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Posts Tagged ‘Wikipedia’

Wikipedia Turns 10, Looks Forward to Next Decade

Wikipedia turned 10 years old Jan. 15. Jimmy Wales said Wikipedia’s goal will be international expansion to facilitate the consumption of content to more diverse readers. – Against extraordinary odds, Wikipedia turned 10 years old
Jan. 15, celebrating a decade of providing free information about almost any topic
conceivable.
Wikipedia, managed by the non-profit Wikimedia
Foundation, launched by Jimmy Wales in 2001 as a project to allow volunteer
editors to contri…


User-generated content: Wikipleadia

The promise and perils of crowdsourcing content

IT MAY not stir up international outrage like its semi-namesake WikiLeaks, but Wikipedia sparks debate. The free online encyclopedia, which celebrates its tenth birthday on January 15th, is a symbol of unpaid collaboration and one of the most popular destinations on the internet, attracting some 400m visitors a month. It also faces serious charges of elitism.

Wikipedia offers more than 17m articles in 270 languages. Every day thousands of people edit entries or add new ones in return for nothing more than the satisfaction of contributing to the stock of human knowledge. Wikipedia relies on its users’ generosity to fill its coffers as well as its pages. Recent visitors to the website were confronted with images of Jimmy Wales, a co-founder (pictured), and a request for donations. The campaign was annoying but effective, raising $16m in 50 days. …

FBI Threatens to Sue Wikipedia over Seal Use

The Federal Bureau of Investigation said an image of the FBI seal on Wikipedia violates a U.S. law. The FBI wants Wikipedia to take it down but lawyers for the online encyclopedia said no way. A court battle could loom. –

The Federal Bureau of Investigation asked the Wikimedia
Foundation to take down an image of the FBI seal from its popular Wikipedia
online encyclopedia because it violates a U.S. law.
An attorney for the Wikimedia told the FBI it’s reading
of the law was quot;idiosyncratic qu…


Wikipedia’s Wales Scales Back Founder Flag After Angering Editors

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has given up his rights to block users, delete pages or protect pages on the online encyclopedia he helped build after drawing the ire of editors who felt he overstepped his bounds by yanking images he deemed pornographic from Wikimedia Commons. More than 300 Wikipedia editors signed this petition complaining about Wales’ actions. The hullabaloo started when Wales deleted and facilitated the deletion of thousands of images that some deemed pornographic, including images with children. – <p>Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has given up his rights
to block users, delete pages or protect pages on the online encyclopedia he
helped build after drawing the ire of editors who felt he overstepped his
bounds. </p>
<p>The hullabaloo, which Wales downplayed in tweets to the media, started…


Wikipedia Refreshed with Better Navigation, Search, Editing

Wikipedia has changed its navigation, search and editing features in an effort to improve the user experience. The search bar has been moved over to the top right corner of the page. Taking a cue from the successes of major search engines Google, Bing and Yahoo, Wikipedia has also spruced up its search suggestions. The new Wikipedia graduated from beta status one week after Google unveiled a brand-new search user interface. – <p>Wikipedia launched a major redesign May 13, adding easier navigation, better
search and improved editing features after hard-core testing by a beta group of
635,000 people.</p>
<p>Working under the theme Vector, the Wikimedia Foundation User Experience
team improved navigation for reading a…


Check out New Wikipedia

Wikipedia aware of all this and has announced the changes for the free most famous online encyclopedia in the world, Wikipedia would receive changes to their image as well as incorporate new features.
This change was announced last March but had not yet been revealed .Since, Wikipedia has unveiled the new look that is coming:
Wikipedia revamps [...]

Wikipedia is all set to unwrap its new face

Worldwide famous user-friendly encyclopedia called Wikipedia will soon be rolling out its latest features.
Wikimedia, the non-profit organization behind Wikipedia said, “When it was first developed, the software running Wikipedia was considered reasonably user-friendly. By today’s standards, it is neither as streamlined nor user-friendly as other software.”
The new features include an improved navigation, a reorganized intuitive [...]

