Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Single/2013-06-19

The Signpost
Single-page Edition
WP:POST/1
19 June 2013

 

2013-06-19

Two responses to "The Tragedy of Wikipedia's Commons"

Following last week's op-ed by Gigs ("The Tragedy of Wikipedia's Commons"), the Signpost is carrying two contrary opinions from MichaelMaggs, a bureaucrat on Wikimedia Commons, and Mattbuck, a British Commons administrator.

MichaelMaggs

The true tragedy

The title of last week's piece, "The Tragedy of Wikipedia's commons" was perhaps rather more ironic than its author intended. One of the truly great tragedies of medieval England was not so much the tragedy of the commons in its original sense but the forcible enclosure by powerful outside interests of the historic common land that had for centuries been available as a free resource for all. If there is any tragedy here, it is in the author's wish to use Wikipedia to take over Wikimedia Commons and to do very much the same thing online.

Background and remit

Commons always has and always will have a far broader free-content remit than that of supporting the narrow focus of an encyclopaedia. Commons provides media files in support not just the English Wikipedia but all of the WMF projects, including Wikisource, Wikibooks, Wikivoyage and many more. These sister projects of Wikipedia often have a need to use media on Commons that could never be used on the Wikipedias as they are not - in Wikipedia's narrow sense - "encyclopaedic". Some of Commons' detractors like to give the impression that its collections are nothing more than a dumping ground for random non-educational content. Nothing could be further from the truth, and the energy expended by those who would criticise from the outside (but who are strangely reluctant to engage on wiki) bears little relation to the extremely small proportion of images that could in any way be considered contentious.

Commons' policies are of necessity different and more wide ranging than any of the individual projects. We hold many images that will never be useful to the English Wikipedia, and that is not only OK, but should be welcomed as Commons' contribution to the overall mission of the Wikimedia Foundation, "to empower and engage people around the world to collect and develop educational content under a free license or in the public domain, and to disseminate it effectively and globally". Note that the overall mission of the WMF is not "to write an encyclopaedia", but rather to develop and disseminate educational content. Supporting the English Wikipedia is one way, but by no means the only way, in which we do that, and the idea that Commons should be forcibly subjugated to the policies of a specialist encyclopaedia project would do immeasurable harm to the mission which I had hoped we were all working to support.

Contrary to the suggestion that the Commons policy on scope of 2008 was an "unchallenged action by a tiny group of people", it was in fact largely an exercise in documenting for the first time the unwritten long-established practices of the community. The policy attracted very little controversy (despite it being very widely advertised, on Wikipedia and elsewhere) largely because the vast majority of it was uncontentious. Indeed, the fact that it has retained very wide community support since then indicates that we didn't do too bad a job.

With its specialised emphasis on media curation and the niceties of copyright law, Commons will never be as popular a place for editors to hang out as some of the bigger encyclopaedias. It requires not only a particular set of interests, but also at least for admins some level of specialist knowledge which not everyone has or is interested to acquire. Those outside the local community who only see the external carping may not realise that we have thousands of very committed editors who work tirelessly in the background curating and categorising content and bringing to the attention of the admins non-educational content that has no place in our collections.

Commons has never (as was claimed last week) been merely a repository that supports its sister WMF projects. Right from the start it had a remit to make content freely available to external re-users. As early as 2006 there was a formal proposal (since implemented as InstantCommons) to integrate into Mediawiki a mechanism specifically designed to support users on non WMF projects. Perhaps the real worry of last week's author was that Commons currently holds too many non-encyclopedic images of a sexual nature. But even assuming that is true, a proposal to revoke one of the fundamental free content aims of Commons hardly seems proportionate. Instead, let's have a proper discussion on what Commons' scope should be. Times change, as do priorities, and what made sense five years ago may now perhaps need to be revisited.

Over the last few months especially there has been a lot of discussion within Commons as well as outside about issues concerning the small proportion of our holdings that relate to sexual imagery and to privacy/the rights of the subject. Both have complex moral and legal dimensions, and neither has yet been fully resolved. I've set out the main strands of argument below, as objectively as I can, for those who may not be familiar with them. Of course, these summaries are by no means the whole story, and many of the discussions are far more subtle than I have space for here, so please bear with me if you are familiar with this and feel I have mis-characterised or omitted any important point that may be close to your own heart. I deliberately make no comment on the validity of any of these arguments.

Sexual imagery

Some argue that pornographic images (as defined in some way) are never appropriate for any of the Wikimedia projects and are simply not educational.

Others argue that we should keep most images, almost whatever the subject matter, as we need to show the whole range of human experience if we are to call ourselves a comprehensive educational resource. Anything else would be censorship.

Yet others suggest that not all the sexual images held by Commons are "educational", properly defined. Some are photographs that have been taken for non-educational purposes, for example personal gratification/entertainment, and/or have been uploaded for the same purpose or by users who wish to push an extreme view that equates any limits at all with unacceptable "censorship".

Finally, some hold that Commons has too many images in certain marginally-educational areas that, taken overall, create an oppressive or threatening environment (e.g. for women) which may be harming the project as a whole.

Privacy and the rights of the subject

One strand of argument is that we should do more to respect the rights of individuals who are identifiable in a photograph, and recognise that, even where the image may be legal, it can be highly damaging to the individual. Even when an outsider might naively think the image unremarkable, it may still be considered threatening, harassing or oppressive by its subject.

Another strand is that allowing the subject of a photograph a say on whether it should stay on Commons or not opens the door to all sorts of censorship. Proponents argue it's essential that we are able to collect all types of educational image, including those that may offend the subject.

Review

If there is indeed a problem with the boundaries of Commons' scope - perceived or otherwise - we should tackle it head-on with open community discussion. Commons should be and I believe is receptive to the views of everyone within the Wikimedia community in reviewing its curatorial policies. But the way to get things changed is to engage rather than to criticise from afar.

A comprehensive review of Commons' scope is just starting now, and you need never say again that your voice cannot be heard. Please talk.

Please visit Commons' Review of Scope pages now, and make your views known for the sake of all the Wiki communities.

Conclusion

Commons has proved to be a phenomenal success in the years since its introduction, and we should be proud of what has been achieved. We should keep it, improve it, and celebrate it.



Mattbuck

Last week, the Signpost published a rather scathing op-ed about Wikimedia Commons, the Wikimedia project which seeks to be a resource of free, educational media. Perhaps you feel it presented a valid argument, perhaps not, that's for you to make up your mind on. I would like to take this chance to offer a defence of Commons.

As you probably know, Wikimedia Commons acts as a central repository for images. Once an image is on Commons, any project can use it, exactly the same way they can use their own images. It's an incredibly valuable tool for the Wikimedia project as a whole, as it prevents duplication and provides a central place to search. You want an image of something for your Wikipedia article? Commons probably has a category for it. And that is the same whether you're editing in English, German, Arabic or even Tagalog.

I first joined Commons back in October 2007, when I was working on an eclectic mix of the Ffestiniog Railway and McFly. About six months later I became a Flickrreviewr, checking uploads from Flickr that for some reason couldn't be checked by a bot, and a month or so after that I became an admin, primarily so I could deal with all the copyright violations I came across with the Flickr work. In the five years since my interest in admin duties has waxed and waned, and I had little side-projects, but Commons had swiftly become my home-wiki. My watchlist has some 60,000 pages on it, of which 10,000 are my own photos.

Commons has its problems, I cannot deny that. The number of people who believe that because they found a photo on Google it can be uploaded to Commons is simply staggering. The search engine is designed for pages not images (a limitation of the software). The community can be a bit fractured, it can be very difficult to get people blocked for being terminally incapable of working with others (even when their name comes back to the admin noticeboards week after week after week), and we have remarkably little in the way of actual policy. Indeed our main guiding principles boil down to two pages: Commons:Licensing and Commons:Project Scope. The former tells us what files we're allowed, the latter which we want. Scope is the real issue of the moment, and in a nutshell it says that Commons collects educational media. Which brings the question, "what is educational?"

A similar problem has existed on Wikipedia for years - what is notable? There are even factions - deletionists, who think articles must prove their notability, and inclusionists, who think that there's no harm in letting potentially non-notable articles stay. And so it is on Commons - those who adhere to a strict definition of educational, and those who accept a somewhat looser guide.

And this dispute would be fine, if it were argued on Commons and in the abstract. But that is not what happens. The major rift happened a few years ago, when, apparently due to a disparaging Fox News article about the amount of "porn" on Wikipedia, Jimbo Wales, co-founder of Wikimedia, came onto Commons and starting deleting sexuality images. That didn't really go over well with the Commons community, of which Jimbo has never been a part, especially when it was found he was deleting images which were in use on multiple projects. To cut a long story short, the deleted images were restored and Jimbo lost admin rights at Commons, as did several admins who had joined him in his purge. Many of the images Jimbo deleted were in fact subsequently deleted again, following deletion requests to allow for Community input. But the deed had been done, and for a large proportion of the Commons community, it appeared that Jimbo was not to be trusted to have the best interests of the project at heart.

The issue stewed for a few years, and reemerged with a vengeance last year. Again, it has been fought almost entirely over what some describe, disparagingly, as "porn". As I mentioned earlier, the Commons search engine is not really designed for images, and so it tends to give unexpected results. One of those results was the search "toothbrush" returning a picture of a woman using an electric toothbrush for self-pleasure as one of the top results. This was entirely a legitimate result - it was a picture of a toothbrush, and it was titled as such. And while the so-called "principle of least astonishment" can easily be applied to categories - Commons has a whole proliferation of "nude or semi-nude people with X" categories on the grounds that nudity should not appear in the parent category "X" - it doesn't really work for a search algorithm, not if you want to continue with correct categorisation. Until the Wikimedia Foundation develops some form of search content filter (which itself brings up issues of what exactly should be filtered - should images of Muhammed be filtered out? What about Nazi images due to German law?) all that can really be done is to either delete the image or rename it to try and reduce the chances of an innocuous search returning it. I personally favour keeping the images, and this has led me to be named as part of a "porn cabal" by people, most of whom rarely if ever edit on Commons, who favour deleting the images.

But the issue, for me, is that these issues so rarely get brought up on Commons. Instead of using the deletion request system to highlight potentially problematic images (which is after all what the process is for), the detractors would rather just soapbox on Wikipedia - usually on Jimbo's talk page - about how awful Commons is, and how this latest penis photo proves once and for all that I (or some other member of the "porn cabal") am the worst admin in the history of forever and deserve to be shot out of a cannon into a pit of ravenous crocodiles. What people don't seem to understand is that in large part, I do agree. Commons has problems. We do have too many low quality penis pictures - so many that we even have a policy on it - and so I have a bot which searches new uploads for nudity categories and creates a gallery so I can see any problematic ones, and thus nominate them for deletion. This somehow seems to make me an even worse admin in many people's eyes. We should indeed have better checks to ensure that people in sexual pictures consented to having their pictures uploaded, and I would like to see a proper policy on this. I'd like to see the community as a whole have a reasoned discussion on the matter, for a policy to be drafted, amended, voted on and finally adopted. But that is very difficult when you feel you are under attack all the time, where your attackers are not willing to actually work with you to create a better project.

Wikimedia projects are based around collaboration and discussion within the community. I would urge those of you who feel that Commons is "broken" to come to Commons and offer constructive advice. Attacking long-term Commons users will get you nowhere, nor will pasting links on other projects, or on Jimbo's talk page. If you truly want to make Commons a better place, and are not in fact just looking for any reason to tear it down, then come to Commons. Come to the village pump - tell us what is wrong, and how you feel we could do better. Use the systems we have in place for project discussions to discuss the project. Sitting back and sniping from afar does nothing for your cause, and it only embitters the Commons community.

Come and talk to us.

Reader comments

2013-06-19

Most popular Wikipedia articles of the last week

The season finale of Game of Thrones ensured that the epic high fantasy series would dominate the top 10 again last week; however, it was joined by the perennially popular children's author Maurice Sendak, whose 85th birthday was celebrated with a Google Doodle, and by the number one movie of the week, Man of Steel. Politics rarely impacts the top 10, but the controversy over the PRISM surveillance program proved too potent to miss.

Please see here for the top 25 articles of the week, plus analysis.

For the week of 8 to 15 June, the ten most popular articles on Wikipedia, as determined from the report of the 5,000 most trafficked pages* were:

Rank Article Views Notes
1 Maurice Sendak 1,717,368 A Google Doodle to celebrate the children's author's would-have-been 85th birthday sent almost 2 million people to his Wikipedia page.
2 Man of Steel (film) 1,117,658 The second attempt to rework the Superman mythos for modern cinema, (after Bryan Singer's Superman Returns) this film earned $125.1 million over its first weekend, setting a record for the month of June.
3 Game of Thrones 1,000,649 The season finale of this popular TV show drew 5.39 million viewers; its highest rating ever.
4 State of Decay (video game) 715,148 Much anticipated zombie apocalypse video game.
5 Game of Thrones (season 3) 600,721 See #3 above
6 List of Game of Thrones episodes 590,697 see #3 and #5 above
7 Facebook 580,390 A perennially popular article.
8 Edward Snowden 576,664 The PRISM program whistleblower became the major discussion point in the news this week.
9 PlayStation 4 519,716 Sony unveiled their addition to the already controversial eighth generation of video game consoles, to positive reception.
10 The Last of Us 500,214 Another much-anticipated post-apocalypse video game which was released on June 13.

Notes:

  • This list is derived from the WP:5000 report. It excludes the Wikipedia main page (and "wiki"), non-article pages, and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views).
  • Standard removals this week include Cat anatomy (explanation still unknown for its continuing high view counts)

    Reader comments

2013-06-19

South African learners want Wikipedia; Editing of Israel topics

South African learners lobby for data-free Wikipedia access

Memeburn.com published an article on the yearning of students in South Africa for free knowledge through Wikipedia Zero. Students from Sinenjogo High School have written letters to four major mobile phone companies requesting access to Wikipedia Zero, but the response entailed "little enthusiasm". According to the article, only 21% of South African schools have libraries and access to computers is very limited:


Managing editor of WorldWideWorx.com Arthur Goldstuck agrees. He said that giving kids free access to Wikipedia would go a long way to solving some of South Africa’s education problems.

When asked about the specific request of the students, as well as the future of open educational resources on Wikipedia, Kul Wadhwa, Head of Mobile and Business Development for the Wikimedia Foundation (which encompasses Wikipedia Zero) called the students inspirational, saying "We were truly inspired by this grass roots movement, and we hope that this will open up a larger dialogue about the need to make open educational resources available to everyone in a way that can be delivered to them. This is really what Wikipedia Zero is about."

In an article by IOL SciTech, the author discussed the visit by WMF storyteller Victor Grigas to the high school where he filmed a documentary about their efforts, which will be available later this year. Grigas was quoted in the article as saying "the learners are so sharp and determined to better themselves. The teachers were amazing too. You can’t spend a day there and not feel inspired." Grigas also posted to the Wikimedia-l mailing list on June 19 asking for collaborators on this project.

Partisan editing of Israel topics

Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on the recent indefinite block of Soosim (talk · contribs), described as "Arnie Draiman, a social-media employee of NGO Monitor". The story, also carried by France 24, says Draiman edited English Wikipedia articles on the Israeli–Palestinian conflict "in an allegedly biased manner".


Draiman had been active in Wikipedia for several years, but had increased his participation in 2010 after taking a position at NGO Monitor, on whose website he is listed as the member of the Communications Department responsible for online communications. At 91 edits, he was the most frequent editor of the Wikipedia article on NGO Monitor, which he began editing in May 2010.


Wikipedia administrator Jan Nasonov told Haaretz that biased editing of organisations like NGO Monitor is "unfortunately not all that uncommon on Wikipedia", pointing out that it is difficult to prove. Neither NGO Monitor nor Draiman provided a comment to Haaretz, though Draiman, who had revealed his name to another user on Wikipedia five years ago, before his employment with NGO Monitor, disputed the sockpuppet and meatpuppet allegations against him on Wikipedia and stated that his edits were in compliance with Wikipedia rules.

