In late 2023, an article claimed that Wikipedia is one of the fastest websites in the USA. Flattering, right? I've been measuring web performance for over a decade, I couldn't help but wonder: How did they measure that? How do you know that Wikipedia is one of the fastest websites? The article does not say anything on how they did measure it.

I went to the Web Performance Slack channel (yes, there's a dedicated place where web performance geeks hang out). I asked the question:

“Has anyone seen the data or the actual “study” done by DigitalSilk about the fastest loading US websites? https://www.technewsworld.com/story/craigslist-wikipedia-zillow-top-list-of-fastest-us-websites-178713.html - I can only find references to it and a screenshot, nothing else?”

Not providing references? That's not Wikipedia! We're all about citations and verifiable sources. No one on the Slack channel knew anything about how the test was run. But then, one of the channel members took action: Stoyan Stefanov emailed the journalist and actually got an answer!

Methodology
The most visited websites based on web traffic were ran through Google's PageSpeed Insights tool, to find out how long it takes for each site to load in full on average“

So, while it's flattering to see Wikipedia crowned as one of the fastest websites based on Google's PageSpeed Insights tool, I couldn't help but feel a tricked. They seemed to rely on the onload metric. That's a metric that, in the web performance world was regarded as old and not correlating to user experience since 2013.

Understanding the limitations using the onload metric, let’s shift our focus to modern metrics that better reflect real-world user experiences: Google Web Vitals

Google Web Vitals

Google Web Vitals is Google's initiative to focus on the metrics that matter to users and also affects Googles core ranking system. Unlike the old-school onload time, Google Web Vitals better measure aspects of real world user experience.

The core metrics at the moment are three metrics:

  • Large Contentful Paint (LCP) - when in time is the largest element painted on the users screen. For Wikipedia that is very often a paragraph, but sometimes its an image element or a heading.
  • Interaction To Next Paint (INP) - measure the responsiveness of page, meaning that a page responds quickly to user interactions. For Wikipedia the responsiveness can be slow depending on the amount of JavaScript we ship, event listeners or click events.
  • Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) - measure the visual stability of the page. That means it measures if content is moved around. In the Wikipedia case this means when campaigns runs and we move the content of Wikipedia.

Google also have two other web vitals, two metrics that are important for the user experience but not listed as core:

  • Time To First Byte (TTFB) - measure the time between the request for a resource and when the first byte of a response begins to arrive. For Wikipedia TTFB depends on where the users are in the world and how far it is to the closest data center.
  • First Contentful Paint (FCP) - measure the time from when the user first navigated to the page to when any part of the page's text/images painted on the screen. For Wikipedia this is often text.

Google pay special attention to the 75th percentile of those metrics. It was chosen because "First, the percentile should ensure that a majority of visits to a page or site experienced the target level of performance. Second, the value at the chosen percentile shouldn't be overly impacted by outliers.". But what does the 75 percentile mean for us at Wikipedia?

The 75th percentile at Wikipedia

Now let’s put the 75th percentile into perspective by applying it to Wikipedia’s vast global audience.

Imagine that there were 100 people visiting Wikipedia. Each person got a different user experience because of their device, the internet connection and how we build Wikipedia. For some users the experience will be really fast, for some it will be slower.

The 75th percentile focus on the worst experience of the best 75%. If you take all 100 users and then sort the experience from fastest to slowest, the 75th experience is where you draw the line. This means that 75% of the users had a better or equal experience and 25% had a worse one. So, how many users are in that 25% for us? We measure unique devices and not users so lets use that.

Well, for Wikipedia, those 100 users are actually 1,5 billion unique devices per month and 24 billion page views.

That means if we look at the 75 percentile and we see that a metric move we know that at least 6 billion page views per month ( 24 billion × 0.25) is affected. And 375 million unique devices (1.5 billion × 0.25).

That is many devices. Suppose we have a regression of just 100 milliseconds in the 75th percentile. That is at least 375 million devices are experiencing this delay. Collectively, those users are waiting an extra 434 days. Yes, over a year of extra wait time for the users with the worst experience because of a (tiny) 100 ms change.

Is the English Wikipedia the fastest website in the USA according to Google Web Vitals?

With the metrics Google collects from different web sites, you can compare different sites with each other! The metrics are available per domain (not user country), so we can not compare if the English Wikipedia is one of the fastest web sites in the USA, but we can compare the English Wikipedia against other web entities with users all around the world.

However before we do that, I want to point out that "Is the English Wikipedia fastest website in USA according to Google Web Vitals?" is a very exclusionary question to ask since:

  • The English Wikipedia is used in more places than the USA
  • There are many Wikipedias for other languages out there and we should not only focus on the English Wikipedia. We need to make sure that everyone independent of language has the same user experience.

Looking just at "Are we fast in the USA" we leave out a big part of the world. So today we gonna look at the English Wikipedia compared to other web sites and then also look at Wikipedias all around the world to see what kind of user experience all users have.

But first let's talk about how Google also categorises these experiences as good, needs improvement, or poor by setting specific limits for each metric. With Googles definitions we can see how many of our users have different kinds of experiences. In the data I will show, green means good, needs improvement yellow and red means bad/poor experience.

We collect all data that is available through the Chrome User Experience API and you can see that in our Chrome User Experience dashboard. There's a lot of metrics, so I will focus on just the Largest Contentful Paint today.

First let's look at the actual 75 percentile Largest Contentful Paint. We compare against a couple of other web sites. Lower numbers are better. Green is good. We will start to look at the numbers for mobile.

Mobile

This graph highlights that Wikipedia's mobile LCP performance is nearly as fast as Google's, which is quite remarkable!

We can also look at how many of our users have a slow/bad experience.

Wow we can see that we have less users in percentage with a bad experience than the rest of the sites. However the graph shows a small percentage of mobile users experiencing suboptimal LCP. For a website of Wikipedia's scale, this small percentage translates into millions of users, we need to be even better!

I wonder if it's the same for desktop users? Lets look at the 75 percentile again.

Desktop

Again we can see that Wikipedia is almost the fastest, outperforming many major websites! We seem to be fast on both mobile and desktop.

Yes we are really fast! Can we open the champagne and celebrate?

Are we the fastest site known to human kind?

Well I would take it a little easy here before we start to brag. Do you remember how we calculated how many users are left out when we use the 75 percentile? I would be careful with a web site with so many users. I would say that: "The English Wikipedia is really fast compared to other web pages looking at the Largest Contentful Paint at the 75% percentile for Chrome users that Google collects metrics from".

Another way of looking at the data we get from Google is to see how many users have a bad experience using Wikipedia. By taking the ones that need improvement and poor experience, we can see how many users in percentage we need to move to having a good experience.

First let's look at Largest Contentful Paint again for desktop users. This time we look at the number of users in percentage that have a non good experience per wiki.

And then we look at the same for mobile.

We can see that on desktop and mobile we have Wikipedias where we as developers have work to do to give more users a good experience.

As a last example I want to share the interaction to next paint data for mobile. This is interesting because here JavaScript comes into play and there are many things we can do on our side to give the user a better experience.

We see that for almost every Wikipedia, 5% of the users have a not so good user experience.

Summary

Wikipedia's performance story is one of scale and precision. By focusing on Google Web Vitals, we've seen how milliseconds of delay can impact millions of users. Metrics like Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) and Interaction to Next Paint (INP) can provide valuable insights into real-world user experiences, guiding us to optimize for both mobile and desktop users.

With billions of page views monthly, even the smallest regressions in performance ripple across the globe. Yet, Wikipedia stands as a benchmark of speed in the US, rivaling even the likes of Google. This achievement underscores the importance of continuous monitoring, fine-tuning, and maintaining a user-first perspective in web development.

As we celebrate, we also need to acknowledge the challenges. Moving the needle for those users with "non-good" experiences remains our mission. By using data and ongoing analysis, we can ensure that Wikipedia stays fast, accessible, and enjoyable for everyone, everywhere.

Since July 2023, Women Association for Technology and Innovation (WAFTAI) is actively implementing Wiki N’zuñdeuh, a promotion and saving initiative of the cultural identities of the Cameroon people. In this initiative, WAFTAI is being accompanied by partners; which are Cameroon Ministry of art and culture (MINAC), Wiki Loves Museums, Kiwix, Cameroon Institutes of fine arts, and some museums. On the following lines, we share with you the highlights of Wiki N’zuñdeuh.

What is Wiki N’zundeuh?

Definition

Wiki N’zuñdeuh is a program which has as its objective the promotion of production, access and  exploitation of knowledge around culture through the projects of Wikimedia and Kiwix technology. Based on the gender approach, this project has the merit of seeing in majority women taking part. The registering analysis reveals 21 new editors of which 14 are women thus 66.7% of women representative.

Program key domains

Wiki N’zuñdeuh interfered in axes notably culture, education and tourism.

Culture is the central object of this program. The knowledge produced is related to the cultural domain. It includes notably knowledge on museums, festivals, traditional dances, stories and many more.

Education is the second axis, it comes to enlighten the production views and the exploitation of knowledge. The focused schools of the program notably the Institutes of fine arts of higher éducation (IBAI Garoua and IBA of Nkongsamba) have the merit to conciliate the other two axes. The participating students and teachers are at a time who produce through edi-a-thons, upload -a-thons, data-thons and who in a large dimension exploit them through Reading Wikipedia in the classroom.

Wiki N’zuñdeuh integrated tourism as the third axis. It is the result of the preceding axis facilitating the access and exploitation of knowledge produced. Products of technology are upcoming, this is the case of QR-code which would be created according to the tourists’ different languages.

Through the Kiwix technology, a mobile application is witnessed with a goal of rendering internet access everywhere, at every time, anywhere and even in localities with no internet access.

Methodology of the put in plan of the program for the first year 

Documenting on culture is the central point of this program, for this has defined a way that will facilitate us to attain this goal. It brings different activities from the diagnostic to the training session.

Diagnostic

To document culture, the ideal would be to know it, understand it and experience it. Discovering the Cameroon museum universe helps us to really understand the realities of museums and equally to verify the information. The diagnostic held from the 10th, August to the 20th, September 2024, was based on secondary data furnished by MINAC. With the help of the diagnostic, an evaluation with experts in the domain of museum brings out the existence of about 40 museums in Cameroon of which 15 exist on Wikipedia and 29 on Wikidata. Still on the aspects of museums, some specifities were brought out to know the categories of museums. They are public, private and communitarian and integrate in the register of ethnographic and/or contemporary museums. All these informations help us to produce a documentation which takes into account the context. The elements have been introduced in the documentation template of the different Wikimedian projects (Wikidata, Wikipedia, Commons Wikimedia and soon WikiVoyage)

Guided visit

If the diagnostic had as goal to facilitate the understanding of the culture environment  by the project team, the guided visit held on the 26th, October 2024, the day of the project launching had as fonction to bring the editors in the museum field and also in the Wikimedian World what we call “Socio-Wikimedian immersion“. The participant had a practical approach to the Commons Wikimedia project. After the different museal mediation and the views, a great part was given to training sessions and to uploads. Starting the program by guarded visits help editors develop a practical and heuristic interest for the program.

Training and contribution sessions

Digital is the base of our organisation, the technological approach is prioritized for this activity. We have opted for the training. The experienced trainers who accompanied the program intervene very often online and the training assistant facilitates in the rooms. This strategy in addition to permitting the editors to accomodate to the numerical principles assures the backup of trainers. Participants through this strategy acquire abilities in animation technics of online and physical training. The issue of internet network forced some experienced trainers to also move to training  rooms. The working sessions are cumulative, that is the training and contribution sessions. The editors are in totality the new contributors. Launched on 26th October by Commons Wikimedia. The training and contribution sessions are in multiples. They are based on projects like Wikipedia, Wikidata and soon WikiVoyage. With a goal of ensuring a good acquisition of skills, the follow up sessions are organised the thursday which follows the training weekend. These moments are occasions to find solutions to the different problems of editors and boost those that don’t still meetup.

Diversity and Inclusion

The approach on diversity and inclusion was taken into consideration as well as on the object of the program as by the editors.

The object of this year’s program is the museums. We have targeted all the museums of  Cameroon so different cultures since museums are cultural identities. A major point brought out during our training is that of the 15 museums existing on Wikipedia, no museum from the Far North of Cameroon figures. This has been taken into account in the project since articles on the museums of that part will be created.

For the editors, it is important to signify that this approach was one of the reasons for the choice of partner schools. It is in the issue of including the different social groups that we have solicited a partnership with a school in the Far North Cameroon (Institute of Fine arts and Innovation Garoua- IBAI). This implies that the spatiotemporal and cultural realities are Taken into account in the project. Beside the cultural diversity, the linguistic and religious ones are brought up. The editors are of French and English expressions; Christians, Muslims and traditionalists. 

Challenges and high tips of Wiki N’zundeuh 

We faced large difficulties which were treated as the project was going on. We share with you the majors:

Lack of computers

Of the 21 new publishers registered, only 6 have a permanent computer, even though owning a computer was one of the prerequisites for taking part in the programme. Unfortunately, as confirmed by a teacher in IBAN,

if we should only respect the order of selecting only students having computers, this program would be done with less than 5 students because the majority of the students don’t have computers”.

The same remark was done by the IBAI administration. This observation also implies that the students have limited knowledge in the numerical domain. Although the students’ phones are not always highly performant for technology and lesser for contributions (particularly for Wikipedia), trainers do their best to transmit the Wikimedian knowledge in this context. Knowing the difficulty, we have decided to give rewards to the three best contributions that are one computer each.

Difficulty of holding the Reading Wikipedia in the classroom 

The Reading Wikipedia in the classroom has a goal to help teachers understand the knowledge production process through the Wikipedia project, equally to train on the exploitation technics in the room of the knowledge produced by Wikimedian editors on Wikipedia. Being in the fine and arts domain, we wanted to prioritize the didactic methodology through Wikipedia. This was not possible due to the prejudices about the university world in general and great schools in particular of this free encyclopedia. To solve this problem, with our experts, we thought that instead of Reading Wikipedia in classroom train teachers on WikiVoyage through WikiLearn is more advantageous. These schools have for example needs in tourism, WikiVoyage help as a useful tool for this sector. It was thought a project Wikimedia for Education (WFE) which integrates read WikiVoyage and many more. This will permit in a specific way to the didactic method in these fine and arts schools and to further ensure a good quality of knowledge produced.

Fight against prejudice and misinformation

The program for this new year was hardly accepted in schools due to the prejudices they have on the encyclopedia. They talk about a lack of information. In addition to the production of knowledge, we have carried out awareness to the administration, to teachers and students on what is Wikimedia and particularly Wikipedia and other projects. On our social network and even during our working sessions, we have multiplied the fight against these stereotypes and misinformation. The editors are invited to produce documentation based on credible sources. We celebrate here the work of experienced trainers and the administrators in the Wikimedian projects (Wikipedia, Wikidata…) who strengthen this fight through the checking of contributions. The editors, who at the beginning of the project; used to discredit Wikipedia, support  that “Wikipedia is the most difficult project and requires more care and discipline during the contributions“. The prejudices fade gradually in the university sectors through IBAN and IBAI.

Community membership

The project as mentioned above was accompanied by the government of Cameroon through the Ministry of Art and Culture (MINAC). In addition to this accompaniment, communities involved in the program. We were touched by the consideration of the promoters and museum directors. During our launching activities, the promoters didn’t stop manifesting their joy of having such an initiative in Cameroon. Receiving calls from traditional leaders and museum promoters is a great source of motivation.

The move towards the documentation of cultural aspects in Cameroon through the Wikimedian projects is launched. We are thankful to all those who accompanied us in this initiative we think principally of the experienced trainers and Wikimedian administrators who work so that the contributions should be of good quality. Thanks also to all our partners, to the editors, to the Wiki N’zuñdeuh teams and to our followers.

Three sentence summary

Prepare for a very hard read. You will not understand anything the first time you read the book. If you're like me, you will not like the book and you will not want to read it the second time.

Book Club

This was the sixth book in our T247665: QTE book club and the first one that wasn't on software testing. We were reading it for three months, from November 2022 to January 2023. The club meets once a month for an hour long discussion. We had three very interesting discussions. Some members of the club like the book, some don't. This is by far the oldest book we've read. It was published in 1975.

Random thoughts

It's one of those books that you have to read once just to get an idea of what the book is about. Then you have to read it at least one more time. I've read it once and I've had enough of it for now. I'm not sure I know what the book is about. Maybe I'll read it again in the future. Maybe.

According to my notes, in 2022 I've read over 100 books. Only 5 got a 2-star rating. 4 were kid's books I didn't like. The fifth 2-star book was this one.

This book was recommended in Lessons Learned in Software Testing (5-star rating from me), so I was expecting much more.

According to Wikipedia, this is one of the two of the author's most famous books. The second one is The Psychology of Computer Programming. I've read his Perfect Software: And Other Illusions about Testing (twice) and really liked it (4-star rating).

Goodreads and Amazon reviews say I'm not alone in not liking the book. But, at both sites, the book has a great average rating (3.96 and 4.2).

I usually sort books in fiction and non-fiction. Or, practical and non-practical. This book looked like a practical book, but I didn't get anything practical out of it. Maybe it's not the book. Maybe I just didn't put enough effort in the book. Maybe I've approached it wrongly, expecting it to be a practical book.

Usually, when I read a practical book, I summarize each chapter. That's what I did for this book. Well, I've tried. I've struggled with chapter summaries for the first three chapters, then gave up for chapters four to seven.

Quotes

All that said, there are good quotes in the book.

Chapter 1. The Problem

The first step to knowledge is the confession of ignorance. We know far, far less about our world than most of us care to confess. (p. 10)

Any field with the word “science” in its name is guaranteed not to be a science. (p. 32)

Chapter 2. The Approach

If you never say anything wrong, you never say anything. (p. 47)

Chapter 3. System and Illusion

What is a system? As any poet knows, a system is a way of looking at the world. (p. 55)

Chapter 4. Interpreting Observations

The Lump Law: If we want to learn anything, we mustn’t try to learn everything. (p. 105)

Chapter 5. Breaking Down Observations

The Axiom of Experience: The future will be like the past, because, in the past, the future was like the past. (p. 141)

Chapter 6. Describing Behavior

Count-to-Three Principle: If you cannot think of three ways of abusing a tool, you do not understand how to use it. (p. 191)

Chapter 7. Some Systems Questions

These, then, are the three great questions that govern general systems thinking, the Systems Triumvirate:

  1. Why do I see what I see?
  2. Why do things stay the same?
  3. Why do things change? (p. 221)

New project will support students’ coursework across healthcare professions to improve content

When searching for information on health-related topics, people turn to Wikipedia more than any other source. While it may come as no surprise that the general public visits Wikipedia for answers to questions and to inform their decisions as healthcare patients or caregivers, healthcare experts including providers, researchers, and instructors also often utilize the online encyclopedia within the context of their professional work. 

Given the impact and reach of Wikipedia’s healthcare content, it’s imperative that the information is accurate, up-to-date, high-quality, and trustworthy. Thanks to a new project supported by the Eugene Washington PCORI Engagement Award Program, an initiative of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), Wiki Education will collaborate with higher education faculty across healthcare professions to support their students in the impactful work to improve Wikipedia’s coverage of healthcare topics. 

The two-year project aims to significantly enhance the quality of openly accessible information on critical topics including stroke prevention, postpartum care, and radiation therapy. 

Drawing on the rigorous evaluation of medical research available in PCORI-funded Systematic Reviews, the postsecondary students will improve Wikipedia articles by developing and adding new content, as well as adding missing citations to existing content as needed. The faculty and students will join Wiki Education’s Wikipedia Student Program and receive our staff guidance, curriculum, subject-specific resources, and digital tracking tools to support their coursework on Wikipedia. 

In addition to supporting the student editors’ contributions to Wikipedia, we’ll also explore their perspectives on their Wikipedia experiences to better understand how to improve future student engagement with this work.

To aid our engagement with key stakeholders, Wiki Education will form a Medical Community Advisory Committee composed of health professions faculty and students. The group will provide strategic guidance throughout the project, including ideas for outreach initiatives to reach medical educators, reflections on the results of surveys and focus groups, and suggestions for ensuring sustainability of the project.  

PCORI is an independent, nonprofit organization with a mission to fund patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) that equips patients, their caregivers and clinicians with the evidence-based information they need to make better informed health and health care decisions. The Wiki Education Engagement Award project is part of a portfolio of projects that PCORI has funded to help disseminate PCORI-funded research findings

This new project builds upon previous work through which we trained medical professionals and health professions students how to add the high-quality information from the systematic reviews to Wikipedia, working to ensure articles include research on patient-centered outcomes. Their collective contributions to improve more than 40 medical articles across Wikipedia have been viewed more than 11 million times.


We express our gratitude to PCORI for their support of this new project, and encourage any interested instructor to visit teach.wikiedu.org to learn more about incorporating a Wikipedia assignment into their courses. This project is funded through a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) Eugene Washington PCORI Engagement Award (EADI #38991).

An interview with Ramjit Tudu, a Santali Wikimedian

Friday, 14 February 2025 07:00 UTC
Members of the Santali community in the Santali Wikiconference in September 2024. Nayan j Nath, CC0 1.0.

This is Nikos Likomitros, a Greek Wikimedian. In my first Wikimania, I met many people, and decided among many other things to conduct some interviews with Wikimedians from minority languages. So I elected to interview Ramjit Tudu for this purpose, one of the most active Wikimedians in Santali language, thus having a good knowledge of the project and its qualities.

Having been aware of this interesting community, which gave birth to the very first Wikipedia in an Adivasi language in India, I asked him some questions to learn more about the project. This is by far the fourth interview of a Wikimedian that I am publishing on Diff, and I am planning to do more in this and the next years. For my interviews I give a strong emphasis on minority languages and other communities that have done interesting things, yet they aren’t very well known. Below is the transcript of the interview.

Ramjit explains, that the project began in 2012, and they decided to accelerate the creation of the project in 2017. The project went live in 2018. So I asked: How you connected and formed a team? Ramjit tells me, that he was very far from his team. So he engaged with them and helped them with editing and then, they established contact with the Odia community which provided them support. Then they did their first workshop, and introduced people in to the movement.

After the approval, Ramjit explained that they embarked on a strategy to promote the Santali language through relevant places such as social media, and people began to be interested in contributing on it. Some partnerships were able to be made and the community started to consolidate. The Santali Wikimedians have a user group, that the Wikimedia Foundation recognizes. They are doing various programs, and they receive support from CIS-A2K (editor’s note: it’s an organization that provides multifaceted support to Indic communities). The community, given that the language is spread among multiple countries and not within a united geographic area, and thus social media play a significant role in the cohesion of the community.

Afterward, I asked Ramjit about the public presence of the Santali community, and the outreach activities. They have conducted outreach to universities, and also they have been in touch with Santali language writers through various events to promote the Santali language. In general, the presence of the Santali language on the internet is not very good, because of a low amount of speakers, and the fact that it coexists with other bigger languages in its locales like Bangla or Hindi, however, Santali is taught as a lesson in university. The Wikipedia in Santali language is struggling, but they are also active in event organising and they have approximately 10 active members which conduct various activities. In the future, they are aspiring to collaborate with universities where Santali is taught, as there is a large potential to bring new users in the community.

The Santali community, as we can see, has managed to build a solid community, and the potential is high for sure. The interview was taken in August, however I published it now, as my university-related liabilities didn’t allow me to do it earlier.









Wikimedia Brasil Becomes the Newest Wikimedia Chapter

Thursday, 13 February 2025 14:42 UTC

In a quiet corner of the internet, over a decade ago, a group of six passionate Brazilian Wikimedians began building something remarkable. Despite being physically distant in cities such as São Luis, Salvador, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, they were driven by the belief that knowledge should be free, accessible, and collaborative. What started as informal gatherings of editors and small-scale projects has now grown into something much greater.

Earlier this year, Wiki Movimento Brasil – now to be known as Wikimedia Brasil – was officially recognized as a Wikimedia chapter, a milestone that cements its role in the global free and open knowledge movement. This occasion marks its evolution from a voluntary informal User Group to a formal, registered nonprofit organization, significantly enhancing its ability to champion free knowledge throughout Brazil.

What does it mean to be a chapter?

Wikimedia chapters are independent, nonprofit organizations dedicated to supporting Wikipedia and its Wikimedia sister projects as well as their mission in their respective regions. They work to promote free knowledge, organize local initiatives, and strengthen community participation in the movement, outreaching the greatness of contributing to such an important cause.

As a chapter, Wikimedia Brasil now has the resources and structure to amplify its impact and ensure the long-term growth of free knowledge in Portuguese. With its headquarters in São Paulo, Wikimedia Brasil joins 37 other recognized Wikimedia chapters worldwide, becoming the most recent addition to this global network. The last country to be recognized as a chapter was Colombia, back in 2019.

Winning photos from Wiki Loves Monuments Brazil.

Valério Melo, president of Wikimedia Brasil, sees this recognition as both an honor and a big responsibility.

“In addition to our volunteer work as wiki editors, we chose to become Wikimedia Brasil to represent our country’s Wikimedia community while respecting and collaborating with other user groups and projects,” he explains. 

More than just a title, this new status is a commitment to a sustainable and independent growth.

“We understand the responsibility that comes with this role,” he adds, “ And our goal is to support initiatives that strengthen equity, reliability, and the security of the open internet’s sociotechnical infrastructure.” 

Wikipedia has long played a vital role in Brazil, with millions of people relying on it every day for information. Portuguese Wikipedia now hosts over 1.1 million articles, being one of the most visited sites in their continental-sized country.  

Given the community’s presence in a country of vast continental dimensions, encompassing diverse contexts, cultures, and experiences best understood by those directly engaged with their local communities, governance is naturally decentralized. This territorial approach is integral to the group’s organizational culture, aiming to empower diverse voices and strengthen the sense of community while amplifying underrepresented knowledge. To achieve this, the community remains committed to engaging new editors in regions that have yet to participate, with a particular focus on promoting gender equity within Portuguese Wikipedia.

For years, this work was driven by an informal network of volunteers. In 2013, a small but determined group launched Wiki Movimento Brasil, an effort to connect editors and promote Wikimedia projects locally. By 2024, with 43 associate members and a growing contributor base, it became clear that the movement had outgrown its early structure. In response, the community adopted a highly participatory governance model with subcommittees, ensuring alignment with a collaboratively designed strategic plan based on a theory of change. Transitioning into a chapter was not about gaining a new title but about achieving greater stability, providing more support for volunteers, and building stronger partnerships.

Winning photos from Wiki Loves Cultura Popular 2024 Brazil

Wikimedia Brasil’s voluntary work over the years has shown they are well-prepared for this new role. The chapter emerges from the strength of its community. Whether through the thousands of edits made by these individuals—each bringing their own expertise and thematic interests—or through the excellent projects conceived and implemented by them and their groups, Wikimedia Brasil chapter is built by genuinely committed people.

Their commitment to diversity is evident in GLAM outreach efforts, educational programs, and community support across Brazil that engage both urban and rural areas. Strong partnerships with organizations like Coalizão Direitos na Rede and the Creative Commons Global Network highlight their leadership in open-knowledge advocacy and civil society engagement. With transparent governance, elected leadership, and a proven track record of initiatives like WikiCon Brasil and GLAM-Wiki projects, Wikimedia Brasil has the structure and dedication to make a lasting impact.

What’s next for Wikimedia Brasil?

Wikimedia Brasil is already organizing the second edition of “WikiCon Brasil 2025: Strengthening Digital Public Goods” with the goal of showcasing how their practices as Wikimedians differ from those established by major digital platforms and raising awareness about the fact that public-interest projects, like those within Wikimedia, enable the creation of a more horizontal, collaborative, responsible, and healthy online environment.

The new chapter values human interaction and grassroots collaboration, that’s why they chose to participate in the project of a global platform for exchanging knowledge, skills, and services with peers. The Capacity Exchange (CapX) was developed to enhance peer-to-peer learning and build capacity in the movement in accessible ways. It is meant to support the Wikimedia ecosystem by connecting movement organizers to strengthen affiliate and movement governance and help to coordinate affiliate activities to have lasting positive impact on Wikimedia projects. At the same time, Wikimedia Brasil recognizes the importance of connecting and strengthening the Portuguese Wikimedia community, the group expanded its leadership development initiative, which is now Calilu, and is supporting the organization of the Portuguese Wikimedia Party.

As Wikimedia Brasil moves forward, it builds on the dedication of its founding team and the community that has grown around it. Now, as a recognized chapter, expanding its reach, strengthening collaborations, and creating a real world impact. More than a reflection of their beginnings, this milestone highlights how far they have come and what is possible next.

Logo Fotamana

Emerging communities are at the heart of the Wiki movement, playing a key role in building and sharing free knowledge. However, their growth is often limited by a lack of learning and collaboration opportunities. What if you could join a program designed to equip you with the right skills, expand your network, and strengthen your community?

Fotamana, Wikimedia Côte d’Ivoire’s immersion program, offers leaders of emerging Wiki communities in Africa a opportunity to enhance their skills, engage with other movement actors, and promote open knowledge and information integrity. With expert guidance and tailored resources, participants will deepen their knowledge, discover best practices, and collaborate with peers to build a stronger and more inclusive movement.

Don’t miss this opportunity! Applications are now open. Join us and be part of this transformative journey.

Apply here: link to application form by February 21, 2025.

Celebrating Auckland Women on an Open Knowledge Platform

Thursday, 13 February 2025 07:00 UTC

In November 2024, I was granted one of the Sheldon Werner Summer Studentship positions at Tāmaki Paenga Hira Auckland War Memorial Museum, joining a cohort of five Wikipedia students. I was new to editing and created a Wikipedia account for the first time. Tasked with developing content on Wikipedia related to Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland’s histories over this ten-week programme, I first needed to decide what my focus within Auckland’s histories would be. Fortunately, within the first few days of my studentship, I was introduced to the Women in Red movement and knew that I wanted my outputs to contribute to the commitments of this project.

The first article I wrote was on the Charlotte Museum, the only museum in the world dedicated solely to lesbian culture and history. Located in the heart of Auckland, on the vibrant Karangahape road, I was surprised that a page had not already been written about this distinctive space. However, I quickly discovered why this was the case – there was a huge lack of secondary sources available on the Charlotte Museum. Considering the nature of this highly unique institution, I thought I would be producing a thorough, detailed article covering its history, influence and legacy, but this was not to be the case. In fact, after attempting to use as many sources as possible but coming up with very few – and finding most information through links on the Charlotte Museum’s website – my article was flagged a short time after publishing for relying excessively on references to primary sources.

I was slightly discouraged, but it was an important lesson to learn that the lack of literature on underrepresented communities has a direct impact on efforts to produce open-access knowledge. It made me think, how am I supposed to get underrepresented stories out onto Wikipedia if there are so few sources written on these places, people or communities?

I decided that going forward, I would continue to draw primarily on my art history background and mainly dedicate articles on women artists and public art. Some of these articles were not particularly extensive, nor were they anywhere near a complete summation of people’s lives or artworks histories, but I felt empowered nevertheless in amplifying the visibility of artists on Wikipedia. I was able to edit and expand on Mary Wirepa’s page, correcting unsubstantiated and unsourced claims and contributing new information from sources previously unused on her page. I also provided a more substantial overview of the life and work of Lois White, highlighting her contributions as an artist more significantly.

I then turned my focus toward contemporary women artists who are from or practice in Auckland, knowing the contentious history of how contemporary artists are often undervalued, and how this can be especially true for women. I got my first C-class article from my article on Tyla Vaeau, a master tattooist (or Tufuga Tātatau). The final article that I completed for this internship was on the statue A Māori Figure in a Kaitaka Cloak which was the first public art commission awarded to a woman – Molly Macalister. Contributing accessible knowledge on esteemed women in our society and artworks that have been salient in Auckland’s history was not only rewarding but inspiring, knowing that writing such knowledge can generate new or expanded ideas on such topics in the future.

Wikipedia taught me the value of starting something. It doesn’t have to be perfect, and it doesn’t have to be complete, but sharing the information you do have freely is critical in ensuring that people have access to a vast range of information on their own histories, their own land, and the people and places that came before them.

Photograph of Ōwairaka, Statue of a Cloaked Woman, 2024

Wikipedia Recognized as a Digital Public Good

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 21:20 UTC

Feb 12, 2025  ― Wikipedia has officially been recognized as a digital public good (DPG) by the Digital Public Goods Alliance (DPGA), a multistakeholder initiative that maintains a Registry of Digital Public Goods: open source-software, data, AI models, standards, and content created for the public interest.  The DPGA is endorsed by the United Nations (UN) Secretary-General in support of open source technologies that contribute to the advancement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This recognition of Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia hosted by the nonprofit organization the Wikimedia Foundation, highlights its unique role in advancing global access to a free and open source of trusted knowledge in the public interest. 

According to Liv Marte Nordhaug, CEO of the DPGA Secretariat: 

“Wikipedia’s recognition as a digital public good is a testament to the power and importance of open access to knowledge. Wikipedia stands as a prime example of how technologies can drive equitable and unrestricted access to information, accelerating the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals worldwide.” 

Wikipedia, the world’s largest online encyclopedia and only top-visited website operated by a non-profit organization, contains reliably sourced information that is shared, maintained, and verified by a global community of nearly 260,000 volunteers in over 300 languages. 

“The Wikimedia Foundation works with affiliate organizations and volunteer Wikipedians across the world to advocate for policies that protect and support Wikipedia and other digital public goods upon which the free knowledge ecosystem depends,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, Vice President of Global Advocacy at the Wikimedia Foundation. “We look forward to working with the Digital Public Goods Alliance, along with other organizations and communities that create and maintain digital public goods, to build a better internet that serves the public interest.”

In 2024 Wikimedia Foundation staff along with Wikipedia volunteers from around the world participated in the UN General Assembly’s Summit for the Future and the drafting of the Global Digital Compact—the UN’s blueprint for global governance of digital technology and artificial intelligence. 

In an open letter in early 2024, the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia affiliates called on UN Member States to:

  • Protect and empower communities to govern online public interest projects.
  • Promote and protect digital public goods by supporting a robust digital commons from which everyone, everywhere, can benefit.
  • Build and deploy Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to support and empower, not replace, people who create content and make decisions in the public interest.

The recognition of Wikipedia as a digital public good strengthens these advocacy efforts and affirms Wikipedia’s role in the broader global movement for an internet that protects and promotes community-led spaces. The Wikimedia Foundation will continue working with the UN and other international institutions, governments, and civil society partners to ensure that digital public goods like Wikipedia are protected, supported, and accessible to all.


For media inquiries, please contact press@wikimedia.org

Subscribe to our newsletter to stay informed on internet policy and Wikipedia’s future.

About the Wikimedia Foundation

The Wikimedia Foundation is the nonprofit organization that operates Wikipedia and other Wikimedia free knowledge projects. Our vision is a world in which every single human can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. We believe that everyone has the potential to contribute something to our shared knowledge and that everyone should be able to access that knowledge freely. We host Wikipedia and the Wikimedia projects; build software experiences for reading, contributing, and sharing Wikimedia content; support the volunteer communities and partners who make Wikimedia possible. The Wikimedia Foundation is a United States 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization with offices in San Francisco, California, USA.

Related content

Ahead of UN General Assembly, Wikipedia nonprofit calls on governments to ensure the future internet is shaped by communities for the public interest

21 September 2024, New York USA ― As UN Member States are gathering in New York for the 79th United Nations General Assembly, the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that hosts Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects, is calling on governments and the UN to ensure that stakeholders from all sectors can work together in deciding how….

Read more

Wikimedia Foundation and global communities call on UN Member States to protect Wikipedia and other public interest projects in the Global Digital Compact

New open letter calls for UN Member States to include three key commitments in the Global Digital Compact that can allow public interest projects and the people who create them to thrive.

Read more

The post Wikipedia Recognized as a Digital Public Good appeared first on Wikimedia Foundation.

Wikipedia Recognized as a Digital Public Good

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 20:36 UTC

This post was originally published on the Wikimedia Foundation website.

The UN-endorsed Digital Public Goods Alliance has added Wikipedia to its registry, affirming the important role its volunteer editors play in making the internet better for everyone.

Feb 12, 2025  ― Wikipedia has officially been recognized as a digital public good (DPG) by the Digital Public Goods Alliance (DPGA), a multistakeholder initiative that maintains a Registry of Digital Public Goods: open source-software, data, AI models, standards, and content created for the public interest. The DPGA is endorsed by the United Nations (UN) Secretary-General in support of open source technologies that contribute to the advancement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This recognition of Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia hosted by the nonprofit organization the Wikimedia Foundation, highlights its unique role in advancing global access to a free and open source of trusted knowledge in the public interest. 

According to Liv Marte Nordhaug, CEO of the DPGA Secretariat: 

“Wikipedia’s recognition as a digital public good is a testament to the power and importance of open access to knowledge. Wikipedia stands as a prime example of how technologies can drive equitable and unrestricted access to information, accelerating the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals worldwide.” 

Wikipedia, the world’s largest online encyclopedia and only top-visited website operated by a nonprofit organization, contains reliably sourced information that is shared, maintained, and verified by a global community of nearly 260,000 volunteers in over 300 languages. 

“The Wikimedia Foundation works with affiliate organizations and volunteer Wikipedians across the world to advocate policies that protect and support Wikipedia and other digital public goods upon which the free knowledge ecosystem depends,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, Vice President of Global Advocacy at the Wikimedia Foundation. “We look forward to working with the Digital Public Goods Alliance, along with other organizations and communities that create and maintain digital public goods, to build a better internet that serves the public interest.”

In 2024 Wikimedia Foundation staff along with Wikipedia volunteers from around the world participated in the UN General Assembly’s Summit for the Future and the drafting of the Global Digital Compact—the UN’s blueprint for global governance of digital technology and artificial intelligence. 

In an open letter in early 2024, the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia affiliates called on UN Member States to:

  • Protect and empower communities to govern online public interest projects.
  • Promote and protect digital public goods by supporting a robust digital commons from which everyone, everywhere, can benefit.
  • Build and deploy Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to support and empower, not replace, people who create content and make decisions in the public interest.

The recognition of Wikipedia as a digital public good strengthens these advocacy efforts and affirms Wikipedia’s role in the broader global movement for an internet that protects and promotes community-led spaces. The Wikimedia Foundation will continue working with the UN and other international institutions, governments, and civil society partners to ensure that digital public goods like Wikipedia are protected, supported, and accessible to all.

For media inquiries, please contact press@wikimedia.org

Subscribe to our newsletter to stay informed on internet policy and Wikipedia’s future. 📩

A collage of photographs of Wikimedia affiliates celebrating Public Domain Day 2025
Image collage of Wikimedia affiliates celebrating Public Domain Day 2025. Image by Wikimedia Foundation, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

On 1 January 2025, Wikimedians across the world marked Public Domain Day, holding in-person and online celebrations throughout the first month of the new year.  Public Domain Day celebrates the moment when copyright protections on numerous cultural works expire and they become common cultural heritage that can be freely and openly accessed, shared, and reimagined. For the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia volunteers, Public Domain Day celebrations offer a chance to discover and preserve works of cultural or historical significance and to imagine the endless possibilities that come from being able to access, adapt, modify, and share the sum of all human knowledge.

On the first day of 2025, many important works of art, literature, and music entered the public domain in the United States and many other countries. Some of the most famous works included:

In this blog post, we illustrate the value of the public domain in enriching human knowledge and culture as a part of the digital commons, as well as in powering online collaborative projects like Wikipedia. We also explain digital public goods (DPGs) and digital public infrastructures (DPIs), which frequently come up as a focus of the public policy advocacy that Wikimedia affiliates and the Foundation do in partnership with international institutions, governments, and allied organizations across the world. Finally, we describe how the public domain and digital commons are important to the Foundation’s positive vision of the future of the internet, and share examples of the work we have been doing to advance this vision.

What is the public domain, actually … and how is it connected to the digital commons?

The public domain are cultural works no longer protected by any copyright. For that reason, the general public collectively owns them: nobody needs to obtain permission to reference or use them in any way. Works of many kinds enter the public domain when their copyright expires or when they are ineligible for copyright protection to begin with, like many national government works.

Some works of the public domain are part of the digital commons. What do we mean by that? The commons are resources that belong to no one in particular and, because of that, belong to everyone and can be used by everyone. Historically, the concept of a commons was related to natural resources: commons were large public lands where people could take their animals to feed.

The concept and usage of commons have continued to evolve historically. With the spread of the internet, it also includes things that are created, preserved, or shared through digital technologies. This is what we understand as the digital commons. While public domain works make up some of the digital commons, open access advocates have created specific copyright licenses that allow anyone to contribute their work to the commons during their lifetime. Creative Commons licenses and public domain tools establish how digital commons can be accessed, modified, reused, and shared with others—for instance, by attributing the work to whoever created or modified it in order to recognize their effort.

For example, content on Wikimedia projects was updated in 2023 to the latest Creative Commons license. This provided a number of benefits to Wikimedia volunteers and the general public who want to access and share free knowledge. Museums, for instance, recognize that Wikimedia Commons has become “one of the most important hubs for image information” worldwide, and researchers have estimated that throughout the lifetime of this Wikimedia project it could contribute US$ 28.9 billion (!) to the global economy—noting that its “actual societal value” is most likely “considerably greater.”

What are digital public goods (DPGs) and digital public infrastructures (DPIs)? Are they different from the digital commons and the public domain?

Digital public goods (DPGs) and digital public infrastructures (DPIs) are terms that have become familiar in the context of international relations and development by the United Nations (UN). Recently, there has been much interest within the UN system and among UN Member States in understanding how digital tools created for the public interest can help achieve their stated Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and improve the lives of billions of people worldwide.

DPGs include open-source software, data, AI models, standards, and content. The Creative Commons license and public domain tools mentioned above are examples of digital commons being officially recognized as DPGs. Another recent example, which makes us especially proud, is that Wikipedia was also officially recognized as a DPG! The online encyclopedia has served to increase awareness and understanding of the SDGs in addition to its many other contributions to free and open knowledge worldwide. Several other Wikimedia projects and tools also serve the public interest in innovative ways. Wikidata, for instance, has proven to be a valuable resource for everything from data journalism storytelling to ensuring historical memory and social accountability. Local governments have joined Wikimania hackathons to learn how to use Wikibase in order to improve coordination and discussion around the development and implementation of solutions to reach the SDGs, even with scarce resources.

DPIs are understood through an evolving concept that covers networked open technology built for the public interest and helps to enable governance and innovation. The Global Positioning System (GPS) and the internet and mobile networks are examples of DPIs. Other examples include platforms for identification, public services, and instant payments that countries both in the Majority World and Global North have developed in past years.

A Venn diagram showing the relations between the public domain, digital commons, and digital public goods (DPGs) and digital public infrastructures (DPIs)
A Venn diagram showing the relations between the public domain, digital commons, and digital public goods (DPGs) and digital public infrastructures (DPIs). Image by Miguelángel Verde Garrido, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Advancing a positive vision of the future of the internet

The Foundation believes that in order to flourish, people need access to knowledge for education, health, economic opportunities, sustainable development, informed decisions, and accountable governance. As the nonprofit that hosts the Wikimedia projects, we are committed to advancing our mission of making the sum of human knowledge available to everyone, everywhere.

For these reasons, we champion everyone having easy access to a multilingual digital commons that is supported by a thriving public domain and freely and openly licensed content.

As a result, we advocate promoting and protecting DPGs and DPIs in collaboration with a number of international institutions, governments, and civil society partners, who are allies in sharing a positive vision of the internet and the global digital commons.

What follows are some examples of the efforts that the Foundation and Wikimedia affiliates carry out with the above-mentioned allied partners.

A. Global Digital Compact and Freedom Online Coalition (FOC)

Last year, 2024, United Nations Member States drafted and approved the Global Digital Compact: an agreement which lays down the principles for the future of the internet and its governance. The Foundation, together with a number of Wikimedia affiliates and volunteers, worked to ensure this process highlighted the importance of community-led internet spaces and DPGs like Wikipedia.

We published an open letter outlining our positions for the Compact, and carried out an advocacy campaign working closely with affiliates to ensure our shared points were reflected in the final text of the agreement. Thanks to this work, some aspects of the commitments we highlighted made it into the Compact, and we were able to secure partnerships and a seat at the table during the UN General Assembly and beyond to ensure DPGs are included in the implementation of the agreement.

The Foundation is also a member of the Freedom Online Coalition (FOC) Advisory Network. Last year we co-led a FOC task force on Information Integrity together with the governments of the Netherlands and Denmark. The task force developed and published a Blueprint on Information Integrity—which outlined a multistakeholder, positive vision of how to create a trustworthy information environment, articulated with the three core principles of agency, trust, and inclusion. In this vision, DPGs are considered an important aspect in helping to establish trust in reliable information online, in addition to furthering inclusive knowledge and empowering communities.

B. World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)

The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is the UN agency governing global copyright, patent, and trademark policies, and its 193 Member States are central to discussing copyright’s future. Wikimedia projects like Wikipedia depend on open copyright policies to facilitate free and open access and sharing of knowledge for millions globally. The Foundation advocates modern, flexible copyright frameworks that promote public access to free knowledge and culture, and believes a presence at WIPO would help shape a copyright landscape reflecting the internet’s global and diverse needs.

Since 2020, the Foundation has sought permanent observer status at WIPO, but has not yet succeeded; meanwhile, since 2021, Wikimedia volunteers have an ongoing multilingual collaboration with the UN agency to make its content freely and openly available through the projects.

C. Toward a Recommendation on Cultural Heritage (TAROCH) Coalition

At the end of 2024, the Foundation joined the Toward a Recommendation on Open Cultural Heritage (TAROCH) Coalition. This Creative Commons-led initiative aims to encourage Member States in the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to adopt an international standard by 2029 that advocates open solutions to improve access to cultural heritage in the public domain.

Wikimedia projects and communities are essential to sharing this public domain cultural heritage around the world. By joining the Coalition along with several Wikimedia affiliates, we reaffirm our commitment to support community efforts to celebrate and protect cultural heritage, and advocate the removal of barriers and the adoption of open access policies, both internationally and nationally.

D. Working to create and expand multilingual digital commons for a more equitable and inclusive internet

In October 2024, five new language versions of Wikipedia were launched: Pannonian Rusyn, Tai Nüa, Iban, Obolo, and Southern Ndebele Wikipedia. The launch was part of the Future of Language Incubation experiment, a cross-departmental effort throughout the Foundation that aims to understand how we can further support both existing and new languages on Wikipedia with access to tools and resources.

The Research team at the Foundation also built the Wikimedia Language Metrics Explorer, which gives an overview of language coverage across Wikimedia projects.

On the community front, there is the Wikimedia Language Diversity Hub, which works on new language versions of the projects—especially including Indigenous, minority, marginalized and/or under-resourced language communities. The hub hosted its first community call in November 2024, and the second community call is planned for 28 February, 2025; in addition, it is also offering consultation calls to interested language communities in order to provide them with the support they need.

The open nature of Wikimedia projects is what enables this important work, which serves as an example of the significant role that DPGs can have in advancing the promise of an equitable internet and world.

Conclusions

The Wikimedia Foundation will continue to look for opportunities to advance our positive vision of access to a multilingual digital commons for all by fighting for support and protection for the public domain, along with DPGs and DPIs.

But a thriving public domain and digital commons is, and should be, a project for all of us. If you would like to celebrate the public domain this year, there are several ways you can do so on the Wikimedia projects and beyond:

We will continue to provide updates throughout the year about our work promoting the public domain, digital commons and open cultural heritage, and DPGs and DPIs. To stay-up-to-date easily, make sure you sign up to our quarterly newsletter and keep an eye out for our monthly recap on Diff, “Don’t Blink”!

Many thanks to everyone in the Foundation who contributed to this blog post with their knowledge, experience, and insights: Amalia Toledo (Lead Public Policy Specialist for Latin America and the Caribbean), Costanza Sciubba Caniglia (Anti-Disinformation Strategy Lead), Rebecca MacKinnon (Vice President, Global Advocacy), Satdeep Gill (Senior Program Officer, Culture and Heritage), Shaun Spalding (Lead Counsel), Stan Adams (Lead Public Policy Specialist for North America), and Ziski Putz (Senior Movement Advocacy Manager).

When you first join Wikipedia, one of the hardest things to figure out is what you can do. For the past few years, we’ve been welcoming new users with our growth features. Every new user has access to their own Homepage, where they can find suggested edits to get started or find a mentor ready to help. Although the Homepage offers several options for starting to edit Wikipedia, we’re keen to offer as many options as possible to all newcomers.

Some newcomers are motivated by the collaborative aspect of Wikipedia. And that’s just as well: there are a large number of initiatives set up by experienced editors and associations, from face-to-face workshops to learn how to start editing in person, to other online actions designed to encourage participation in a common effort… These initiatives go by many names: editathons, sprints, thematic months… and any experienced user can easily find them. Newcomers? Only a happy few can achieve this journey.

A module to fill a gap

To bridge this gap, the Growth team introduced a new feature to facilitate the connection between these wiki editing initiatives and newcomers. We’ve called it the “Community Updates” module. It is located on the Homepage, and presents an event taking place on Wikipedia.

Drawing attention to content gaps on high-impact topics aligns with the 2030 Movement strategy’s “Topics for Impact” recommendation. Until now, events were much harder to find when you’re new to the wiki ecosystem, and signing-up was equally confusing (it improved thanks to Event Registration).

An easy-to-configure feature

If your community hosts events, campaigns, or initiatives that you’d like to showcase to newcomers, consider setting up a Community Update on the Newcomer Homepage! This is a great way to welcome and engage new editors while supporting impactful contributions to Wikipedia.

Creating an event is done using the Community Configuration. By visiting Special:CommunityConfiguration, in the Community Update tab, any Wikipedia administrator can define a logo, title, and call-to-action, as well as a URL where newcomers can find out more about the event. It is possible to target users based on their number of edits. You can even use it for community news or global events!

By offering these customizable options, communities can ensure that the most relevant opportunities reach the right newcomers at the right time. 

More to come! 

The Community Updates module was officially deployed on February 11, 2025. We previously tested the module on Arabic, Czech, French, and Spanish Wikipedias to see whether newcomers would appreciate the initiative. 

This trial deployment also enabled us to gather user suggestions, which we have listed for a second iteration. We hope to soon be able to connect to the features developed by the Campaign team (currently being rolled out), such as Event Registration or the Collaboration List.

Are you interested in showcasing an event to newcomers? Please follow the path!

Translations for wdlocator

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 12:33 UTC

Fremantle

· wdlocator · Wikimedia · OSM ·

I've upgraded toolforge:wdlocator to PHP 8.2 and Symfony 7, and in doing so I think have fixed a long-standing (but unknown to me!) bug with how it was selecting the user interface language. It's supposed to change based on the Accept-Language header, but there was a bug with that in our ToolforgeBundle. I think we fixed that bug ages ago, but I forgot to update wdlocator. So now I have, and it can be read in Indonesian at e.g. https://wdlocator.toolforge.org/?uselang=id#map=17/-8.72520/115.17650

(I mention Indonesian, and the map above is centred on Denpasar, because that's where I'm going tomorrow. For the Wikisource Conference.)