Facebook Links Profiles to Pages, Taps Wikipedia for Community Pages

Facebook April 19 introduced Community Pages that feature Wikipedia information and a new option to link their profile information to Facebook Pages they endorse. Users who want to add more connections to their profile can click Like, which replaced the Become a Fan option. Facebook, which also offered new privacy features to let users limit which of their friends may see what info they decide to share, is counting on these new Pages options to help strengthen the connective social tissue among its 400 million-plus users.
– Facebook April 19 offered a glimpse at its next designs
on the social Web with Community Pages that feature Wikipedia information and a
new option to let users connect to Facebook Pages they
endorse from their profiles.
Soon, parts of users’ Facebook profiles will offer
quot;connections quot; …


Facebook Links Profiles to Pages, Taps Wikipedia for Community Pages

Facebook April 19 introduced Community Pages that feature Wikipedia information and a new option to link their profile information to Facebook Pages they endorse. Users who want to add more connections to their profile, can click Like, which replaced the Become a Fan option. Facebook, which also offered new privacy features to let users limit which of their friends may see what info they decide to share, is counting on these new Pages options to help strengthen the connective social tissue among its 400 million-plus users.
– Facebook April 19 offered a glimpse at its next designs
on the social Web with Community Pages that feature Wikipedia information and a
new option to let users connect to Facebook Pages they
endorse from their profiles.
Soon, parts of users’ Facebook profiles will offer
quot;connections quot; …


Wikipedia Will Undergo Fundamental Changes in April

Wikipedia will enact some changes to its user experience, including adjusting its default theme and introducing tools that will make its crowd-sourced articles easier to edit, in April, according to a posting on the Wikimedia blog. Deployment of those changes will begin April 5 on Wikipedia Commons, Wikipedias media repository, followed by a rollout to Wikipedia in late April. Since its founding in 2001, Wikipedia has managed to amass a collection of 3.2 million articles in English, although controversy occasionally erupts about the accuracy of its crowd-sourced content.
– Wikipedia plans on making fundamental changes to its user experience in
April, including changing the crowd-sourced reference Websites default theme
and making pages easier to edit. The ultimate goal, according to the
development team behind the project, will be to simplify the process of finding…


Google Gives $2M Grant to Help Keep Wikipedia Running

Google has given a $2 million grant to support Wikipedia, the massive encyclopedia that contains more than 14 million articles contributed by more than 100,000 volunteers. The money will be used to buy more computer infrastructure to power Wikipedia, including bandwidth, servers and routers to support Wikipedia’s global traffic and capacity demands. Support comes from individual donations from Wikipedia users. The Wikimedia Foundation raked in more than $8 million from 240,000 users in just two months through Jan. 5.
– Google has given a $2 million grant to support Wikipedia, the massive
encyclopedia that contains more than 14 million articles contributed by more
than 100,000 volunteers.
Google.org offered the
grant to the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation that oversees Wikipedia. The money
will be used to buy…


Wikipedia ‘loses’ 49000 volunteer editors

In the first three months of 2009, Internet encyclopaedia Wikipedia ‘lost’ 49,000 of its volunteer editors, according to University research.
Over the same period in 2008, just 4900 people, who voluntarily amended and updated the information on the website, had stopped contributing.
Felipe Ortega, from the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid, who carried out the study, [...]

Google Fits Wikipedia for Custom Search Skin

Google Oct. 26 wished its Custom Search application a happy birthday by issuing special Wikipedia skin to makes it easier for users to surf the leading resource Website. Wikipedia has long let users personalize their Wikipedia environment with certain configurations and the use of styles or skins. What Google has done is essentially marry the customization aspects of Custom Search with those of Wikipedia. Users may now use Custom Search to search across all Wikipedia articles for any topic, and find relevant pages linked from the Wikipedia page users are currently on.

Google Oct. 26 celebrated the third birthday of its
Custom Search application by rolling out a special Wikipedia skin to makes it
easier for users to surf the leading resource Website.
Google Custom Search lets Website publishers make their content
searchable by Google,
prioritizi…


How to get printable version of Wikipedia article page

Wikipedia.org is a huge online resource of useful information. You can find information about any topic, place, personality on Wikipedia. Often we get to required Wikipedia page and want to quickly print its content for hard copy future reference.
Printable version of Wikipedia article page
1. Open the required Wikipedia article page.
2. Click “Printable version” link under toolbox on [...]

‘iPods won’t end dictatorship’

The TEDGlobal conference began its second day with views of the internet as a fragile network running on the kindness of strangers and as a force for spin and repression

The second day of the TEDGlobal conference in Oxford began with contrasting optimistic and pessimistic views of the internet.

Internet: The fragile but functional network of people

Jonathan Zittrain, who recently wrote the cautionary book The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It, decided to paint an optimistic view of the internet and its future.

Discussing the creators of the internet, he said that they built the foundation for this global network despite facing a huge difficulty:

[They had no money to build it] but they had an amazing freedom. They didn’t have to make any money from it. The internet has no business plan. There is no firm responsible for building it. 

In many ways, the internet should not work. As late as 1992, IBM said that it wasn’t possible to build a corporate network using internet protocol.

Zittrain said the mascot of the internet is the bumble bee. It shouldn’t be able to fly, but a recently government-funded programme discovered how bees fly: They flap their wings really fast.

The internet works on a process that Zittrain compared to passing a beer to a person in a mosh pit. “This system relies on kindness and trust. This makes [the internet] rare and vulnerable.”

Wikipedia also shouldn’t work, according to Zittrain. “Wikipedia is an idea so profoundly stupid that even Jimbo [Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales] didn’t have it,” he said. Wikipedia was originally a way for editors of another project, Newpedia, to collaborate. But the backroom eventually took over the front room.

He showed how Wikipedians debate issues, and said that they are making their own law democratically. They decided to remove the real name of the boy who appeared in the Star War Kid YouTube video after his parents requested it.

“At all times Wikipedia is 45 minutes away from utter destruction. It’s a thin geeky line that keeps it going,” Zittrain said.

He believes that the lessons of how the internet works can applied to real world and also back to the technology of the internet itself.

I think that we can build architectures online so that such human requests are easier online. It represents human emotion, endeavour and impact. We can decide how we want to treat it.

Why iPods won’t topple dictators

From that optimistic view, Evgeny Morozov countered some of the cyber-utopian ideas that the internet, new media and technology were an unalloyed force for good and democracy.

Morozov, who is from Belarus, worked for an NGO using new media to promote democracy, but he found:

Dictatorships do not crumble so easily. Some get even more repressive.

He started studying how the internet could impede democracy. Cyber-utopians believe that with enough connectivity and devices that democracy will inevitably follow, he said. It was an assumption that underlies what he called “iPod liberalism” that everyone who owns an iPod must be a liberal.

If you believe ‘Drop iPods, not bombs’, the problem is that it confuses the intended versus actual uses of technology.

Governments are learning that censorship doesn’t work but spin does. They are actually encouraging people to share information online. Blogs, Twitter and Facebook actually allowed the Iranian authorities to gather open-source intelligence on networks of anti-government activists.

The KGB used to torture people for weeks to get that information.

Also, he said that while many assume that technology is a catalyst for change, it might also be an opiate for the masses. Governments can engage in meaningless exercises that allow their citizens to believe they have a voice when the exercise itself is meaningless or it gives a government a scapegoat – the public – if the policy fails.