In brief

  • Google quietly kills quick view for Wikipedia results in mobile search: An article in Techcrunch.com noted that a "quick view" feature which loaded a Wikipedia page in a matter of milliseconds has quietly disappeared without direct, succinct explanation from Google.
  • Creative Wikipedia edit shows us the winner of the next-gen console wars: PC & Tech Authority reported on Tuesday that the article List of burn centers in the United States was vandalized, saying that an editor added "Sony Entertainment acted as the burn center for Microsoft employees following E3 2013", in a slam against Microsoft.
  • How are museums collaborating with Wikipedia?: A group of articles in the journal Museum Practice gives an overview of collaborative projects for museums who wish to work with Wikipedia, including GLAM initiatives. The suite includes a piece on the challenges and successes of WIkipedia-museum collaborations, guides to hosting edit-a-thons, having a Wikipedian-in-Residence, and digitization, as well as case studies, an overview of QRPedia, and inspiration for smaller museums that wish to work with Wikipedia.
  • Wikipedia’s "Human" Entry Is Charmingly Alien: The Motherboard blog published a short piece exploring the article human, noting that it seems to have been written by "either extraterrestrials or our reptilian, shape-shifting overlords. Or both."

    Reader comments

2013-06-19

The Volunteer State: WikiProject Tennessee

Your source for
WikiProject News
Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the Signpost's WikiProject Desk.
Memphis, the largest city in Tennessee
The state capitol in Nashville
Chattanooga was the site of several battles during the American Civil War
A replica of the Parthenon was built in Nashville as part of the state's centennial celebrations
The Sunsphere in Knoxville was built for the 1982 World's Fair
W. C. Handy, pictured with his orchestra, would pioneer the blues music genre
Elvis Presley got rock and roll all shook up
The Grand Ole Opry features weekly country music concerts

This week, we visited WikiProject Tennessee, a project dedicate to the state at the geographic and cultural crossroads of the United States. Started in December 2006, WikiProject Tennessee has grown to include 21 pieces of Featured content and 29 Good articles. The project has a lengthy to-do list, taskforces dedicated to Chattanooga and state routes, a listing of the project's most-viewed articles, and Article Alert notifications. We interviewed Doncram, Orlady, Bms4880, and Theopolisme.

What motivated you to join WikiProject Tennessee? Do you contribute to the projects of any other US states? How would you compare activity at WikiProject Tennessee to activity at other state projects?
Doncram: I joined Wp:TENN in January 2011 to follow my interest in developing wikipedia coverage of historic sites, and hoping to get past some previous negative interactions with some TN editors. Maybe that was a bad idea to try? Anyhow, I started most of the 147 articles on current and former National Register of Historic Places listings in Williamson County, Tennessee, the only big county list fully covered so far with starter articles. Like most US-state WikiProjects, there's not much activity at the Wikiproject's Talk page, but in my three experiences trying to open a friendly conversation there, it has turned out to be, well, interesting.  :) --doncram 21:17, 17 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Orlady: I live in Tennessee and I've been editing articles about my city, the surrounding region, and the state since some time in 2006, at least. I work on pages about my local area because the places we live are important in our lives, because I have found some serious errors in some of the pages, because I figure that local knowledge is of great value and that these are topics that few people from other places would ever build, and (importantly) because I've derived personal satisfaction and learned a great deal from researching topics about my local area and this state. (I'm not "from here", so I didn't ever have to learn about Tennessee in school.)
It took me a long time to list myself as a member of this project (I didn't do so until some time in 2008) because I saw myself as a individual contributor here. I didn't want to participate in Wikipedia "clubs" or social networking and I definitely didn't want to sign up to pursue someone else's project goals. Eventually I realized that this WikiProject is essentially a register of people who identify themselves as being interested in articles about Tennessee -- there are no dues, secret handshakes, or commitments to volunteer to work on somebody else's pet project.
I've edited pages about several other states, and I sometimes participate in their state WikiProject pages. I don't think WikiProject Tennessee is particularly more or less active than other state projects. A number of participants in this project have been active at Wikipedia for a long time. This means the project is well-supplied with experienced and capable contributors, but on the other hand it means that project participants are now involved in a lot of Wikipedia work that's unrelated to Tennessee, so they (we) aren't paying as much attention to Tennessee as they (we) did at one time.
Bms4880: I joined this WikiProject shortly after becoming an active editor seven or so years ago. I mainly joined for advice on articles I was writing. I was born and raised in Tennessee, so it was only natural that I started editing local topics. I loosely follow the North Carolina and Kentucky projects, and don't see a big difference in activity on any of the three.
Do you tend to focus on articles pertaining to a particular aspect of Tennessee? In addition to cities, counties, and geographic features in Tennessee, what are some interesting articles covered by the project?
Orlady: Beyond a preference for the geographic areas of the state that I'm familiar with, I don't specialize in any particular type of topic related to Tennessee. I've created and expanded articles about state government, politicians past and present, a tax, universities, local schools, tiny communities (some with funny names), rivers, symphony orchestras, country music, radio stations, historical events, businesses, coal-mining accidents, notable crimes, roads, parks, a couple of Civil War battles (not my forté!), and a diverse range of famous people -- and that's not the complete list. I think much the same thing is true of most Tennessee WikiProject members. While most of us have some ongoing involvement with monitoring editing activity around the project so we can clean up problems as they arise, I think we all enjoy exploring some of the state's "nooks and crannies".
A few of the more unusual articles I've encountered in the scope of this WikiProject are Coal Creek War, about armed struggle between citizens and the state militia over the state's practice of convict leasing; Mary (elephant), about the hanging of a circus elephant; and University of Tennessee Anthropological Research Facility, about the "body farm" for studying the decomposition of human bodies.
Bms4880: I tend to focus on articles related to East and eastern Middle Tennessee, including geographical, biographical, and historical topics. I rewrote most of the articles for the state's governors and created or expanded many of the state park articles. Some of the more interesting articles I've worked with include East Tennessee bridge-burning conspiracy, William Gannaway Brownlow, John Randolph Neal, Jr., Pinson Mounds, Vardy Community School, Joseph Alexander Mabry, Jr., and Loyston, Tennessee.
Have you contributed to any of the project's 12 Featured Articles, 9 Featured Lists, or 27 Good Articles? What are the greatest difficulties editors face when improving Tennessee-related articles to Featured or Good Article status?
Orlady: I figure I could put notches on my Wikipedia belt (if I had such a belt) for two of those Featured Lists and one of the Featured Articles. I was the chief proponent of the FL nomination for List of cities and towns in Tennessee (subsequently renamed) and I later contributed to List of counties in Tennessee before and during its FL nomination process. Both of those FLs were truly team efforts that benefited from the technical skills, knowledge, and research contributions of several WikiProject Tennessee members, as well as input from helpful reviewers at WP:FLC. My FA involvement was with the article Manhattan Project, where I contributed to the FA nomination campaign, mostly by providing focused input to article sections related to the aspects of the project that occurred in Oak Ridge, Tennessee (where I live).
A general challenge I see in writing about Tennessee is a lack of accessible sources. There's not as much scholarship about Tennessee topics than there is for the typical U.S. state, less content has been posted online than I've seen for some other states, and Tennessee's public libraries don't have the level of resources found in some other areas (state rankings of public libraries place Tennessee around number 48 or 49 on most measures). If it weren't for the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, Wikipedia's documentation of Tennessee topics would be much poorer than it is.
Another interesting challenge I've encountered is the difficulty of documenting -- and the reluctance of editors from other parts of the U.S. to believe -- certain idiosyncrasies of our state that are well-known within the state. With the "cities and towns" list, non-Tennessee editors refused to accept that fact that there is no difference between "cities" and "towns" in Tennessee. It isn't easy to verify that kind of tidbit, and even in spite of having solid reference support (page xiv in [1]), Wikipedians from other states insist that "Cities" and "Towns" must be separate entries in Tennessee county navboxes and that separate categories must be maintained for the state's "cities" and "towns". I encountered similar challenges recently when I undertook to expand and improve the sourcing of Grand Divisions of Tennessee -- an article about an aspect of Tennessee that state schoolchildren learn about in the 4th grade and that is fundamental to understanding this state. The topic is briefly addressed in the state constitution and state law, and there's some standard documentation in lesson materials for 4th-graders, but I had a hard time finding authoritative sources to use in expanding the encyclopedia article beyond a stub. My experience editing in other states leads me to think that Tennessee is not alone in this respect -- every U.S. state seems to possess certain peculiarities that are widely known within the state but may not be documented in published sources to the level required to document them in Wikipedia.
With Memphis and Nashville serving as the historic roots for multiple music genres, does the project deal with a lot of articles related to the entertainment business? How does Wikipedia's coverage of the music industry in Tennessee compare to coverage of other entertainment hubs like California or New York?
Orlady: That question illustrates one of the challenges we face in documenting the music associated with the state of Tennessee: namely, the fact that the rest of the world has sure knowledge of the subject, but that knowledge often happens to be wrong. The story of music in Tennessee is far more complex (and, IMO, far more interesting) than the story of the music industries of Memphis and Nashville. The roots of country music are not in Nashville, but in the mountains of rural southern Appalachia: East Tennessee, Southwest Virginia, etc. (See articles about the Bristol sessions and the Johnson City sessions, for example.) Similarly, the roots of the blues are not in urban Memphis, but throughout the rural Mississippi Delta region. Rural musicians found commercial success and larger audiences in the big cities of Nashville and Memphis and through venues like WSM radio and the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville and Beale Street in Memphis. The performing venues and recording studios of both cities have, of course, nourished explosions of musical development into new genres that only slightly resemble their original rural roots.
Having said all that, I also should say that I don't often see Tennessee WikiProject members engaged in editing articles about the music industries in Memphis and Nashville. Others may contradict me, but I think we tend to leave those topics to contributors who focus on popular music.
Where can I get some decent Memphis barbecue? Seriously, where?
Theopolisme: As a long-time Memphian, I can safely say that there is no such thing as "bad" Memphis barbecue. For the most variety, come in May for The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest--otherwise, stop by Central BBQ, where you can get some delicious eats and (even if you're vegetarian) a bag of specially-flavored potato chips that I guarantee will be gone by the time you get back to the hotel.
The assessments of WikiProject Tennessee continue to be maintained independently of WikiProject United States, despite the latter project assuming the assessment responsibilities for many other states. Was this a conscious decision on the part of WikiProject Tennessee or was the state simply overlooked? Why would a project wish to remain separate from consolidated assessments?
Orlady: Put that question another way: What advantage would there be to Tennessee's joining WikiProject United States? We were invited to participate in the U.S. WikiProject on multiple occasions (1, 2, and 3), but nobody was interested. Maybe that's related to the state's personality: Tennesseans tend to value their personal autonomy.
Are there any Tennessee-related topics that can be improved by editors who don't live in Tennessee? What can be done to improve collaboration between all of the state projects in the United States?
Doncram:: Tennessee needs 1300 articles and 1200 photographs for the 2,000 National Register of Historic Places-listed historic sites in the state , a bit more needed than average percentage-wise per the current "progress" tally at WikiProject NRHP, which coordinates across all 50 U.S. states and U.S. territories. Non-Tennessee editors are welcome to contribute photos, at least.
Orlady: Regarding coordination/collaboration across state lines, I had hoped that WikiProject United States would foster such coordination/collaboration, but it hasn't worked that way. In particular, I hoped for a coordinated effort to update U.S. articles to incorporate the 2010 Census data after it was published, but that never happened. My queries about this on the United States WikiProject talk page didn't get results. I think multi-state WikiProjects with a narrower focus, such as WikiProject Appalachia, which is focused on a particular region, and topic-focused projects such as WP:USROADS and the NRHP WikiProject that Doncram mentions, can be effective at getting collaboration between editors from different states.
As for what editors who don't live in Tennessee could do, it isn't necessary to live in Tennessee to help out with a project like inserting 2010 census information in articles about cities and counties. The data are obtainable from the Bureau of the Census Factfinder2 website (look for 2010 Table DP-1) and it's now possible to permalink to individual Census data tables with "bookmark" links like this one. If someone wants to volunteer for this job, I suggest posting on the WikiProject Tennessee talk page to let people know what you are doing -- or to ask for advice about oddities you find in the data.
What are the project's most urgent needs? How can a new contributor help today?
Orlady: A lot of Wikipedia content about the state has started to show signs of old age. Some of the highest-importance articles about Tennessee (starting with Tennessee) apparently were written before current Wikipedia policies like verifiability were enforced consistently, so they need more references. Some important articles about the state as it exists today, such as Tennessee Plan, Tennessee Lottery, and TennCare, not only need more references, but also need expansion and updates to reflect recent developments. Many of the articles about cities and counties need to be updated to include population data from the 2010 Census. A few major topics related to state government, such as Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury (one of the state's constitutional officers), still lack articles.
Bms4880: I would also include the state's river articles, many of which are brief and inadequate. Caney Fork, Little Pigeon River (Tennessee), Obed River, and Big South Fork of the Cumberland River come to mind.
Previous Reports
United States
Do you want to see your city, state, or region in a future edition of the WikiProject Report? Post a request at the WikiProject Desk!

Next week, we'll catch up with the latest trends. Until then, strut down to the archive.

Reader comments

2013-06-19

Swedish Wikipedia's millionth article leads to protests; WMF elections—where are all the voters?

Swedish Wikipedia reaches one million articles with a bot

With Erysichton elaborata, the Swedish Wikipedia passed the one million article rubicon this week, following closely on the heels of the Spanish Wikipedia last month. While this is a mostly symbolic achievement, serving as a convenient benchmark with which to gain publicity and attention in an increasingly statistical world, the particular method by which the Swedish site has passed the mark has garnered significant attention—and controversy.

The Swedish Wikipedia, alongside the Dutch and much smaller Wikipedias, is one of the few to allow bots—semi-automated or automated programs—to mass-create articles. Using this method has allowed them to leap from about 968,000 articles in May to about 1,044,000 now, with about 454,000 of them being bot-created. This puts them as the fifth-largest Wikipedia, up from ninth just one month ago, and the same method has pushed the Dutch past the Germans, who had long held the title of second-largest Wikipedia. By comparison, the Polish Wikipedia, which had a similar total to the Swedish in May, is now at 973,000 articles.

The Dutch and Swedish totals come despite their far smaller userbases—for example, the Germans have an active userbase that is five times the size of the Dutch and eight times the size of the Swedish. By the same metric, the Polish are twice the size of the Swedish.

The bot-created articles themselves are basic enough: they are about four sentences long, with an infobox and sources from a common database. Each article is tagged with {{Robotskapad}} a template that notes its origins. Before it received attention for the achievement it represents, Erysichton elaborata provides an excellent example.

The Signpost contacted the bot operator, Lsj, for his thoughts. He told us that the idea for bot-created articles came from the Dutch Wikipedia and an idea mentioned on the Swedish equivalent of the Village Pump in early 2012. While a "handful" of editors were "adamantly opposed", the great majority were in favor. Several smaller trials were conducted before the large-scale project that led to the millionth article, including on birds and sponges.

He told us that bot-created articles can offer significant benefits to Wikimedia communities: "human minds should not be wasted on mind-numbing tasks that a machine can do equally well. Let the machines do the grunt work, and let humans do what requires real intelligence." Bots are also better and far faster at repetitive tasks than humans, who can inadvertently introduce errors. Any bot errors, which in an ironic twist are typically kindled human mistakes, can usually be fixed by a second bot run, similar to what Lsjbot will be doing to add images to the biological articles it has created.

The very concept of bot-created articles, though, has garnered significant opposition in the Wikimedia community as a whole, particularly from German Wikipedians. The prominent editor Achim Raschka authored a piece in the German-language news outlet Kurier. He lamented the Swedish Wikipedia's "bitter" milestone, which puts a spotlight on an article that has little more than "their existence and taxonomic pigeonholing" and omits key information like where the species lives or what it does. Raschka told the Signpost that these stub articles impart little useful information to readers—he asks, "who could be helped with [these] fragment[s] of data?" He also pointed at an entry Denis Diderot wrote for the Encyclopédie, titled "Aguaxima":


... the bot is always right, uses a neutral language, forms complete sentences, provides verifiable facts and makes no trouble, unlike us human authors. It knows ... correct formatting, rarely [vandalizes], addresses no other authors offensively, sought no barrier tests, never complains and is easily turned off without resistance. There are no bots with gender bias and of course no problems with the author leaving the site. If in any topic people are missing, there is no problem, as the programming of a few new bots by specially trained bots, perhaps with steward rights, proceeds rapidly. They are absolutely reliable even with a vote. ... We simply need to take note: Bots are better Wikipedians, our days are gone. We have only consumption, sex and drugs. But this does not have to be bad, right?

Schlesinger, "Die Zukunft heißt Botpedia," 16 June 2013.

A separate Kurier article by Schlesinger, which hyperbolically compared the bot-created articles to the famous novel Brave New World and claimed that bots can and will replace human editors, is a non sequitur. While bots can create article shells and—as can be seen on the Swedish Wikipedia—even short stubs, they can never be programmed to mass-create detailed articles capable of becoming featured or even good articles.

There was also extensive discussion on the Wikimedia-l mailing list and a Wikipedia blog post.

Lsj was unaware of the wider German-language attacks on bot-created articles, but after examining them, found that they were principally based in deeply held principles, making them difficult or impossible to provide an effective counter-argument.

In reply to Hubertl's sarcastic mailing list post, Lsj commented that the statistics, including view counts, editor numbers, and participation, contradict Hubertl's argument.

Still, a major problem could come from human error. Lsj acknowledges that source materials' errors could then creep into articles, but explains this by saying that a second bot run would fix the problem. The obvious rhetorical reply is simple: what if an error only creeps up every so often and is not fixable by bots? What if these errors are not caught until a significant amount of articles are created? A small base of active users may not be able to deal with the required cleanup.

Despite the risks, carefully planned bot-created articles could hold significant benefits for the Wikimedia movement. As Lsj told the Signpost:


While German-language Wikipedians lament the loss in quality in these programmatic articles, especially when compared to their stringent biology project guidelines, a short article may be better than none at all. This advantage is particularly apparent in smaller languages, whose Foundation projects have few editors and limited sources of information on the Internet, but far less so for wikis with larger userbases and article counts. It remains to be seen if more wikis will choose to bolster their content in this way.

This article was updated with comments from Achim Raschka.

Low voter numbers in WMF elections

Voter turnout by day, showing the onset and the effects of emailed reminder notifications halfway through the election period.

With little more than a day before voting closes for the WMF elections for three community seats on the ten-member Board of Trustees, fewer than 1700 Wikimedians out of a purported 90,000 active editors have turned out to vote—about one in every 50. This compares with a vote of almost 3500 in the last elections for these two-year seats, in June 2011.

Voter proportions by language
Arabic is spoken in 27 nation states by nearly half a billion speakers; but where are the voters?
The disappointing rate of participation is despite a lengthy pre-election period and almost two weeks of voting, with banners on all WMF sites and reminder emails sent out. The graph shows the day-by-day vote until the time of publication. The typical spurt of interest followed by a rapid fall-off in numbers occurred twice: once at the open of voting on 8 June, and once a week later on 15 June, corresponding to the distribution of email notifications.

Risker, a member of the volunteer election committee, commented: "It is lower than I would have expected ... It may be that the active community of 2013 is not as interested in the 'meta' aspects of the Wikimedia movement as in the past, as we have mostly followed the same processes as existed over the past several elections. Or it could be something entirely different. It's generally much harder to figure out why people don't do things than why they do them."

Of the 1659 votes cast at the time of writing, 592 (35.7%) are from English-language sites, 221 (13.3%) German, 157 (9.5%) Italian, 153 (9.2%) French, 82 (4.9%) Spanish, 55 (3.3%) Commons, 48 (2.9%) Polish, 41 (2.5%) Chinese, and 310 (18.7%) from all other languages.

Other languages on the radar are Japanese (27 voters) and Indonesian (12)—both welcome signs of the beginnings of a closer engagement with the worldwide movement—and Hebrew (10), Finnish (9), Danish (7), and Norwegian (7).

A notable disappointment is Hindi, with one voter out of some 200 million native speakers and a significant number of second-language speakers—the fourth-most-spoken language in the world—and an active and growing offline movement in the subcontinent.

Arabic, counting all dialects, has well over 400 million speakers, including 300 million native speakers, but managed to garner only four voters; this is despite a marked shift from the English and French Wikipedias to the Arabic Wikipedia in Arabic-speaking countries, and a successful start to a WMF education program in Egyptian universities.

Editors can vote until UTC 23:59 Saturday 22 June, by clicking on this link to the SecurePoll interface. Instructions on voting and information about candidates is at Meta. The close of voting corresponds to Saturday afternoon to evening in the Americas, before sunrise on Sunday morning in the Subcontinent, and early to late Sunday morning in East Asia and Australia/New Zealand.

In brief

  • Wales portrait with an odd backstory: A portrait of Jimmy Wales that was painted with a person's penis was the subject of a Commons deletion discussion, alongside a video of how the image was created. The portrait was uploaded by and possibly requested by Russavia, who was unblocked just months ago via an arbitration appeal. (The Signpost has carefully worded this due to Russavia's persistent refusal to give a definitive positive or negative answer when asked in multiple locations if he inspired the image's creation.) The discussion is leaning towards keeping both. Russavia was indefinitely blocked from the English Wikipedia last week.
  • New hires: The Wikimedia Foundation has brought four temporary community liaisons on board, including users Elitre, WhatamIdoing, The Interior, and Keegan. They have also hired a new director of analytics, Toby Negrin.
  • Privacy policy: The Foundation is asking for community input in formulating a new privacy policy on its projects. The move comes after the recent PRISM scandal in the United States, which drew a Foundation response.
  • Happy birthday: The Foundation is now ten years old.
  • South Africans want free access to Wikipedia: A Facebook campaign to allow free access on cellphones in South Africa so students can do their homework has inspired a WMF blog post. Related coverage is in this week's "In the media". The students state:


Reader comments

2013-06-19

Cheaper by the dozen

A YAL-1A Airborne Laser in flight with the mirror unstowed. The shoot, which was done by the Missile Defense Agency, is now a featured picture.
A Black-crowned Night Heron fishing in a river.
A Black-backed jackal feeding on a springbok carcass at the Etosha National Park.
A Yellow Bellied Marmot on a rock in the Tuolumne Meadows Yosemite National Park.

Eleven articles gained featured status this week:

  • Henry I of England (nom) by Hchc2009. Henry I (1068 –1135) was the fourth son of William the Conqueror and served as the King of England from 1100 to 1135. Considered by contemporaries to be a harsh but effective ruler, Henry skilfully manipulated the barons in both England and Normandy, supported the Cluniac order, and played a major role in the selection of the senior clergy in those territories.
  • James Moore (Continental Army officer) (nom) by Cdtew. Moore (c. 1737 – c. April 15, 1777) was a Continental Army general during the American Revolutionary War. Moore served in the colonial militia during the French and Indian War, and commanded the colonial governor's artillery at the Battle of Alamance, which ended the War of the Regulation.
  • McDonnell Douglas A-4G Skyhawk (nom) by Nick-D. The McDonnell Douglas A-4G Skyhawk was a variant of the Douglas A-4 Skyhawk attack aircraft developed for the Royal Australian Navy. It was based on the A-4F variant of the Skyhawk, and was fitted with slightly different avionics. The Skyhawks were not used in combat, and the planned deployment of some of their pilots to fight in the Vietnam War was cancelled before it took place.
  • Tern (nom) by Jimfbleak. Previously considered a subfamily of the gulls, the terns are seabirds spread across the globe, and which are normally found near the sea, rivers or wetlands. Terns are long-lived birds and are relatively free from natural predators and parasites, but most species are declining in numbers due directly or indirectly to human activities, including habitat loss, pollution, disturbance and predation by introduced mammals.
  • Red Rail (nom) by FunkMonk. The Red Rail (Aphanapteryx bonasia) is an extinct, flightless rail endemic to the Mascarene island of Mauritius, east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. Reminiscent of a Kiwi and a Limpkin, the Red Rail is thought to have gone extinct around 1700, due to predation by humans and introduced species.
  • SheiKra (nom) by Dom497. SheiKra is a steel Dive Coaster roller coaster at the Busch Gardens Tampa Bay, manufactured by Bolliger & Mabillard. It was the first Dive Coaster to be constructed in North America, and includes a splashdown and an Immelmann loop.
  • Kahaani (nom) by Msrag and Dwaipayan, Pleasant1623 and Karthikndr. Kahaani is a 2012 Indian thriller film directed and co-produced by Sujoy Ghosh. The film was conceived and developed by Ghosh, and explores themes of feminism and motherhood in male-dominated Indian society. It received three National Film Awards and five Filmfare Awards.
  • Pigeye shark (nom) by Yzx. The pigeye shark or Java shark is an uncommon species of requiem shark mostly found in the warm coastal waters of the eastern Atlantic and western Indo-Pacific. It is an apex predator that mostly hunts low in the water column, and enjoys a varied diet, consisting mainly of bony and cartilaginous fishes.
  • Tommy Amaker (nom) by TonyTheTiger. Amaker is an American NCAA Division I college basketball coach and the current head coach of the Harvard University men's basketball team. Amaker was the first coach to lead the Crimson to victory over a ranked opponent with the 2008–09 team.
  • Conte di Cavour-class battleship (nom) by Sturmvogel 66. The Conte di Cavour-class battleships were a group of three dreadnoughts built for the Royal Italian Navy in the 1910s. One of the ships was sunk by a magazine explosion in 1916, and the surviving two were extensively reconstructed between 1933 and 1937, to participate in the Battle of Calabria in July 1940.
  • God of War: Betrayal (nom) by JDC808. God of War: Betrayal is a side-scrolling action-adventure mobile game part of the God of War video game series. Developed by Javaground, Betrayal is the only installment in the series to be released on a non-PlayStation platform. The game was praised for its fidelity to the series in terms of gameplay, art style, and graphics.
The Royal Prison and the St. Sophie Church, Altstadt, Dresden, Saxony, Germany, seen in a c. 1895 photochrom.
"The High Rollers Extravaganza Co.: The Great Chariot Race in Bend Her" poster for an American burlesque from 1900.
Half Dome as viewed from Glacier Point, Yosemite National Park, California, United States.

Twelve lists gained featured states this week:

  • List of Lincoln City F.C. players (nom) by Struway2. English association football club Lincoln City, founded in 1884, has seen more than 50 of its players appear in 100 or more matches across the last century. First entering the FA Cup in the 1884–85 season, the club became founder members of the Midland League, and won the inaugural league title.
  • Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series (nom) by Aircorn. The Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series is an Emmy Award which first appeared at the 1985 Daytime Emmy Awards. Originally called Outstanding Ingenue in a Drama Series, the award begun using its current title in 1991.
  • Amateur Achievement Award of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (nom) by Tomcat7. The Amateur Achievement Award is an award managed by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, recognizing contributions to astronomy or amateur astronomy. The recipients of this award receive a commemorative plaque, and are selected by the Awards Committee appointed by the Board of Directors.
  • Latin Grammy Award for Best Latin Jazz Album (nom) by Jaespinoza. The Latin Grammy Award for Best Latin Jazz Album is presented by the Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences at the annual Latin Grammy Awards. The award recognizes new material recorded in Spanish or Portuguese, and has been presented to musicians or ensembles originating from Brazil, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, United States, and Spain.
  • List of works by Sharpe and Paley (nom) by Peter I. Vardy. Sharpe and Paley was a partnership of two architects between 1845 and 1856. It became the largest practice in northwest England by the late 19th century and was responsible for the design of many important buildings, especially churches. The partnership also handled restorations, doing alterations to mediaeval churches in an effort to return their structure to their original designs.
  • List of songs recorded by Kelly Clarkson (nom) by Chihciboy. American singer-songwriter Kelly Clarkson has recorded a wide variety of songs since the beginning of her career in 2005, after winning the American Idol singing contest. Most of her recorded material has appeared on the five studio albums she has released to date; although she has collaborated with other recording artists for duets and songs on their respective albums.
  • Citra Award for Best Leading Actor (nom) by Crisco 1492. The Citra Award for Best Leading Actor is an award given at the Indonesian Film Festival to Indonesian actors for their performance in lead roles. Described as the equivalent to the Oscars, the award was first presented in 1955 to A. Hadi and A.N. Alcaff, for their performance in Tarmina and Lewat Djam Malam, respectively. 61 actors have been nominated, and 26 have won the award.
  • List of Mystery Dungeon video games (nom) by PresN. Mystery Dungeon is a series of roguelike video games mostly developed by Chunsoft, along with several secondary studios under permission. Starting in 1993 with Torneko no Daibōken: Fushigi no Dungeon, the series has 27 total entries as of 2010, spanning several generations of consoles.
  • List of UK Official Download Chart number-one singles from the 2000s (nom) by A Thousand Doors. The UK Official Download Chart ranks the most downloaded songs in the United Kingdom. First issued is September 2004, the chart has had 110 singles reach number one, with Lady Gaga’s "Poker Face" becoming the most downloaded single of the decade. However, Rihanna was recognized as the most downloaded artist for that timespan.
  • List of songs written by Emeli Sandé (nom) by Calvin999. Scottish singer-songwriter Emeli Sandé has recorded a wide variety of songs since the beginning of her career in 2009; Most of her recorded songs appear on her debut set Our Version of Events, released in 2012. Sandé has also worked with a wide list of singers on songs that have been included on their albums.
  • Terry-Thomas on screen, radio, stage and record (nom) by SchroCat with Cassianto. British actor and comedian Terry-Thomas’s career spanned from 1933 until his retirement in the late 1970s, and included film, radio and theatre. He made his film debut as an extra in the 1933 film The Private Life of Henry VIII. His first television appearance came in 1949 in Technical Hitch, which opened the door for his first success, How Do You View?. He was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1971, which finally ended his career a decade later.
  • Tip O'Neill Award (nom) by Muboshgu with Bloom6132. The Tip O'Neill Award is an award given annually to Canadian baseball players for their achievements and teamwork. The prize was created by the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame and first presented in 1984. It was named after James "Tip" O'Neill, one of the earliest Canadian stars in Major League Baseball.

Eleven pictures gained featured status this week:

An Armenian woman standing in the middle of the forest. This picture, originally taken by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky, is now a featured picture.
The Common Raven, a large, all-black passerine bird found across Earth's northern hemisphere.
  • Common Raven (nom) created and nominated by Diliff. The Common Raven, also known as the Northern Raven, is a large, all-black passerine bird. Found across the northern hemisphere, it is the most widely distributed of all corvids. The Common Raven has coexisted with humans for thousands of years.
  • Yellow-bellied marmot (nom) created and nominated by Diliff. The yellow-bellied marmot, also known as the rock chuck, is a ground squirrel in the marmot genus. The species lives in the western United States and southwestern Canada, including the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.
  • Half Dome (nom) created and nominated by Diliff. Half Dome is a granite dome in Yosemite National Park, located in northeastern Mariposa County, California, at the eastern end of Yosemite Valley — possibly Yosemite's most familiar rock formation.
  • Black-backed jackal (nom) created by Yathin sk and nominated by Tomer T. The black-backed jackal (Canis mesomelas), also known as the silver-backed or red jackal, is a species of jackal which inhabits two areas of the African continent separated by roughly 900 kilometres (560 mi). Although the most lightly built of jackals, it is the most aggressive, having been observed to singly kill animals many times its own size.
  • Boeing YAL-1 (nom) created by Missile Defence Agency and nominated by Cowtowner. The Boeing YAL-1 Airborne Laser Testbed weapons system is a megawatt-class chemical oxygen iodine laser mounted inside a modified Boeing 747-400F. It is primarily designed as a missile defense system to destroy tactical ballistic missiles. The aircraft was designated YAL-1A in 2004 by the U.S. Department of Defense.
  • Armenian woman (nom) created by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky and nominated by Proudbolsahye. An Armenian woman from Artvin in national costume, photographed by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky between 1909 and 1912. Women in Armenia are normally expected to be virtuous and submissive, safeguarding their virginity until marriage.
  • Black-crowned Night Heron (nom) created by Acarpentier and nominated by Nikhilb239. The Black-crowned Night Heron, commonly abbreviated to just Night Heron in Eurasia, is a medium-sized heron found throughout a large part of the world, except in the coldest regions and Australasia. These birds stand still at the water's edge and wait to ambush prey, mainly at night or early morning.
  • The High Rollers Extravaganza Co. (nom) created by The Courier Company, Buffalo, N.Y. and nominated by Adam Cuerden. A poster of an American burlesque desings, circa 1900. It depicts Bend Her, a burlesque of the 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ by Lew Wallace.
  • Maktoum bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (nom) created by Rowan Farrell and nominated by Surtsicna. Sheikh Maktoum Bin Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum is the deputy ruler of Dubai, and the Chairman of Dubai Media Incorporated. He is the third son of Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
  • Sophienkirche (nom) created by Detroit Publishing Co. and nominated by Adam Cuerden. The Sophienkirche was a church in Dresden that stood on the northeast corner of the Postplatz, in Dresden's old town, before its destruction in 1962 on resolution of the party and government of the GDR. It was the only Gothic Church in the city.
  • Map Projections Set created by Strebe and nominated by Cowtowner. A list of map projections of the Earth, showcasing the types of map projections that currently exist, and that display the relevant features we would expect of maps--longitude, latitude, tropics of Cancer and Capricorn and the equator.

    Reader comments

2013-06-19

Citations, non-free content, and a MediaWiki meeting

Seating in the Saeima, the Parliament of Latvia

This is mostly a list of Non-article page requests for comment believed to be active on 19 June 2013 linked from subpages of Wikipedia:RfC, and recent watchlist notices and SiteNotices. The latter two are in bold. Items that are new to this report are in italics even if they are not new discussions. If an item can be listed under more than one category it is usually listed once only in this report. Clarifications and corrections are appreciated; please leave them in this article's comment box at the bottom of the page.

Style and naming

Policies and guidelines

WikiProjects and collaborations

Technical issues and templates

Proposals

English Wikipedia notable requests for permissions

(This section will include active RfAs, RfBs, CU/OS appointment requests, and Arbcom elections)

Meta

Upcoming online meetings

2013-06-19

May engineering report: Flow enters consultation phase and other headlines

May engineering report published

In May:
  • 124 unique committers contributed patchsets of code to MediaWiki (stable)
  • The total number of unresolved commits stood at 960 (up 145 from April)
  • About 87 shell requests were processed (up 38)
  • Wikimedia Labs now hosts 165 projects (stable) and has 1382 registered users (up 158).

—Adapted from Engineering metrics, Wikimedia blog

The WMF's engineering report for May was published recently on the Wikimedia blog and on the MediaWiki wiki ("friendly" summary version), giving an overview of all Foundation-sponsored technical operations in that month (as well as brief coverage of progress on Wikimedia Deutschland's Wikidata project and Wikimedia CH's Kiwix offline reader project, which the report noted, recently released its first version for Android). Although the ten headlines items will be the major focus of this "Technology report", the WMF-led publication also contains a myriad of updates about smaller initiatives which interested users should peruse at their leisure.

As has been the trend in recent months, the choice of headlines mirrors the use of blogposts on the Wikimedia Techblog. Among the teams to blog the most, the Foundation's Language Engineering team wrote of their efforts to attract an intern, deploy the UniversalLanguageSelector, and make it easier to internationalise an external MediaWiki installation. Another busy team was that focussed on the Foundation's "Wikipedia Zero" project, aimed at giving free access to Wikipedia in developing nations via portable devices. The team reported that during May they had "[worked to launch] Wikipedia Zero in Pakistan, refactored its legacy codebase, migrated configuration from monolithic wiki articles to per-carrier JSON configuration blobs, generated utility scripts, patched legacy hyperlink redirect and content rendering bugs, and supported partner on-boarding" against the backdrop of widening adoption. Finally, the Foundation's soon-to-be-flagship project to improve talk pages, Flow, entered its community consultation phase during April.

Highlights from last month's report, which the Signpost did not report extensively at the time, included details on an area that the Foundation has recently begun to hire in – multimedia engineering – with the commitment to ensure that "contributing an image or video to an article while you’re editing does not require leaving the “edit mode”; as this month's report notes, however, the Foundation is still having to fix bugs in its media handling backend, as well as its core TimedMediaHandler video player, which appear to be more likely targets for development in the interim. A second featured another cornerstone project, Wikidata, in the wake of news that Russian technology firm Yandex is to donate €150,000 to support its development. Entitled "The Wikidata Revolution", the blog post details the march of Wikidata's second (infobox) phase, while the Wikidata team has more recently announced progress integrating new datatypes, including date-time and geocordinate displays.

Though neither monthly report commented greatly on any disappointments the Foundation has had over the past two months, it is clear that many of the perennial concerns – project delays, variable community resistance, and code review – remain ever present worries. Commenting on the last of these, the report noted that WMF Technical Contributor Coordinator Quim Gil has been "preparing a proposal to get automated community metrics" with the potential to help the Foundation better understand the health of the volunteer community given the spiraling number of unreviewed (but still open) commits.

In brief

Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for several weeks.

  • Many (if not most) recently developed features have compatibility issues with older version of Internet Explorer, an analysis showed this week (wikitech-l mailing list). The flagship VisualEditor project, for instance, intentionally does not support IE6, 7 and 8 (combined usage: 7.5% of Wikimedia pageviews) and unintentionally excludes a further 6.76% by virtue of their using IE9.
  • The Google Summer of Code code period is officially underway (also wikitech-l).
  • The latest version of MediaWiki (1.22wmf7) was added to test wikis and MediaWiki.org on June 13. It will be enabled on non–Wikipedia sites on June 17, and on all Wikipedias on June 20.
  • A report on mobile upload errors was published, and software changes to reduce their number has been promised.
  • The Narayam (non-Latin script input) and WebFonts extensions were successfully replaced with the Universal Language Selector across all applicable Wikimedia wikis on June 11. It will now be rolled out to wikis which did not have either predecessor extension, including the Catalan (ca), Cebuano (ceb), Persian (fa), Finnish (fi), Norwegian Bokmål (no), Portuguese (pt), Ukrainian (uk), Vietnamese (vi), Waray-Waray (war) and Chinese (zh) Wikipedias on June 18 (wikitech-ambassadors mailing list). In related news, two new webfonts (UnifrakturMaguntia and Linux Libertine) will shortly be added to wikis that use Universal Language Selector to further help avoid the presence of unrecognised and/or unsupported Unicode characters (which would otherwise appear as a string of ���s)..
  • A patrolling link will now be visible for un-patrolled pages, even if users do not originate their page request from Special:NewPages or Special:RecentChanges (bug # 49123).

    Reader comments
2013-06-19

The Farmbrough amendment request—automation and arbitration enforcement

Richard Farmbrough

Editor's note: the "Arbitration report" invited Richard Farmbrough to comment on his recent request to the arbitration committee. In an effort to represent all sides of the issue, we also asked arbitrators T. Canens and Carcharoth if they would take the time to answer some questions about the case, since they both commented on the initial request. Carcharoth declined, but T. Canens agreed to talk to us from his own perspective.

Richard Farmbrough was set to have his day in court, but as events transpired, this was not to be so. On 25 March 2013, an accusation was made against Farmbrough at Arbitration Enforcement (AE), claiming that he violated the terms of an automated edit restriction. Within hours, Farmbrough had filed his own request with the arbitration committee, citing the newly filed AE request and claiming that the motion was being used "in an absurd way" in the filing of enforcement requests: "I have not made any edits that a sane person would consider automation."

The AE arm of the arbitration committee blocked Farmbrough for one year, after receiving a go-ahead from arbitrator T Canens and without waiting for input from either Farmbrough or the community. The committee, noting that Farmbrough was blocked, then declined to consider Farmbrough's request.

Meet Richard Farmbrough

Richard Farmbrough is something of an icon in the Wikipedia saga. In 2007, Smith Magazine interviewed him as one of the most prolific editors on Wikipedia. In 2011, he was cited by R. Stuart Geiger in "The Lives of Bots" as the creator of the {{nobots}} opt-out template and an advocate of the "bots are better behaved than people" philosophy of bot development. Farmbrough is also credited with coining the word "botophobia", to make the point that bot policy needs to be as responsive to public perceptions as to technical considerations. Farmbrough described himself to the Signpost as "a reader and sometime editor and administrator of the English Wikipedia ... [I've] contributed to and started many articles, worked on policy, edited templates, created and organised categories, participated in discussions, helped new users, run database extraction, created file lists and reports for Wikipedians, done anti-vandal work, and was a host at Tea-house. I also wrote and ran bots."

Genesis

SmackBot: the earliest incarnation of Farmbrough's first bot, Helpful Pixie Bot
Farmbrough's first bot was Smackbot, later renamed Helpful Pixie Bot "to be more welcoming". Helpful Pixie Bot worked mainly on article space, using mostly the AWB (AutoWikiBrowser) program for general clean-up, dating maintenance tags, checking and formatting ISBN numbers, and other tasks that are listed on its user page; it also ran tasks requested by individual editors or projects. Femto Bot was created later, and did more "meta" tasks, such as archiving and maintaining page lists for WikiProjects.

All of the bots' tasks were approved by BAG, the Bot Approvals Group, "although in the less restrictive environment of 2007 a more liberal approach was taken to 'obviously' good extensions of existing tasks than was later the case." Before being submitted to BAG's testing regime, bot tasks underwent a significant amount of manual testing. In one typical case, Farmbrough manually checked and saved more than 3000 edits over the course of six or seven weeks.

None of Farmbrough's bots are currently running. Some of the code and data from his bots is used in other bots, such as AnomieBot and AWB-based bots. AnomieBot has taken over some of Helpful Pixie Bot's dating tasks, but the other general fixes are not being performed.

Dwarves vs gnomes?

So what went wrong? "In September 2010 I made some changes to the general clean-up, there was some opposition and I agreed to revert the changes ... However, an avalanche had been unleashed, and the matter was escalated to ANI. Subsequently I removed all custom general fixes, and rewrote the entire bot in perl, since AWB at that time could not meet the exacting standards that were being demanded. ... One would think that having agreed to do everything asked, and even gone beyond it, the matter would have rested there; but a series of ANI and ARB filings ensued, some rejected out of hand, others gaining traction until by mid-2012 it had become impossible to edit."

As one observer put it, "What we are seeing here is 'The War of the Dwarves and the Gnomes'. Dwarves are editors who work mainly on content, and typically put a lot of thought into each edit; gnomes are editors who work mainly on form, and tend to make large numbers of edits doing things like changing a - to a –. Richard is a Supergnome, and the comparatively small fraction of errors generated by his huge volume of automated edits ended up costing the dwarves who maintain articles an enormous amount of time. Eventually, after repeated failed attempts to rein him in, the outraged dwarves banded together to ban him."

An automation restriction

The outcome of the 2012 Rich Farmbrough arbitration case, along with its subsequent motions, was not at all in his favor. It contained the wording of the automation restriction that has become so controversial: "Rich Farmbrough is indefinitely prohibited from using any automation whatsoever on Wikipedia. For the purposes of this remedy, any edits that reasonably appear to be automated shall be assumed to be so." A later "amendment by motion" stated "Rich Farmbrough is directed ... to make only completely manual edits (i.e. by selecting the [EDIT] button and typing changes into the editing window)".

Is typing four tildes "automation"?
What, exactly, are "automated edits"?
So did Farmbrough break his automation ban? And what exactly are "automated edits"? Opinion was divided over whether automation had been used. Some said there was no compelling reason to believe the edits were likely automated. Others speculated that the edits might have been done with the "search and replace" function in the edit window toolbar, and therefore not prohibited under the restriction. Still others said the edits could be completely manual. (Farmbrough told the Signpost that it was "a manual error incidentally" that gave rise to the AE posting.)

The Arbitration Enforcement administrator, however, stated that "it appears very improbable that this sort of repetitive change was made without some sort of automation, if only the copy/paste or search/replace functions (which are forbidden under the terms of the decision, which prohibits 'any automation whatsoever')", and defined "find and replace" as automation because "it produces the effect of many keystrokes with one or few keystrokes". If "search and replace" is automation, replied the commenters, then so is "copy and paste" or signing posts with four tildes. Farmbrough pointed out that caps-lock also fits the definition of producing the effect of many keystrokes with one keystroke.

Defining automation

What interpretation of "automated edits" is reasonable? We asked Farmbrough if some automated edits are potentially damaging and others not:


Chilling effect on bot operators?

It has been suggested that this will have a chilling effect on other bot operators, that they will be afraid of making mistakes and getting banned. Says one talk page commenter, "A lot of bot ops and potential botops think twice before starting a bot. I have talked with several editors who want too but are afraid if they make mistakes that the zero defect mentality will get them banned."

Arbitrator T. Canens responded:


Does it matter if edits are beneficial?

We did not think to ask whether sub-optimal edits are beneficial, as long as they move the project forward, but both Farmbrough and T. Canens identified this as an issue.

Said T. Canens, "It is very clear to me that the committee in both the initial sanction and the subsequent motion intended to ban all forms of automated editing whatsoever from Rich, regardless of whether any particular automated edit is beneficial. In general, this happens when the Committee determines that 1) the disruption caused by the totality of the automated editing outweighs the benefits of said editing and 2) there is no less restrictive sanction that is both workable and capable of preventing further disruption. In this case, for instance, given the high volume of Rich's automated edits, a remedy that only prohibits him from making problematic edits would be impractical."

Farmbrough stated, "What we should be concerned about is the encyclopedic project, is something someone is doing damaging or benefiting the project? If it is damging we should look at steps to address that, if it is benefiting we should look at ways to improve it further."

Procedural issues about arbitration and enforcement

The Arbitration Enforcement request against Farmbrough was initiated at 10:29, 25 March 2013, and closed less than 13 hours later, at 23:04, with only the accuser and the AE administrator participating. After a request to leave the case open a little bit longer for discussion was declined, discussion continued on Sandstein's and Rich Farmbrough's talk pages.

Farmbrough's block at AE

T. Canens' statement at Farmbrough's Arbcom request that "I think the AE request can proceed as usual", and Richard's subsequent block, received comments at various talk pages ranging from "[it is] somewhat strange that T. Canens should encourage blocking of an editor who has made an appeal to ArbCom" to "the comments from arbitrators seem to say 'block him, we're not going to change the sanction' (T. Canens) and 'we're not going to change the sanction because he's blocked' (Carcharoth and Risker)."

"I was amazed that one arb suggesting Sandstein go ahead was considered authority to do so," Farmbrough told the Signpost. "Even more at the circular argument 'Rich is blocked so the request to remove the provision he was blocked under is moot'".

We asked arbitrator T. Canens why he had Farmbrough blocked while his Arbcom request was still open.


Autonomy of Arbitration Enforcement administrators

There was also some disagreement over the intentions of the arbitration committee with regard to automation and role of AE.

According to one interpretation of the Farmbrough arbitration case, "it isn't the automated editing itself that is harmful/disruptive, and if there is no harm being done here then the 1 year block does not prevent any problems. So in that sense it is neither punitive nor preventative!" and "the Enforcement By block section says 'may be blocked...' which I can't read any other way than to imply that some discretion is given to administrators to not block or to block for a shorter period when, for example, the infraction was so exceedingly minor or when there is no or very little disruption."

According to another view, "the underlying decision of the Arbitration Committee to consider all automated editing of whatever nature by Rich Farmbrough to be harmful, and to ban all such editing. ... Because Arbitration Committee decisions are binding, AE admins in particular have no authority to question the Committee's decisions; they must limit themselves to executing the decisions."

We asked T. Canens if, under these circumstances, "the arbitration committee needs to clarify their intentions about automation and mass editing". Canen replied:


Is there a way forward?

"I just want to get back to editing" says Farmbrough. "Wikipedians do not edit for thanks and barnstars, though they are both nice to receive. It is however a big disincentive to edit, and part of the hostile environment, when there's a constant (and I do mean constant) threat hanging over every editor's head that they're going to have to spend days and weeks fighting off ANI threads and Arbcom cases every time they do something that someone doesn't like."

Given the absence of any other formal mechanism for dealing with automation disputes, that may be exactly what will happen once the block is over.

Reader comments

If articles have been updated, you may need to refresh the single-page edition.