participants and 743 submissions".

Asaf Bartov at the 2011 Wikimania

The Foundation was also active in its pursuit of a more global editor base during August. For example, the report describes how the Head of Global South Relationships, Asaf Bartov, visited Kenya for four days. During the trip he delivered "five public talks on university campuses in Nairobi and Mombasa as well as a tech outreach talk at the Nairobi iHub". He also led a workshop for local Wikimedians and scouted out potential local partners for a more substantial expansion into Kenya. In addition, the WMF Engineering department investigated the possibilities of the USSD protocol in facilitating mobile browsing (an issue also covered in this week's "Technology report"). Meanwhile, the report announced the start of an Education Program in Canada, to which 1700 students are signed up, and a $40,000+ support package for a WikiConference in Mumbai in November (further information is available via foundation-l).

The monthly report also gives publicity to the activities of departments who do not otherwise receive it. For example, the human resources department noted that although it was still behind its target for hiring new staff, it has been able to close the gap, whilst it was also reported that the legal department would be receiving four legal interns, and it was "happy to have their support" in the next few months. According to the report, it has also recently engaged with two external firms: MarkMonitor, to help it track registration of trademark-infringing domain names (for example, cases of typosquatting; see previous Signpost coverage) and Californian law firm Hiaring Smith, to help it manage its existing portfolio of trademarks both in the United States and abroad. The legal teams also finalised the Foundation's internal legal policies during August.

In brief

Milestones

In addition to the Hungarian Wikipedia's 200,000 articles, mentioned above, the following projects also reached major milestones:

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Editor's note: The Wikinews news came in very late for this edition, which was therefore delivered to some subscribers under a different subtitle. It will be dealt with in full in next week's issue. - Jarry1250 [Weasel? Discuss.] 22:52, 12 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Aren't the subtitles transcluded anyway? –xenotalk 23:05, 12 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]
On the ENglish Wikipedia, yes. Our global subscribers don't get transclusions (obviously) but did get the updated subtitle; I think it was just the mailing list that went out incorrectly, and the first few subscribers here may need to purge. - Jarry1250 [Weasel? Discuss.] 06:43, 13 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]

We at Malayalam wikipedia had made a collective and concerted effort to reach the 20000 article target before Onam, the regional festival of Kerala which was to be on the 9th of September.When we set ourselves the target, it seemed a preposterous and impossible idea. But brick by brick , drop by drop articles started coming in. First a drop, then a trickle and it became a flood . On sixth september we reached the target and still had a few days to spare .The effort should go down in Wikipedia History as a classic example of collective , targeted effort. Yes we admit that the quality of many of the articles leaves something to be desired. We have now set our mind to cleanse the ml wikipedia of one line articles and to clean up the area. Stay tuned . We've just begun :)--Fuadaj (talk) 14:20, 13 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Exciting stuff. The "rubbish article" or "no article" divide is always a contentious one. - Jarry1250 [Weasel? Discuss.] 14:44, 13 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]



       

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