Discussion and feedback on the update has involved extensive community input: more than 35,000 words over the past year, and almost 55,000 words in the year before that. There have been five revisions at roughly six-monthly intervals, the first in April 2009. Arbitrator Roger Davies told The Signpost that the way the Committee works in practice has evolved significantly since the first policy was ratified in 2005, yet the text has remained static; the proposed update to the policy reflects how things now work in practice, and is structured in a way that is much clearer and more accessible to editors.
All Wikipedians are encouraged to vote in the referendum.
User:Dominic (Dominic McDevitt-Parks) recently began his stay as Wikipedian in Residence at the US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) (cf. Signpost coverage of the announcement). Similar to previous projects at other GLAM institutions (galleries, libraries, archives, and museums), the job description lists the following broad goals for the residency (a paid student internship lasting until late August):
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As described by Sj on the "Wikilove.in" blog, Dominic has already secured an image donation of 220 high-resolution reproductions of public domain images, responding to an earlier uploading request on Commons for the already available low-resolution versions. It concerns a series of black-and-white photographs dating mostly from 1941–42, commissioned from photographer Ansel Adams – mostly landscape photographs of US National Parks and portraits of native Americans. Sarah Stierch (fellow Wikipedian-in-residence at the Smithsonian's Archives of American Art, cf. Signpost coverage) pointed out that while Adams' photos are in the public domain, NARA's release of the high-resolution reproduction was nevertheless significant: Adams' work, she said, "is known for being one of the most accessible to the public eye – pleasant and monumental images of the parks of the West, often making their ways into calendars and posters in gift shops ... This accessibility and availability allows for cultural organizations to milk what they can out of licensing; fearing to release their images into the public domain due, claiming they'll lose major income. Many of us within the [GLAM] world know that this is rarely a truth".
The first editing challenge is currently in preparation, and will involve the "Today's Document" section on the NARA website. Dominic told The Signpost that it "will hopefully stimulate article content on Wikipedia to be used or referenced on the National Archives website, as well as bring in high-resolution documents from the National Archives."
Last week, NARA saw an hour-long presentation by Liam Wyatt (User:Witty lama, who has just left the Wikimedia Foundation's office, where he had spent part of his year-long WMF "GLAM fellowship" about cultural collaborations). In his introduction (as well as in a blog post), David Ferriero, the Archivist of the United States, said he had "long been a fan of Wikipedia", emphasized the importance of GLAM-WIKI collaborations, and called Liam Wyatt (whom he credited with introducing NARA to local Wikimedians) "one of the [Wikimedia] movement's greatest champions". In January, NARA had already hosted 90 Wikimedians for a one-day "WikiXDC" event celebrating Wikipedia's 10th anniversary (Signpost coverage).
As reported in the May "This month in GLAM" newsletter, DC Wikimedians were exploring possible collaborations with the Center for History and New Media last week, founded by the late Roy Rosenzweig – known to many Wikipedians for his 2006 essay about Wikipedia, titled "Can History be Open Source?".
The log of last week's office hour with WMF Executive Director Sue Gardner has been posted. Topics included work on the 2011–12 annual plan. Gardner explained that "one of the issues the board grapples with ... is how much emphasis the Wikimedia Foundation should put on growing its operational reserve fund ... balancing the importance of programmatic activities (e.g., Visual Editor) against the importance of yes, having rainy day funding." Another part of the tech budget will go into the "Wikimeda Labs" projects. Brion Vibber said "it's still all a little vague at this point", but that it would include "adapting toolserver-like infrastructure and making it even easier for researchers and experimenters (should be very awesome). [It] will be more flexible than toolserver and we'll be able to let folks run more server-ish tools".
Trustee Kat Walsh talked about several aspects of the Board's work. Gardner also looked ahead to the wrap-up of the Public Policy Initiative, scheduled for September. The WMF intends to make permanent "the most successful elements of that program, and internationalise its work. .... We're also going to fund more 'editor recruitment' in India, and begin some similar work in Brazil. [We hope] to fund a couple of community convenings (gatherings of community members to tackle hard challenges like editor retention)... we're wanting to finally start the [online] shop, so people have easy access to Wikimedia merchandise ... and we'll be spending a little more money on legal work." Regarding financial sources, she remarked "that we (WMF) don't have a 'bad boy' donor policy. Some non-profits explicitly have people they won't take money from: we don't [have such a list]."
An article in The Washington Post ("Wikipedia goes to class") reviewed the success of the Wikimedia Foundation's Public Policy Initiative, with a focus on participating universities from the region: Virginia Tech, Georgetown University and James Madison University. The article said that "Many students involved in the project have received humbling lessons about open-source writing as their work was revised, attacked or deleted by anonymous critics with unknown credentials", but indicated that this had had a positive impact on quality, quoting Rochelle Davis, one of the participating professors from Georgetown University: "Collectively, they were the best papers I’ve ever read at Georgetown". The Washington Post noted the Foundation's goal "to train at least 10,000 professors and students by 2013". The article's author also designed an online quiz inviting the reader to "test your Wikipedia knowledge" on the Washington Post's website.
The Wikimedia Foundation's blog featured an entry last week about the work of Campus Ambassadors at Montana State University.
In India, Daily News and Analysis (DNA) reported on the extension of the Campus Ambassadors program (originally introduced as part of the Public Policy Initiative) to Pune, as the first place outside the USA to ("become Wikipedia's campus ambassador").
As reported on The Chronicle of Higher Education's "Wired Campus" blog ("Academics, in New Move, Begin to Work With Wikipedia"), a "call to action" for participating in Wikipedia "was all over the Association for Psychological Science’s annual meeting" last week, as part of an initiative recently launched by the association (Signpost coverage: "US psychological society starts Wikipedia initiative"). A Wikipedia booth at the event was staffed by Sage Ross from the Foundation's Public Policy Initiative, User:Piotrus and Wikipedia researchers Rosta Farzan and Bob Kraut. Sage Ross described his impressions in a blog post ("Wikipedia and the psychologists"), detailing the numbers of psychologists recruited so far, noting the positive reaction of the associations board to a presentation about Wikipedia, and concluding "I’m optimistic that we’ll see a wave of additional professional societies getting behind Wikipedia".
In related news, Brenna Gray (who appears to edit as User:Brenna.gray) of the Department of English at Douglas College has been using Wikipedia in the classroom and summarized her experiences at the 2011 Congress of the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences (press release). She found that students produce better quality work when they are writing for Wikipedia than if writing their assignment for the teacher alone; in particular, they become much more worried about the factual accuracy of their work. The students in question were first-year English students instructed to write biographies on Canadian writers.
The story was picked up by several other Canadian news outlets, including the National Post ("Can Wikipedia improve students’ work?").
The campaign to have Wikipedia listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO (cf. last week's "In the news": "New York Times and others on Wikipedia UNESCO bid", and earlier Signpost coverage listed there) continued to generate media coverage and online discussions last week, for example from The Atlantic ("Is Wikipedia a World Cultural Repository?") and on Firstpost.com ("Wikipedia’s bold bid for World Heritage status"). An article by Deutsche Welle quoted a German representative of UNESCO: "We sympathize with this desire and we take this as a starting point", while pointing out difficulties in reconciling the proposition with UNESCO's regulations. But he added that "this is only the beginning of a mutual discussion with Wikipedia".
Two promotional videos featuring Jimmy Wales advocating the idea were published last week on Vimeo [1] and YouTube [2] (they do not appear to have been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons, but are licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0). The online petition surpassed 10,000 signatures on May 30; it will close on January 15, 2012.
In unrelated news, Florence Devouard (User:Anthere, former Wikimedia chair) is currently participating in an expert meeting on languages at UNESCO, in her capacity as Wikimedia advisory board member.
The May 25 episode of the webcomic xkcd described Wikipedia as an "Extended Mind": "When Wikipedia has a server outage, my apparent IQ drops by about 30 points" (on the previous day, Wikimedia wikis had undergone a scheduled downtime, see this week's "Technology Report"). The detailed drawing of the standard "Wikipedia has a problem" error message drew scrutiny on the Wikitech-l mailing list, where developer Domas Mituzas observed that the included server IP address (10.0.0.242) could not have actually appeared since it was that of an internal DNS server. Mituzas later quoted an explanation from xkcd creator Randall Munroe: "I drew it based on an older error message where the IP was 10.0.0.243. I changed it to 242 (a) because I try not to get too specific with those things, and didn't want people poking the actual machine at .243 (if it was still there) -- I actually considered putting .276 and seeing how many poeple noticed, but figured they'd just think I made a dumb mistake. and (b) as part of this ancient inside joke involving the number 242 ... ".
The tooltip comment to the comic rekindled interest in the observation that for most articles, if one clicks on the first wikilink in the article and keeps repeating the process, one will eventually pass by the entry about philosophy. (This had been described on Wikipedia since at least 2008, see Wikipedia:Get to Philosophy.) For example, Thenextweb.com invited its readers to "Try This Crazy Wikipedia Trick". On May 25, page view numbers for philosophy peaked at around 40 times their previous daily average. One xkcd reader programmed a tool displaying the chain for any given start article.
Jimmy Wales was one of the representatives from the global Internet industry who met with government leaders at the E-G8 Forum in Paris last week, to discuss the Internet in the context of global public policy. Much of the discussions at the event concerned stricter regulation of the Internet by governments (an approach championed by the host, French president Nicolas Sarkozy). In particular, the recent UK superinjunctions against the publication of allegations about the private life of some celebrities were debated in Paris, where Jimmy Wales added to his previous criticism (Signpost coverage), going so far as to compare it to the Internet censorship in the People's Republic of China: "I do view it to being similar to the Chinese situation where they also cover up misdeeds of high ranking people" (BBC), and warned that the US would not weaken its strong free speech protections to compromise with other countries.
In April, Wales had asked readers of his blog "What should I put on the agenda at the upcoming e-G8?". The Guardian reported a remark by Wales about the impact of the Internet on languages in the developing world, and more specifically that of Wikipedia, citing the example of the Swahili Wikipedia which is the first ever encyclopedia in that language. In response to "criticism that Wikipedia is a permanent record of some information that people might prefer not to have on a public forum", Wales said: "They say an elephant never forgets; Wikipedia is a very big elephant." A somewhat gossipy article on CNBC mentioned Wales' commitment to running Wikipedia as a nonprofit, and described him having a "heart-warming reunion" with Tom Glocer, CEO of Thomson Reuters.
As reported earlier ("Company sues IP editors for defamation"), fashion company Façonnable last month filed a John Doe lawsuit against anonymous (IP) editors who inserted what it says are false claims alleging ties of the company with the Lebanese Hezbollah organization into the Wikipedia article about Façonnable. The lawsuit was brought after the users' Internet provider, Skybeam Inc, had rejected the request to provide their names to Façonnable, stating that this would need "a summons delivered by a local law enforcement agency".
According to the blog E-Commerce Law ("Identity of Anonymous Wikipedia Editors Not Protected by First Amendment"), the District Court for the District of Colorado has now rejected a motion by Skybeam to quash the subpoena that had been subsequently obtained by Façonnable. The charges brought by the company against the IP editors, as summarized by E-Commerce Law, allege they "violated the Lanham Act and committed trade libel and commercial disparaging by falsely posting that plaintiff is a support of Hezbollah, a Shiite Islamist militia and political party which has been designated as a terrorist organization", and the court's justification for not applying the "heightened standard" used by other US courts for such discovery of the identity of online speakers was that in this case "the burden placed on the anonymous speaker's exercise of free speech was content neutral as the subject subpoena was not 'designed to suppress the express of unpopular views,' but instead to allow an allegedly injured victim to seek relief against anonymous Internet posters for actionable speech."
On Foundation-l, the Wikimedia Foundation's former legal counsel Mike Godwin illuminated the legal situation further by describing "the status of anonymity under U.S. constitutional law" according to the landmark case Lovell v. City of Griffin, which "basically says you have the right to attempt to engage in anonymous public speech, and you don't have an obligation yourself to disclose who you are simply in order to speak. At the same time, Lovell does *not* say you have a constitutional guarantee to *succeed* in being anonymous. In effect, that means that telcos and ISPs can be compelled to provide whatever information they have on you, the anonymous speaker, and the government may be able to use other investigatory techniques to figure out who the anonymous speaker is anyway."
The articles about Façonnable and its parent company M1 Group had been speedily deleted some weeks after the earlier news reports about the lawsuit appeared.
This week, we took a ride on the trains of WikiProject UK Railways. The project, begun in April 2006, currently conducts expansion and maintenance on over 11,000 pages. There are 26 featured articles, 5 featured lists, and 52 good articles included in the project's scope. The project maintains a portal, a list of open tasks, and plenty of resources available to all Wikipedians. WikiProject UK Railways is a child of WikiProject Trains (see our interview from September 2010), sister of WikiProject UK Trams, nephew of WikiProject London Transport, and cousin of WikiProject UK Waterways (interviewed in January 2011). We spent some time with project members mattbuck, Thryduulf, Optimist on the run (formerly Tivedshambo), Alzarian16, Iridescent, Simply south, and Mjroots.
What motivated you to join WikiProject UK Railways? Do you commute via rail? Would you consider yourself a trainspotter?
Do you find yourself working more on articles relating to currently operating railways or historic/defunct railways?
The project's talk page is very active. What brings so many editors together for discussion? Is there anything unique about the project or the topic that might contribute to the high levels of activity?
The project has 26 featured articles, 5 featured lists, and 52 good articles. Have you contributed to any of these? Do you have any advice for improving articles about railways in the UK for FA or GA promotion?
Railway articles often include detailed route maps and color-coded lists of rail lines. What sources of information are used to create these visual aids? How much effort goes into keep these updated?
Does the project collaborate with any other projects?
What are the project's most pressing needs? How can a new member help today?
Next week's article will be printed, bound, and sold. Until then, see our previously published work in the archive.
Reader comments
Two featured articles were delisted:
Seven lists were promoted:
One featured list was delisted:
The reviewers promoted only one image of 12 that were nominated:
There are four new featured sounds
The Arbitration Committee opened no new cases. Two cases are currently open.
During the week, further proposals were submitted in the proposed decision for arbitrators to vote on.
During the week, drafter Elen of the Roads submitted additional proposals in the workshop which received comments from arbitrators and parties to the case.
The Committee has clarified that the injunction included in last week's Signpost coverage may now be regarded as expired. This is because an arbitration case will not be opened, and pending changes are not enabled on any main namespace pages [3].
Reader comments
As noted in last week's "Technology Report", Wikimedia wikis underwent a scheduled downtime of one hour on Tuesday 24 May at around 13:00–14:00 UTC. The downtime meant that the Foundation has already missed previous aired targets of limiting downtime to just 5.256 minutes per annum (equivalent to 99.999% uptime) and 52.6 minutes (99.99% uptime) for this calendar year. However, the work does appear to have been successful at reducing the quantity of out-of-date pages served to readers and other similar problems.
During the downtime, designed to allow the operations team sufficient time to "update the router software and tune the configuration", access to Wikimedia sites was intermittent. The episode and associated issues was alluded to by cartoonist Randall Monroe on his comic strip xkcd (see also this week's "In the news" for more details). Wikimedia developers enjoyed dissecting the technical aspects of the cartoon on the wikitech-l mailing list.
Many Wikipedia editors can now access the Internet from multiple locations: at home, at work, even on-the-go with smartphones. In 2010, however, only 30% of the world had any access at all to the so-called "World Wide Web", even when the high rates of availability found in the developed world are allowed to skew the data (source: CIA World Factbook). Since the Wikimedia Foundation's aim is to "encourage the growth, development and distribution of free, multilingual content", it is clear that either the remaining 70% will have to be supplied with the Internet so they can access the online versions of Wikimedia wikis, or the Wikimedia wikis will have to be provided in an offline-friendly format (in contrast, 50% of the world has used a computer, according to Pew Research). The "Wikipedia Offline" project, then, is a WMF initiative aimed at spreading its flagship product freely to the two billion people who use a computer but cannot access the Internet.
There are two parts to the challenge: firstly, in ensuring that there are Wikipedias in as many languages as possible. The number of users for whom a Wikipedia exists in a language they speak was recently estimated as above 98% (foundation-l mailing list); about 82% have a Wikipedia in their native tongue (also foundation-l). The second challenge is the technical one of supplying the information. A current strategy of the Foundation is to continue to make the raw data of Wikipedias available via so-called "dumps", while simultaneously supporting open-source programs that can process these files. In combination, this will allow whole Wikipedias to be either downloaded when an Internet connection is available, or to be shipped on DVDs or other portable media. This runs alongside the Foundation's existing project to select the most useful articles from a given Wikipedia, hence condensing an encyclopedia onto a single CD.
While "dumps" are largely tried and tested (though recent work has focussed on improving their regularity and reliability), there have also been efforts to enable the export of smaller "collections" of articles, for example those relating to major health issues faced by developing countries. This was in part provided by a new export format (ZIM, developed by the openZim project) that can be read by some offline readers. However, ongoing efforts focus mainly on the second half of the strategy: the provision of a good-quality reader capable of displaying off-line versions of wikis. A number of possible readers were tested. The "Kiwix" reader was selected in late 2010, and the Foundation has since devoted time to improving its user interface, including via the translation of its interface. There is also competition from other readers, including "Okawix", the product of the French company Linterweb. User:Ziko blogged last week about the differences he found between the two. Which, if either, will become the standard is unclear, because it is such a fast-moving area.
See also: Wikimedia strategy document, update on Wikimedia's progress (as of March 2011).
Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.