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Tag: wikipedia

  • Salesforce Faces Employee Backlash Over NFT Plans

    Salesforce Faces Employee Backlash Over NFT Plans

    Salesforce employees are pushing back against the company’s plan to create an NFT platform.

    Salesforce announced in early February that it was working to develop its own NFT platform and NFT Cloud. Co-CEOs Marc Benioff and Bret Taylor told employees at an online event. NFTs have become increasingly popular, with some fetching millions of dollars.

    It seems Salesforce employees are not impressed with the plans, with hundreds of them signing an open letter of protest, according to Thompson Reuters Foundation News. The employees took multiple issues with the company’s plans, including the environmental impact of NFTs and their being “unregulated, highly speculative financial assets.”

    The environmental concerns are becoming a common refrain of critics of blockchain-based tech. Mozilla was forced to abandon plans to accept cryptocurrency donations over crypto’s environmental impact, and Wikipedia is under similar pressure.

    It remains to be seen if Salesforce will abandon its plans, or merely alter them to address employee concerns.

  • Wikipedia the Latest to Face Pressure to Stop Accepting Crypto

    Wikipedia the Latest to Face Pressure to Stop Accepting Crypto

    Pressure is mounting on Wikipedia to stop accepting crypto, amid criticism of its environmental impact.

    Mozilla came under heavy criticism for its decision to accept cryptocurrency donations. None other than one of the founders of Mozilla lambasted the organization for its decision, prompting an about-face.

    Wikipedia is now facing pressure to stop accepting crypto as well, with a “Requests for comments” page opened to discuss the situation. The user who opened the page, GorillaWarfare, explained three specific issues with accepting crypto.

    • Concern that accepting crypto signaled endorsement
    • The environmental impact of crypto
    • The potential to damage Wikipedia’s reputation

    It’s too early to know how Wikipedia will proceed, but the discussion is another example of the headwinds crypto faces in its bid for widespread acceptance.

  • Wikimedia Enterprise Seeks to Turn Big Tech Into Paying Customers

    Wikimedia Enterprise Seeks to Turn Big Tech Into Paying Customers

    Wikimedia is looking to turn Big Tech into paying Wikipedia customers with the creation of Wikimedia Enterprise.

    Wikipedia is the premier online encyclopedia, crowd-sourced and free for anyone to use. Many of the biggest names in tech, including Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google rely on the encyclopedia.

    Every couple of weeks, Wikipedia provides a snapshot of everything on the site to various tech companies, data the companies use in search and other products. The Wikimedia Foundation, responsible for Wikipedia, is now seeking to monetize that data feed.

    Wikimedia Enterprise is a new product from the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that operates Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects. Wikimedia Enterprise provides paid developer tools and services that make it easier for companies and organizations to consume and re-use Wikimedia data.

    According to Wired, the free data stream will still be available to all users, but Wikimedia Enterprise will offer a data stream that is more up-to-date and compatible with the client company’s formats. Given that many of the big tech companies have entire teams dedicated to managing the incoming Wikipedia data, licensing it from Wikimedia Enterprise could save significant time and money.

  • Wikimedia Works On Search Improvements, Says It’s Not Competing with Google [Updated]

    Wikimedia Works On Search Improvements, Says It’s Not Competing with Google [Updated]

    Note: This article has been updated with clarification directly from The Wikimedia Foundation.

    It would appear that there is a new search engine from Wikipedia in the works – one that would surface public information from Wikipedia and its sister free knowledge projects.

    “We continually work to improve how people can find and engage with this content, including but not limited to searching on Wikipedia. This is in keeping with Wikimedia’s commitment to operating in free and open way, without running ads and while protecting user privacy,” a representative from the Wikimedia Foundation tells us in an email.

    The Wikimedia Foundation was awarded a $250,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation in September. This is for the initial phase of a project with a total budget of roughly $2.5 million.

    “We should also clarify that the results of this first discovery phase of prototyping and community dialogue will help determine our next steps in development of technology in collaboration with the community,” the representative said, adding that the budget is based on the budget for their planned work to “improve a variety of knowledge discovery functions on Wikipedia.”

    “We do not have plans to build a new search engine: our objective is to improve the existing search experience on Wikimedia projects and help people find content across the projects,” they said. “As the first phase of undertaking these improvements we received a grant to research how people access and interact with Wikimedia content. The grant agreement outlines a general direction, but the results of this first phase of prototyping and community dialogues will determine our next steps, in collaboration with the Wikimedia community.”

    “More generally, I also wanted to clarify one issue that’s been a point of discussion: whether or not we intend to compete in the area of search with this project. This project does not aim to compete with Google or any other company. As a non-profit, our mission is to support how people interact with and discover free educational content on Wikimedia projects. Everything we create is under an open license and can be used and reused freely by everyone and for any purpose. This means everyone, including commercial entities, can and do use results of our work. This is made clear in our product roadmap, which includes releasing our findings publicly.”

    A document from the Knight Foundation from September was just recently made public. In that, the project is described. It’s called “Knowledge Engine,” which is obviously very Google-esque. According to the document, this has four stages: discovery, advisory, community, and extension. Each will take about 18 months, it says.

    They’re also supposedly conducting tests with potential users, creating a public-facing dashboard of key KPIs, and measuring user satisfaction, load time, API usage, etc.

    The Knight Foundation’s funding is specifically for the discovery stage, which began around the time of the document. It said that over the following six months, Wikimedia would seek to answer questions like: Would users go to Wikipedia if it were an open channel beyond an encylopedia?” and “Can the Wikimedia Foundation get Wikipedia embedded in carriers and Original Equipment Manufacturers?”

    That second question is particular interesting.

    “Knowledge Engine by Wikipedia will create a model for surfacing high quality, public information on the Internet,” the document says. “The project will pave the way for non-commercial information to be found and utilized by Internet users.”

    It says that after 12 months, the Wikimedia Foundation will assess the progress and at the conclusion of the grant, the team will have sent the groundwork for the project to proceed to the second stage.

    You can read through the full document here.

    Last week, Wikimedia said Super Bowl searches show “Wikipedia is the second screen.” They pointed to the large search volume and clicks leading to Wikipedia pages related to players and the game.

  • Wikipedia Is Bitching About Media Coverage

    English Wikipedia administrator Robert Fernandez just published a blog post on the official Wikimedia blog complaining about Wikipedia / Wikimedia’s media coverage – both quantity and quality.

    On which we are now reporting.

    According to Fernandez, the media doesn’t really understand Wikipedia, its parent organization Wikimedia, or the other projects under its umbrella.

    “Both qualitatively and quantitatively, news coverage is inadequate for a website and movement as large and influential as Wikipedia and Wikimedia. The news media has little understanding of the mechanics of Wikipedia, the role of the Foundation, non-Wikipedia Wikimedia projects, and other important issues involving the encyclopedia and the community. The coverage we usually see is neither in-depth, nor specialized, nor systematic,” he writes.

    “To the English-language news media, Wikipedia is a foreign country. They don’t speak the language, they don’t know how anything works.”

    According to Fernandez, news outlets need Wikipedians in residence.

    “There are plenty of stories here to be told, and a Wikipedian in residence could help tell them. In the process, they could help educate the media about how Wikipedia works and let them know that there are stories worth telling in the Wikimedian community too.”

    In order to bolster his claims that Wikipedia doesn’t get its fair share, he presents this chart of New York Times story subjects in 2015:

    Screen Shot 2015-10-27 at 11.12.59 AM

    As you can see, the Times writes a lot about Twitter, Facebook, and Google – and not so much about Wikipedia.

    It might not be fair to say that the entirety of the Wikimedia organization feels this way. I mean, there is this disclaimer at the end of the post:

    The views expressed in this blog post are not necessarily those of the Wikimedia Foundation or Wikipedia.

    Then again, this is the English Wikipedia administrator posting on the official Wikimedia blog, so …

    While you’re here, please take a look at our coverage of Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales’ Chuck Norris humor.

  • Study Finds Wikipedia Still Outperforms Google Properties in Google

    Study Finds Wikipedia Still Outperforms Google Properties in Google

    Last month, there were a number of reports about a significant drop in Wikipedia’s Google traffic. A report from SimilarWeb found that Google “stole over 550 million clicks” from Wikipedia in 6 months. According to Search Engine Journal, the site’s organic search traffic from Google dropped 11% from May to July.

    Search Engine Land reported a few days later that Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales had said there was “a long-term issue with decreasing traffic from Google,” but that the SimilarWeb article was a misrepresentation of how Wikipedia actually needs the clicks in question. The article quotes Wales as saying:

    “It is also false that ‘Wikipedia thrives on clicks,’ at least as compared to ad-revenue driven sites… The relationship between ‘clicks’ and the things we care about: community health and encyclopedia quality is not nothing, but it’s not as direct as some think.”

    Wikipedia later released its own report on the subject saying, “No direct data shows a decrease in Google traffic; in fact, direct referrals from Google have been increasing in the last few months, rather than decreasing. However, we have some fuzziness around indirect referrals that cannot be resolved without the participation of Google. We should seek that participation, and work on tracking these metrics in an automated fashion.”

    The report concluded:

    Based on the data we have we can establish that the most obvious avenues for verifying or dismissing SimilarWeb’s claim show no evidence that Google traffic has declined. However, we do not have the data at our end to eliminate all avenues of possibility.
     
    Our next work should be to reach out to Google themselves and talk to them about the data we’re seeing, and to build out infrastructure to begin tracking metrics like this on a consistent and automated basis, rather than relying on costly ad-hoc analysis.

    Now there’s a new report on this subject. This one comes from Stone Temple Consulting, which has recently delivered interesting findings related to Google’s partnership with Twitter and engagement on Google+. They ran an analysis of the rankings data for over 340,000 search queries.

    According to that, Wikipedia is still prominent on the first pages of search results, but has lost many of its #1 and #2 rank positions.

    “Wikipedia still is far more prevalent than Google properties, so we cannot conclude that Google is favoring its own content,” a spokesperson for Stone Temple says.

    It did find that Wikipedia pages are more prominent in commercial queries than for informational ones. It also found the opposite to be true for Google properties.

    Check out that full report here.

  • Russia Bans Wikipedia Over Drug Article, Promptly Reverses Course After Edits

    Russia Bans Wikipedia Over Drug Article, Promptly Reverses Course After Edits

    Roskomnadzor, Russia’s Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media (basically its internet watchdog) has been in the news quite a bit lately. The regulatory body seems to be scouring the web, looking to block certain sites of content it deems harmful – which as of late has all related to drugs.