I know I should also add a UI for actually selecting a language, but that'll have to wait.

← PreviousNext →
Comments on this post
No comments yet

Wiki Loves Folklore 2025

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 12:00 UTC


Grab your camera, smartphone, or recording device, and start capturing photos, videos, or audio that tell the story of Australian folklore!
, Ali Smith.
Cedar Basket Weaving with Brenda Crabtree by EmilyCarrUniversity, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

We are excited to announce Wiki Loves Folklore 2025, an international photography contest on Wikimedia Commons. This is a competition is dedicated to capturing the beauty of folklore and intangible cultural heritage from around the world. Whether it’s vibrant folk festivals, traditional dances, soulful music, time-honoured culinary practices, unique attire, oral storytelling, or other cultural treasures, this is your chance to document and share the living heritage that unites us all!

Thira Festival of Andalurkkavu by Shagil Kannur, Shagil Kannur, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

What is Wiki Loves Folklore?[edit | edit source]

This photography contest celebrates the rich tapestry of folk culture from around the world, featuring categories that include (but are not limited to) folk festivals, dances, music, activities, games, cuisine, clothing, and a wide variety of traditional expressions. These may encompass ballads, folktales, fairy tales, legends, seasonal celebrations, calendar customs, folk arts, folk religion, and mythology. For further inspiration and a broader selection of examples, we invite you to explore the Category page.

How Can I Contribute?[edit | edit source]

It’s simple! Grab your camera, smartphone, or recording device, and start capturing photos, videos, or audio that tell the story of your local folklore.

Swallowtail jig, an Irish fiddle tune, played by Katy Adelson, Katy Adelson, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Once you’ve collected your media, head over to the Wiki Loves Folklore 2025 page and click on the Upload Now icon to submit your entry. Make sure to tag your image with tagging it with "Wiki Loves Folklore 2025".

For complete rules and guidelines, please visit the project page on Wikimedia Commons.

Timeline[edit | edit source]

  • Submission Period: February 1, 2025, 00:01 (UTC)March 31, 2025, 23:59 (UTC)
  • Results Declaration: Around July 15, 2025

This year there are prizes for the overall campaign, community prizes as well as regional prizes. We look forward to seeing your entries!

Fante Wikimedians Participate in Shesaid 2024

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 11:00 UTC

In a concerted effort to amplify women’s voices and increase gender representation in Wikimedia projects, the Fante Wikimedians Community proudly joined the global SheSaid Contest 2024. This initiative aligns with the community’s mission to improve inclusivity and promote knowledge equity by highlighting quotes from remarkable women worldwide, translated into the Fante language.

Since the SheSaid contest was a new undertaking for the Fante Wikimedians Community, several preparatory steps were taken to equip volunteers with the necessary skills and knowledge to contribute effectively to the Fante Wikiquote Incubator. Two online workshops were organized to provide training and guidance for participants: 

December 3, 2024: The community hosted the Fante Wikiquote Workshop, an interactive session aimed at training members on how to create, improve, and translate quotes from English into Fante on the Fante Wikiquote Incubator. This workshop also served to introduce new editors to the basics of Wikiquote editing.

December 19, 2024: A second online workshop focused on preparing volunteers for the upcoming SheSaid Contest. Participants were trained on contest guidelines and technical editing skills to ensure they could effectively contribute during the competition.

Following these training sessions, the community officially launched the Fante SheSaid 2024 Contest, which ran from December 20, 2024, to January 20, 2025. Participants engaged in a month-long effort to create, improve, and translate Wikiquote items related to women from around the world into the Fante language.

This represented a major achievement for the community, showcasing our dedication to expanding Fante language content on Wikimedia projects while actively participating in a global movement.

The contest ended with the acknowledgement of the following exceptional contributors for their dedication to creating, improving, and translating information about women globally into the Fante language.

Winners

  • Top Contributor: User: David kojo joe Mensah
  • Second Top Contributor: User: CanadianBride
  • Third Top Contributor: User: Amaesumambaa

Language and Internationalization/Newsletters/5

Wednesday, 12 February 2025 10:00 UTC

Welcome to the January 2025 edition of the Language and internationalization newsletter by the Wikimedia Foundation Wikimedia Language and Product Localization team! This newsletter provides you with quarterly updates on new feature developments, improvements in various language-related technical projects and support work, community meetings, and ideas to get involved in contributing to the projects.

Subscribe to the newsletter.

Key highlights

  Mobile contribute menu

Contribute menu enabled in 144 wikis

The Contribute menu, found under user contributions on Wikimedia wikis, offers editors various ways to engage, such as starting a translation, exploring suggested edits, uploading files, or creating new articles. This menu is being gradually introduced to wikis where translation tools and features are available, meaning editors can easily translate existing content or contribute in multiple languages. So far, the menu has been enabled on 144 wikis, with 221 more planned for future rollout.[1]

Five New Languages Added to Wikipedia

Southern Ndebele, Pannonian Rusyn, Iban, Obolo, and Tai Nüa have received a Wikipedia as part of the Future of Language Incubation initiative [2][3]. This initiative is a new experiment designed to test ideas for supporting the growth of new language editions of Wikipedia. It is part of a larger effort under the Wikimedia Foundation’s Annual Plan 2024–25 to help communities close knowledge gaps by making tools and systems more accessible, adaptable, and effective. The goal is to increase the creation and availability of reliable encyclopedic content. These five languages represent millions of speakers around the world.

Book a Community Consultation with the Language Diversity Hub

The Language Diversity Hub (LDH) recently organized its first community consultation, focusing on the translation of technical terms. This initiative is designed to assist communities as they overcome challenges within the Wikimedia landscape. The Dagbani community, recognized for its creativity and commitment, took part in the inaugural session. Translating MediaWiki is a key step for new language communities, and mentors provided useful guidance to make the process easier. Is your community interested in a consultation? Submit a request here, and the team will follow up.[4]

Dance competition during a festival in Duala.  Duala became the first language from Cameroon to be added to MediaWiki.

Language Support for New and Existing Languages

9 Languages were added to translatewiki.net, including Acholi [5], Fur [6], Mansi [7].

Translatewiki.net is a platform that enables communities to localize the software into their languages before the language becomes fully supported.   These translations are essential for making the platform user-friendly in their language and are a key step in the new wiki creation process. With these new languages added, users can now translate the user interface messages they see on Wikimedia sites like Wikipedia (e.g., menus, buttons, and system notifications).

4 Languages were added to Mediawiki , including Chakma [8] and Tigre [9]. Among these languages is also Duala, which has become the first language from Cameroon to be supported by MediaWiki, marking an important milestone for linguistic diversity on Wikimedia platforms.[10] This is the next step after Translatewiki.net and involves making these languages officially supported by the MediaWiki software. With this support, speakers of these languages can use Wikimedia websites like Wikipedia or Wiktionary in their own language and create or contribute content directly.

Furthermore, several Configuration fixes were implemented, such as fixing line height [11] renaming autonyms [12], adding or modifying namespace translations [13] and adding new keyboards [14]. Learn more here.

Community defined lists

  Translation suggestions flow for Community Defined Lists

In November 2024, the Language and Product Localization team launched an exciting new feature in the Content Translation tool: Community-defined lists. This innovative translation suggestion feature is designed to enhance the experience for translators working in Wikis where the mobile experience of Content Translation is available. Now, translators can easily discover articles related to their interests from Wikiproject campaigns within the All collection category of suggested articles.

Wikiproject Campaign organizers can take advantage of this feature by incorporating the  ‎<page-collection>...‎</page-collection> tag into their campaign article list on Meta-wiki. This simple addition will make those articles readily discoverable in the Content Translation tool, connecting more translators with topics they are passionate about.

For a comprehensive guide on how to effectively use this tool and the tagging process, please refer to the detailed step-by-step instructions provided. Getting involved in Wikiprojects campaigns has never been easier!

Community meetings and events

  • Wikimedians at Global Voices Summit 2024 in Nepal. A session on Getting started with Wikimedia language tech volunteering was delivered for 30+ students from Wikitech Club India. They were introduced to the basics of internationalization and localization, along with beginner-friendly tasks from actively maintained repositories, perfect for them to start their newcomer journey in the Wikimedia movement. One of the new developers, Ravitej_Neeli, had their first MediaWiki core patch merged–kudos!
  • In case you missed the language community meeting in August, you can catch up by watching the video recording and reading the notes. This meeting was co-organized by the Language and Product Localization team and the Language Diversity Hub and had over 35 attendees, covering topics such as developing Indonesian language keyboards, hearing firsthand from Moore Wikipedia community members about their language incubation journey and challenges and outcomes from the language support track at Wikindaba. Sign up here to attend the upcoming meeting in February.
  • Language and Product Localization team members shared their experience from organizing a hackathon at the Wikimedia Technology Summit 2024.
  • The 2024 Global Voices Summit in Nepal brought together voices from around the world to discuss preserving endangered languages and strengthening Wikimedia’s role in this effort. Discover the key discussions and outcomes from the event here.
Wikimedians at Global Voices Summit 2024 in Nepal

Get involved

Stay tuned for the next release! You can subscribe to this newsletter.

References

  1.  phab:T381371
  2. https://diff.wikimedia.org/2024/10/31/wikipedia-goes-live-for-five-languages-through-the-future-of-language-incubation-initiative/
  3. Future of Language Incubation
  4. https://diff.wikimedia.org/2024/11/26/creating-words-for-the-future-the-first-language-diversity-hub-consultation-call/
  5. phab:T376060
  6. phab:T378711
  7. phab:T375944
  8. phab:T365365
  9. phab:T375052
  10. https://aharoni.wordpress.com/2024/10/18/duala-becomes-the-first-language-from-cameroon-to-be-supported-by-mediawiki-the-software-that-runs-wikipedia/
  11. phab:T377294
  12. phab:T377294
  13. phab:T377510
  14. https://github.com/wikimedia/jquery.ime/commit/b170943cd13c4001a5e11e0865ff351622f52f94

Episode 176: Selena Deckelmann

Tuesday, 11 February 2025 22:56 UTC

🕑 1 hour 11 minutes

Selena Deckelmann has been the Chief Product and Technology Officer of the Wikimedia Foundation since 2022. Before that, she worked for around 10 years at the Mozilla Foundation, eventually reaching the position of Senior Vice President, Firefox.

Links for some of the topics discussed:

To celebrate the International Day of Women and Girls in Science (today!), we’re taking the opportunity to look back at some of the incredible impact made by our program participants as they seek to improve Wikipedia’s coverage of women in the sciences. 

Even if you haven’t yet taught with a Wikipedia assignment, enrolled in a Wiki Scholars & Scientists editing course, or engaged with other efforts to improve the world’s go-to online encyclopedia, Wikipedia’s persisting gender gap probably comes as no surprise to you – a gap that extends from its content across disciplines to its content contributors themselves. Over the years, Wiki Education’s programs and resources have empowered academics, students, and subject matter experts to move the needle on this imbalance, and today we’re reflecting on just a snapshot of their work to expand the coverage of women in science.

One of the most straightforward and impactful ways to enhance Wikipedia’s coverage of underrepresented notable figures is to create new biographies for those who lack their own articles or to improve existing biographies. And year after year, professors like Glenn Dolphin at the University of Calgary empower their students to do just this.

Last term, Dolphin incorporated his eighth Wikipedia assignment into his annual Introduction to Geology course, charging his students with the mission of creating new Wikipedia articles and improving existing content about famous women geologists and other underrepresented people in the field. In his most recent course alone, Dolphin’s students improved or created articles for 37 women scientists, including geologist, politician, and diplomat Judi Wakhungu and micropaleontologist Helen Jeanne Skewes Plummer. Over the years since he first taught with Wikipedia, Dolphin’s students have added more than 350K words and 3,330 references to Wikipedia, creating content that has been viewed 2.63 million times.

Judi Wakhungu
Geologist, politician, and diplomat Judi Wakhungu. Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung from Berlin, Deutschland, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Unlike Dolphin, biologist Emily Sylwestrak at the University of Oregon was new to incorporating the Wikipedia assignment into her pedagogy last term, but she too tasked her students with the mission to create new biographies of women in the sciences. Thanks to the efforts of Sylwestrak’s class, we can now learn about prominent female figures in fields such as marine biology (Natalya Gallo, Ana K. Spalding) and chemistry (Sibrina Collins, Cynthia Chapple).

And as Wiki Education’s curriculum emphasizes, improving representation is not just about creating articles or adding new sections to existing articles. By citing more sources authored by female scientists, taking a critical eye to the weight of existing sections, adding links to other related articles, and considering the role of images on Wikipedia, editors can also make significant impact on this topic area through smaller edits.

Mary Welleck Garretson
Geologist Mary Welleck Garretson. Christian Dauer, CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons.

While Wiki Education supports hundreds of faculty each term to assign their students Wikipedia coursework, faculty and other subject area experts across the world also enroll in our professional development courses to improve content through their own contributions. 

Thanks to support from the American Physical Society, we’ve offered 10 courses since 2019 to teach scientists how to add their expertise to Wikipedia, many of whom have focused their efforts on enhancing the coverage of women in sciences. 

Prior to the work of the course participants, prominent female scientists including Leticia del Rosario, the first Puerto Rican woman to earn a PhD in physics, and Silke Bühler-Paschen, a solid-state physicist, were absent from Wikipedia, and the content of others with existing articles was limited. Throughout the courses, participants transformed Wikipedia’s existing coverage of figures like chemist Ka Yee Christina Lee, materials scientist Julia R. Greer, and astronomical sciences professor Gillian Knapp, and so many others, expanding the world’s understanding of women’s contributions to the sciences.

Today, we celebrate the efforts of all who have worked to improve representation of women in science  – and all who will read their stories on Wikipedia and be inspired to follow their own professional dreams. 


Visit teach.wikiedu.org to learn more about the free resources, digital tools, and staff support that Wiki Education offers to postsecondary instructors in the United States and Canada.

Building a Safer Online Community

Tuesday, 11 February 2025 12:00 UTC


On Safer Internet Day, Wikimedia Australia reaffirms its commitment to building and participating in a safe, inclusive, and accessible online environment.
, Ali Smith.


Building a Safer Online Community[edit | edit source]

As we observe Safer Internet Day on 11 February, we reflect on the importance of online safety and the collective responsibility we share in creating a secure and positive digital environment. This year's theme emphasises the need for a safer and more inclusive internet for everyone, particularly for children and young people who are increasingly navigating online spaces. So it’s an opportunity to review and reflect on the policies introduced by the Wikimedia Foundation last year, and the related guidance and advice for children and adults, when using Wiki projects and online spaces.

Online Safety & the Universal Code of Conduct[edit | edit source]

Online safety encompasses various practices and principles designed to protect users from harm while using the internet. This includes safeguarding personal information, recognising and avoiding online threats, and fostering respectful interactions in digital communities.

The Universal Code of Conduct established by the Wikimedia Foundation serves as a guiding framework for Wikimedia Communities worldwide in maintaining a safe and respectful online environment. It emphasises the importance of:

  • Respectful Communication: Users are encouraged to engage in constructive dialogue, valuing diverse perspectives while avoiding harassment and discrimination.
  • Accountability: Individuals are responsible for their actions online, promoting a culture of transparency and integrity.
  • Inclusivity: The code advocates for creating spaces where everyone feels welcome and valued, regardless of their background or identity.

Other key measures[edit | edit source]

In addition to the Universal Code of Conduct, Wikipedia protects its editors through several key measures:

  1. User Anonymity: Users can edit anonymously, helping to protect their privacy.
  2. Content Moderation: Volunteer editors monitor changes to quickly identify and revert vandalism.
  3. Talk Pages: Each article has a talk page for discussions, promoting transparency and collaboration.
  4. Blocking and Banning: Disruptive users can be blocked or banned to maintain a safe environment.
  5. Guidelines and Policies: Established rules govern user behaviour, promoting respect and collaboration.  This includes the Wikimedia Foundation’s Combating Online Child Exploitation Policy (COCE policy).
  6. Reporting Mechanisms: Users can report harassment or vandalism for swift action. Or if there is material that may violate the COCE policy then notify legal-reports@wikimedia.org
  7. Educational Resources: Tutorials help new users edit responsibly and adhere to community standards. Information pages outline best safety practices.
  8. Privacy Policy: A clear policy outlines how user data is handled and protected.
  9. Secure Infrastructure: Wikipedia uses HTTPS to encrypt data, protecting against eavesdropping.

Wikimedia Australia's Safe Space Policy[edit | edit source]

Wikimedia Australia is dedicated to providing a welcoming experience for everyone and has implemented a Safe Space Policy that aligns with the Universal Code of Conduct. These guidelines for virtual and in-person Wikimedia community gatherings support and encourage positive and constructive experiences where all participants can engage without fear of harassment or discrimination. Key aspects of our policy include:

  • Zero Tolerance for Harassment: Any form of harassment, bullying, or intimidation is strictly prohibited, ensuring that all users can participate freely and safely.
  • Supportive Community: The policy encourages community members to support one another, fostering a culture of kindness and respect.
  • Reporting Mechanisms: Clear procedures are in place for reporting incidents of harassment or unsafe behaviour, ensuring that concerns are addressed promptly and effectively.

Social Media Ban for under-16s[edit | edit source]

Wikimedia Australia is actively responding to the Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Bill 2024 and its potential impact on Wikimedia users under the age of 16 years. We have been engaging with key stakeholders to ensure our advocacy is well-informed and aligned with the broader goals of the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF).  

As part of this effort, we will deliver a briefing at RightsCon in Taipei in late February 2025, updating WMF staff and the Wikimedia community on our work to inform the Australian Government and the eSafety Commissioner about the bill’s implications. These include concerns about access to Wikimedia platforms for young contributors, the role of Wikimedia projects in digital literacy and education for students, and the broader effects of age restrictions on open knowledge sharing.

On Safer Internet Day, Wikimedia Australia reaffirms its commitment to building and participating in a safe, inclusive, and accessible online environment. Upholding the Universal Code of Conduct, advocating for informed policies, and supporting community safety measures are key to ensuring Wikimedia projects remain open and welcoming for all. Online safety is a shared responsibility, and we encourage everyone to take this opportunity to review safety guidelines, engage respectfully, and help create a more positive and secure digital space for sharing knowledge.

Links:[edit | edit source]

Image credits:[edit | edit source]


This plan builds on our achievements to date and sets ambitious goals to grow and strengthen our community, partnerships and impact across Australia and within the wider Wikimedia movement.
, Elliott Bledsoe.

Introducing Wikimedia Australia’s Draft 10 Year Strategic Plan – Share Your Feedback![edit | edit source]

On behalf of the Board and staff of Wikimedia Australia I am pleased to share the Draft of our Strategic Plan 2025–2035, outlining the vision and priorities we will take forward for the next decade. Thank you to everyone who contributed ideas and suggestions at WikiCon Adelaide 2024. We now invite further community input to refine and finalise the Strategic Plan.

This plan builds on our achievements to date and sets ambitious goals to grow and strengthen our community, partnerships and impact across Australia and within the wider Wikimedia movement.

Why a 10 year plan?[edit | edit source]

In the rapidly changing digital landscape, long-term planning is essential to ensure Wikimedia Australia continues to support free knowledge, inclusivity, community and collaboration. Our draft strategy is built around four key strategic pillars, and aligns with the Wikimedia Movement Strategy 2030’s focus on knowledge as a service and knowledge equity. This ensures our efforts contribute to a more equitable and sustainable knowledge ecosystem.

The four strategic pillars[edit | edit source]

  • Strategic pillar 1: Grow free knowledge – Diverse Australian contributors – including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples – will be empowered to expand free knowledge on Wikipedia and the other Wikimedia platforms.
  • Strategic pillar 2: Strive for knowledge equity – In our pursuit of free knowledge, we remain committed to knowledge equity. This means improving representation and diversity within our membership and the Wikimedia platforms to ensure inclusivity and to better reflect Australia’s rich cultures and histories, and those across our region.
  • Strategic pillar 3: Build a stronger organisation – We will strengthen Wikimedia Australia’s capacity, resilience and leadership through governance, financial sustainability, organisational development and continual improvement.
  • Strategic pillar 4: Celebrate our community – Through a shared purpose and shared ownership of and responsibility for free knowledge, we will celebrate our community and the unique contributions Australia makes to Wikipedia and Wikimedia platforms.

We want your input![edit | edit source]

As members or participants in the Wikimedia Australia community, your insights and feedback are invaluable in shaping our strategic direction. We invite you to review the draft Strategic Plan 2025–2035 and share your thoughts, ideas and suggestions overall.

Additionally, we seek your input on which activities you suggest should be included in our next three year Activity Plan that will start us on our journey to 2035.

We are looking for your input on our long-term aspirations and the activities we will undertake in the short-term.

📅 Deadline for feedback: Monday 24 February 2025[edit | edit source]

To read the draft plan and contribute your feedback, please visit DRAFT 10 year WMAU Strategic plan: Community consultation.

You can share your thoughts by:

If you want to make any changes to the draft 10 year Strategic Plan, you are welcome to. Please use the 'Suggesting' mode for suggested changes to the text or 'Comments' to discuss anything in the document. If you are unsure how to use these features, please see these Google help pages for instructions:

Here is a reminder of our current 3 year WMAU Strategic Plan and Activity Plan 2022-2025 that concludes on Monday 30 June 2025.

This is a unique opportunity to help shape the future of Wikimedia Australia. Your participation ensures that our strategy and activities reflect the needs and aspirations of our community.

Thank you for being part of this important stage – we look forward to your ideas and insights!

Links[edit | edit source]

Events[edit | edit source]

  • DRAFT 10 year WMAU Strategic plan Community consultation — Monday 17 February 2025
    As members or participants in the Wikimedia Australia community, your insights and feedback are invaluable in shaping our strategic direction. We invite you to review the draft Strategic Plan 2025–2035 and share your thoughts, ideas and suggestions overall at this special Community Meeting.


Image attribution: Boranup gnangarra 11.JPG, by Gnangarra, Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia.

This Month in GLAM: January 2025

Sunday, 9 February 2025 23:24 UTC

weeklyOSM 759

Sunday, 9 February 2025 11:18 UTC

30/01/2025-05/02/2025

lead picture

[1] An interactive air quality map for Kigali, Rwanda. © Open Seneca | © Mapbox | Map data © OpenStreetMap Contributors.

Mapping

  • Requests for comments have been made on this proposal:
    • traffic_sign:id=* to explicitly reference official traffic sign identifiers, improving data accuracy and interoperability with external databases.

Mapping campaigns

  • AE35 has announced that OpenStreetMap Denmark’s Mapping Project of the Month for February 2025 will focus on bench mapping. To support participants, 15 grants of 100 DKK are available for refreshments on a first-come, first-served basis. To claim a grant, mappers can email soren DOT johannessen AT gmail DOT com with their MobilePay number and OpenStreetMap username.
  • After five years of work, OSM mapper Ottwiz has completed mapping West Virginia’s forest landcover and is now shifting focus to Pennsylvania.

Community

  • YouthMappers UFRJ Chapter (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) highlighted their main achievements since its creation and extended an invitation to participate with its vibrant mapper community.
  • Anne-Karoline Distel recapped her mapping contributions made while touring the Netherlands with a band (we reported earlier). Using a GoPro Max, she captured 360° imagery along motorways and concert venues, significantly improving the coverage on Panoramax. She also mapped thatched buildings, defibrillators, and backstage amenities in theatres, adding missing shops, streetlights, and other details. Despite the limited daylight, Anne-Karoline ranked number 56 in Dutch OSM contributions.
  • Anne-Karoline also announced that the OpenStreetMap Ireland community has successfully completed the Dundalk mapping project.

Local chapter news

  • Matthew Whilden has released his candidate statement for the upcoming OSM US Board 2025 election.

Events

  • You can participate in the selection of a SotM LatAm2025 logo by participating in the OSM Community forum survey before Wednesday 12 February.

Education

  • Emilie Lerigoleur, from the Géographie de l’Environnement research group at the Université de Toulouse II (France), highlighted the potential of uMap in the training of geographers and the visualisation of scientific data. You can access some learning resources and start to map with uMap.

OSM research

  • Zhang and other authors published a paper in the International Journal of Digital Earth, tracking individual OSM mappers’ trajectories of editing behaviour. The paper concluded that OSM has been self-sustaining so far and does not yet show any signs of decline, along with the finding that most contributors transition to a higher career stage within a month, a conclusion that may cause more than one raised eyebrow.
  • Scholz and other authors have written a paper on investigating the potential of using OpenStreetMap data to understand exposure and vulnerabilities to climate-related hazards of Sudan’s most vulnerable populations, such as internally displaced persons or refugees displaced by violent conflict.

Maps

  • Cayenne has tooted a map illustrating the percentage of fibre to the home eligibility coverage by department in metropolitan France for the third quarter of 2024. The map was created using QGIS, combining data from ARCEP, France’s telecommunications and postal regulator, with a basemap from OpenStreetMap.
  • The eu citizen science has an interactive map, developed using OSM, Mapbox and Leaflet, showing research groups and related citizen science initiatives around the world.
  • You can see an interesting uMap, created by Alan Grunitzki, showing Xanxerê City’s (Santa Catarina, Brazil) emergency escape routes.
  • The United Nations office in Brazil has created a map showing its initiatives related to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals and Agenda 2030, using OpenStreetMap data, Mapbox and Leaflet, a powerful JavaScript Library for web map interactivity.

OSM in action

  • [1] Open Seneca has launched an interactive air quality map for Kigali, Rwanda, providing a visual representation of air pollution levels across the city, with OpenStreetMap data as its basemap. The data was gathered in 2021 through a network of 16 sensors mounted on electric delivery motorbikes, capturing pollution levels during their daily travels.

Software

  • The Agence Nationale de la cohésion des territoires has published a newsletter describing the advances in using uMap (OSM-fr tool) in the development of a map tool for the French administration. You can also access a website to explore the maps generated by the community.
  • HeiGIT has recently expanded the ohsome Quality API and its dashboard, adding a new indicator to assess attribute completeness in OpenStreetMap and introducing major upgrades to the functionalities of this Indicator:
    • Multi-Attribute Queries: Assess the completeness of multiple attributes simultaneously, such as comprehensive address information.
    • Custom Attribute Filters: Define complex key-value combinations using and/or logic for more advanced data analysis.

    The code is available on GitHub.

Programming

  • Savaş Altürk published on using Panel, DuckDB, and MapLibre for data analytics.
  • The OpenStreetMap Google Summer of Code (GSoC) 2025 committee is seeking project ideas and mentors for this year’s event. GSoC provides stipends for students and new open-source contributors to develop OSM-related software. Interested mentors and project contributors can submit their ideas on the OSM Wiki.
  • Along with the usual charts, the Plotly library lets you create interactive maps with OSM. The open source graphing library is available for both Python and Javascript and has moved from Mapbox to Maplibre as the rendering engine, while still providing various OSM styles. There is also a tutorial that shows how to render OpenStreetMap tile layers using the Maplibre library.

Releases

  • Version 1.5.1 of Baba for Android has been released. It is used to contribute to the Panoramax project and new features include the resumption of recordings interrupted by calls and setting the image orientation.
  • Yohan Boniface listed the improvements made to the user experience in the pre-release version of uMap (2.9.0b0).
  • TrickyFoxy outlined the new features of their better-osm-org browser userscript, for adding additional functionality to the OpenStreetMap website. This update implements the display of photos associated with StreetComplete notes, and the panoramax=* and wikimedia_commons=* tags. Also added are the display of users’ GPS tracks on the map and when opening notes from StreetComplete. The changesets history page now displays the first comment to a changeset. You can read about the other functions of the script in their other diary entries.

Did you know that …

  • … OSM has a feature to allow you to follow other mappers’ edits? The edits of the mappers you are following will appear as a list in your OSM user dashboard.
  • … there is a Wiki OSM page that lists some websites and services that use OpenStreetMap, clustered by countries, companies and thematic categories? And that you can help to improve it?

OSM in the media

  • The Sydney Morning Herald has highlighted Jake Coppinger’s Better Intersections project (we reported earlier) in a recent article on pedestrian-friendly traffic reforms. Anthony Segaert’s article notes that the push for improved walking spaces gained momentum in 2023 when Coppinger began crowdsourcing a survey to identify the local intersections with the longest pedestrian wait times.
  • Les Petites Affiches has published an article about OSM, highlighting its advantages and collaborative nature.

Other “geo” things

  • Pablo Sanxiao has written [gl] Fina e os mapas, a children’s book about cartography and collaborative maps, with OpenStreetMap being mentioned as an example. The book, currently available in Galician and Spanish, can be translated into other languages from its GitHub repository.
  • PetaPixel reported on safety concerns surrounding GeoSpy, an AI tool capable of pinpointing a photo’s location by analysing its visual elements.

Upcoming Events

Where What Online When Country
Wien 73. Wiener OSM-Stammtisch 2025-02-06 flag
Montrouge Réunion des contributeurs de Montrouge et du Sud de Paris 2025-02-06 flag
Guadalajara A Synesthete’s Atlas: Cartographic Improvisations between Eric Theise and Fernando Feria 2025-02-07 flag
OSMF Engineering Working Group meeting 2025-02-07
København OSMmapperCPH 2025-02-09 flag
Grenoble Atelier de février du groupe local de Grenoble 2025-02-10 flag
中正區 OpenStreetMap x Wikidata Taipei #73 2025-02-10 flag
Hamburg Hamburger Mappertreffen 2025-02-11 flag
Meeting preparing the creation of the Catalan Association of the OSM 2025-02-11
München Münchner OSM-Treffen 2025-02-12 flag
Mappy Hour: State of the Map US Info Session 2025-02-13
Richmond MapRVA Meetup 2025-02-14 flag
Bochum Bochumer OSM-Treffen 2025-02-13 flag
Moers I Love Free Software Day Community-Hackday vom 14. – 16. Februar 2025 im JuNo, Moers Repelen 2025-02-14 – 2025-02-16 flag
Karlsruhe Karlsruhe Hack Weekend 2025-02-15 – 2025-02-16 flag
東区 State of the Map Japan 2024 2025-02-14 flag
Panoramax monthly international meeting 2025-02-17
Missing Maps London: (Online) Mid-Month Mapathon [eng] 2025-02-18
Lyon Réunion du groupe local de Lyon 2025-02-18 flag
Arlon Réunion Province de Luxembourg 2025-02-18 flag
San Jose South Bay Map Night 2025-02-19 flag
Bonn 185. OSM-Stammtisch Bonn 2025-02-18 flag
Lüneburg Lüneburger Mappertreffen 2025-02-18 flag
[Online] Map-py Wednesday 2025-02-19
Hannover OSM-Stammtisch Hannover 2025-02-19 flag
Karlsruhe Stammtisch Karlsruhe 2025-02-19 flag

Note:
If you like to see your event here, please put it into the OSM calendar. Only data which is there, will appear in weeklyOSM.

This weeklyOSM was produced by MarcoR, PierZen, Raquel Dezidério Souto, Strubbl, TheSwavu, barefootstache, mcliquid.
We welcome link suggestions for the next issue via this form and look forward to your contributions.

February 7, 2025

MediaWiki Users and Developers Conference Spring 2025

The third MediaWiki Users and Developers Conference Spring 2025 will occur on May 14 - 16, 2025 in Sandusky, Ohio, USA. Semantic MediaWiki-related talks are welcome.


Over 1,000 images have now been added to Wikimedia Commons
, Alice Woods.


Since our last update in May 2024 about the upload of Central Australian Historical Images to Wikimedia Commons, in partnership with Alice Springs Public Library, much has happened!

There are now a total of 15 collections of images available on Wikimedia Commons, a total of over 1,000 images, which link through to numerous Wikipedia pages and Wikidata entries.

Many of these images were the first available images of their subject matter and they are helping build the world’s knowledge base about this important region.

In celebrating this milestone Wikimedia Australia would like to share some highlights from the collection:

Image of Moses Tjalkabota[edit | edit source]

Moses Tjalkabota who is also known as 'Blind Moses', photograph by Mr Tasker, CC BY-SA 4.0. Uploaded by Alice Springs Public Library

One of the standout images of the Jessie May Gunn Collection was that of Moses Tjalkabota (c.1869 - 6 July 1954), who was also known as ‘Blind Moses’. Moses was a Western Arrernte man was born east of Hermannsburg (Ntaria). Moses became an evangelist and it is said that he was a master storyteller who attracted large crowds when he preached

The image was captured  by Mr Tasker in 1946, the tour photographer, travelling with Bond’s Tours as they travelled between Alice Springs (Mparntwe) and Darwin (Garramilla), in the first tour hosted by them after World War II. This image was collected by Jessie May Gunn, who also took many photos on this tour.

The man in this image was not identified by either Jessie or Mr Tasker and the identity of this man was only made following the cultural sensitivity assessment of the image collection in 2019 by a Braydon Kanjira, a Traditional Owner and Arrernte Senior Ceremonial Leader from the Ntaria community.

It is so wonderful to have this image available on Wikimedia Commons and Wikipedia!

The Pat Govers Collection[edit | edit source]

Another highlight of the recently added collections is the Pat Govers Collection. Pat Govers was an ABC reporter and businesswoman and her collection contains both black & white and colour photographs from various sources that span from the 1900s to the 1970s.

Some collection highlights include:[edit | edit source]

  • People playing cricket on top of the Hotel Alice Springs
  • The ‘flower bombing’ of John Flynn’s grave’ which you can read about on the John Flynn’s Grave Historical Reserve (Alice Springs);
  • Photos of the ordination ceremony for Conrad Rabaraba and Cyril Motna in 1964 at Ntaria;

Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Traffic report

Friday, 7 February 2025 00:00 UTC
File:David Lynch at the 1990 Emmy Awards.jpg
Alan Light
CC 2.0
40
300
Traffic report

A wild drive

This traffic report is adapted from the Top 25 Report, prepared with commentary by Igordebraga, Vestrian24Bio, GN22, Wizzito and CAWylie (January 12 to 18); by Igordebraga, Shuipzv3, Vestrian24Bio, and GN22 (January 19 to 25); and by Igordebraga, Clubette, GN22, Royiswariii, Rebestalic, Vestrian24Bio, and Wizzito (January 26 to February 1).

She wore blue velvet, bluer than velvet was the night (January 12 to 18)

Rank Article Class Views Image Notes/about
1 David Lynch 2,785,081 A widely acclaimed filmmaker known for works full of mystery and surreal imagery such as the movies Eraserhead, Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive, and the TV show Twin Peaks, David Lynch died at 78 as his already decayed health caused by emphysema (consequence of decades smoking) took a dive once he was forced to leave his Los Angeles home due to wildfires. Along with the directing gigs that even landed him an Academy Honorary Award, Lynch also worked on music, photography and literature, and also acted on occasion, such as a memorable appearance as John Ford on The Fabelmans.
2 MrBeast 1,868,297 His reality competition show Beast Games, which is currently releasing weekly episodes on Amazon Prime Video, has become their most-streamed unscripted show in history. Despite its success, the show has received negative reviews from critics and some contestants alleged that they were mistreated during its production, with five of the contestants filing a class action lawsuit against MrBeast and his company.
3 Game Changer (film) 1,160,501 Like past mainstay of this list Pushpa 2: The Rule, this is also from Tollywood, but a box-office bomb. This is the directorial debut of S. Shankar (pictured) in the Telugu industry but it ultimately became his fourth consecutive overall film to fail at box office. Yet, what really worries me is another film (from Kollywood) directed by him is releasing next week and its a sequel to the biggest disappointment of 2024.
4 Kumbh Mela 1,079,008 An important Hindu pilgrimage that happens every 6 to 12 years, with the 2025 Prayag Kumbh Mela scheduled to take place from 13 January to 26 February at the Triveni Sangam in Prayagraj.
5 Pete Hegseth 1,073,626 #8's pick for the United States Secretary of Defense had his confirmation hearings this week.
6 Deaths in 2025 1,052,510 From one of #1's movies:
Turn off the sun; pull the stars from the sky
The more I give to you, the more I die!
7 Pam Bondi 999,773 #8's pick for the United States Attorney General had her confirmation hearings this week.
8 Donald Trump 776,542 It’s been a long four years since Trump was last in the Oval Office, but, starting Monday, he will be sitting behind the Resolute desk once again. On his successful campaign to reclaim the Presidency, the 45th and 47th President sustained four indictments and 34 felony convictions, narrowly survived an assassination attempt at a rally by less than an inch, and kept going despite a swap at the top of the Democratic ticket. He won all seven battleground states and (narrowly) even the popular vote, robbing Grover Cleveland of his sole claim to fame in American history (before this point he was the only President elected to nonconsecutive terms). Whether you love him, loathe him, or simply don’t care about him, it’s indisputable that Trump definitely knows something about the art of the comeback!
9 Severance (TV series) 749,163 This American science fiction psychological thriller series, filmed mostly at Bell Labs (pictured), debuted on Apple TV+ in 2022. Its first season received 14 Emmy nominations but only won creative ones (title design and music). It was renewed for future seasons soon after the release of the first, the second of which premiered January 16.
10 Squid Game season 2 699,841 Set three years after Seong Gi-hun won the Squid Game, he returns to the game in season 2 to stop them once and for all. Joining the cast are Park Sung-hoon as a transgender woman seeking a gender reassignment surgery, Im Si-wan as a former YouTube star who lost his fortune, Lee Jin-wook as a man trying to win the money for his cancer-battling daughter, Kang Ae-shim and Yang Dong-geun as mother and son who enter the game individually in a desperate bid to clear his debts just to find each other there, Choi Seung-hyun as a purple-haired rapper, known by his stage name "Thanos", and Jo Yu-ri as a heavily pregnant woman hoping to win enough money to support her baby as a single mother. The season garnered positive reviews and big viewership numbers, set record for highest premiere viewership for Netflix surpassing Wednesday season 1, and it is expected to be followed by the third and final season this year.

He's at it again and he's gonna win (January 19 to 25)

Rank Article Class Views Image Notes/about
1 Donald Trump 3,884,456 On January 20, he was sworn in (#8) as the 47th President of the United States, taking over from Joe Biden. He immediately issued a series of executive orders to fulfil his agenda. They include withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization and the Paris Agreement, re-declaring a national emergency at the Mexico–United States border, directed the federal government to only recognize two genders, estabishing the Department of Government Efficiency to be headed by #6, rescinding artificial intelligence policy goals, reversed sanctions on Israeli settlers, pardoned around 1,200 January 6 defendants, commuted sentences for members of Oath Keepers and Proud Boys, ordered the federal renaming of #9 to the "Gulf of America" and Denali back to Mount McKinley, and delayed a ban on TikTok by 75 days. An order to end birthright citizenship was quickly blocked by a federal judge. Several inspectors general were also informed of their immediate termination, which may be "inconsistent with the law" and subject to court challenge.
2 MrBeast 3,666,653 From most-subscribed YouTube channel to most viewed show on Amazon Prime Video and now he's biding to buy TikTok.
3 JD Vance 2,319,253 The new Vice President, who prior to inauguration met his Chinese equivalent Han Zheng, and after getting in the role swore in Secretary of State Marco Rubio and cast the tie-breaking vote to confirm Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense.
4 Melania Trump 2,173,494 The Slovenian First Lady and the Hindu American Second Lady of the United States.
5 Usha Vance 2,139,252
6 Elon Musk 2,041,055 Elon Musk, Elon Musk. Why you choose that to greet me?

In a rally shortly after the inauguration (#8) of #1, the centibillionaire who will head DOGE saluted the crowd in a way that instantly caused a ruckus. His defenders and a few other organizations tried to claim it was not as it seemed, but as The Hollywood Reporter put it, "Sometimes a Nazi Salute is a Nazi Salute.” Then, on January 25, Musk made a surprise appearance via video link at a Alternative for Germany campaign rally, expressing his support for the far-right party.

7 Ross Ulbricht 1,840,003 Ulbricht created and operated Silk Road, a marketplace on the dark web in which illegal products and services could be traded. In October 2013, the website was shut down by the FBI and he was arrested. Ulbricht was serving a life imprisonment sentence when #1 granted him a full pardon.
8 Second inauguration of Donald Trump 1,073,356 Due to freezing temperatures in DC, this was held inside the United States Capitol rotunda, the first indoors inauguration since the one for Reagan's reelection in 1985. Among the ones in attendance were all the living U.S. presidents, and lots of rich people - a much divulged picture had tech moguls #6, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and Google’s Sundar Pichai.
9 Gulf of Mexico 1,066,060 #1 signed an executive order to rename this to the "Gulf of America" for federal use. Even still, most of the world, including the majority of everyday Americans, will continue to call it the Gulf of Mexico.
10 Mariann Budde 1,061,367 As the Bishop of Washington, she gave a prayer service the day after #8, urging #1 to show mercy and compassion to vulnerable people, specifically citing the LGBTQ community, immigrants, and war refugees. #1 responded with insults and demanded an apology.

Dance little tin goddess, dance (January 26 to February 1)

Rank Article Class Views Image Notes/about
1 DeepSeek 2,542,555 Actually, I’m not sure why I bother. In the end, it too will probably be Made in China.

An arms race to build the best large language model (LLM). OpenAI with ChatGPT, Google with Gemini, Microsoft with Copilot, character.ai, and so on. Established tech giants putting everything into AI. Billions of dollars and thousands of people working on LLMs. The U.S. president investing $500 billion in AI.

An obscure Chinese company releasing DeepSeek. 20 times cheaper, 10 times less processing power, still just as good. People thinking, "Maybe we don't need to pump so much money into the industry?" A trillion-dollar stock market crash.

2 Karoline Leavitt 1,719,534 This gentlewoman is President #6's fifth White House Press Secretary, when including first-term predecessors Sean Spicer, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Stephanie Grisham, and Kayleigh McEnany. Raised Catholic and hailing from the Live Free or Die state New Hampshire, she recently claimed that $50 million in taxpayer funds were to go to fund "condoms in Gaza".
3 2025 Potomac River mid-air collision 1,585,882 On January 29, a Bombardier CRJ700 airliner collided mid-air with a Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter of the United States Army over the Potomac River a half-mile (0.8 km) from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. All 67 people on board the two aircraft were killed in what was the deadliest air disaster on United States soil since 2009.
4 List of Super Bowl champions 1,246,947 As of this writing, a total of 20 franchises have won the NFL Super Bowl. The winner of each Super Bowl receives the famed Vince Lombardi Trophy. Super Bowl LIX next Sunday will have a repeat winner between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles.
5 Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 1,188,293 One more in the influential Kennedy Family, Mr. Robert F. K. Jr. is President #6's nominee for Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, highest-spending of all Government Departments by more than double the second-placed D. of Defense (see here; 2023 numbers). At a spunky 71 years young, environmental law and health topics have been among his interests; while appraising efforts like the Green New Deal and championing the adoption of solar-cell magic, he also denounces vaccines, claiming they cause autism.
6 Donald Trump 1,079,557 Trump’s back (both in this report and to the presidency), and so are his tariffs. Several of his executive orders are being challenged in court such as the ones attempting to redefine birthright citizenship guaranteed under the 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution and freeze federal spending.
7 Marianne Faithfull 1,052,186 An English singer and actress who died at the age of 78. Faithfull achieved popularity in the 1960s, with some help from The Rolling Stones (she dated Mick Jagger, co-wrote "Sister Morphine" with him, and he let Faithfull record "As Tears Go By" first, giving her a top 10 single), only for the following decade to have her face hardships, including laryngitis and drug abuse that led to what James Hetfield described as a "weathered, smellin'-the-cigarettes-on-the-CD voice" hauntingly employed in one of his songs.
8 Deaths in 2025 999,735 Speaking of said song:
And can't the band play on?
Just listen, they play my song
Ash to ash
Dust to dust
Fade to black...
9 Royal Rumble (2025) 952,745 WWE Royal Rumble 2025 was held at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. Fans were shocked and surprised at who returned, like WWE Hall of Famer Trish Stratus, Nikki Bella, Alexa Bliss and many more. But, they didn't expect AJ Lee to not return, nor did they forget IShowSpeed appearing like... what the...?, as well as RVD (Rob... Van... Dam!) and Ron Simmons (Damn!). In the 30-Man Royal Rumble, while Jey Uso and John Cena are fighting, fans did not expect or was not in my bingo card! that Uso would eliminate Cena to become the main event on WrestleMania 41. Fans were also disappointed that, in the 30-Woman Royal Rumble, Charlotte Flair won, fans called it "predictable" and Flair will also go on WrestleMania 41. I wonder if Drew Carey can go again on Royal Rumble just like he did on 2001 Royal Rumble. Hmm... much worse.
10 Sky Force (film) 920,762 This Bollywood action drama film centred around India's first airstrike – the attack against Pakistan's Sargodha airbase in the Indo-Pakistani air war of 1965 – was released last week coinciding with the Indian Republic Day weekend. The film stars Akshay Kumar in the lead role and is directed by Abhishek Anil Kapur and co-produced by Ambani's Jio Studios. It received positive reviews and has almost recovered its budget as of this writing.

Exclusions

  • These lists exclude the Wikipedia main page, non-article pages (such as redlinks), and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views). Since mobile view data became available to the Report in October 2014, we exclude articles that have almost no mobile views (5–6% or less) or almost all mobile views (94–95% or more) because they are very likely to be automated views based on our experience and research of the issue. Please feel free to discuss any removal on the Top 25 Report talk page if you wish.

Most edited articles

For the December 27 – January 27 period, per this database report.

Title Revisions Notes
Bigg Boss (Tamil TV series) season 8 3725 Kollywood didn't have a good 2024 with many expected films being met with criticism and becoming box-office bombs, line-up for 2025 isn't very promising either; but this reality show from Tamil Nadu which is part of the Big Brother franchise has made it here. The eighth season hosted by Vijay Sethupathi for the first time premiered on last October and concluded with the Finale on 19 January.
Deaths in 2025 2013 New year, new notable deaths, and the two biggest of January 2025 were directors, the aforementioned David Lynch and Jeff Baena, which aside from one exception made a few unconventional comedies featuring his wife Aubrey Plaza.
January 2025 Southern California wildfires 1920 California has been hit by extreme weather in the last decade, with an extensive drought from 2011 to 2017, floods last year, and now a combination of dry weather and strong winds leading to massive fires in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. 27 people died and hundreds of thousands were forced to evacuate, many of whom wound up losing their homes as the flames destroyed lots of buildings.
2025 New Orleans truck attack 1547 At around 3:15 a.m. on January 1, a man drove a pickup truck into a crowd celebrating the New Year in New Orleans, then engaged in a shootout with police before being shot dead. Fifteen people were killed, including the perpetrator (identified as Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar) and 35 more wounded. According to investigators, the perpetrator had been radicalized in 2024, and pledged allegiance to Islamic State in the minutes before the attack.
Jeju Air Flight 2216 1506 Jeju Air Flight 2216 was a scheduled passenger flight operated by Jeju Air from Bangkok, Thailand to Muan International Airport in South Korea. On December 29, the aircraft operating the flight landed on its second attempt with no landing gear, possibly due to damage from a bird strike. It skidded down the runway, overrunning it and crashed into an embankment, where it immediately burst into flames. Out of the 181 occupants, two cabin crew survived.
Margaret Sanger 1475 Noleander did extensive work on the page for the Planned Parenthood founder so it could become a Good Article.
Bigg Boss (Hindi TV series) season 18 1246 We mentioned the Kollywood Big Brother, here's the Bollywood one.
Donald Trump 1061 Four more years with this guy splitting his time between Mar-a-Lago and the White House.
2024–25 NFL playoffs 918 The lead-up to Super Bowl LIX ended up in a slightly disappointing match-up that is also a rerun of the 2023 edition, namely the Philadelphia Eagles facing the two-time defending champion Kansas City Chiefs. At least there will be Kendrick Lamar at the half-time show!
Bigg Boss Kannada season 11 895 Again, the Sandalwood Big Brother (there are eight Indian versions of the famed reality show).
2025 Australian Open – Men's singles 854 Jannik Sinner successfully defended his title in Melbourne, postponing the dream Alexander Zverev has of a first Grand Slam.
2025 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election 850 Justin Trudeau, who's been prime minister of Canada since 2015, announced on January 6 his pending resignation, to take effect once his party elects a new leader on March 9. His announcement came after a series of by-election losses and the resignation of several members of his cabinet in 2024, most notably his deputy Chrystia Freeland, which triggered the 2024–2025 Canadian political crisis.
2025 795 All is quiet on New Year's Day
A world in white gets underway
I want to be with you
Be with you night and day
Nothing changes on New Year's Day...
Death and state funeral of Jimmy Carter 794 39th president of the United States Jimmy Carter died on December 29, 2024. His state funeral took place from January 4 to 9, starting in his home state of Georgia, where his body laid in repose at the Carter Center from January 4 to 7. His body was then flown to the capital, where it laid in state in the United States Capitol rotunda until January 9, when a state funeral service was conducted at Washington National Cathedral, attended by the Carter family as well as domestic and foreign dignitaries. After the service, his remains were transported to the Jimmy Carter House in Plains, Georgia, where Carter lived for decades and spent his final years, for a private burial.
Palisades Fire 793 The most affected area of the aforementioned wildfire was Pacific Palisades, which were basically all burned down, destroying homes of celebrities and commoners alike.
File:A human writer and a creature with the head and wings of a crow, both sitting and typing on their own laptops, experiencing mild hallucinations (DALL-E illustration).webp
HaeB
CC0
300
Recent research

GPT-4 writes better edit summaries than human Wikipedians


A monthly overview of recent academic research about Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects, also published as the Wikimedia Research Newsletter.


GPT-4 is better at writing edit summaries than human Wikipedia editors

A preprint[1] by researchers from EPFL and the Wikimedia Foundation presents

Edisum, which is, to the best of our knowledge, the first solution to automate the generation of highly-contextual Wikipedia edit summaries [given an edit diff] at large scale, [and] achieves performance similar to the human editors

Average aggregated human evaluation scores for edit summaries generated by language models and by the human editors who originally made the edits

This solution was designed to match the performance and open source requirements for a live service deployed on Wikimedia Foundation servers. It consists of a "very small" language model (ca. 220 million parameters), based on Google's LongT5 (an extension of the company's T5 model from 2019, available under an Apache-2.0 license).

Separately, the authors also tested several contemporaneous large language models (GPT-4, GPT-3.5 and Llama 3 8B). GPT-4's edit summaries in particular were rated as significantly better than those provided by the human Wikipedia editors who originally made the edits in the sample – both using an automated scoring method based on semantic similarity, and in a quality ranking by human raters (where "to ensure high-quality results, instead of relying on the crowdsourcing platforms [like Mechanical Turk, frequently used in similar studies], we recruited 3 MSc students to perform the annotation").

Examples of summaries written by human editors and generated by Edisum and GPT-4
edit human editor Edisum [0%] Edisum [100%] GPT-4
Special:Diff/1172472704 added the range added location Added location information Added information about the location and altitude of Boveys Lookout and the orientation of the Burton Range.
Special:Diff/1169223741 in 1982 Added date and citation. Added the year of the speech Added the year of Fidel Castro's speech.
Special:Diff/1169701032 added artist Added a wikilink and a link Added a new name to the list of artists Added Stefan Brüggemann to the list of artists whose works are included.
Special:Diff/1170976899 lede; infobox infobox (inapplicable); lede; -cats Clarified the nature of Denis- Auguste Affre's cause and added information about his title Updated the description of Denis-Auguste Affre's religious status and clarified the stage of his canonization process.
Special:Diff/1170699096 fixed link to aias awards, it was at 5th, not 7th 5th Corrected the award number from 7th to 5th Corrected the year of the Annual Interactive Achievement Awards nomination.
Special:Diff/1169516533 Amended lists so they are split at 100 m ""at least", not "at least"" Clarified the range of heights in the list Added information about two different height categories for the ranking of buildings and structures in Greater Manchester.
Special:Diff/1173169263 UPD Romelu Lukaku updated Lukaku Removed the end of the season Removed incorrect future date for Romelu Lukaku's tenure at Inter.
Special:Diff/1171641782 "This \"however\" doesn't make sense here" "rmv deprecated, ambiguous "however" per MOS:RELTIME" Removed unnecessary word Removed the word "However," from the beginning of the sentence.
Special:Diff/1168487383 Per feedback given in GA review, elaborated on David King Udall and Ella Stewart Udall in the lead and in Ella Udall's first mention; David Udall was already identified Added link; improved phrasing and punctuation Added additional information about the individuals' professions Added professional details for David King Udall, Ella Stewart Udall, and Mary Ann Linton Morgan Udall.

This outcome joins some other recent research indicating that modern LLMs can match or even surpass the average Wikipedia editor in certain tasks (see e.g. our coverage: "'Wikicrow' AI less 'prone to reasoning errors (or hallucinations)' than human Wikipedia editors when writing gene articles").

A substantial part of the paper is devoted to showing that this particular task (generating good edit summaries) is both important and in need of improvements, motivating the use of AI to "overcome this problem and help editors write useful edit summaries":

"An edit summary is a succinct comment written by a Wikipedia editor explaining the nature of, and reasons for, an edit to a Wikipedia page. Edit summaries are crucial for maintaining the encyclopedia: they are the first thing seen by content moderators and they help them decide whether to accept or reject an edit. [...] Unfortunately, as we show, for many edits, summaries are either missing or incomplete."

In more detail:

"Given the dearth of data on the nature and quality of edit summaries on Wikipedia, we perform qualitative coding to guide our modeling decisions. Specifically, we analyze a sample of 100 random edits made in August 2023 to English Wikipedia [removing bot edits, edits with empty summaries and edits related to reverts] stratified among a diverse set of editor expertise levels. Two of the authors each coded all 100 summaries [...] by following criteria set by the English Wikipedia community (Wikimedia, 2024a) [...]. The vast majority (∼80%) of current edit summaries focus on [the] “what” of the edit, with only 30–40% addressing the “why”. [...] A sizeable minority (∼35%) of edit summaries were labeled as “misleading”, generally due to overly vague summaries or summaries that only mention part of the edit. [...] Almost no edit summaries are inappropriate, likely because highly inappropriate edit summaries would be deleted (Wikipedia, 2024c) by administrators and not appear in our dataset."

Metric Summary (what) Explain (why) Misleading Inappropriate Generate-able (what) Generate-able (why)
Description Attempts to describe what the edit did. For example, "added links" Attempts to describe why the edit was made. For example, "Edited for brevity and easier reading". Overly vague or misleading per English Wikipedia guidance. For example, "updated" without explaining what was updated is too vague. Could be perceived as inappropriate or uncivil per English Wikipedia guidance. Could a language model feasibly describe the "what" of this edit based solely on the edit diff. Could a language model feasibly describe the "why" of this edit based solely on the edit diff.
% Agreement 0.89 0.8 0.77 0.98 0.97 0.8
Cohen's Kappa 0.65 0.57 0.50 -0.01 0.39 0.32
Overall (n=100) 0.75 - 0.86 0.26 - 0.46 0.23 - 0.46 0.00 - 0.02 0.96 - 0.99 0.08 - 0.28
IP editors (n=25) 0.76 - 0.88 0.20 - 0.44 0.40 - 0.64 0.00 - 0.08 0.92 - 0.96 0.04 - 0.16
Newcomers (n=25) 0.76 - 0.84 0.36 - 0.48 0.24 - 0.52 0.00 - 0.00 0.92 - 1.00 0.12 - 0.20
Mid-experienced (n=25) 0.76 - 0.88 0.28 - 0.52 0.16 - 0.36 0.00 - 0.00 1.00 - 1.00 0.08 - 0.28
Experienced (n=25) 0.72 - 0.84 0.20 - 0.40 0.12 - 0.32 0.00 - 0.00 1.00 - 1.00 0.08 - 0.48

"Table 1: Statistics on agreement for qualitative coding for each facet and the proportion of how many edit summaries met each criteria. Ranges are a lower bound (both of the coders marked an edit) and an upper bound (at least one of the coders marked an edit). The majority of summaries are expressing only what was done in the edit, which we also expect a language model to do. A significant portion of edits is of low quality, i.e., misleading."

The paper discusses various other nuances and special cases in interpreting these results and in deriving suitable training data for the "Edisum" model. (For example, "edit summaries should ideally explain why the edit was performed, along with what was changed, which often requires external context" that is not available to the model – or really to any human apart from the editor who made the edit.) The authors' best performing approach relies on fine-tuning the aforementioned LongT5 model on 100% synthetic data generated using a LLM (gpt-3.5-turbo) as an intermediate step.

Overall, they conclude that

while it should be used with caution due to a portion of unrelated summaries, the analysis confirms that Edisum is a useful option that can aid editors in writing edit summaries.

The authors wisely refrain from suggesting the complete replacement of human-generated edit summaries. (It is intriguing, however, to observe that Wikidata, a fairly successful sister project of Wikipedia, has been content with relying almost entirely on auto-generated edit summaries for many years. And the present paper exclusively focuses on English Wikipedia – Wikipedias in other languages might have fairly different guidelines or quality issues regarding edit summaries.)

Still, there might be great value in deploying Edisum as an opt-in tool for editors willing to be mindful of its potential pitfalls. (While the English Wikipedia community has rejected proposals for a policy or guideline about LLMs, a popular essay advises that while their use for generating original content is discouraged, "LLMs can be used for certain tasks (like copyediting, summarization, and paraphrasing) if the editor has substantial prior experience in the intended task and rigorously scrutinizes the results before publishing them.")

On that matter, it is worth noting that the paper was first published (as a preprint) ten months ago already, in April 2024. (It appears to have been submitted for review at an ACL conference, but does not seem to have been published in peer-reviewed form yet.) Given the current extremely fast-paced developments in large language models, this likely means that the paper is already quite outdated concerning several of the constraints that Edisum was developed for. Specifically, the authors write that

commercial LLMs [like GPT-4] are not well suited for [Edisum's] task, as they do not follow the open-source guidelines set by Wikipedia [referring to the Wikmedia Foundation's guiding principles]. [...Furthermore,] the open-source LLM, Llama 3 8B, underperforms even when compared to the finetuned Edisum models.

But the performance of open LLMs (at least those released under the kind of license that is regarded as open-source in the paper) has greatly improved over the past year, while the costs of using LLMs in general have dropped.

Besides the Foundation's licensing requirements, its hardware constraints also played a big role:

We intentionally use a very small model, because of limitations of Wikipedia’s infrastructure. In particular, Wikipedia [i.e. WMF] does not have access to many GPUs on which we could deploy big models (Wikitech, 2024), meaning that we have to focus on the ones that can run effectively on CPUs. Note that this task requires a model running virtually in real-time, as edit summaries should be created when edit is performed, and cannot be precalculated to decrease the latency.

Here too one wonders whether the situation might have improved over the past year since the paper was first published. Unlike much of the rest of the industry, the Wikimedia Foundation avoids NVIDIA GPUs because of their proprietary CUDA software layer and uses AMD GPUs instead, which are known for having some challenges in running standard open LLMs – but conceivably, AMD's software support and performance optimizations for LLMs might have been improving. Also, given the size of WMF's overall budget, it seems interesting that compute budget constraints would apparently prevent the deployment of a better-performing tool for supporting editors in an important task.


Briefly

  • Submissions are open until March 9, 2025 for Wiki Workshop 2025, to take place on May 21-22, 2025. The virtual event will be the 12th in this annual series (formerly part of The Web Conference), and has been extended from one to two days this time. It is organized by the Wikimedia Foundation's research team with other collaborators. The call for contributions asks for 2-page extended abstracts which will be "non-archival, which means that they can be ongoing, completed, or already published work."
  • See the page of the monthly Wikimedia Research Showcase for videos and slides of past presentations.

Other recent publications

Other recent publications that could not be covered in time for this issue include the items listed below. Contributions, whether reviewing or summarizing newly published research, are always welcome.

"Scholarly Wikidata: Population and Exploration of Conference Data in Wikidata using LLMs"

From the abstract:[2]

"Several initiatives have been undertaken to conceptually model the domain of scholarly data using ontologies and to create respective Knowledge Graphs. [...] Our main contributions include (a) an analysis of ontologies for representing scholarly data to identify gaps and relevant entities/properties in Wikidata, (b) semi-automated extraction – requiring (minimal) manual validation – of conference metadata (e.g., acceptance rates, organizer roles, programme committee members, best paper awards, keynotes, and sponsors) from websites and proceedings texts using LLMs. Finally, we discuss (c) extensions to visualization tools in the Wikidata context for data exploration of the generated scholarly data. Our study focuses on data from 105 Semantic Web-related conferences and extends/adds more than 6000 entities in Wikidata. It is important to note that the method can be more generally applicable beyond Semantic Web-related conferences for enhancing Wikidata's utility as a comprehensive scholarly resource."

"Migration and Segregated Spaces: Analysis of Qualitative Sources Such as Wikipedia Using Artificial Intelligence"

This study uses Wikipedia articles about neighborhoods in Madrid and Barcelona to predict immigrant concentration and segregation. From the abstract:[3]

"The scientific literature on residential segregation in large metropolitan areas highlights various explanatory factors, including economic, social, political, landscape, and cultural elements related to both migrant and local populations. This paper contrasts the impact of these factors individually, such as the immigrant rate and neighborhood segregation. To achieve this, a machine learning analysis was conducted on a sample of neighborhoods in the main Spanish metropolitan areas (Madrid and Barcelona), using a database created from a combination of official statistical sources and textual sources, such as Wikipedia. These texts were transformed into indexes using Natural Language Processing (NLP) and other artificial intelligence algorithms capable of interpreting images and converting them into indexes. [...] The novel application of AI and big data, particularly through ChatGPT and Google Street View, has enhanced model predictability, contributing to the scientific literature on segregated spaces."

"On the effective transfer of knowledge from English to Hindi Wikipedia"

From the abstract:[4]

"[On Wikipedia, t]here is a significant disparity in the quality of content between high-resource languages (HRLs, e.g., English) and low-resource languages (LRLs, e.g., Hindi), with many LRL articles lacking adequate information. To bridge these content gaps, we propose a lightweight framework to enhance knowledge equity between English and Hindi. In case the English Wikipedia page is not up-to-date, our framework extracts relevant information from external resources readily available (such as English books) and adapts it to align with Wikipedia's distinctive style, including its neutral point of view (NPOV) policy, using in-context learning capabilities of large language models. The adapted content is then machine-translated into Hindi for integration into the corresponding Wikipedia articles. On the other hand, if the English version is comprehensive and up-to-date, the framework directly transfers knowledge from English to Hindi. Our framework effectively generates new content for Hindi Wikipedia sections, enhancing Hindi Wikipedia articles respectively by 65% and 62% according to automatic and human judgment-based evaluations."


References

  1. ^ Šakota, Marija; Johnson, Isaac; Feng, Guosheng; West, Robert (2024-04-04), Edisum: Summarizing and Explaining Wikipedia Edits at Scale, arXiv, doi:10.48550/arXiv.2404.03428 Code models
  2. ^ Mihindukulasooriya, Nandana; Tiwari, Sanju; Dobriy, Daniil; Nielsen, Finn Årup; Chhetri, Tek Raj; Polleres, Axel (2024-11-13), Scholarly Wikidata: Population and Exploration of Conference Data in Wikidata using LLMs, arXiv, doi:10.48550/arXiv.2411.08696 Code / dataset
  3. ^ López-Otero, Javier; Obregón-Sierra, Ángel; Gavira-Narváez, Antonio (December 2024). "Migration and Segregated Spaces: Analysis of Qualitative Sources Such as Wikipedia Using Artificial Intelligence". Social Sciences. 13 (12): 664. doi:10.3390/socsci13120664. ISSN 2076-0760.
  4. ^ Das, Paramita; Roy, Amartya; Chakraborty, Ritabrata; Mukherjee, Animesh (2024-12-07), On the effective transfer of knowledge from English to Hindi Wikipedia, arXiv, doi:10.48550/arXiv.2412.05708

Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Opinion

Friday, 7 February 2025 00:00 UTC
File:Moon_over_arches_at_Pakistan_Monument_Islamabad.jpg
Alighazanfarz
cc-by-sa-3.0
450
Opinion

Fathoms Below, but over the moon

This is a re-adapted version of user Fathoms Below's own reflections – published with their permission – about their Request for Adminship, which passed in February 2024, when they were known as The Night Watch. Enjoy!

A year on from my RfA, I have some thoughts that I'm willing to share. While I won't go into heavy detail regarding what occurred there and what led to it becoming probably the closest RfA of 2024, I suggest that anyone who reads this essay just look into what happened and come to their own conclusions what I could have done differently. What I do know is that there isn't any response that will satisfy everybody, and so I'm just going to leave the matter to itself. If you were looking for an overview of my week at RfA, there isn't much to talk about and this essay won't focus much on it. But I do want to push back against the idea that "RfA can be fun", because that's not true at all, and frankly, it makes me upset to hear that. Usually, I'd give more restraint to that line of thinking, but I've also remembered someone saying that one of the worst RfAs in several years was just a rare fluke, as if its occurrence was akin to "in order to make an omelet, you have to break some eggs". So, this essay is focused towards those people, and although there is a likelihood that there really isn't another RfA as toxic as mine with the advent of Administrator elections, and that there's probably people out there that just dismisses this essay as the ramblings of a temperamentally unfit admin, but I really don't want some up-and-coming but clueless newbie like me to go down my path.

The week of my RfA was busy for me in real life, though it was six straight days of stress from the very start. Waking up early in the morning and seeing who !voted, pacing around the streets near me to try and relax, listening to music to help cope with the intensity... it wasn't a good ride. But I didn't expect that things would be so hard, and newbie me thought in 2022 that the process wasn't nearly as traumatizing. I think they thought that it might have been "fun" in a way. In the summer of that year, after I helped promote the article Elden Ring to good article status, I read about the RfA that the GA reviewer, Vami IV, had experienced. Now, say and think what you will about Vami, but I try to remind myself that we're all humans here. We do good and bad things, and while Vami did bad things, he also did good. A lot of good that was shared. And newbie me was clueless about how to discuss the RfA with Vami in private. I realized what I had said then by the time it was too late, and it kind of created a "cloud" between us that I thought had gone away about a year or so later.

Fast forward to February 11, 2024, and I speak to him for the last time. That tension hadn't really gone away, and by that point I was dazed about how my RfA went that I could not concentrate on Vami, and I tried recovering from the damage to my esteem. It's weird how traumatic events get burned into your mind and phase in at odd moments. I reread my RfA many, many times over the next few months that it had hurt my mental health. I felt guilty that I passed while my friend was left with more baggage and nothing gained. I really can't describe the feeling, and I don't expect to be able to communicate it here. After all, Wikipedia articles are written in a dispassionate tone that bleeds over into our processes. And when you can't see the human on the other end, the average person doesn't care enough.

But for all of that drama and pushback, I still continued as a relatively unremarkable admin for a few months, resigned as I tried to process a difficult period in my real life, and returned last November. It seems that it's typical of Wikipedia's processes that so much volunteer time is spent on discussions and things that don't objectively matter so much. This article comes to mind immediately. But someone was hurt in real life, and the people around them were hurt too by RfA. That's why I'm upset to hear that RfA can be "fun". So yeah, I'm writing this to all the people out there that see RfA as cluelessly as I did in the Summer of 2022. Maybe some newbie down the line will find this essay and be a bit wiser, à-la The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Or, perhaps, the lessons of the debriefs written by Moneytrees, Tamzin, and Vami IV will fall on deaf ears.

I'd like to acknowledge the following people:

  • Ingenuity and Moneytrees, for being amazing nominators. If either of you are reading this, I really don't feel like I deserved your support and advice. A part of me feels ashamed that you had to watch all of that unfold, and I feel like I let you all both down in a way. I'm not a ScottishFinnishRadish, or GorillaWarfare, or... a Moneytrees, but I suppose I've done some good work in a way and I hope that work gives back to you both somehow. You guys are both awesome.
  • Panini, Shushugah, and the others who reached out to me on my talk page, and Maliner and a few others who reached out to me privately. I was in a really hard point of my life and everything you all said helped give some endurance I needed to reach the end. If you gave me both reasonable and constructive criticism, I really appreciate it, too. Hopefully among you all will be the people who lead Wikipedia to a better future, even in the days that I may no longer be as active as I used to be.
  • Vami IV's sister, for her support and compassion. We miss your brother so much.
  • An anonymous editor. Hopefully I was a source of goodness in your life as you were in mine.
  • And Clovermoss, for her encouragement for me to publish this essay. I doubt my debrief would be as good as your debrief, and I still don't think it's on a comparable level, but I hope it means something to some reader out there. You had my back throughout a lot of last year, and I see how you demonstrated that big things have small beginnings. It's all because of the butterfly effect, y'know? You're an amazing friend, and I would not have gotten this far without you.


See more RfA debriefs here – eds.

Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/News and notes

Friday, 7 February 2025 00:00 UTC
File:Maryana Iskander 02.jpg
Joe Mabel
CC 4.0 BY-SA
100
450
News and notes

Let's talk!

January 2025 update from the Wikimedia Foundation

TKTK
The CEO of the Wikimedia Foundation, Maryana Iskander, wants your feedback!

The executive team at the Wikimedia Foundation, led by CEO Maryana Iskander, presents periodic updates about the states of their projects. The January 2025 update presents and links to narratives categorized as technological developments, legal challenges, the state of Wikimedia Movement fundraising, the budget for spending those funds, staff-organized communication into Wikimedia audiences, and the Wikimedia Foundation–developed pilot projects which are the alternative direction from the now deprecated Wikimedia Community Movement Charter.

The Wikimedia Movement has always aspired to community governance and oversight. As such, letters such as this one are Wikimedia Foundation staff responses to Wikimedia user community requests, petitions, and calls for action. As is usual for these things, the letter is rich with links to even more documentation, and that documentation is often the present culmination of hundreds of Wikimedia user community discussions over years. Aspects of this kind of shared governance which work well include mutual good will, the intent of transparency, invitations for community inclusion, and the Wikimedia platform's history of success in inviting and collecting community conversations which often satisfy the volunteers who participate and the Wikimedia community organizations which promote and observe them.

Any Wikimedian who has participated in these process will be able to offer either criticism or suggestions for improvement, but whatever anyone says, they will want to know that the Wikimedia Movement empowers staff, volunteers, and allies of all backgrounds to grow their ability to advance Wikimedia project goals and to distribute power and resources appropriately.

Interested readers should check out the update, and are invited to post questions on the talk pages of various projects. Those with lots of questions are invited to interview Wikimedia Foundation staff for upcoming articles in The Signpost, and outspoken commentators are invited to submit opinion pieces for publication here. – Br

EU policy report: Is age verification coming?

In its European Policy Monitoring Report for January 2025, Wikimedia Europe shared smaller updates on several legal developments in the European Union, including regarding AI liability rules, geoblocking, anti-SLAPP measures, and obligations for online platforms, including Wikipedia, under the Digital Services Act (DSA) – see prior Signpost coverage here and here.

Concerning child protection, the chapter highlights recent comments by a representative of the European Commission's Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology (DG CNCT):

- Age verification is a central issue, and we [the EU] need to work towards a European solution by mid-2025.

- Other ideas than age verification can be implemented, and it's a work in progress. We want to have a public consultation on the DSA guidelines soon.

- We are in close contact with the Australian authorities [these might include the Ministers for Communications, Cyber Security and Social Services] and with Ofcom in the UK [both countries have seen extended debates about mandatory age verification systems in recent years]. Banning seems effective, but it's excluding minors from useful areas. There are other means that are less intrusive. Different platforms pose different issues. Age verification is essential for adult content, but it isn't the answer for social media.

TB, O

German Wikipedia deletes 20-year-old WP:Café

In a controversial decision, the German Wikipedia's Café (archive) was recently deleted. Unlike the English Wikipedia's Teahouse, the Café, opened in 2005, was a place for off-topic discussion and socialising. Controversial IP contributions were part of the chain of events that led to the decision to delete – subsequently reviewed and upheld, but still the subject of ongoing discussion as many lament the venue's loss.

A.K.

Brief notes

You can join other editors in editing Ice cream social. And maybe enjoy an actual ice cream social afterwards.

Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/In the media

Friday, 7 February 2025 00:00 UTC
File:2.02.1 Клятва Горациев.jpg
Jacques-Louis David/Kotejan
CC BY-SA 4.0
65
400
In the media

Wikipedia is an extension of legacy media propaganda, says Elon Musk

A Roman salute?

Detail from The Oath of the Horatii by Jacques-Louis David (1785). Painted in Rome for the French King Louis XVI, by a future revolutionary

A gesture made on stage by Elon Musk at the 2025 Donald Trump presidential inauguration was interpreted by some as a Nazi or Roman salute, and by others as an ambiguous wave. The Wikipedia article on the Elon Musk gesture controversy covers both possibilities, but this didn't prevent it from being the focus of attention in the media.

Neutrality-preserving processes at work

On Elon Musk's Wikipedia biography, a long paragraph about the controversy is currently included, following the closure of a request for comment on the article's talk page as accepting that a limited mention should be included. An articles for deletion nomination for Elon Musk's arm gesture was closed with a rough consensus to keep the article. Sarah Grevy Gotfredsen wrote for the Columbia Journalism Review that "Wikipedia's update on Musk's salute is a case in point" of the encyclopedia's neutrality in describing controversial events, as it "includes Musk's physical arm movement and how it was viewed by some as a Nazi gesture, but also notes that Musk denied such intent" (emphasis added).

Reactions, and reactions to reactions

The Independent reported that "Elon Musk was furious" after his Wikipedia page referred to his controversial gesture as a "Nazi salute":

(Musk) called out the online encyclopedia site on X after the gesticulation he made at a rally at the Capital One Arena was referred to as "a Nazi salute or fascist salute" on his Wikipedia page – something the Tesla/X CEO vehemently denies.

But the link to the "denial" is less than it first seemed. Also, Vanity Fair's article on the same matter said that "Elon Musk Sure Isn’t Denying That His Inaugural Gesture Was a Nazi Salute".

Numerous tweets were tweeted (or X'd). A Newsweek piece stated in its title that Wikipedia "fired back" at Musk, but it was actually talking about Jimmy Wales's response to a Musk tweet – both posts were linked to in the aforementioned Independent article:

I think Elon is unhappy that Wikipedia is not for sale. I hope his campaign to defund us results in lots of donations from people who care about the truth. If Elon wanted to help, he'd be encouraging kind and thoughtful intellectual people he agrees with to engage.

– Jimmy Wales

What is certain is that Musk's gesture caused different reactions within Jewish political organizations: The Forward – formerly known as Forverts when it was published in Yiddishquoted a "conciliatory" statement by the Anti-Defamation League, who said that Musk "made an awkward gesture in a moment of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute". The ADL statement is discussed in the Wikipedia article about the controversy, which also mentions a former director of the association, Abraham Foxman, being at odds with their take. On the other hand, as reported by The Guardian, the head of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Amy Spitalnick, expressed more concern over the gesture, saying that "there was nothing ambiguous" about the salutes, and that they "should be enough to warrant condemnation and attention".

Swedish national public broadcaster Sveriges Television added more details about Musk's criticism of Wikipedia (in Swedish), highlighting his claim that the site relies on "legacy media propaganda" for sourcing. It also includes another direct response from Jimmy Wales, who defended Wikipedia's neutrality, stating that the article simply reports verifiable facts: Musk made the gesture, it was widely compared to a Nazi salute, and he denied any intent. Wales also took the opportunity to remind Musk of the failure of his supposed bid to buy Wikipedia.

And the truth is...

France 24 gave a comprehensive video analysis of Musk's gesture, while DW News (a channel of Deutsche Welle) stated what may be the last word on the meaning of the gesture. According to analyst Matthew Moore, "there's only one person I think that really knows whether this was a fascist salute, and that is Elon Musk".

B, JSG, O

Palestine-Israel Articles decision

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) report on the Arbitration Committee's Palestine-Israel Articles 5 decision was the core of several stories in The Times of Israel and The Jerusalem Post, both Israeli media, as well as The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.

Several Wikipedians provided a mix of anonymous and attributed responses to the Jewish Journal, expressing a range of opinions from optimistic – "I like the idea of something like the article titles restriction...the vacuum [caused by bans of individuals] will be filled by experienced editors who have heretofore been afraid to edit in the topic area" – to ascerbic – "[it is] flabby and insufficient ... the arbs in general were lazy, robotic, and are utterly unsuited to provide 'adult supervision' of Wikipedia."

The decision was also covered by Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), with less emphasis on the ADL commentary.

The JTA was in turn syndicated by several US newspapers, including Miami's South Florida Sun Sentinel (read here) and Brooklyn's Jewish Press (read here).

See related Signpost coverage at this issue's Arbitration report. – B

Big picture

Stephen Harrison's latest piece for Slate combines topics we also discuss below, most specifically the Heritage Foundation's plans to "identify and target" Wikipedia editors – see prior Signpost coverage – plus the aforementioned conclusion of an ArbCom case involving Israeli and Palestinian supporters.

Harrison noted how it is not encouraging that "in the long term, Wikipedians, and the rest of us, can ask for stronger privacy protections from both lawmakers and the companies", but "until then, there is not much that users can do to protect themselves from mass surveillance."

The beat reporter sees the Heritage's alleged plan to out editors as a form of harassment to force its views into contentious articles, fearing that, if these tactics were implemented and proved to be successful, they might drive away all but the most strident editors:

Faced with the risk of harassment or real-world retaliation, many volunteer editors—especially those covering politically sensitive topics—may simply stop contributing. Those who remain are likely to be the most ideologically driven voices, further eroding Wikipedia's stated goal of neutrality.

The free encyclopedia will become too toxic to sustain.

S

John Green's ties to AFC Wimbledon now officially acknowledged on his Wikipedia page

Jack Currie and John Green
Jack Currie could definitely tell how much John Green loves AFC Wimbledon... well, so does his Wikipedia page now!

In a recent video for the vlogbrothers YouTube channel, author and philantropist John Green recently shared more details about "something ridiculous", that is, the latest achievement of his charity community, Nerdfighteria: the completion of a real-life soccer transfer. Green, together with his wife and about 1,100 members of Nerdfighteria, helped English League Two club AFC Wimbledon pay for the transfer of Marcus Browne, having collected most of the money through donations on several livestreams hosted at Green's solo channel.

AFC Wimbledon was founded in 2002 by former fans of Wimbledon F.C., in dissent to the controversial relocation of the club to Milton Keynes, which eventually led to the foundation of MK Dons. The phoenix club is majority-owned by a fan association, the Dons Trust, and Green – despite being a life-long fan of Liverpool F.C. – has sponsored them since July 2014, when Nerdfighteria was first announced as a back-of-shorts sponsor.

In his video about the Browne transfer, Green stated that supporting AFC Wimbledon was "one of my great achievements of my life", and that he had "no idea why it's not on my Wikipedia page". As reported by several users in the comment section, the author's call-to-action (of sorts) prompted editor Hameltion to add new information to the Personal life section of his Wikipedia article, so that the "ridiculous" milestone could be celebrated properly. In the words of Green himself, "The ridiculous is perilously close to the sublime!" – O

In brief

Wikipedia correctly provided information on The Godfather's lead actor, unlike CNN's recent AI query (director's casting notes shown, with Marlon Brando underlined in red)



Do you want to contribute to "In the media" by writing a story or even just an "in brief" item? Edit next week's edition in the Newsroom or leave a tip on the suggestions page.


Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Community view

Friday, 7 February 2025 00:00 UTC
File:Wikipedia Day NYC 2025 -05.jpg
SkaterbyAssociation
CC0
75
300
Community view

24th Wikipedia Day in New York City

A crowd of about 100 people pose for a photo. Silver balloons in the shape of '24' are held up in front. Pacita Rudder is crouching right in front of them. Some people are holding up finger signs in the shape of the Wikipedia 'W'.
New York City Wikimedians celebrate 24 years of Wikipedia
A photo of a cake. The cake has an edible laptop on top, with a DVD, a flash drive, and a mouse on top. DVDs circle the side of the cake. The laptop screen has text saying "Happy birthday Wikipedia".
One of the cakes baked for the celebration (red velvet)

Over 350 Wikimedians and newbies celebrated 24 years of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, at Wikimedia New York City's Wikipedia Day NYC 2025 celebration on January 25, at the Brooklyn Central Library. Special guests Stephen Harrison, tech reporter and author of The Editors, and Clay Shirky, technology writer, joined in a conversation about reliable sources.

Every year, on or around January 15th, Wikimedians around the world host in-person meetups to celebrate the anniversary of the birth of the online encyclopedia. Typical at these events are birthday cakes, Wikipedia globes, and short presentations called "lightning talks". Fifteen years have passed since Wikimedia NYC 2010, the first Wikipedia Day celebration in NYC.

The first half of Wikipedia Day NYC 2025 was spent in the atrium of the Central Library, with informational tables run by partner organizations, including AfroCrowd, Wikitongues, BetaNYC, Cybernetics Library, and Farming Concrete. The atrium also featured a photo booth backdrop, an art presentation by the Interactive Telecommunications program at NYU, a vinyl shirt pressing station, and more. Meanwhile, in the nearby Info Commons Training Room, talks included Intro to Wikipedia, Your Neighborhood on Wikipedia, and the first group of lightning talks.

Lightning talks included a wide variety of presentations. Pharos discussed Wikinews, a project I began participating in alongside a push by the NYC chapter to do original reporting. PixDeVl presented "Wikis, beyond 'media", showcasing the wide variety of non-WMF wikis that are created for niche interests. He applauded, for instance, the work of the Minecraft Wiki, a project that forked from Fandom.com, which I also contributed to. bstadt discussed using machine learning to create a latent space for all articles from every language Wikipedia, mapped onto a 2D graph.

Lane Rasberry, a University of Virginia School of Data Science Wikipedian-in-residence, highlighted the unprecedented suppression of an English Wikipedia article by an Indian High Court. Rasberry previously wrote about it back in November for The Signpost. His motto? "Editing Wikipedia is not a crime." Sharon Park showed her beautifully-created, Wikipedia-inspired, animated illustrations she made for 2024's "Wikipedia in Review". Dorothy Howard presented on contributing concert photos to Wikimedia Commons. James Hare dove deep into explaining "Infrastructure and Tools for Source Reliability," preceded by a related talk on "reference parsing" by Wikimedia Enterprise employee Francisco Navas. RoySmith shared insight on "Sourcing the Big Apple". Rosiestep updated the crowd on ongoing research into Wikimedia's Gender Gap. Several others also contributed lightning talks, some of which were not taped.

Attendees spent the second half of the Wikipedia Day NYC 2025 celebration downstairs in the Dweck Cultural Center, where Rhododendrites kicked off the presentations with a micro-keynote on community and thinking locally.

Pacita Rudder

Wikipedia Day NYC 2025 was the first Wikipedia Day event with the first executive director of Wikimedia NYC, Pacita Rudder, who joined the organization in May of 2024. "We're really excited for this particular event because it's not often that we celebrate all of the work that we do, and all of the contributors like yourselves who are making a difference to the world's largest encyclopedia," Rudder told attendees.

2025 is also roughly the 400th anniversary of the founding of New York City. Depending on how you define "founded", there is disagreement on which year the city was established, but the official Seal of New York City was changed in 1977 to date it at 1625. Rudder, with Wikimedia New York City founder Pharos, introduced a new initiative celebrating the quadricentennial anniversary of the city establishment. This initiative seeks to improve 400 articles on neighborhoods in New York City with a website, 400nyc.org, soliciting suggestions for neighborhoods and New Yorkers to improve/create articles for.

Supporting this endeavor is Craig Newmark's Newmark Philanthropies, founder of Craigslist, who appeared in a prerecorded message at the event. In his message, Newmark reiterated his support for Wikipedia: "I'm a passionate believer in what Wikipedia does. I tell people over and over again, Wikipedia is where facts are going to live. Wikipedia is a critically important platform, because it's built on lifting up reliable sources, something which is getting harder and harder to find."

Keynote panel, left to right: Emily Gertz, Stephen Harrison, Clay Shirky, and Molly Stark Dean.

Energetically introduced by Molly Stark Dean, the keynote event was a conversation between author and tech journalist Stephen Harrison and tech writer Clay Shirky, moderated by environmental journalist and Women Do News co-founder Emily Gertz. (I was tapped to moderate the panel, but I declined.) The conversation topic revolved around reliable sources and the threat to fact-based institutions on which the project relies. "I would say, in the spirit of 'reliable sources', that the huge threat right now isn't the engagement of Wikipedians themselves," Shirky said, "but the big risk is the loss of facts upstream. There is an attack on factual accuracy on the availability of facts that is quite profound."

Annie Rauwerda

Following the conversation was Depths of Wikipedia creator Annie Rauwerda, quizzing the audience with obscure Wikipedia lore. Two volunteers won copies of Harrison's new book, The Editors. Finally, before the cakes were served, another round of lightning talks had been delivered.

Information about last year's Wikipedia Day in New York City was published on Wikimedia's blog, Diff. A recording of part of this year's event is available on YouTube. Photos from the event are posted on Wikimedia Commons.

With contributions from Wil540 art.