Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/Single/2005-11-07

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The Signpost
Single-page Edition
WP:POST/1
7 November 2005

 

2005-11-07

From the editor

This week, the Signpost has made a few backend changes. While the site will remain the same, our newsroom has been de-cluttered and organized for clarity. In addition, the Signpost now accepts e-mailed suggestions for story ideas for those editors who wish to remain anonymous. The e-mail address is WikipediaSignpost@GMail.com (you can also use this link) Any comments are welcomed here.

Also, we'd like to remind readers that your input is welcomed. If you have an event you'd like to publicize, feel free to leave a note on the tip line — or even write the article yourself!

Thank you for continuing to read the Signpost; we're proud to have such a great readership.

Ral315 and the Signpost staff



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2005-11-07

ArbCom duties and requirements

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2005-11-07

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2005-11-07

ArbCom member resigns

Related articles
2005-11-07

A chat with the elected Arbitrators
6 February 2006

Jimbo Wales appoints 11 arbitrators, increases committee size
23 January 2006

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16 January 2006

ArbCom candidates (part two)
9 January 2006

ArbCom candidates
2 January 2006

Straw poll closes
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Jimbo starts new poll regarding election
5 December 2005

Last chance to run for ArbCom
28 November 2005

ArbCom voting process
14 November 2005

ArbCom duties and requirements
7 November 2005

A closer look: the calls for reform of the ArbCom
31 October 2005

A look back: the 2004 ArbCom elections
24 October 2005

Current ArbCom members
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Criticism of the ArbCom
10 October 2005

About the Arbitration process
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The history of the Arbitration Committee
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Introduction to a special series: A look at the upcoming Arbitration Committee elections
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Reader comments

2005-11-07

News and notes

800,000th article created

The English Wikipedia celebrated their 800,000th article this week. It is believed that the milestone article was History of Sudan (Transitional Military Council).

Merriam-Webster creates Open Dictionary

Merriam-Webster, a Britannica subsidiary, has created a new Open Dictionary. Despite the name, the copyright status of entries is not given, and entries with profanities are not accepted. At press time, the dictionary included 1,697 entries.

Wikipedia breaks Alexa Top 40

Wikipedia has entered the Alexa Global Top 40, ranking in at #38. Wikipedia has eclipsed Google Spain, and is poised to pass Google Canada and the popular online weblog site Xanga.

Conventional news media scooped

When Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand co-leader Rod Donald died on Saturday, Wikipedia was the first major news source to recognize his passing. At 11:47 UTC on 5 November, Alan Liefting first updated Donald's entry with the news. According to Google News, the first conventional news source to confirm his death was an Auckland radio station, who first posted the story at 2:35 UTC on 6 November. ([1])

Wikiversity vote ended

The vote on whether to create a new Wikiversity project ended today. Wikiversity, which currently resides on Wikibooks, started a vote on 15 September to move to wikiversity.org, currently hosting a near-dormant German Wikiversity project. A two-thirds majority, required to submit the proposal, has been reached, and board approval is all that is required to start a project beta period. The issue is on the agenda for the next board meeting, scheduled for 12 November.

Briefly



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2005-11-07

In the news

Reuters talks print with Jimmy Wales

Wikipedia's main exposure in the news this week was a Reuters piece by Paul Holmes called "Wikipedia may go to print, says founder". The article ran on October 31, and was reprinted by CNN.com, USA Today, CBC, ABC News Australia, and numerous other newspapers and technology magazines.

Accuracy in South African articles

The South African newspaper Mail & Guardian Online conducted a rating exercise similar to the Guardian's October analysis, using the same article title, "Can You Trust Wikipedia?". The article was published on 7 November.

The newspaper asked local experts to rate Wikipedia articles on South African subjects:

  • Sangomas -- 6/10 "It needs to be placed within a bigger conceptual framework of traditional healers and the current roles need to described";
  • Media in South Africa -- 2/10 "disappointing";
  • South Africa national rugby league team and South Africa national rugby union team -- 10/10 "If I were to be hyper-critical, I might say that they are a little too up to date and don't care enough for history";
  • African National Congress -- 7/10 "the entry was surprisingly accurate (perhaps I have low expectations): one clear factual error only is less than I would have expected";
  • Braai -- 8/10 "could be a more in-depth description incorporating favourite dishes from various areas";
  • Boerewors -- 6/10 "not invented by the boers";
  • South African National Defence Force -- 7/10 "very useful and, surprisingly, factually very correct. There is also an absence of emotional opinions in the presentation of the [historical] facts -- something that you don't always find in South Africa these days";
  • Economy of South Africa -- 6/10 "a lot of information about the current state of the South African economy and economic policy, but provides little context and is poorly organised";
  • Telkom -- refused to comment on the article about themselves.

National Public Radio

"Wikipedia, Open Source and the Future of the Web" on NPR's Talk of the Nation on 2 November included interviews with Jimbo Wales, Chris Anderson and Nicholas Carr.

Wikipedia's coverage of conspiracy theories

The article "Ten years after" was published by Haaretz.com on 3 November. On the 10th anniversary of the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, Haaretz notes the boom in conspiracy theories and notes those on the English and Hebrew Wikipedias that claim Shimon Peres was behind it.

Citations in the news

Wikipedia was cited in the last week in the following publications:



Reader comments

2005-11-07

Features and admins

Administrators

Administration status was given to ten users this week: Jeffrey O. Gustafson (nom), ScottDavis (nom), Egil (nom), Shimgray (nom), Necrothesp (nom), Commander Keane (nom), Alai (nom), Physchim62 (nom), Pamri (nom), and Mysekurity (nom).

Featured content

Ten articles were promoted to featured status: Human, Doctor Who missing episodes, Sylvanus Morley, Boston, Massachusetts, November (film), War of the League of Cambrai, Waterfall Gully, South Australia, Our Friends in the North, Mandan, and Canberra.

A milestone was reached last week, when the number of featured articles hit 800.

One list reached featured list status this week: List of Final Fantasy titles.

Six pictures reached featured picture status recently:



Reader comments

2005-11-07

The Report On Lengthy Litigation

The Arbitration Committee closed two cases this week.

Onefortyone

A case against Onefortyone has closed. The ruling puts Onefortyone on probation on celebrity biography articles. Onefortyone was accused of inserting information of dubious reliability into celebrity articles regarding their sexual orientation.

DreamGuy

A case against DreamGuy has closed. The Arbitration Committee made no actions on the case, citing a lack of evidence. Editors claimed DreamGuy had an unreasonable point of view, and was often mean-spirited.

Other cases

A case was accepted this week against Silverback. It is in the evidence phase.

A temporary injunction has been imposed on Jguk, prohibiting him from changing date notations on articles.

Other cases against Ultramarine (user page), Maoririder (user page), numerous editors on Bogdanov Affair, Rangerdude (user page), numerous editors on Ted Kennedy, Lightbringer (user page), and Copperchair (user page) are in the evidence phase.

Cases against numerous editors on Polygamy, Jguk (user page), REX (user page), Zephram Stark (user page), Everyking (user page), Instantnood (user page), and Stevertigo (user page) are in the voting phase.

Motions to close are on the table in the cases against BigDaddy777 (user page) and 12.144.5.2 (user page, a.k.a. Louis Epstein).



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