    Now, over the past couple of days, the Russian agency directed Internet Service Providers to block a certain Wikipedia page, ISPs responded by doing what they could do (which was block all of Wikipedia for a brief time), and Roskomnadzor then lifted the ban after significant editing to the specific article.

    Roskomnadzor was upset over a Wikipedia article about hashish. On Monday, it sent out a decree instructing ISPs to block access to the article. To comply with the order, ISPs were forced to block the entirety of Wikipedia because its “secure communication protocol doesn’t allow the blocking of individual articles,” according to Roskomnadzor.

    But after edits to the article of which Roskomnadzor found satisfactory, the ban was lifted.

    “Unexpectedly, confirmation has arrived from Roskomnadzor that the entry on Charas has been excluded from the register of banned sites,” Wikimedia Russia executive director Stas Kozlovsky said.

    This isn’t the first time in recent memory the Russian watchdog has blocked access to major sites over drug content.

    Roskomnadzor sent out the order to block reddit on August 12th. The government was upset over a post about the “cultivation of narcotic plants” – more specifically mushrooms. Officials said they had been trying to get in touch with reddit about removing the offending thread – but didn’t hear back. So they blocked reddit.

    But reddit soon complied with the request to block the “offending” post and Russia authorities unblocked the site. This led to the revelation that reddit will, in practice, block content in certain countries to “preserve the existence of reddit in those regions.”

  • Google Algorithm Gets Mysterious Jolt

    Google Algorithm Gets Mysterious Jolt

    Google changes its algorithm constantly, so an update is hardly newsworthy unless it causes major changes. Something pretty big apparently happened with the algorithm on June 17 – so big that Moz is calling it the “Colossus” update.

    I don’t know if that name’s going to catch on or not, but according to its MozCast product, which measures the “temperature” of patterns of the Google algorithm, the update came in at 101.8°F. For comparison, the first Penguin update only registered at 93.1°.

    temp

    Google has confirmed an update, and said that it’s not Panda, Penguin, or HTTPS-related. Other than that, they’re really not giving out much in the way of details.

    Search Engine Land shares this statement from the company: “This is not a Panda update. As you know, we’re always making improvements to our search algorithms and the web is constantly evolving. We’re going to continue to work on improvements across the board.

    SEL’s Barry Schwartz has an interesting theory in that the major change in temperature could have come from Wikipedia going HTTPS which the Wikimedia Foundation recently announced. The thinking is that this could have a substantial impact given that Wikipedia ranks at the top of search results for so many queries.

    Either way, Google gets updated constantly, and it’s possible that they didn’t really do anything all that significant this time.

    Images via Moz, Thinkstock

  • Wikipedia Lists Ten Most Edited Pages Of 2014

    Earlier this month, the Wikimedia Foundation released its first-ever annual video looking back at the year in Wikipedia edits.

    The video gave us a glance at some of the most edited pages, but now, the foundation has released an actual top ten list (in ranking order) of the most-edited pages in the English language, as well as how many times they were edited:

    1. Deaths in 2014 (19,789 edits)
    2. Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 (10,217)
    3. Japanese dissidence during the Shōwa period (8,212)
    4. Ebola virus epidemic in West Africa (7,794)
    5. Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (7,520)
    6. 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict (6,497)
    7. Shooting of Michael Brown (5,835)
    8. Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 (5,185)
    9. 2014 Pacific typhoon season (5,012)
    10. List of works by Eugène Guillaume (4,311)

    An interesting list to say the least.

    “In 2014, volunteer editors created more than three million pages and made more than 100 million edits on Wikipedias across all languages,” says the foundation’s Juliet Barbara. “During this time, Wikipedia content was viewed around 250 billion times by nearly half a billion visitors worldwide. With its vast community of readers and contributors, Wikipedia content is a reflection of what much of the world experiences and considers significant.”

    Harvard Business School computational social scientist and research associate Brian Keegan recently published a year in review of Wikipedia usage across 19 languages (English, Russian, Spanish, German, Japanese, French, Chinese, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Dutch, Turkish, Arabic, Swedish, Indonesian, Korean, Czech, Farsi, and Ukrainian).

  • Here’s What 2014 Looked Like On Wikipedia

    Here’s What 2014 Looked Like On Wikipedia

    It’s that time of year. Everybody’s putting out their year-end round-ups. Sometimes they come in the form of lists. Sometimes they’re videos. Sometimes both.

    The Wikimedia Foundation is getting in on the fun this year with its first-ever annual video looking back at the year in Wikipedia edits. The Foundation’s Katherine Maher writes:

    More than anything, it celebrates those who come to Wikipedia to learn and understand the complexity of our world, and those who edit and contribute information so that others might do the same.

    In watching the video, you embark on a journey through the world and Wikipedia, revisiting what you read and edited this year. From the FIFA World Cup to the Indian general elections, and the Ice Bucket Challenge to Ebola in West Africa, we follow threads of discovery through Wikipedia’s vast constellation of knowledge, finding opportunities to contribute along the way. We venture from Sochi to outer space in less than three minutes.

    It has a pretty Googley feel to it, doesn’t it? Besides the fact that many of the subjects in it are reflective of Google’s search trends for the year, the way the actual video is edited reminds me of many of the Google videos I’ve seen in the past. Still, I think it will make a nice addition to the annual round-up in years to come.

    Speaking of Google meets Wikimedia, Google announced this week that it’s shutting down its community-driven structured data offering Freebase, and will now support Wikimedia’s Wikidata project.

    Image via Wikipedia

  • Wikipedia Mobile Apps Get Nearby Feature

    Wikipedia Mobile Apps Get Nearby Feature

    Last year, Wikipedia added “nearby” functionality to its desktop and mobile sites to let users find interesting content about subjects relevant to their location. The functionality has now come to the Android and iOS apps.

    The feature shows you a list of articles for your location, and gives you the distance from where you’re at. There’s also a compass that points you in the right direction, which is pretty cool.

    This could be a pretty interesting thing to have on hand while you’re traveling, if you’re not using Andrew Mason’s Detour app.

    You can tap an entry to read the article or long-press and open it in map view.

    “With this feature, we’re bringing Wikipedia into the world around you and enabling you to explore and learn more about your surroundings,” the Wikimedia Foundation says in a blog post. “Perhaps you’ve always wondered about that monument that you pass during your commute home, been curious about an architecturally interesting building, or simply wanted a to-do list while traveling. Now, the new Wikipedia app can surface those for you, and maybe it’ll even inspire you to add your own.”

    The foundation also announced some ideas it wants to work on. These include filtering nearby items by category, searching for other articles that are near the article you’re reading, and letting you drop a pin on a map to see articles tagged near that location.

    It looks like learning is going to continue to become more mobile.

    Image via Wikimedia

  • Wikipedia Banks $140,000 in Bitcoin Donations in First Week

    Wikipedia Banks $140,000 in Bitcoin Donations in First Week

    The Wikimedia Foundation lives on donations – that’s how you can read the Wikipedia entry on World of Warcraft and not be bombarded with ads for Mountain Dew Code Red. And garnering enough donations to keep afloat hasn’t always been easy for the non-profit – a fact that can be proven by Jimmy Wales pleading face appearing every once in a while as you browse the online encyclopedia.

    Last week, the Wikimedia Foundation announced that it would start accepting donations in bitcoin, with the help of wallet service Coinbase. With the help of Coinbase, any donations made in bitcoin can be immediately converted into US dollars.

    Ok, so it’s been a week. How’d they do?

    Pretty well, actually. The Wikimedia Foundation, which umbrellas Wikpedia, Wiktionary, Wikimedia Commons, and more, raised over $140,000 over the past week.

    “Wikipedia is run by a non-profit organization and has been able to operate ad-free because of the generosity of donors from across the world. For donors worldwide, bitcoin is a convenient donation method that ensures 100% of donated funds go to the cause. Donors can also enjoy significant tax benefits by donating bitcoin. As inspiring non-profits such as the Wikimedia Foundation continue to adopt bitcoin as a payment method, we look forward to seeing you and the community show strong support as well,” says Coinbase.

    Strong support indeed. Wikimedia did say that bitcoin donations have been a frequent demand of the community for a while now. Though it’s unlikely that Wikimedia can sustain such a robust donation flow, it does show that there are plenty of people out there willing to give up their bitcoin for the cause.

  • Wikipedia Shows Content Google ‘Forgets’

    It was recently reported that Google is removing links to Wikipedia articles from search results in Europe thanks to the new “right to be forgotten“. The Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia, has now put out a statement.

    Do you think the “right to be forgotten” law is going too far? Do you agree with the concept at all? Should Wikipedia articles be vanishing from Google results? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    The foundation says it has received multiple notices of intent to remove certain Wikipedia content from European search results, and that to date, the notices would affect over 50 links directing readers to Wikimedia sites.

    “The decision does not mandate that search engines disclose link censorship,” says recently appointed Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director Lila Tretikov. “We appreciate that some companies share our commitment to transparency and are providing public notice. This disclosure is essential for understanding the ruling’s negative impacts on all available knowledge.”

    What a fun time for Tretikov to be taking over, by the way. The foundation is not only dealing with this, but also with black hat paid editing.

    In terms of search engine disclosure of censorship, Google displays the following message at the bottom of search results pages:

    Some results may have been removed under data protection law in Europe. Learn more.

    The Wikimedia Foundation is keeping a running tab of notices it receives from search engines. One of them is about a link for a Wikipedia article on Gerry Hutch, which according to the article is about “an Irish convicted criminal, alleged to have been one of Ireland’s most successful bank robbers.”

    Splendidly showing how ridiculous the right to be forgotten ruling is, there’s now a section of the Wikipedia article dedicated to informing users that the URL was requested to be removed from search engines. It says:

    Due to a request under data protection laws of Europe, it was revealed in August 2014 that Google has removed the Wikipedia page on Hutch on some search results from European versions of Google.

    I imagine this will be pretty standard on affected articles. It will be interesting to see how crowded the page showing them all gets.

    “We only know about these removals because the involved search engine company chose to send notices to the Wikimedia Foundation,” the foundation says in its statement. “Search engines have no legal obligation to send such notices. Indeed, their ability to continue to do so may be in jeopardy. Since search engines are not required to provide affected sites with notice, other search engines may have removed additional links from their results without our knowledge. This lack of transparent policies and procedures is only one of the many flaws in the European decision.”

    Google further examined the complexity of complying with the decision in a questionnaire from regulators. The search engine has dates set up throughout the fall, for experts to discuss ideas and concepts for how this should all be implemented. Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales will appear in Madrid next month at the first of these meetings.

    The Wikimedia Foundation has also released its first-ever transparency report, disclosing that in two years, it has received 304 general content removal requests, zero of which were granted. That seems like a surprisingly low number of requests, doesn’t it?