For technology to really be an agent for change, he said we need to stop thinking about computers per capita and start thinking about empowering NGOs and other members of society.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Wikipedia painting row escalates

By Rory Cellan-Jones
Technology correspondent, BBC News

Georgina Spencer, Duchess of Devonshire ascribed to Sir Joshua Reynolds, circa 1759-1761. © National Portrait Gallery

The battle over Wikipedia’s use of images from a British art gallery’s website has intensified.

The online encyclopaedia has accused the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) of betraying its public service mission.

But the gallery has said it needs to recoup the £1m cost of its digitisation programme and claims Wikipedia has misrepresented its position.

The NPG is threatening legal action after 3,300 images from its website were uploaded to Wikipedia.

The high-resolution images were uploaded by Wikipedia volunteer David Coetzee.

Now Erik Moeller, the deputy director of the Wikimedia Foundation which runs the online encyclopaedia, has laid out the organisation’s stance in a blog post.

‘Empire building’

He said most observers would think the two sides should be "allies not adversaries" and that museums and other cultural institutions should not pursue extra revenue at the expense of limiting public access to their material.

"It is hard to see a plausible argument that excluding public domain content from a free, non-profit encyclopaedia serves any public interest whatsoever," he wrote.

He points out that two German photographic archives donated 350,000 copyrighted images for use on Wikipedia, and other institutions in the United States and the UK have seen benefits in making material available for use.

Another Wikipedia volunteer David Gerard has blogged about the row, claiming that the National Portrait Gallery makes only £10-15,000 a year from web licensing, less than it makes "selling food in the cafe".

But the gallery insists that its case has been misrepresented.

A spokeswoman said the issue was not about web licensing.

Instead, she said, the income from reproduction of its images in books and magazines could be damaged if the high-resolution pictures were freely available online.

She also said that the two German archives mentioned in Erik Moeller’s blog had in fact supplied medium resolution images to Wikipedia, and insisted that the National Portrait Gallery had been willing to offer similar material.

The gallery has claimed that David Coetzee’s actions have breached English copyright laws, which protect copies of original works even when they themselves are out of copyright.

The British Association of Picture Libraries and Agencies has backed the National Portrait Gallery’s stance.

"If owners of out of copyright material are not going to have the derivative works they have created protected, which will result in anyone being able to use then for free, they will cease to invest in the digitisation of works, and everyone will be the poorer," it wrote in an email to its members.

But the Wikipedia volunteer David Gerard accuses the gallery of bureaucratic empire building.

"They honestly think the paintings belong to them rather than to us," he wrote. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The library that never closes

The Open Library hopes to unite the net and the printed word by creating a web page for every book. Bobbie Johnson talks to the audacious project’s leader

The internet’s relationship with books, it is fair to say, has been a tumultuous one. Ever since the digital revolution started changing our relationship with information, the printed word – one of the most successful technologies in history – has been on the back foot.

Amazon has altered the face of the industry twice – first in the 1990s by changing the way books are sold and then, more recently, the way they are consumed, with its Kindle electronic book reader. Google has caused its own earthquake in the print world with its Book Search scheme – a plan to suck the text of millions of books into its search engine that has raised the hackles of publishers and authors alike.

Talk to workers at either of these technology companies and there is a feeling of technological inevitability: that the printed book is a stepping stone in the evolution of information, and now lies ready to be devoured by its hi-tech successors.

Not everybody thinks that way, however, including the Open Library – a project with an audacious goal that it hopes can bring the web and books closer together.

The scheme is to create a single page on the web for every book that has ever been published; an enormous, searchable catalogue of information about millions of books. It is still in beta, but already more than 23m books are in its system, drawing information from 19 major libraries and linking to the text of more than 1m out-of-copyright titles.

That is admirable work for just a handful of staff at the library, an arm of the non-profit Internet Archive (which itself has the vast objective of trying to keep a historical record of the web for future generations). But with information about books already being processed by hugely popular websites such as Google and Amazon, the question remains – why bother?

George Oates, the newly installed project leader, says it’s a way to preserve book records for history and, crucially, make the information usable by anybody.

“It’s remarkably difficult to unify this information,” she says, when we meet at the Internet Archive building in San Francisco’s leafy Presidio park, a former military outpost that is, rather aptly, historically preserved. “As much as the libraries attempt to have similar standards and orders, there are always gotchas and nooks and crannies that have to be worked out.”

The locus position

More than simply bringing together cold lists of books from isolated libraries, however, she also believes OL can breathe life into books by grabbing information from around the internet.

“Imagine books more as a networked object, rather than a single entity,” she suggests. “We start with this kernel and then we see what we can pile onto it … it’s a locus for all the information about a book that’s on the wider web.”

In a way, it’s like a Wikipedia for printed material (indeed, it runs on wiki software, allowing anyone to add their own notes on different books or editions). And Oates, who took over the project this year, is hoping to turn it from a skilful attempt to ingest vast amounts of data into something that is useful to ordinary people.

The site can potentially pull information from all over the web – retailers, reviews, book clubs, forums and enthusiast sites – as well as from social networks that already exist for bibliophiles, such as LibraryThing or GoodReads.

“It is about sharing as openly as possible – and that’s really liberating … we’re almost a non-threat to the rest of the web, because we’re not keeping the property.”

Oates knows a thing or two about sharing objects online. For the past few years, the Australian was one of the leading lights at the popular photo website Flickr – spending four years as lead designer, before moving to a role that included projects such as the Commons: a scheme to use Flickr as a window on publicly held photography collections.

Journey of discovery

The lessons from her previous work are carrying through to the project in obvious ways – a redesign is being mooted to make more palatable to those who don’t have a degree in library science. But she is also hoping to introduce some of sense of serendipity or exploration to the records.

“Right now it’s about search and retrieve, and there’s no sense of browsing or skipping around,” she says. “In the future we can start to do queries like ‘show me all the popular subjects that were written about in 1934′. You can start to trend that over time, look at peaks and troughs in areas of interest. The data’s all there, but it’s about making connections that are inferred by the data itself – I’m really excited by that.”

Propagating that idea could be made more difficult by Google, which last week revamped its book search to make it a more sleek and social experience. Oates says she doesn’t see that in adversarial terms, however.

“The book search on Google is awesome – they’ve thrown a shitload of computing power at it, and you can see books that mention things, websites that mention those books and books on a map. It’s useful, but it’s really clinical.” Oates won’t say any more about Google, but her colleagues are less reticent. Peter Brantley, the archive’s director of access, has been a vocal critic of the company’s plans – even going as far as calling Google’s attempt to gain exemption against future copyright claims as ­”disgusting”.

There is certainly a tension between the two schemes, partially because their intentions are so similar while their approaches are so different. But, while Google has the backing of many publishers, who see the chance to make some extra cash in the deal, one crucial ally for Open Library may be the academic world.

If the scheme gives researchers and students the chance to use Open Library in their work – referring to an OL page as a citation source, or building a bibliography using its tools – they could get a core audience that spreads the concept. Plus, of course, the idea is that Open Library will remain just that – open – for ever. “The longevity of the work that we’re doing is a bit of a culture shock, and a really curious solution to provide,” she says. “How do we write stuff to disk that’s going to be retrievable in 1,000 years? This is a very new problem for my brain – not that the systems I’ve worked on before would go up in smoke, but this is designed explicitly not to.”

Neutral success?

Still, regardless of long-term vision, the scheme’s success is not clear cut. Despite its meek appearance, the library world is big business – and it is not clear that big libraries are particularly keen on giving away the keys to anyone just yet. Organisations such as the British Library have their own projects to archive their vast collections for the web.

Still, Open Library is hoping that it can succeed by being a neutral space, without agendas or commercial imperatives.

“I want it to be a place where people can love books and contribute information about books,” Oates says. Perhaps, in the face of the onslaught of digital ­information, the printed word has found a new way to evolve.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds