Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2011-08-15/In the news
Wikipedia a "sausage fest", Chicago Wikipedians ("the people you've probably plagiarized"), and other silly season stories
Continuing coverage of the gender gap
Building up steam after
Chicago Wikipedians analyzed
The A.V. Club Chicago, the Chicago-specific branch of the American entertainment website The A.V. Club, has published a humorous analysis of the 226 English Wikipedians who identify as coming from the city. "Chicago's Wikipedians: a look at the people you've probably plagiarized" goes through the user pages of these Wikipedians ("it’s crazy to think that random human volunteers [could build] Wikipedia into the hulking hive of not-citable knowledge it is today") to build up a picture of the average editor from Chicago. It did acknowledge that it was relying on how users described themselves to be accurate, and that registered users were a representative sample of the body of editors that work out of Chicago, since it could not easily determine which anonymous editors it could reasonably include.
Starting off with the discovery that among these 226 editors are "a filmmaker, a cartographer, a financial engineer, a handful of Russians, a schizophrenic, and a gay pastor in the United Church Of Christ", the article continues by confirming many of the
Briefly
- Vandalism noted: Bryan Floyd of SB Nation got some humor out of an act of vandalism writing "Texas A&M To SEC Rumors Hit Wikipedia Defacement Stage" which, he says, "comes just after the Board of Regents meeting discovery stage and Dan Beebe realizes there's a disturbance in the force stage."
- Slow news day at NYT: The owner of crawfish as "lobster", reports The New York Times ([1]). According to Wikipedia's article, crawfish is related to the species commonly known as "lobster".
- Wikipedia in schools: Eleanor Yang Su of California Watch reports that although once maligned, Wikipedia is now being used in class assignments in the state of California. "Dozens of teachers at high schools and universities ... are assigning their students to write and edit entries. ... The projects are designed to help students improve their research and writing skills, while adding to the public knowledge", says the news website.
- XKCD creator Randall Munroein calling for the article to be more widely read.
- Philanthropy and the Smithsonian: The Chronicle of Philanthropy, a website dedicated to spreading "news, jobs and ideas" relating to the charitable work of non-profit institutions, described recent partnership efforts with the Smithsonian. Although titled "How the Smithsonian is helping Wikipedia"and written with that slant, one commenter was clear about the benefits of partnership. "What a fantastic idea! Nonprofits of all shapes and sizes could replicate this effort around their own themes," wrote 'Jendarra'.
Discuss this story
It is a source of encouragement to see 16% compared with previous figures of 9% (and also 22% female attendance at Wikimania). It would be better still to see an analysis of the holistic impact on content of the somewhat self-selecting editing community, which is described by turns as welcoming or hostile. And this brings into focus that a very significant part of the content creation is by editors who are not part of the community (and more power to them I say). Rich Farmbrough, 17:25, 16 August 2011 (UTC).[reply]
I love the geekosystems editor's sincerity: "I don’t look at the sources or anything, I just assume blue, superscript numbers are markers of truth."[42].