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WMF on the looming SOPA blackout, Wikipedia turns 11, and Commons passes 12 million files

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By Resident Mario, Tony1, Aude, and Tom Morris

SOPA blackout

Although the exact actions to be taken through the Wikipedia SOPA initiative are uncertain as of publication, there is general consensus for a single-day blackout on January 18, to coincide with similar actions by several other prominent sites. At the time of writing, the proposal for a full multinational blackout holds the widest support, with just under 500 editors in favour. Among the first to cover the story has been the CBS News site ("Wikipedia to join Web blackout protesting SOPA").

The Signpost asked the head of communications for the Wikimedia Foundation, Jay Walsh, what the significance is of acting in concert with other major sites? Will this really produce a politically effective message beyond acting in isolation?

Jay Walsh, the Foundation's director of communications
"The Wikipedia community has chosen January 18th because that date the US House of Representatives had scheduled several committee hearings that day to discuss SOPA and other legislation related to online piracy. Though the hearings have been rescheduled, likely due to the increased public attention around the issue, the threat of the legislation moving forward continues. When many [Internet organisations] and projects align and protest like this there’s clearly a big net effect. There’s no question this makes the story bigger than if one site, say Wikipedia alone, made a protest. Ultimately, though, it doesn’t look like we’re just following in the steps of others.
Our community has had strong views about this from the beginning, and doesn't appear to be viewing activism in terms of how other sites are responding. Conversely, I’d say a lot of those other sites are very much looking to Wikipedia to see how our community is responding."

What are the trigger points, so to speak, for persuading voters to contact the politicians? What do American voters respond to? Is the creation of newsworthiness in the media by the protest just as important as the direct persuasion of voters to lobby the politicians? Are there really two aims?

"As you know the RfC is still in progress [early Tuesday UTC], so we’re speculating and we absolutely don't want to pre-empt that process. But based on what we’re seeing, the focus of the message on the Wikipedia blackout page is likely to be action-oriented, with strong encouragement that the US voters reading the message get in touch with their representatives and voice their displeasure over SOPA and PROTECTIP.
This effort is newsworthy to the US and global press, and it’s very significant because it will expand the story beyond tech and media insiders to a wider public. Up to this point, many people have not heard much about the issue. The two issues go hand in hand and should create a virtuous loop of calls in opposition to the proposed legislation."

Did the Italian Wikipedia’s protest action last year achieve its goal of stopping the passage of the Italian law that would have had significant implications for Internet freedom?

"The WP.it community would be in the best position to speak to that, but it certainly does look like their efforts stopped that law and compelled the Italian Parliament to add amendments to make it less noxious. This gives us some context on the thinking around SOPA of course – I think everyone in the community is aware of the strength of that effort."

We asked what the dangers might be for the project if these two laws pass.

"It’s safe to say that the SOPA project page has a lot of viewpoints listing those dangers. Provided you’re talking about what the dangers to Wikipedia are if SOPA passes, there are still a lot of crazy and bad things in SOPA/PROTECTIP to be concerned with. The Electronic Frontier Foundation runs through the most important of those points here.
Although these points may not seem to be immediately threatening to Wikipedia, they would fundamentally change the structure of the free and open Internet. This is a terrible precedent – it could hurt other sites. It could make finding and sharing information – and growing Wikipedia internationally – very difficult. It could hurt the way that finance works on the web. In short, anything that stops the free flow of information – any massive powers granted to the US government would create an unpredictable situation for any web project. And so much of these bills is just not well-defined: there are many, many grey areas."

Wikipedia celebrates its 11th birthday as Commons breaks another milestone

The 12 millionth file on Commons

15 January is Wikipedia's birthday, and this year marks 11 years since The Free Encyclopedia first went online. 2011 saw the total number of articles pass the 20 million mark (now close to 21), the number of unique visitors 400 million, individual page requests 16 billion per month, and 282 Wikipedia languages currently available. Wikimedians gathered to celebrate so-called Wikipedia Day, including "meet-ups, hack-a-thons, a bicycle rally, a kite festival in India, and a picnic in Caracas."

As Wikipedians prepared their celebrations, Commons broke an important milestone, when at 22:17 on 12 January, User:Crazyale pushed the project over the 12 million mark with File:Egyptian Building.JPG, a depiction of the Egyptian Building in Richmond, Virginia. The building is a U.S. National Historic Landmark and is on the National Register of Historic Places. Commons celebrated 10 million files in April last year and 11 million files in September 2011.

WikiProject Medicine translation task force

WikiProject Medicine has launched the Translation task force project, in partnership with Wikimedia Canada and Translators Without Borders. The goal is to improve the quality of vital topic medicine articles, to good or featured status, and translate them into many languages. In the process, the articles will be copyedited and simplified, into Simple English.

As the medicine-related articles on the English Wikipedia alone receive 150–200 million page views each month, and the articles are read by medical professionals and the public alike, project leaders believe "that this project will have a significant impact on the availability of good health care information wordwide and that this, in turn, is likely to save many lives and to improve the quality of life of many people globally." Volunteers are needed to improve the content of these medical articles in English, to help simplify them, translate them, and incorporate the translated articles back into other language Wikipedia projects.

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And now a bit of a rant that I am somewhat entitled to for shelling out for this thing every week. The reviewer count at WP:FPOC is depressingly low, and very surprising given that, of all Featured content, portals are the easiest to review—they require almost no specialized knowledge (beyond a few common practices), and there are only three or four nominations up at a time (as opposed to 30 at FAC or FPC). All that and you have to wait two months to get some sort of consensus from passing editors. It's not hard! Participate! Stop by every once in a while to give your two cents. Considering that a new nom only pops up every couple of weeks, that's not asking much... ResMar 04:43, 17 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]

No, you're not entitled to a rant. Tony (talk) 07:23, 17 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Complaint still registers :| ResMar 12:32, 17 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]



       

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