    “The Wikimedia Foundation is deeply committed to supporting an open and neutral space, where the users themselves decide what belongs on the Wikimedia projects,” write Legal Counsel Michelle Paulson and General Counsel Geoff Brigham.

    Additionally, it says only 14.3% of requests for user data were granted because many were found to be illegal or not up to the foundation’s standards. In other cases, the foundation just didn’t have any information to give. You can find the report here.

    Gizmodo points to an interesting thing in the transparency report showing that the foundation denied a photographer’s requests to remove pictures of a monkey because it contends that the monkey is the copyright holder. In the report, the foundation says:

    A photographer left his camera unattended in a national park in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. A female crested black macaque monkey got ahold of the camera and took a series of pictures, including some self-portraits. The pictures were featured in an online newspaper article and eventually posted to Commons. We received a takedown request from the photographer, claiming that he owned the copyright to the photographs. We didn’t agree, so we denied the request.

    A photo of Babe Ruth’s famous called shot is also among the content to have been requested for takedown. The foundation cites fair use in its denial on that one, for “its extraordinary value in illustrating the famous moment and the educational purpose it serves.”

    Is Wikipedia taking the right approach to takedowns? Is Google? Let us know what you think.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Wikipedia Articles Not Exempt From ‘Right To Be Forgotten’

    Okay, if this thing wasn’t already getting out of hand (it was), it certainly is now. A Wikipedia link is reportedly being removed from Google search results as a result of Google’s process for complying with the new “right to be forgotten” law in the EU.

    Buried in the middle of a lengthy Jimmy Wales profile at The Observer, is this:

    On 9 September, he will travel to Madrid as a member of a Google-appointed panel, charged with drawing up guidance for search engines on how to handle requests to remove links to web pages under Europe’s controversial right to be forgotten legislation. It is an issue close to home – Google is understood to be about to remove its first link to a Wikipedia page. “The legislation is completely insane and needs to be fixed,” says Wales.

    It’s unclear what exactly the link being removed is about, or who requested its removal. It will be interesting to see if that information comes out, as it could obviously help us get a better understanding of the context.

    For now, we’ll just have to consider it part of the larger mess that is the “right to be forgotten,” and know that not even the Internet’s encyclopedia is exempt from having information disappear from search results. This is particularly significant as Wikipedia results are often among the top results for informational queries on Google. The site even powers a great deal of the information that appears in Google’s Knowledge Graph results.

    The fact that Wikipedia is a community-edited effort only makes things more complex. It’s supposed to be bias free in the first place, leading one to wonder what grounds would call for an article to be eliminated from search results as opposed to having an informational article edited for the removal of bias.

    It is worth noting that Wikipedia has had some problems with undisclosed paid editing.

    Google outlined the complexity of enforcing the right to be forgotten in a questionnaire from EU regulators last week. The company also released some dates for when it will consumer presentations from “expert” voices on the EU’s right to be forgotten ruling. These events should help Google shape its policy for URL removal.

    Image via Google

  • Wikipedia Donations Can Now Be Made in Bitcoin

    Wikipedia Donations Can Now Be Made in Bitcoin

    If you’ve been putting off donating to the Wikimedia Foundation, waiting to do so in a cryptocurrency, today’s the day.

    The Wikimedia Foundation, which is responsible for the internet’s largest encyclopedia, Wikipedia – as well as Wiktionary and Wikimedia Commons (among others) – has just announced that it now accepts Bitcoin. This is the 13th method of donation now accepted by the foundation.

    Wikimedia’s Lisa Gruwell says that this option was a frequent demand of the community.

    They’ll get help from Bitcoin wallet Coinbase, who will make it so Bitcoin donations are immediately converted into US dollars.

    “During this review, we identified a new way to work around past technical challenges, as well as to minimize the legal risks of accepting Bitcoin. Using Coinbase, a Bitcoin exchange, we’re able to immediately convert Bitcoin to U.S. dollars, requiring minimal technical implementation on our end. Since we now also have guidance on how to account for Bitcoin, there is a clear understanding of how to legally manage it,” says Gruwell.

    Coinbase is also offering zero procession fees for non-profits.

    “The Internet has made it easier for non-profits to operate by enabling them to increase geographic reach and reduce the overhead required to fundraise. Adding bitcoin as a donation option is a natural next step for non-profits because it eliminates one of the most significant costs remaining —payment processing fees. In response, we’re proud to announce zero processing fees for all registered non-profits accepting bitcoin through our merchant tools. This means that any non-profit accepting bitcoin through Coinbase will be able to instantly cash out their bitcoin donations for U.S. dollars and receive a daily bank transfer, free of charge,” says Coinbase.

    You can hand those Bitcoins over to Jimmy Wales here.

  • Wikipedia Wins One Battle Against Black Hat Paid Editing

    The Wikimedia Foundation announced that it successfully obtained orders preventing four sites, which advertise paid Wikipedia article editing, from using the Wikipedia trademark. The sites are wikipediapagecreators.com, getawikipedia.com, getonwikipedia.com, and onwikipedia.com.

    The foundation, which has been battling undisclosed paid editing, considers getting the orders a “victory for free and neutral knowledge”. As the foundation notes in a blog post, such editing has been a “hot topic” over the past few years. They even had to fire an otherwise respected employee over a paid editing scandal.

    The sites in question reportedly offered to create Wikipedia pages starting at $799 per article to “enhance the overall business reputation” of clients, and “exploited” Wikipedia’s logos.

    In the blog post, Wikimedia Foundation Legal Counsel Yana Welinder writes:

    This exploitation allowed the Foundation to enforce the Wikimedia trademarks, counteracting the sites’ business practices. We contacted the owner of these websites and asked that they cease using the “Wikipedia” trademark to promote their businesses. After months without change to the websites, and no response to our messages, we filed UDRP complaints with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). The complaints explained that the registrant of the domain names was violating Wikimedia’s trademark rights.

    In two administrative panel decisions, WIPO found that the domain names in question were confusingly similar to the “Wikipedia” trademark, that the registrant had no rights or legitimate interests in the domain names, and that the registrant was using the domain names in bad faith. The panels ordered that all the disputed domain names be transferred to the Wikimedia Foundation. You can read a summary of the decisions here and here.

    These decisions are a victory for the integrity of the name “Wikipedia”, which symbolizes the reputation and goodwill created by the hard work of thousands of independent editors and content providers. The Wikimedia Foundation registered “Wikipedia” as a trademark in order to ensure its use is consistent with our mission. Trademark protection allows us to prevent abuse of the “Wikipedia” marks by those trying to take advantage of the value the community has imbued in those iconic representations.

    Last month, the foundation introduced changes to its terms of service aimed at addressing the problem of black hat paid editing. More on that here.

    Image via Twitter

  • Wikipedia Gets A Revamp On Tablets

    Wikipedia Gets A Revamp On Tablets

    The Wikimedia Foundation unveiled a new look for Wikipedia and its other properties for tablets. There are similarities to the mobile web version you’ve already been seeing on your smartphone, but there are also some differences.

    For one, they’ve increased the font size and narrowed the width of the content area, and the design is responsive, so it’s optimized to cater to different screen sizes.

    “Get to the section you need quicker, but don’t be afraid to lose yourself in the content once you’re there,” says Wikimedia’s Maryana Pinchuk. “We’ve taken advantage of the larger screen space that tablets provide and kept article sections open to encourage long-form reading.”

    The design also better highlights articles that have been edited recently, and those that need more info.

    “Wikipedia is never finished. Getting more readers to see that our content is constantly growing and evolving is a big priority for us.,” says Pinchuk.

    There are also simplified formatting options and mobile-friendly linking to page or references. This stuff will roll out on Thursday.

    The upload, watchlist, page history, and notifications features have also been optimized for tablets.

    If you would rather use the classic desktop version, you’ll still have the option to switch to it.

    Earlier this week, the foundation announced that it has made some changes to its terms of service to better disclose when articles have received paid edits.

    Images via Wikimedia Foundation

  • Will Policy Changes Make Wikipedia More Trustworthy?

    The Wikimedia Foundation announced changes to its terms of service to address the problem of black hat paid editing of content such as Wikipedia articles. With half a billion people using Wikipedia every month, and the major search engines drawing from its information for quick answers to users’ queries, it’s pretty important that the content remains unbiased and factual, and not tainted by the influence of money in an undisclosed manner.

    “This new change will empower Wikipedia’s editor community to address the issue of paid editing in an informed way by helping identify edits that should receive additional scrutiny,” a spokesperson for the foundation tells WebProNews. “In addition, the change will help educate good-faith editors as to how they can continue editing in the spirit of the Foundation’s mission and provide additional tools in enforcing existing rules about conflicts of interest and paid editing.”

    Do you trust information on Wikipedia to be unbiased and factual? Do you think the new changes will help? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    The issue has been around for a long time, but really gained a lot of attention last year when Wikimedia announced that it shut down hundreds of accounts for undisclosed paid edits. Prior to that, a Wikipedia editor had uncovered “the largest sockpuppet network in Wikipedia history,” and a service called WikiPR was actively promoting services to manage clients’ Wikipedia, employing admins, which have special rights over content and edits that others don’t.

    “Editing-for-pay has been a divisive topic inside Wikipedia for many years, particularly when the edits to articles are promotional in nature,” said Sue Gardner, the foundation’s former executive director at the time. “Unlike a university professor editing Wikipedia articles in their area of expertise, paid editing for promotional purposes, or paid advocacy editing as we call it, is extremely problematic. We consider it a ‘black hat’ practice. Paid advocacy editing violates the core principles that have made Wikipedia so valuable for so many people.”

    Gardner recently stepped down from the executive director role, which was officially taken over by Lila Tretikov this month.

    Earlier this year, the foundation had to let go a respected employee after it became known that she was involved in paid editing.

    That was in January. In February and March, the Wikimedia community discussed the issue of undisclosed paid editing, and the changes that the foundation just announced gained “overwhelming” support from the community.

    Wikimedia’s Geoff Brigham writes in a blog post:

    As explained in October of 2013, we believe that undisclosed paid advocacy editing is a black hat practice that can threaten the trust of Wikimedia’s volunteers and readers. We have serious concerns about the way that such editing affects the neutrality and reliability of Wikipedia.

    The change to the Terms of Use will address these concerns in a variety of ways. First, it will help educate and explain to good-faith editors how they may continue to edit in the spirit of the movement and mission, through simple disclosure of their affiliation. Second, it will empower the community to address the issue of paid editing in an informed way by helping identify edits that should receive additional scrutiny. Finally, it will provide an additional tool to the community and Foundation to enforce existing rules about conflicts of interest and paid editing.

    Those who are being paid to edit will need to disclose the paid editing to comply with the new ToS, and add their affiliation to their edit summary, user page, or talk page, and “fairly disclose” their perspective. There’s an FAQ about this here.

    Those who edit Wikipedia as volunteers and “for fun” don’t have to worry about anything changing with the new terms. Those employed by galleries, libraries, museums, etc. that pay employees to make “good faith” contributions are considered “welcome to edit” as long as the contributions aren’t about the actual institutions themselves.

    There’s a letter from Wikimedia’s board about paid contributions without disclosure here. Here’s a sample:

    Several editors raised concerns about the impact of this amendment on good-faith editors, such as first-time editors who aren’t familiar with our rules, or editors who work on projects with GLAM (galleries, libraries, archives and museums) or with universities. We ask everyone to be respectful of others and to help enforce existing community practices and policies about privacy and harassment, even in cases of suspected paid advocacy editing. The amendment is not intended to impact participants in GLAM projects, or professors, when they are writing about topics of general interest on their own, rather than writing about their own institutions while being compensated directly quid pro quo, for example.

    Given the complexity of the issue, the Wikimedia Foundation will continue to monitor the effectiveness of the amendment, and remain open to changes as necessary to improve it. We thank everyone who participated in the community consultation.

    Those who are paid to edit are also subject to laws such as those prohibiting fraudulent advertising.

    Do you think the foundation’s ToS changes will make a significant impact on the legitimacy of information presented in Wikipedia articles? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Image via Twitter

  • Lila Tretikov Replaces Sue Gardner As Executive Director Of Wikimedia Foundation

    Lila Tretikov Replaces Sue Gardner As Executive Director Of Wikimedia Foundation

    It’s been over thirteen months since Sue Gardner announced that she’d step down as the Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit behind Wikipedia. The foundation has finally announced her replacement.

    Lila Tretikov will be taking on the role.

    Tretikov, originally from Moscow, moved to New York after the collapse of the Soviet Union, then went to the University of California, Berkley, to major in computer science and art. There, she did research work in machine learning.

    She has worked for tech companies in the Bay Area for the past fifteen years, mostly in open source. This began with a stint at Sun Microsystems before she founded GrokDigital, and spent three years as senior director of development at Telespree. Most recently, she spent 8 years at SugarCRM, where she was in charge of internal IT, marketing, customer support and professional services, engineering, and product development. She’s also an advisor to the board of Zamurai Corporation.

    Two years ago, she won a bronze for Female Executive of the Year – Business Services – 11 to 2,500 Empnloyees – Computer Hardware & Software at the Stevie Awards.

    Tretikov holds at least seven patents in intelligent data mapping and dynamic language applications.

    Here’s an interview she did with Forbes a few years ago:

    “The Executive Director Transition Team, chaired by me, has unanimously recommended Lila to the Board to be our next ED, and the Board has unanimously approved the recommendation,” writes Jan-Bart de Vreede in the announcement. “We believe she will be an excellent leader in the Wikimedia movement. She strikes us all as smart, brave and unpretentious, and we believe she has the skills the Foundation needs.”

    She’ll officially take over on June 1st. In June, Gardner will serve as a special advisor to both Tretikov and de Vreede.

    “I want to close this post with a heartfelt and deeply appreciative thanks to Sue Gardner, who has been the Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation for the past seven years,” de Vreede writes. “Sue’s leadership has built the Foundation into an effective, well-funded and well-managed organisation with integrity and a clear sense of purpose, and her steady and committed presence throughout the search process was integral in helping us come to this excellent result. We will be forever grateful for her leadership and vision, and I hope we can continue to rely on her support in the months and years ahead.”

    When Gardner announced her departure, she said she was “uncomfortable” with where the internet was heading.

    She said at the time, “I feel that although we’re in good shape, with a promising future, the same is not true for the internet itself…Increasingly, I’m finding myself uncomfortable about how the internet’s developing, who’s influencing its development, and who is not.”

    She pointed to bills like SOPA/PIPA and CISPA, and said, “Wikipedia has experienced censorship at the hands of industry groups and governments, and we are –increasingly, I think– seeing important decisions made by unaccountable, non-transparent corporate players, a shift from the open web to mobile walled gardens, and a shift from the production-based internet to one that’s consumption-based. There are many organizations and individuals advocating for the public interest online — what’s good for ordinary people — but other interests are more numerous and powerful than they are. I want that to change. And that’s what I want to do next.”

    Since then, Gardner and Wikimedia have had to deal with questionable practices from within the organization itself. After fighting companies accepting payment for influencing Wikipedia content, a respected Wikmedia employee was busted and fired for making paid edits.

    It will be interesting to see how the organization develops under Tretikov’s watch. Right now, she’s still getting acquainted with the organization.

    As you might imagine, managing a foundation that has such a profound influence on information consumption is no easy feat. A few years ago, we had a conversation with Gardner about this, which you can read here.

    Tretikov will no doubt have her work cut out for her.

    Images via Wikimedia, Wikimedia Commons

  • Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales Calls Bullsh*t on Alt-Medicine Petitioners

    If you look up “Emotional Freedom Techniques” on Wikipedia, you’ll see that it is “is generally characterized as pseudoscience and has not garnered significant support in clinical psychology.”

    If you look up “Thought Field Therapy on Wikipedia, you’ll find that “there is no scientific evidence that [it] is effective, and the American Psychological Association has stated that it ‘lacks a scientific basis.’”

    One alternative medicine group is upset with Wikipedia and its founder Jimmy Wales over what they call “inhibition to open discussion,” and has petitioned the online, crowd-sourced encyclopedia to change its policies. The only thing is that Jimmy Wales has absolutely no time for “lunatic charlatans.”

    The petition from the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology, on the popular change.org, asks Jimmy Wales to “create and enforce new policies that allow for true scientific discourse about holistic approaches to healing.”

    “Wikipedia is widely used and trusted. Unfortunately, much of the information related to holistic approaches to healing is biased, misleading, out-of-date, or just plain wrong. For five years, repeated efforts to correct this misinformation have been blocked and the Wikipedia organization has not addressed these issues,” says the petition.

    The group outlines a handful of examples of practices which are current receiving the wrong end of the Wikipedia stick–things like Energy Medicine, Energy Psychology, Emotional Freedom Techniques, Thought Field Therapy, and Tapas Acupressure Technique.

    Here’s the beef:

    Energy Psychology, Energy Medicine, acupuncture, and other forms of complementary/alternative medicine (CAM), are currently skewed to a negative, unscientific view of these approaches despite numerous rigorous studies in recent years demonstrating their effectiveness. These pages are controlled by a few self-appointed “skeptics” who serve as de facto censors for Wikipedia. They clothe their objections in the language of the narrowest possible understanding of science in order to inhibit open discussion of innovation in health care. As gatekeepers for the status quo, they refuse discourse with leading edge research scientists and clinicians or, for that matter, anyone with a different point of view. Fair-minded referees should be given the responsibility of monitoring these important areas.

    Jimmy Wales, never shy to speak his mind, has responded in truly incredible fashion. In essence, his response is put up or shut up.

    “No, you have to be kidding me. Every single person who signed this petition needs to go back to check their premises and think harder about what it means to be honest, factual, truthful,” said Wales in a response to the petition.

    “Wikipedia’s policies around this kind of thing are exactly spot-on and correct. If you can get your work published in respectable scientific journals – that is to say, if you can produce evidence through replicable scientific experiments, then Wikipedia will cover it appropriately. What we won’t do is pretend that the work of lunatic charlatans is the equivalent of ‘true scientific discourse’. It isn’t.”

    Well, there you go. Science or GTFO, says Jimmy Wales.

    As of now, the petition has yet to reach its 10,000 signature goal. It’s about 3/4 the way there.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Respected Wikimedia Employee Busted And Fired For Paid Wikipedia Edits

    Back in the fall, the Wikimedia Foundation announced that it was shutting down hundreds of Wikipedia accounts over paid edits, and that it was investigating editors being paid for their editing. This came after a site called Wiki-PR was exposed for engaing in the selling of such edits.

    In November, the foundation sent Wiki-PR a cease-and-desist.

    Paid editing on Wikipedia drew a lot of attention in the media, yet just the following month, one of the foundation’s employees apparently engaged in paid editing, and has now been let go.

    Sarah Stierch became an employee last April after a paid fellowship with the foundation. She has gained quite a bit of respect from her peers, which even continues through her firing. She’s been lauded for her efforts to get more women editing Wikipedia, and reportedly coordinated an “edit-a-thon” to create new articles on female historical figures.

    Frank Schulenberg, the foundation’s senior director of programs, wrote a message on a public Wikipedia mailing list (via Ars Technica), saying:

    I’m writing to let you know that Sarah Stierch is no longer an employee of the Wikimedia Foundation.

    The Wikimedia Foundation has recently learned that Sarah has been editing Wikipedia on behalf of paying clients, as recently as a few weeks ago. She did that even though it is widely known that paid editing is frowned upon by many in the editing community and by the Wikimedia Foundation.

    The Wikimedia Foundation values Sarah a great deal. She has been an active Wikipedian since 2006. She is committed to increasing dialogue between cultural institutions and our projects. She has worked hard to increase the presence and voices of women and other minorities in our projects, and she is a warm welcomer of new Wikipedians. Her work in Program Evaluation has been important and necessary. She is a good friend of many of us.

    Everybody makes mistakes, and I would like to believe that the Wikimedia movement is a place of forgiveness and compassion. And so I ask you to respect Sarah’s privacy at what is surely a difficult time for her, and to join me in wishing her every future success.

    I sincerely hope that Sarah will continue her important work as a Wikipedian and member of the GLAM community, and I thank her for the commitment and energy and thoughtfulness she has brought to her work at the Foundation.

    Stierch’s doings were first pointed out by Wikimedia Commons contributor Tomasz Kozlowski in a blog post, where he wrote, “It defies belief that Sarah would be oblivious to these issues, and how they are perceived by the wider community.”

    He linked to a screenshot from freelance marketplace oDesk.com showing she was paid $300 for a “Wikipedia Page for Individual.”

    The page in question remains a mystery. It’s not like Google or other legit native advertising on the web where it’s marked as sponsored. And that’s part of the problem. Wikipedia is one of the most highly-trafficked sites on the web, and its pages often appear among the top of search results.

    Unfortunately, you never know when something was written there because an editor was paid to write it, and that’s likely why Wikimedia, as much a it may respect the work Stierch has done, was forced to let her go. It can’t convey a tolerance for this.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons