3735:
a single session of
Wikimania 2022. I keep meaning to catch up via videos, but deep down I know it's not going to happen (too busy with other things). The problem with an online conference is that you remain in your home town with all the usual expectations of family, friends, bosses, colleagues, real-world volunteering, etc, to do the things you always do at the times you always do them. This does not allow you the luxury of sitting up all night attending an online Wikimania when you have to function in the real world during the daylight hours without being sleep-deprived behind the wheel of a car, finalising an important report, etc. But when you get on a plane to another city, many of the expectations of your everyday life disappear (or can be managed by not answering your phone and ignoring their emails, later blaming "local technical difficulties"). Being in another city means you are in the same time zone as Knowledge and free to fully devote yourself to it. But, the opportunity to attend an in-person Wikimania is limited due to cost, visas, and other factors, so there is definitely a role for an online event, but I think the online and the in-person events should not both be branded as Wikimania and should not be trying to do the same thing, but treated as separate activities with separate organisers and and each free to pursue a different audience, a different purpose, in a different way. The online event might do better not to be done as an intensive 3-5 days (which is essential for in-person event) but as a series of presentations and other activities spread over a few months (or all year round) so attendees are more able to squeeze in a session here and there into their otherwise busy lives with sessions repeated across different time zones in different weeks, etc. It is clear that (even ignoring the technical platform issues) there are barriers to trying to replicate a traditional in-person Wikimania in an online format, and two of those are time zones and the competition for the attention of the Wikimedian vs the demands of their everyday life.
2823:- putting aside that it's a service providing, how is it to be sold for profit? The Foundation can't make profit - anything that comes in through that arm is added to the general fundraising pot. It's commercial-generated fundraising, not profit that can go to shareholders. In a sense, Enterprise is the fundraising aspect that is least on the basis of editors' free labour (I mean, no-one else is donating except because they like one project or another, I assume?) - it's generating value on the basis of a more reliable provision of that information in a better format. The WMF has numerous projects where it's been terribly untransparent - but Enterprise is not one of them. It's on Diff, it had multiple office hours, their base document was amended from feedback and you can just talk to the team and they answer. I'd be surprised if they have met their donation target given where they are in their fiscal year. And we've never got to several times the donation target, although it's certainly heavily exceeded. Now, that was the source of one of my other complaints, where they indicated they hadn't met it. Which I believe is correct...but they wouldn't have expected to do so yet.
3363:«In February 2020, a volunteer collected data from more than 8000 libraries in Spain and incorporated them into Wikidata. However, not all of them have a free photograph in Wikimedia Commons that can illustrate their item in Wikidata or their article in Knowledge. The same happens with libraries around the world. Therefore, from Wikimedia Spain we launched the campaign No library without photography, with the aim of getting images of photographs of libraries under free license. Although it is aimed at the whole society, through it we want to involve especially librarians, as a way to approach the Wikimedia ecosystem and to participate in the dissemination of knowledge. In addition to creating a specific campaign in Commons, there is also the possibility of participating through the WikiShootMe! tool, where the libraries in Spain that do not yet have a photo are displayed, and uploading the images directly from there.» Information from:
3721:
part of the
Knowledge they are editing, and offer them a venue for meeting their Wikifriends and discussing their projects properly in detail, and listening to those of others. It's no one's fault that COVID intervened to break the traditional annual event but it's time to get it back on track and with the original plan to make Bangkok its venue. The vast savings in money by not having to organise one four years in a row, should make the next Wikimania the greatest event ever, and allow not only for planning by experienced event organisers, but also a much greater attendance by volunteers and less monopoly of presentations by paid WMF staff on yet another junket. Every real Wikimania I have attended has been marred in some way by serious planning oversights by its amateurish but well intentioned and hardworking teams of volunteers.
2465:. While I do wish to reiterate the implication of your point Shushugah that this is indeed merely a proposal and makes no promises of funding/prioritisation, all good ideas have to start somewhere :-) I would appreciate if people who are interested in the issues of assessing reference quality on en.wp would have a look at the proposal and see if they think its a viable solution. As I hope is obvious to people who read it - especially the "principles" section - it would permit each language WP to still make its own sovereign choices about the visual display/format of references, and its own policies about what counts as "reliable", but to centralise the task of all the data entry required to maintain and monitor it all.
2134:, but most of them don't have this much of a cultural impact outside Knowledge. News authors and researchers need to stop being lazy and be made aware that Knowledge is not a reliable source, they should have a knowledge about the tools required to identify hoaxes, for example Google NGrams data prior to Knowledge article creation. WikiBlame is another great tool, although I'd appreciate a simplification of the user interface, which helps in identifying the date & time of addition of any claim, hoax or not. Only if they did their research. It is their laziness that has helped to bolster the hoax over the year. Otherwise, someone would have certainly put a tag by now which would have stopped the spread of the hoax.
1826:
3447:
items are for a building that was demolished decades ago) I brought up
Commons App which supplies a form to fill out. The targets I found this weekend were mostly community gardens yesterday and office buildings today; I already shot the libraries years ago or someone else did. So, yes. Use WSM everywhere and, if you like, Commons App as well. Might be pleasant to have symbols to show which red dots are libraries, or a feature to select only libraries or only churches or street clocks or statues or bodies of water or whatever specialty, but even a map full of red dots for all kinds of potential target is not a reason to shun them.
3859:
could attend. That left me out, and probably others, kind of akin to felons not allowed to get into Canada to attend the 2017 conference (I at least cleared the bar on that one), so hopefully the vax "requirement" will be gone by the next live event if not sooner. The next major live conferences (and come on Europe, get a WikiConference Europe organized, maybe in London?) should have plenty of funding, because hopefully the foundation has been feeding the kitty for the last three years so that the next conferences will have a built-up four-year pool of funding to throw the mother-of-all-conferences. Viva WikiVegas2023!
2200:"vastly underestimates Wikimedia Foundation salaries (the Foundation's 2020/2021 salary costs were $ 68M for employees alone (excluding contractors), so an average salary of $ 65,000 per head would require about 1,000 employees, two or three times the number the Foundation actually had)," - this would seem to assume that zero was spent on WMF pension contributions, or what the UK would call national insurance, or various benefits and so on. These are fairly often grouped under salary and thus trying to make a pure "take x divide by y" without factoring it in will lead to significant inaccuracies
3751:
England and Canada, and some food on the big day at the small museum. Our presentations had neither the quantity nor the quality I have come to expect at a real
Wikimania, but I learned a few things and had some fun. Unfortunate minor detail, we were in a small hall of nearly perfect acoustic reflection, making chitchat difficult between presentations. On the days we weren't doing much locally I was able to tune into some of the Webcast presentations, and wasn't terribly bothered when many of them could not be found. Perhaps I'll find some of those on Youtube or something.
4130:, but the cover looked different—was it even the same magazine? As this article notes, names are transitory, and are often not unique; "The Woman Citizen" seems pretty singular, but there's a lot of magazines out there with the same name from different time periods or countries, since a name is just an advertisement in its own market and therefore has no need to be convenient for encyclopedias. How then to tell precisely what magazine it is? Well, global librarians have solved this issue for us (multiple times, actually): add an id number. Magazines have two options: the
3617:; it does not have its own building) and after discreetly taking a picture from the upstairs balcony went downstairs and asked the guy at the front desk if it was OK for me to take a picture down there. He said there were privacy issues and I could only do so if the library director (a woman with whom I am, thankfully, acquainted) gave permission. I haven't yet been able to see her about this, but while I'm optimistic that she'll like the idea, other readers deciding to do this should be mindful that this may be an issue, particularly in smaller libraries.
4032:
conversation. I suppose to volunteer on the trust and safety. But I couldn't because I can only be able to join any session successful via YouTube. I don't know the much effort being put to consider pheedloop whom I think the group did they homework better. But I strongly believe we can do better even with the experience we have now. But so also I will like to acknowledge the great effort by the core organizing team for allowing as money in-person event as possible. This is because the part I enjoyed most is attending the in-person event we held here.
4057:
the software that's been proven to work and has mass appeal? These conferences have always, even before the pandemic, under-emphasized real-world issues of maintaining the content of the online encyclopedias and over-emphasized peripheral things like
Wikidata and Wiki Education. Peripheral things I'd like to see added are fundraising and budgeting. Can someone link me to the recorded keynotes by Jimmy Wales and Wikimedia CEO Maryana Iskander? I think the responsibility for ensuring successful Wikimanias should fall on the CEO. Thanks. –
2952:
applying for an admin permissions it became obvious that with my lack of article writing I would never even be considered. The standards have only gone up since then, and I would never under any circumstances subject myself to the current RfA process, even if my editing history could support admin rights. But if there was a 'Counter-vandalism admin' who only had the rights to do things like delete recently created pages and block non-confirmed users, it might be something that the community might see fit to grant to people of my profile.
782:
gain a wider range of opinions - there's no need for it to go anywhere near AfD. In my opinion, AfD should only be about whether an article should exist on the subject; the actual content of the article is another matter entirely. Actually deleting an article that could instead be stubbified only serves to remove a bunch of contributions from general view, which in my mind goes against the openness of
Knowledge. Sometimes we focus too much on the pedia and not enough on the wiki.
3963:
affiliate concerns and quite frankly seemed rather divorced from actual wikis (for example, compare the number of sessions presented by people who do wikimedia stuff as their job vs volunteers. It seemed a bit unbalanced). In in person conferences, a major part is the so called "hallway track" and social bonding. That doesn't happen remotely, so its critical that presenters have something interesting or unique to say - and this conference simply didn't have that.
3645:
wikimedia. I'm also researching the
Carnegie legacy in England and Wales - and would love to work with someone more expert in wikipedia editing than me to improve the wikipedia page on Carnegie libraries in Europe (which is mostly a list at the moment) to incorporate more of the information I've collated from a range of sources including local newspapers and library visits - which I currently publish on a website. Apologies, I haven't got a formal wikipedia ID
3631:
is up to the organisation in charge to allow photos being taken. Also, the architect might well claim intellectual property rights. I made sure that no persons are visible in the picture.) Perhaps it helps that I'm a volunteer with this library: I've asked the lady in charge of coordinating the activities of the volunteers to forward my request to the head of the
Department of Unusual Requests. I'll keep you informed. Kind regards,
2716:: "I can't go into the specifics, but as a VRT agent I've received numerous emails from people on limited incomes who are donating money they need because they believe that Knowledge is in trouble and that they need to give money to keep it online. I'm absolutely disgusted by this, and I think it will catch up to us in the long-run, as people won't want to give once they realize how deceptive these campaigns are."). --
1904:
1094:. Although it may be more favorable in the context of no longer making Wikimedia Sweden a target of artists' groups in the country, it is less so for Wikimedians globally desiring to share Swedish monuments on Wikimedia sites. Expect a small dose of frustration for the upcoming FoP in Sweden soon, to be aligned similarly to architecture-only FoP of Finland, Norway, Denmark, Russia, Japan, Taiwan, and USA.
4045:
instead of the technology, and Kelly admonished us to think of really different events. For example, I liked the monthly WMF staff conference ("metrics") especially because we lack a periodical kind of medium in the movement. In the old days, an organization had a monthly print medium to catch up with the latest developments. In our movement, the
Signpost has that kind of role to a certain degree.
2176:) but has limited functionality compared to WikiBlame. It only checks additions, no removals; works only for mainspace articles, no other namespace is supported; only wikitext can be searched not the visual part; start/end date range is not supported, an end date can be set such that additions are searched in revisions older than that date; only supports 5 projects, though enwp is one of them.
3481:
pipeline to enable participating institutions in the DPLA network to share their collections with
Wikimedia Commons. DPLA is continuing to innovate by taking advantage of Wikidata entities and Structured Data on Commons to continually synchronize data and improve discoverability. We'll discuss issues around large datasets, aggregation, reconciliation, and other challenges DPLA has faced.
3426:), and find historical information for start and end dates. Having the data items could power tools like WikiShootMe, which I confess I haven't yet used. I see coordinating some standards for Data structure and Commons templates could be important related activities. Thumbs-up for both "#1lib2pics" and "Wiki Loves Libraries", though I wonder whether the prospect of a
839:, when there were no good sources in the article. How good these sources were varied; sometimes they really didn't support the notability, sometimes they very weakly did, sometimes they were good - but they weren't in the article under discussion, and occasionally - with the more POV-pushing kind of article - directly contradicted everything actually in the article.
3812:
last time and (while I didn't get the chance to try it myself) everything I heard about Pheedloop being rather negative (Remo (used in 2021) was, in my opinion, much better and allowed you to communicate with others in small, easy to create and farily loose groups, which often led to interesting and engaging discussions) that led to a pretty mediocre Wikimania.
1305:
in that theatre, and I am therefore offended to the very core of my being that anybody might deem the source of her possible distress a suitable subject for laughter, and I shall therefore be demanding that the cartoonist and his wicked defenders such as yourself be immediately subjected to the Supreme Cabal's ultimate sanction (as described in Note 4 of this
2356:
3939:
just catch up on them later. We had a local event in NYC that was mentioned earlier, it was great. I got to hang out and socialize with people, did some editing and hacking and listened to some pretty interesting lightning talks. It was a pretty "low tech" event, which meant it emphasized the human connection over flashy technology. Other conferences like
1796:, but I am not seeing exactly where there is hand-in-hand communication between editors and the Foundation to address disinformation (apart from the work that went into those 18 events), conduct research, and build new tools specifically for anti-disinformation. Or if it happened, perhaps it isn't summarized online? Have I missed something?
3071:
a world *without* Knowledge, and who think it is *normal* for web searches for gigantic companies to show Knowledge's page about them on the first screen. I've seen people and companies *beg* to have Knowledge pages about them and others who assume that everything that web searches have about them *comes* from Knowledge.
1074:. The assignment even has a specific section "The possibilities of reproducing works of art in a public place should be made clearer" with the remark "It is important that the possibilities to freely reproduce such works are not restricted more than absolutely necessary." The report should be concluded in November 2023.
1883:, Microsoft, LinkedIn, and Verizon Media met on a monthly basis with the FBI, CISA, and other government representatives. According to NBC News, the meetings were part of an initiative, still ongoing, between the private sector and government to discuss how firms would handle misinformation during the election.
3789:
I agree, I've not been to any really successful hybrids events. Most were either primarily in-person (with livestreams of presentations to remote attendees but no remote networking), or primarily remote (with a few bunches of atendees effectively sitting in the same cconfrence room so only networking
3750:
I have the good fortune to live in New York City, big enough to have our own meeting, our "Wiki Worlds Fair" at a small museum and including a preliminary visit to a big museum and an evening at a beer garden. Not exactly a Wikimania culture crawl, but something. We even had visitors from distant New
3734:
Re Wikimania 2022. I was among those who looked through the program, found only a handful of sessions that interested me with "meaty topics", then discovered that they were all be held at 2am (or similar) in my timezone or clashed with a real-life commitment if during my daytime. So I never attending
3699:
I signed up for Wikimania 2022 but I never really attended. I couldn't really figure out how everything worked and I didn't feel like going through the sheer frustration of it all. I was interested in potentially being a part of the hybrid IRL meetings too, but I'm Canadian and the two local ones for
3658:
Update on my post of 9 October: I'm still awaiting permission to upload the photo of the interior. It seems that nobody in the management is willing to assume the position of Head of the Department of Unusual Questions. A bit odd, considering that being asked unusual questions is part and parcel of a
3446:
Actually, a day or two most weeks, I do bits of a much broader project. Today and yesterday, walking through places I don't see every month, I brought up WikShootMe and adjusted my route to hit red dots. I don't like WSM so much for the actual shoot and upload, so when I found a target (many Wikidata
2793:
Courtesy of their own editors that are working for free of course. I am sure WMF didn't put this on their email. WMF clearly have achieved their donation target several times over they need, and they are planning for a "profit arm" (using free labor, I must say), but still they seem to be begging for
1304:
Your Lordship may imagine that Freedom of Speech entitles you to express such an opinion, but in any civilized society Freedom of Speech cannot be entirely without limits, and my late great great great great great great great great aunt Cunegunda might well have lost a few shillings through investing
200:
A single paragraph with a minimum of a single reliable source is not a high bar to reach. Anyone who is willing to put in the effort to create and go through an AfD should be equally willing to stubbify and write 3 sentences for an article. Having a single paragraph article with a proper reference is
3720:
I'm not surprised at this scathing report. I signed up but didn't 'attend' any of the online events because I suspected as much and I'm not a fan of online meetings anyway. There is absolutely no substitute for the genuine conference. No other kind of event can encourage the volunteers to feel more
3687:
Wikimania 2022 wasn't successful for me either. I was able to watch one of the discussions at about the time it was taking place, and it was very interesting. However, the other real time broadcasts of the discussions simply wouldn't work with the interfaces I was using. I therefore had to resort to
3630:
I've just uploaded a photo of the exterior of the (brand new) public library in Uithoorn, the Netherlands, on Uithoorn on NL. I've also taken a photo of the interior but I have to obtain permission for publication. (While libraries are open to the public, they are not seen as "public spaces", and it
3601:
Wonderful project. I teach a course in library history and one assignment is to document a local library with a photo which I then make optional that it be added to Wikimedia Commons. The students tried to add articles about specific libraries to Knowledge and these are often deleted by editors many
3277:
This is a superb idea indeed. In Boise, Idaho alone plans are afoot for the Library! (stylized as such) downtown to be razed and replaced in some glorious fashion, and the original Carnegie Library, defunct since 1973, is in private hands and being renovated for the umpeenth time. And then there are
3223:
I wonder if it changes when an archived page from the Wayback machine is used? I fixed a rotted url today regarding an external link to a building preservation group. The structure is being demolished so preservation is moot and while the group has disbanded their domain redirects to a porn site.
3070:
My account will be old enough to vote in April 2023. I haven't become an administrator, I've stayed a little more focused on Fraternities and Sororities. I've recently run into editors who are younger than my account, born after April 1995. It is fascinating to deal with editors who have never known
2544:
Glad to see the acknowledgement and promise that "42% of your gift will be used to sustain and improve Knowledge and our other online free knowledge projects. 31% of your gift will be used to support the volunteers who share their knowledge with you for free every day." Which confirms one use of the
2363:
the WMF had outside of the US that year. $ 68M divided by 374 is over $ 180K. 55.5M (total compensation paid) divided by 374 is about $ 148K; this would be net salaries without benefits and taxes two years ago, but bear in mind that the number of FTE would have been significantly smaller, given that
2114:
infecting Knowledge, and then being massively perpetuated across the internet by the myriad of mirrors, bots and lazy journalists, corrupting the future. When legions of editors can't recognize a hoax because their so-called reliable sources have circularly reported Knowledge's BS (and because it's
1791:
So to summarize, it looks like the quoted text refers to a specific 2020 anti-disinformation effort specifically in the US and the stats do not link back to a central report or coordination page, whether on Meta-Wiki or elsewhere. Additionally, at first blush and per the Signpost comments, Merkley's
1255:
You may recognise the image from the Gallery two months ago. It's the second time the Covent Garden Theatre burned down to the ground. I'm kind of going with "things more than 150 years ago are probably alright to use for such purposes", since it's guaranteed to be out of living memory. Kind of like
241:
There's been a trend of "stubbifying" that's come up after 2008, and, yes, it helps deal with the issue. I decided the main essay shouldn't be overly changed, but I added the last section - alternatives to deletion - for the republication since we have more options now. I do think that upmerging can
4214:
I for one want all of that high-quality metadata in one place, however cumbersome. Otherwise we're just lead to a disambiguation function in... another place... Which is a whole other layer of cumbersome. This may be a philosophical difference, but citations should be one-stop shopping. The fuller,
4056:
August is a bad month to schedule online conferences. I went on a road trip and enjoyed the great out-of-doors and was lucky enough to avoid the worst of the heat waves. January and February would be better months for online. Seems Zoom is the YouTube of online conferencing, why not just stick with
3938:
There was little incentive for me to attend the online Wikimania session given the scheduling to target different timezones, meaning that a majority of the time things were scheduled at bad times for me. Especially given that most things were recorded, I don't feel like I missed out that much, I'll
3480:
call September 6, 2022: Dominic Byrd-McDevitt will talk about the Digital Public Library's Wikimedia program, an effort to provide national leadership around access and discoverability of digital collections by leveraging Knowledge and its sister projects. 2 years ago, DPLA launched a digital asset
3399:
site and look for red dots. It isn't quite the same as a map of places with no Commons pictures, and it doesn't distinguish libraries from playgrounds, theaters, and other targets until I tap the dot, but generally I just walk to the nearest few red dots and photograph them regardless, turning them
3257:
with a single county of the US is already making it look very weird. I'm not entirely sure how to interact with Dutch libraries, I prefer second-hand bookstores. Maybe I'll take a picture of my favorite ^_^ – I can at least take a picture of the libraries in and around Hoorn for this project,
3175:
As was commented in the article, the split was "Infoboxes","References", "Other" (also called main body). As such, two EL, one in the lede or in a section outside of a reference and one properly in an EL section would be viewed identically. I would *love* to see the analysis done with an EL section
2834:
I do assume good faith with fellow editors, but I don't think it applied to WMF. On the other hand, I do understand that there is nothing inherently wrong in making a profit, but the general tone of WMF is that they are "running out of money", "in the brink of shutdown", "can only rely on donations
2673:
I just read about what happens with Thomas. That is such a crappy behavior from Knowledge. It happened in 2021, now is 2022, and nothing had changed. I am sure average people thought that Knowledge is on the verge of being taken offline and the boards of WMF are paid very low and working so hard to
2437:
multilingual editors who speak English are probably already active on enwp out of necessity, due to enwp's dominance/popularity. That said, enwp's policies on notability may different from other language editions of Knowledge, so we couldn't easily transpose notability of sources. That could change
2405:
It's a shame the NPP community has to resort to such an action to obtain any engagement from the WMF, particularly while the Foundation is wallowing in money but is making a desperate need for cash a fundraising claim for needing more. There does still seem to be a disconnect between the Foundation
1347:
Looks like it was already a bit late to be shouting "Fire". But it seems that freedom of speech does not include the right to shout "Fire" in a crowded theatre, but does include the right to make jokes about Fire in a crowded theatre (or at least it does for the time being, and provided it happened
678:
In 2008 I was dealing with pseudoscience, pseudohistory, and other such things a lot more than entertainment, and the essay likely reflects that. But there is an upper limit to how much of a topic we can do well, and, yes, passionate editors who work well can raise that limit. Still, we should stay
349:
The options are not just keep in that form or delete it. My point was that an AfD discussion is inherently the problem. Because the point of an AfD is to determine notability of a subject. And if the article subject is already stated to be notable, then the entire AfD was pointless from the get-go.
245:
It's probably also worth noting that what I was editing in 2008 included a lot of pseudoscience pages, where you would get, for example, 300 articles on, say, Ayurveda, including a bunch of barely-sourced "medicines", which you could readily prove existed, and cover from an ayurvedic viewpoint, but
4179:
That's really if you believe ISSNs and OCLCs have value in citations. And I personally don't. If you follow them, you won't find the article you're looking for. Others disagree, but I find them to be clutter at best and Worldcat to be a very low quality database in general (with multiple redundant
3754:
With all the worldwide academic and technical conferences held every normal year, I wonder whether anyone during the plague years has succeeded in mixing screen participants and physical participants on something like an equal basis. It seems a difficult task and if nobody has done it well, no use
3525:
I'm really interested, but in a country like mine unfortunately going around looking for *something* town by town is something that is denied for personal safety reasons until further notice. Personally, wherever I go I take pictures of libraries in Mexico, so I will continue to do so and I remain
2951:
This would require technical changes, obviously, but could the adminship crisis be averted by further breaking down 'the mop' into more specific permission roles? For example, the area of Knowledge I am most experienced with is RC patrol and counter-vandalism, but for the brief moment I considered
2493:
wrong about them (which is definitely the case), it also just bad for Knowledge's overall credibility. I've also met a lot people IRL who find persistant fundraising campaigns in general to be annoying... the more they're asked, the more they feel like they're being forced and the less likely they
2421:
Why can't/don't foreign-language Knowledge's help out here? It shouldn't be that hard for any language WP to begin an inventory of their language sources, pass some form of judgement and make it available for other WP–languages. Add a section where foreign editors can submit a source for judgement
954:
A. Yes, I'm presuming that, otherwise notability becomes an issue. B. A POV fork can be redirected to the main article, ideally adding a section on that POV, if it isn't there and isn't totally fringe. C. If A, then for sure C. However, I suspect we may be arguing about thin air. How often does an
921:
I would flip your argument around and say we should not remove a set of sources that establish notability and force any volunteer recreating the article to go find them again. Tagging a substandard article takes no more work than PRODing it and trimming it to a stub doesn't seem much harder than a
903:
You have a point, but I will say that there are nuances there. The idea that you can tell other editors "Write an entire new article, here's some sources, otherwise the fraudulent article stays" is problematic - we're all volunteers here; no-one gets to tell someone they must do something, or hold
781:
I'm generally not a fan of deleting an article where editing can fix it - and by "editing" I include blanking the entire thing and starting again. It requires no special permissions to stubbify an article, and if consensus to do so can be reached on the article's talk page - perhaps with an RfC to
647:
apparently was legitimately to merge. It seems counterproductive and nonsensical to be de facto deleting content like this when there is so much other nonsense out there. Deletion, in other words, is largely driven by the whim of whomever decides to start deleting a sort or class of articles, and
168:
Also, if a subject is notable (which would only be representable via proper reliable source coverage that has a significant amount of information), then I find it hard to see how any argument other than Stubbify/Re-write a stub paragraph from scratch is viable. That one act alone is what should be
4044:
Hello, thanks for sharing all these impressions! I hope that I succesfully restrained from making accusations of any kind. It just turned out a less than perfect experience for many participants, and we can all learn for next events. I loved to read that local events emphasized the being-together
3858:
Let's hope that 2023 goes live again (I've been urging "Viva WikiVegas2023" for the North American conference in October or so of '23). One thing that held live attendance down, at least in some venues: the requirement to have had a Covid vax (and even, in some venues, a booster) before an editor
3811:
I don't think it was necessarily a matter of it being online (I personally rather enjoyed the 2021 Wikimania); rather, it was the lack of any sessions that really interested me (2021 seemed to have quite a few more technical sessions), the registration process being much less straightforward than
3302:
I would also like to join in! Im based in London, UK and travel around a bit. It would be good to determine which libraries do not have photos? Can a list of libraries internationally/in regions be created using Wikidata, and either (I dont know this bit) automate a list of which libraries do not
2270:
Right, I agree that Levivich's $ 104k is closer to what sounds reasonable than the Signpost's listed $ 65k, and I agree that it is likely higher once the FTE are separated from the contractors/contingent workers. I'm not sure how much stock I'd put in the Michigan Tech page but it is worth noting
674:
While that's true, consider the case of, say, pseudoscience. It's valuable for Knowledge to document pseudoscience, but we can't possibly maintain hundreds of different articles which deal with the pseudoscience at increasingly fine detail. And a POV-pushing article on pseudoscience is much worse
562:
be deleted. However there is a percentage that are borderline where good arguments can made either way - that's why they aggregate at AfD and not speedied. These can result in difficult discussions. This does not mean people are unreasonable about deleting. It just means not everything is totally
507:
There would doubtless be a network theory way to do this just by analyzing the network of pages and their interwiki links to identify either full splinter networks (a set of pages that only link to each other) or edge isthmuses of the main network that only sparsely link across (especially if the
164:
If an article is notable, then reliable sources would exist for it to showcase that notability and it also wouldn't be made up. I understand that you meant that the article subject was notable, but the existing article didn't represent or use anything that is a part of that notability, but I feel
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My own personal experience during Wikimania was terrible. I wasn't being able to attend any session on pheedloop particularly this is because of network, not streaming or the app misbehaving. Some times you will only have audio and no video and at some point you will not be able to join the live
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In any case, it seems to me that the most fundamental problem Knowledge has as a project is dwindling editorship, and the dwindling adminship is an extension of that. It seems to me like fixing this should be one of the top priorities for the project to ensure the long-term success of Knowledge.
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I predicated my comment on the the assumption that the subject's notability has been established by reliable sources. If those sources completely contradict the content of the article, that is an editorial problem that should be solved by the usual editorial mechanisms, tagging (citation needed,
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You say that like it's a bad thing. If there's "no evidence anyone is ever going to be inclined" to write or update an article, then IMHO that article should not exist, because the community is either unwilling or unable to adequately curate it. I also think that's rather the whole point of this
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Foundation staff worked for hand in hand with volunteers to establish clearer lines of communication between volunteers and staff to surface and address disinformation attempts, conducted research to better understand how disinformation could spread on Wikimedia projects and built new tools for
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The Userbox kerfuffle I remember is when an admin named "Kelly Martin" thought that userboxes were so inherently stupid a concept that she felt perfectly free to delete any that she didn't like, with no process. I don't remember the "war" described above at all, though it apparently took place
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A very nice read. It misdirected me a little because a lot of times we hear a story about someone tracing back an obscure citation on a random page, the conclusion is that the article is a hoax. But I think this shows just how difficult it is to discover a hoax: here, it really looked like the
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The results of quantitative (A/B and multivariate) testing and qualitative (user research and prototype) testing show that these changes make it easier to read and learn, navigate within the page, search, switch between languages, user page and user tools, and more, without negative effects to
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Very interesting essay but nothing is going to change as long as there are editors who have an interest in keeping a "bad" article. One example was an AfD discussion regarding a BLP where every citation was primary and/or highly exaggerated - likely the work of a "yourwikipediabio.com" group.
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Love this idea - I tried really hard to get library workers to add to a flickr group I set up when working for a national libraries taskforce, to collect free-to-use images of libraries, but most of the photos in that group I think I took! All are cc marked, and all I think have been added to
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For a remote org headquartered in San Francisco, I think it's safe to assume that the highest proportion of their salaries are benchmarked to the Bay Area. But even with the assumption that pay is by geography, $ 65k per employee is nowhere near accurate for an engineering-focused firm, which
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THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY is quietly broadening its efforts to curb speech it considers dangerous, an investigation by The Intercept has found. Years of internal DHS memos, emails, and documents — obtained via leaks and an ongoing lawsuit, as well as public documents — illustrate an
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Software sucked, but i just watched the livestream on youtube so that wasn't a big problem. The bigger problem is none of the sessions were particularly interesting or had anything interesting to say (as far as i can tell, i really only attended one). The vast majority were highly focused on
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While I fully agree with Jimmy on improvements needed against disinformation, I don't think he or anyone needs to worry about what Elon was complaining about. Since it had little to do with "disinformation" and more to do with the fact that Knowledge actually had accurate properly referenced
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Yes - such a frustrating oversight! I have to say though, I'm actually surprised that the overall dolar value came out so low (basically negligeable when spread across so many potential target organisations). I suppose it's actually good news, since it discourages manipulation by companies.
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value for the content writer. The best way is always to rewrite completely, following the same process as writing a new article from scratch. It is much easier that way because you have your sources organised and right in front of you. Chasing up facts one at a time is time largely wasted.
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statement seems to conflate actions I'd expect editors to take without prompting (watchlisting pages, protecting pages, and reverting edits) with actions that the task force directly implemented (the "18 events" mentioned). Merkley laid out a little bit more about the WMF's investment in
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Aside from the overhead, which is easily an additional 30% above base salaries, $ 68k is nowhere near the average base salary for an engineering-focused org based in the Bay Area, which is the highest paid region of the US. I'd recommend taking the estimate out of the Signpost article.
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It's a tough challenge, for sure. Even 2½ years into this ongoing pandemic, I've been to very few hybrid events where remote attendees are not disadvantaged in relation to in-person attendees. Given I'm disabled and less able to travel myself this is a continuing frustration for me. —
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As there wasn't anything public on-wiki about this US elections project (unless I missed it; if so, please provide a link) the impression generated is that there was substantial off-wiki communication between the WMF and a subset of volunteers to coordinate mainspace editing. Best,
159:"Sometimes, an article comes up for AfD (“Article for Deletion”), which, though its subject may be notable, has no redeeming qualities whatsoever. Perhaps its only source is a promotional, questionable website. Perhaps its material seems to be completely made up from thin air."
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cases of a notable article subject that has the issues you are pointing out, but is a notable topic. End of story, that is the action to take. And AfD isn't it if the person nominating knows the subject is notable, they should be the ones stubbifying/rewriting it themselves.
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Honestly, I expected this article to drive debate more than be universally accepted: An essay is meant to express one view; it's not a guideline, it's just one opinion, and there's plenty of room for contrary opinions. I think you do a good job at raising valid objections.
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The total ($ 67,857,675) is also on page 1, line 15 "Salaries, other compensation, employee benefits (Part IX, column (A), lines 5-10)". During that period they had 300-500 employees or so. Not all full time, but 52M / 500 = 104k. But if you divide 52M by the number of
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Not entirely accurate; if Knowledge is better without the current article, and no one is willing to write a better one, then the article should be deleted or redirected. Ideally, there would be someone willing to write a better one, but we don't live in an ideal world.
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Much like "How to research an image," this was a joy to read! Feels good to see a bit of research play out so well. I feel like I've been burned too frequently, not being able to trace back a source at all. Just makes it feel even better to see a success story :)
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Hmm. My account turned 18 back in October 2020, & no I'm not the most senior active editor here. (There are a few more around, quietly lurking in the shadows. I guess we all need to get a life.) My memoirs about my tenure here would be notably less optimistic. --
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Also note that the WMF's Disinformation job ads asked for Arabic, Persian and Russian speakers and that T&S reportedly claims to be "fighting ISIS". What is not clear to me is how, to what extent and through what mechanisms WMF work in this field impacts content.
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Nope, the bulk of the longevity dispute seems to be from before I became active. I'd seen references to the case but never looked too closely at it, so that's something I'll need to dig through. Thanks for the additional lead (and for your work cleaning it up).
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I wish your intuition had been correct. I think the pendulum has swung too far, such that "throw it out and start over" (when there's no evidence anyone is ever going to be inclined to do that) is sufficiently popular to be an existential threat to Knowledge.
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from the readers", while in fact they are not running out of money. I know many charities are running "for profit" - Goodwill, Salvation Army, Habitat for Humanity, are running "profitable" thrift stores. I have no problem with them because of their tone.
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The more I hear about the WMF, this as well as the way the new Vector skin is being developed, the more alienated they seem from the goals, concerns, and efforts of Knowledge and its editors. Good thing they don't own the rights to any of the content.
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for a few days during said imbroglio, I don't know if it was "conspiracy nonsense" so much as a few newspapers jumping on a juicy story and half-assing the background research, surely a time-honored journalistic tradition (albeit an annoying one).
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534:. Again, there was an editorial rally from those who didn't want the shop's memory to die and another article stays as "No consensus". Second, our setup allows any editor to instantly make a new article go "live". We moderate and review
3834:, or we would have had zero attendance. It would've been good to know in advance that no recording meant no streaming, as well. Still, the technical facilitator (Mikel Enecoiz) was super helpful, so no criticism on the on-the-day team. —
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waiting until a discussion was published on YouTube, sometimes several days later, and watching it then. Not really very satisfactory, especially as I was literally thousands of kilometres away from the nearest of the offline gatherings.
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information that informs and debunks right wing misinformation and conspiracy nonsense. And Elon has gone full in on the latter stuff, so of course he's complaining that we include scientific and fact based information proving him wrong.
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I will join you. Goodness knows what madness lies further ahead, I shudder to think of possibly having to read about the heavyweight title match between two elite bexren. Two holdover exceptions and one poetic archaism are enough for me.
567:(which holds true on Knowledge very well), about 20% of them are going to be fairly controversial. Of those 20%, another 20% will be ever more. And so on until you get to the really big ones that use up everyone's time and attention. --
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I don't see why you couldn't pass with some more experience. Time-wise, a year should be enough, but you should probably get some content experience and demonstrate that you understand policies in administrative areas before running. —
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I don't think it's an issue. I personally liked it, and I am irl pretty sensitive to violence (can't even watch those once-popular "fail compilations" where someone could have gotten hurt). As long as you don't use recent pictures (or
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of whom don't think libraries are notable. Because this discourages students, I now encourage posting image and then--as you suggest--add these to articles about counties or cities. It would be grand to have images of all libraries.
4094:, and I remain unconvinced that the WMF is testing for the right things to actually show this. For example, with the sticky header, they only test that the sticky header is used, rather than testing whether it makes it easier to
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As a general comment, I've tried to use WikiBlame many times and have never figured out how the bloody hell to make it do anything useful. You'd think something that's potentially so useful would be functional enough to actually
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It's curious that USA Today took the definition definition things as the fact to debunk. To my understanding, it was just a small offshoot of the recession saga that never really gained much traction since it's just nonsensical.
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The article is garbage. It not only misreads things, it is confused about what the documents the reporters have actually say, and presents widely available, widely known things as if they were secret and hidden when they were
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Glad to do it! As I said, I'm poking some theatrical groups to get more for next month, fingers crossed.... Only have like three or four photos of performers on Commons at the moment, so I definitely will need some additions.
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competition would cause people to hold their pics for competition month instead of uploading them straight away. Perhaps "uploaded in the last year" would be an appropriate entry criterion (or you could have two categories).
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I'm thinking there's an actual balance between universal rules, and situationally appropriate common sense. I don't think Knowledge is good at the latter, as we tend to attract folks who like a Byzantine labyrinth of policy.
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that software engineer/developers are paid higher than engineers in general, i.e., much higher than $ 100k, on average, and I imagine that's including location-based disparities even if it's based mostly in Michigan.
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number, managed by an American non-profit that also maintains the Dewey Decimal system nowadays. ISSN is usually more common for magazines, but either uniquely identifies a magazine- in our case, courtesy of OCLC's
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Thanks. May I ask you – and indeed anyone who has an opinion on these fundraising emails – to please go visit the ongoing RfC at the Village Pump and copy whatever you say here and say it there at the RfC as well:
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As Wugapodes said, this is an interesting essay. Is anyone aware of previous efforts to identify these "walled gardens" or "collective orphans" within Knowledge; I would be very interested in looking through them.
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If the above analysis is correct then having the link in Knowledge may have increased its value for the domain brokers. Or maybe it now goes down because a click on wikipedia no longer takes one to the porn site.
363:, the point of Knowledge is that if a subject is notable, we should have an article on it. Period. The end goal is to have articles on all notable subjects. The way to fix a "disaster" is as I already mentioned.
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the proper response when asked about the notability of a notable topic. Which is why I pointed out that the automatic response to an issue of an article not properly representing the subject it's about should
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exactly that. And it's certainly possible for an article on a notable subject to contain falsehoods or fabrications. It's also possible for that article to lack any reliable sources — even if those sources
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I'd join in. I would love to have Wikidata items as well as photos, though that is a bit harder. For good WD, you need to distinguish between the buildings and the institutions which occupy and run them
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be a justification for deletion. Those references are valuable to our readers even if the article has been reduced to a minimal stub, and they can aid future editors who wish to write a better article.--
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librarian's job. But the lady in charge of coordinating the activities of the volunteers has assured me that I will get an answer, one way or the other. Hope it will be a positive one.;) KInd regards,
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Well that sucks. I wonder whose brilliant idea that was. Been there often enough for academic conferences. It's just about the most expensive place in Asia even if I live 'only' a 3-hour flight away.
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dubious, etc.), bold edits, talk page discussion, dispute resolution, page protection. Our readers need to hear that sources dispute its efficacy. Deletion reviewer shouldn't act as super editors.--
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green. 'Twould be pleasant to replace the dot with a symbol. Anyway I've done a few dozen library exteriors within 20 miles of my Manhattan home, but not nearly a majority, and very few interiors.
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Knowledge is in general far too reluctant to take a critical look either at the state of Knowledge's content or the capabilities of editors. This article is yet more of the standard rosy picture.
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Parenthetically, -, –, —, and ― each serve distinct functions –but that way madness lies. Hence I tend my own garden. (Which functions, I leave as an exercise for the reader.)
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The ultimate fix? Not quite! We're 98% there at the end of this article, but what if our brave librarian reader wants to see more about this magazine? What if they've seen another article in
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Wikimania 2023 will be held in Singapore, which was chosen for reasons including its accessibility and state-of-the-art facilities. More info about the event will be published in due course.
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Based on Charlotte Bronte's account in her novel "Villette", those 19th-century theatre fire panics were not amusing at all if you got caught up in one. In some incidents, people died...
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Levivich said at 21:01 that salary comp is "perhaps much higher" than $ 104k per (non executive) employee. It sounds reasonable to me. Engineering median wage is right about $ 100k per
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That's not quite true. Articles that have been on notable subjects, were fully sourced, and for that matter were quite popular with the readers, can and have been deleted at AFD under
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Despite what the study's highlights claimed, it appears that disabling IP edits had no identifiable effect on the total number of good-faith edits—the decline that was observed
2359:, so it's only the 320 employees listed in line 5 plus any non-US employees (as opposed to contractors). Now, non-US employees cannot have numbered more than 54, because that is the
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keep Knowledge running, while the truth is completely the opposite. I didn't expect a change either this year, as long as editors like us kept working to keep the project online.
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I'm going to be blunt here, those fundraising emails are awful and misleading. They're the kind of thing you'd expect to show up in your spam email. Even if there wasn't anything
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refers to starting efforts two months in advance, which would include this August 2020 incident. Unless there are other classified incidents, it might be that the main effort was
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citation couldn't exist for a while, but it did. Disproving the existence of something beyond reasonable doubt is inordinately complicated. We say that readers should be able to
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I'd love to be an admin, but I've been around for only a year and haven't made a single article, and my one AfD proposal went up in flames. I'm not sure my RfA would ever pass.
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me were in the United States. I'm close-ish to the border so I kind of get it, but stuff like getting a passport are not the easiest at the moment even if it's getting better
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Interestingly, KLM's September in-flight magazine has a multi-page photo spread about amazing libraries around the world. There are some pretty stunning libraries out there!
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And someone votes "Keep. These sources show that the efficacy of homeopathy is a matter of academic discussion." But the sources are all about how homeopathy doesn't work.
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I got the immpression off pages 5–7 of the pdf that this was primarily about improving communication between the WMF, OTRS and functionaries (stewards, oversighters etc.).
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and its flagship projects whose voluntary work brings in the donations. Having been involved with NPP for well over a decade, the community's action has my total support.
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any of them. It's precisely the articles filled with unsourced, fabricated, distorted, self-serving nonsense, that the essay is targeting; the ones that get "keep" votes
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combined. (Note that the total $ 9.8M "Awards and grants" figure shown on that page includes the annual $ 5 million to the Endowment at the Tides Foundation, see p. 14.)
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That has been interpreted broadly to mean that if enough people don't like a particular subject area, articles on that subject area can be barred from Knowledge. See
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2348:(whatever that number is, idk, but it's less than the total number of employees because not all are full time), it's gonna be higher than 104k, perhaps much higher.
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I also think that these messages, about how it's "awkward" to ask, but there is "no choice but to turn to you", etc., "resonate" particularly with people who are
1391:, not "Userboxen", which is why the wikiproject is called WikiProject Userboxes, and the pages in WP space all use the word "userboxes". I will die on this hill.
399:? Because what that covers would inherently not be notable subjects in the first place (since, for example, dictionary words aren't subjects in the first place).
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like that was poorly laid out in this introduction. It just creates confusion on what notability even means if the article lacks notability in its representation.
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Just a note on anyone pursuing this idea (which I consider worthy): I went to my small town's library (which is housed in different rooms on different floors of
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Could we at least have a commons category for images that are added under this project? That would provide some minimum organization. Maybe sub cats by nation?--
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Realise that I'm a lot less involved in deletion discussions anymore, but a common thing that used to happen was that someone would find three or four sources
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be stubbify from scratch, not attempt to delete it. So I guess I am arguing against the central premise of the essay, in that it's fundamentally wrong. Since,
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Decent article, save for the bit about "although editing bots on Knowledge engage in sustained and often destructive warfare" which has never been true.
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donation. I have received donation requests from Salvation Army or others and they didn't beg this much, despite they may be in need of more money than WMF.
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I unberstand that you meant that the article subject was notable, but the existing article didn't represent or use anything that is a part of that notability
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expansive effort by the agency to influence tech platforms. ... Prior to the 2020 election, tech companies including Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, Discord,
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We get them occasionally. One issue is that voters have to put aside up to two hours to review them properly, so too many and they're all going to fail.
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This is an interesting essay. I'd never thought to apply the concept of walled gardens to Knowledge, so I appreciate Adam introducing that perspective.
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I think you made the argument better throughout the rest of the article, but starting with this just created an inherent contradiction from the get-go:
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Ah, I did not consider that ==External Links== would not be considered under References. Yes, it would indeed be interesting to see such an analysis.
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full deletion nomination and discussion. That stub with its sources is valuable to our readers whether other volunteers expand in the future or not.--
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invent the toaster in the face of sources that assert contrary bogus claims) Knowledge risks playing a large part in the stupidifying of the future.
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There's a lot (l-o-o-o-o-t) more history from back then. The userbox wars were messy, and at the height of things, involved a lot of "fait accompli"
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There is a libraries-related Wikidata group, which meets weekly, with next meeting tomorrow September 6. Quote from "Wikidata weekly summary #535":
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Fun article! Every once in a while I sort of try to explain to someone what I was so engrossed in for an hour or 2 or 6, but it's hard to express.
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I think this attitude does a disservice to entertainment content. Sure, it's possible to have a wrong article about a Mortal Kombat character, but
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Multiple editors rallied in defense and it stayed as "No consensus". Another was an AfD about a defunct small business that would normally fail
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I thought that Biden PDF was some kind of postmortem of a singular incident, not a report on the overall anti-disinformation effort. Merkley's
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970:(and several other articles on RAF bases) I petitioned an admin to restore the article for me with nothing but the infobox and the references.
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didn't exist. Basically, a degree of specialisation that no reliable source was going to cover if they hadn't bought into the concept already.
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You obviously never stumbled across longevity articles, which I did in late 2010. That was the poster child of walled gardens on Knowledge for
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65K is what Distractify reported; I was making the point (or trying to make it ...) that the figure reported by Distractify was far too low.
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2563:, "31% of your gift" in 2020/2021 would have been 31% of $ 163 million, i.e. about $ 50 million. That's an order of magnitude more than all
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Nobody seems to have any idea what that number actually includes. However I am certain that what readers imagine does not match the reality.
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the encyclopedia hostage with fraudulent articles unless they do. Especially if the sources that person provided aren't actually that good.
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Thanks. My comment was about a possible 2023 North American Wikiconference. Didn't know about Singapore for Wikimania, sounds interesting.
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was reusing the text from 2 years ago, should probably be updated, seeing as the non-Scots writers from that period have left the wiki now
2257:, and that's granting many employees are engineering track, but at the same time many are non-technical doing other nonprofit functions. ☆
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article with enough good sources to establish notability come up for deletion? If you see one, let me know. I'll be happy to stubbafy it.--
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39.5% of the clicks coming through in-body external links is a bit concerning, no? I thought such hyperlinks were generally discouraged.
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Yes, I would agree. We've all had AfDs that didn't turn out the way we expected; if that were a disqualifier we'd have no admins at all.
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I feel like the clever cartoonist at fault for creating this is subtly calling Knowledge a fire... hmm... I mean, it's certainly clever!
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to say a little more about this back in 2020 but they never got round to it. Could you as the new Chief of Staff elaborate a little now?
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The MacMasters saga should be taught to future Wikipedians as a case study. I lose sleep over the possibility of typos as innocuous as
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this story came out, ProPublica released a much more interesting (and better reported) article that basically talks about how the
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action by many. Oh and I think "userboxen" came from german usage at the time, and has stuck around as an affectation for some. -
112:, it took over a decade to cut that down to reasonable size. Deleting massive amounts of junk was essential to cleaning that up.
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My only experience with Wikimania was as a panelist. In that regard, I will say that despite the software issues; the staff did
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Yeah I think there is barely anyone here these days that really do want to be an admin. RfAs get a bad reputation for a reason.
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The number of employees captured in the line 15 figure is below 400. According to the WMF's FAQ on Meta, the line 15 total does
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I would love to see a push for more movies nominated for Featured Pictures. Just have Featured Content full of films to watch.
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If an article is notable, then reliable sources would exist for it to showcase that notability and it also wouldn't be made up.
2652:. All but three (the GC, CTO and CT/CO) were the same person in 2020 as in 2018. I'm pretty sure those are better raises than
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In my view, if a subject's notability has been established, which requires suitable references to reliable sources, there can
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has a serious amount of detail about the WMF's 2020 stuff. There's also a bit more details about the Merkley piece in this
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I completely agree, and would have added a comment to the effect of this comment if someone else had not already made it.
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As long as any of the facts or ideas added to an article would belong in the "finished" article, they should be retained
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merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia.
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The WMF didn't tell us it was coordinating with the DHS as far as I recall; it only referred to "government agencies".
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and there's a handy and valuable tool IMO. I'm sure I'm not the first 1 to think along these lines, so what gives?
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on the grounds that "subject is notable", therefore we "must" have an article about it. (Even if it's a disaster?)
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was in 2010/2011, and that was only the very beginning of the second (and, after 8 more years, finally successful)
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that the magazine's ISSN is 1937-142X, and its OCLC number is 2395192. Slap either of these on the citation with
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I love the idea! I've always felt frustrated at what libraries are like here in the Netherlands, and comparing
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I absolutely agree that those, roughly, are the most prevalent (mis)perceptions. And those are misperceptions
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I gave one example up above. Another type is where the article has been deleted as a copyvio. In the case of
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have some value for the reader if they are factually accurate (but who's to know?), unsourced articles have
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2419:"There is a particular need for reviewers who can accurately judge the quality of foreign-language sources"
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there were well over a hundred people leaving or joining during the year according to the tuning sessions.
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nearly impossible to prove a negative or find a reliable source claiming that the fictional MacMasters did
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because Republicans completely weaponized it by misrepresenting perfectly reasonable activity as nefarious.
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itself, with huge agendas, could be involved in much smaller task of just getting photos of libraries? --
2588:
491:
4355:
608:: Neutral point of view (which does not mean no point of view), Verifiability, and No original research.
3013:
help out the site's admins by teaching them proper Scots, and generally improve the quality of the Wiki
2819:
this statement is inaccurate, and a failure of assume good faith. A rule that still apply to staffers.
1875:
1420:
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859:
It works! It's amazing! I've worked as a homeopath for years and think everyone should try it! (etc.)
640:
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proposal, I'm always pleased to see it mentioned and recommended 'in the wild' like this - thank you
1472:
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4336:
What a story! This kind of trial and error until success is what I feel the website is all about 🙂
2570:
When I asked for more information what this 31% figure is supposed to include, I received no reply.
2388:
Admins wanted on English Knowledge, IP editors not wanted on Farsi Wiki, donations wanted everywhere
3544:
3531:
1544:
960:
927:
897:
822:
413:
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I definitely agree on Remo over Pheedloop; I'm grateful that we just shared the Zoom link for our
2527:
If we want to have our voice heard, we need to have a well-visited RfC we can point to. Cheers, --
1934:
What's more, that Intercept article seems highly dubious in general. The ever snarky but reliable
4310:
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Not sure what endashes and hyphens and other things have to do with anything here... ?
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3555:
3405:
1931:, the bit about Knowledge is not news at all, the Foundation itself announced that two years ago.
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91:
44:
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Thomas, with $ 18 in the bank, promising to donate as soon as his social security check clears.
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1571:
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369:
207:
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We need a map on the phone. Anytime I'm in a place I haven't been lately, or ever, I open the
2323:
line 5 "Compensation of current officers, directors, trustees, and key employees": $ 3,200,369
3991:
3948:
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amongst people they already knew). For fully remorte events, the best organised was probably
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3622:
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3585:
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There is certainly a risk that without a good explanation, the Foundation could be seen as a
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1990:, also by Masnick, was pure political point-making pretending to be about legal fact. :/
1520:
1205:
547:
425:
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1214:
1200:
What? No racial or ethnic diversity within the theatre audience? This needs to be re-drawn!
542:
rebuild flew under the radar with zero RSs and COI for years before it was finally deleted.
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4255:
3907:
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I know that at least one of the highly compensated positions listed at the discussion for
508:
only links are to extremely central nodes indicating possibly trivial links to pages like
8:
4268:
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do a really job with low tech IMO, which we should try to learn from. Finally, I thought
3892:
3825:
3693:
3540:
3527:
3290:
3111:. My account is a wee pup, a mere 16 years old, but I too would be much less optimistic.
2447:
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is filled by a remote worker. We shouldn't automatically make comparisons to Bay Area. ☆
1353:
1340:
1314:
967:
956:
923:
893:
830:
818:
220:
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100:
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2151:(and no, making me want to throw whatever device I'm using out a window doesn't count).
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3401:
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by some. I mean, even taking the 31% figure at face value, that means 69% of the gifts
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2002:
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over 150 years ago, and provided nobody declares themselves deeply offended, and ...).
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That does rather presume A. the sources are decent, B. the article isn't some form of
4241:
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3019:(the only active admin) can't speak Scots. They are a native speaker, though. –
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2466:
2411:
1624:
The WMF chief of staff wrote about US elections-related disinformation efforts here:
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2320:, page 10 (Part IX: Statement of Functional Expenses), column A ("Total expenses"):
1988:
Did The 5th Circuit Just Make It So That Knowledge Can No Longer Be Edited In Texas?
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of a better article, and C. that there's enough usable material to even get a stub.
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This led to awkward conversations of the sort where the article was something like:
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by the WMF, using this project as the vehicle to spread them – for financial gain.
2064:
is another Bloomberg article (originally) on the Recession-WP-war I rather liked.
643:
looks like a perfectly fine fiction/entertainment/pop culture article... and yet,
35:
The following is an automatically-generated compilation of all talk pages for the
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OCLCs for the same publication each taking you to variations of metadata).
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gets used for a lot of things now. But I'll try to avoid such things in future.
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expecting success by the Wiki establishment with our usual technical bumbling.
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Interesting. I wouldn't endorse Techdirt as ever reliable though. September's
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About the self-licking ... the other day, I compared the top salaries in the
2602:
2571:
2528:
2434:
2423:
2417:
I must be missing something. The last sentence but 1 in the NPP section says:
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1998:
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volunteers to evaluate potentially malicious edits and behaviour on the site.
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You could start with beauty pageants and their contestants. Have a gander at
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seems to be based on some inferences that contradict the points in the essay.
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the CEO's total compensation incl. benefits increased by 7% (to $ 423,318),
2407:
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1217:
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A Fringe Affair (but not the show by Edward W. Feery that was on this year)
1031:
946:
913:
881:
783:
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688:
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330:(which, as you say, they must), that doesn't matter if the article doesn't
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of poorly-referenced or completely unreferenced articles, and while they
568:
288:
starting with this just created an inherent contradiction from the get-go
3415:
3283:
4161:
3944:
3329:
1371:
1090:
the review does not seem to be favorable for Wikimedians, however. See
648:
has never been, (except for maybe the BLPPROD project), focused on the
564:
350:
Complaining about Keep votes is entirely missing the point, since Keep
4134:(ISSN), overseen by the International Standards Organization, and the
1228:
Looking forward to seeing how this cartoon plays out. Keep it going! ~
4046:
3359:
No library without a photograph (Ninguna biblioteca sin fotografía)
3279:
2710:
2284:
2044:
1976:
1869:
1725:
1587:
1536:
1403:
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3021:
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2230:
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1935:
1910:
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initial October 2020 announcement of the anti-disinformation effort
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1630:
1612:
I'm not familiar with this effort. Where can I read more about it?
1513:
she hasn't edited since a flurry of sarcastic ArbCom !votes in 2008
563:
clear in every case. It never can be, never will be. Following the
496:
3791:
2984:
on other wikis in the same region that did not disable IP edits.
1092:
c:Commons:Village pump/Copyright/Archive/2024/01#Swedish FoP
311:
can be notable, but there's no such thing as a "notable article".
1185:
2521:
Knowledge:Village_pump_(proposals)#RfC_(WMF_fundraising_emails)
1153:
2361:
total number of employees, agents, and independent contractors
1839:
a WMF T&S Disinformation subteam (pamphlet to the right).
1289:
tasteless ones), you're fine. And yeah, I chuckled, a lot :D –
70:
66:
Knowledge talk:Knowledge Signpost/2022-08-31/Discussion report
4397:
https://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_Carnegie_libraries_in_Europe
2332:
line 8 "Pension plan accruals and contributions": $ 1,445,512
242:
be better than stubbifying, as context is often more helpful.
4010:
with what they had. I'm extremely grateful for that! –
293:
I'm really not seeing this supposed contradiction, but your
4371:
Knowledge talk:Knowledge Signpost/2022-08-31/Traffic report
4135:
1684:
1001:
Our man drills are safe for work, but our Labia is Fausta.
4114:
The unexpected rabbit hole of typo fixing in citations...
2709:
VRT/OTRS volunteers have commented on this as well (e.g.
1626:
Knowledge:Knowledge Signpost/2020-12-28/News from the WMF
606:
if they meet the three article content retention policies
509:
3588:, we have a very cool library. I'll collect some images.
1139:
Thank you AC for these pics and for the great key throbs
422:
Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Justin Bieber on Twitter
3303:
have photos OR as volunteers go through and list them?
1966:
Biden administration gave up on fighting disinformation
628:
on any day of the week, especially on Monday mornings.
201:
even more so better than having no article on a topic.
94:
might be of interest to those who want to look deeper.
4359:
What dreams (and heavily trafficked articles) may come
3365:
This Month in GLAM – Volume XII, Issue I, January 2022
2975:
2750:
Done. The Thomas example breaks my heart, by the way.
1601:
1515:(Although she's still occasionally active on Commons)
474:(orphan) for starters. Or anything listed in template
2494:
are to feel like they want to of their own volition.
538:
publication. A really bad article about yet another
1746:
File:Biden Campaign Disinformation Retrospective.pdf
307:An article can't, itself, "be notable" or not. The
250:required non-alternative medicine sources for, and
4072:Vector (2022) deployment discussions happening now
3526:attentive to ideas that may arise to organize it.
2112:the fictitious middle initial of a real politician
1580:As one of the people who was getting yelled at on
1559:
1650:Croatian_Wikipedia_Disinformation_Assessment-2021
1072:initiated a report on reviewing current copyright
424:for an example. This decision gave real teeth to
2998:
90:dealt with walled gardens in the early 00's and
2329:line 7 "Other salaries and wages": $ 52,302,332
624:Interesting choice of photo. It reminds one of
4386:https://carnegielegacyinengland.wordpress.com/
3703:. Thousands of km away is much worse, though.
1938:(not known as a defender of censorship) has a
1548:Truth or consequences? A tough month for truth
4302:This is among the best articles I've read in
3374:(Library Science wikiproject) or contact us:
3143:The dollar value of "official" external links
2335:line 9 "Other employee benefits": $ 8,022,951
1774:Thanks. Interesting (the pdf in particular).
2593:do not support volunteers who create content
2545:31% number referred to in past discussions.
120:effort to get that disaster area contained.
4086:pageviews, account creation, or edit rates.
488:Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Lexi Wilson
3058:18 years a Wikipedian: what it means to me
3009:sco:Knowledge:September 2022 Writin Drive
1070:Just a month ago, the Swedish government
675:than an inaccurate entertainment article.
4321:, but things are often not so simple. —
2031:
1824:
1642:Help Wikimedia Counter Disinformation! (
4319:verify any fact in Knowledge themselves
4090:This has been extensively discussed at
321:Well, not just "meant" that, the essay
14:
2650:the annual US inflation rate was at 2%
2338:line 10 ("Payroll taxes"): $ 2,886,511
2242:Levivich's calculation below upholds.
1461:User:Wugapodes#Wugapodes? What's that?
114:WP:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Longevity
3575: 02:36, 20 September 2022 (UTC)
3439: ) 10:40, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
3284:https://www.lclibrary.org/145/Lincoln
2483:
1901:
486:. I took a swing at the problem with
4132:International Standard Serial Number
3675:Wikimania 2022: no show, no show up?
3241:Two photos of every library on earth
2104:
847:
39:issue dated 2022-08-31. For general
3951:about hybrid/in-person attendance.
3003:I know this isn't the fault of the
2976:Farsi Knowledge IP block experiment
1602:Foundation help with disinformation
1039:They will watch all three hours of
27:
2648:– all over a two-year period when
28:
4410:
4065:) 11:09, 10 September 2022 (UTC)
3566:) 23:34, 16 September 2022 (UTC)
3558:. Subcats will follow if needed.
3493:Digital Public Library of America
2619:I found that from 2018 to 2020 –
2255:Michigan Technological University
2161:) 19:32, 11 September 2022 (UTC)
1432:Userboxen Wars has.</yoda>
1410:
1368:) 20:02, 29 September 2022 (UTC)
963:) 22:54, 19 September 2022 (UTC)
930:) 15:23, 19 September 2022 (UTC)
900:) 15:33, 18 September 2022 (UTC)
825:) 15:48, 16 September 2022 (UTC)
18:Knowledge talk:Knowledge Signpost
4271:) 12:43, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
4053:) 13:48, 7 September 2022 (UTC)
3763:) 10:59, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3625:) 19:51, 30 September 2022 (UTC)
3610:) 12:55, 30 September 2022 (UTC)
3596:) 19:40, 22 September 2022 (UTC)
3547:) 15:39, 16 September 2022 (UTC)
3534:) 16:27, 15 September 2022 (UTC)
3200:) 15:02, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
3184:) 15:54, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3104:) 05:20, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
2912:) 12:23, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2864:on the fundraising email RfC. --
2831:) 09:25, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
2605:) 18:08, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2553:) 14:28, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2450:) 20:12, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2430:) 19:38, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2267:) 22:22, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2238:) 20:57, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2208:) 20:19, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2170:https://xtools.wmflabs.org/blame
2166:The Blade of the Northern Lights
2153:The Blade of the Northern Lights
2127:) 04:45, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2072:) 18:24, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1902:
1497:) 04:51, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
1448:The Blade of the Northern Lights
1425:) 00:20, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1399:) 00:04, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1343:) 19:38, 8 September 2022 (UTC)
1301:) 20:06, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
1252:) 22:48, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
1240:) 12:20, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1082:) 21:32, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
742:) 05:31, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
705:) 04:56, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
664:) 04:54, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
504:) 01:28, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
346:) 03:58, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
223:) 02:35, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
197:) 01:09, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
130:) 02:46, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
122:The Blade of the Northern Lights
4351:) 20:10, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
4333:) 11:18, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
4260:) 11:34, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
4244:) 00:38, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
4223:) 12:47, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
4106:) 01:00, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
4040:) 08:30, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
3971:) 06:11, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3959:) 04:42, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3925:) 08:36, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3910:) 03:08, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3895:) 03:03, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3867:) 15:14, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3743:) 02:08, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3729:) 01:48, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3696:) 01:32, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3667:) 11:16, 30 November 2022 (UTC)
3518:) 21:19, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
3503:) 00:01, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
3476:Next Linked Data for Libraries
3465:) 21:16, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
3408:) 01:39, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
3390:) 23:08, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3350:) 17:15, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3311:) 16:18, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3293:) 14:01, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3270:) 11:51, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3168:) 10:28, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3089:) 16:01, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3050:) 15:57, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
3007:because they were just quoting
2473:) 10:21, 7 September 2022 (UTC)
2414:) 01:12, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2130:I've seen quite some hoaxes at
1983:) 03:40, 3 November 2022 (UTC)
1638:) 01:54, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1560:Jimmy Wales interviewed by WION
1523:) 05:38, 8 September 2022 (UTC)
1481:) 18:32, 7 September 2022 (UTC)
1456:) 03:15, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1440:) 01:24, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1356:) 13:21, 9 September 2022 (UTC)
1317:) 13:53, 9 September 2022 (UTC)
1224:) 03:10, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
951:17:44, 19 September 2022 (UTC)
918:17:10, 18 September 2022 (UTC)
636:) 10:22, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
463:) 01:09, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
92:their discussion on the subject
4390:
4379:
4313:21:24, 2 September 2022 (UTC).
3827:14:44, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3802:00:47, 26 September 2022 (UTC)
3786:07:19, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3653:) 17:51, 30 October 2022 (UTC)
3584:This is a great idea. Here in
3212:00:18, 26 September 2022 (UTC)
3133:13:55, 12 September 2022 (UTC)
3035:23:32, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
2995:07:53, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
2947:03:49, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
2821:product to be sold for profit!
2809:11:34, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
2791:product to be sold for profit!
2786:09:33, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
2689:07:38, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
2670:19:58, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2584:17:40, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2541:08:01, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2506:01:29, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2440:meta:WikiCite/Shared Citations
2378:20:29, 11 September 2022 (UTC)
2352:21:01, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2303:21:21, 11 September 2022 (UTC)
2279:23:41, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2250:21:48, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2221:20:55, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2185:22:38, 11 September 2022 (UTC)
2143:07:38, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
2132:WP:List of hoaxes on Knowledge
1864:08:21, 12 September 2022 (UTC)
1847:21:10, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
1821:07:30, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
1804:06:43, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
1788:06:15, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
1771:00:56, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
1709:09:15, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1620:01:08, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1576:00:42, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1540:15:53, 12 September 2022 (UTC)
1274:00:04, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
1209:01:57, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1036:04:02, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
1018:03:53, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
981:23:49, 19 September 2022 (UTC)
886:02:16, 17 September 2022 (UTC)
766:05:12, 23 September 2022 (UTC)
730:05:26, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
693:03:42, 5 September 2022 (UTC)
520:00:33, 26 September 2022 (UTC)
410:04:57, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
392:22:07, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
374:04:46, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
212:01:12, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
185:00:57, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
105:00:39, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
13:
1:
4297:20:56, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
4203:04:09, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
4172:00:15, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
4159:we're at the ultimate fix. --
4026:00:04, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
4001:07:19, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3853:07:19, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3715:01:37, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
3639:) 09:21, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
3233:04:25, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
3176:split from "Other/main body".
2999:Scots Knowledge editing drive
2971:16:56, 7 September 2022 (UTC)
2935:23:03, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2926:13:11, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
2878:17:24, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
2850:04:01, 7 September 2022 (UTC)
2762:17:22, 4 September 2022 (UTC)
2730:09:30, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
2703:well off – like this senior,
2399:
2226:another section in this issue
2098:14:30, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
2056:05:09, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1898:00:35, 1 November 2022 (UTC)
1735:21:27, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
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1506:17:17, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
1181:16:08, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
1161:04:03, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
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621:05:12, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
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551:02:36, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
439:07:02, 3 September 2022 (UTC)
268:17:56, 1 September 2022 (UTC)
145:19:16, 6 September 2022 (UTC)
3554:Splendid idea. Here you go:
3372:Wikiproyecto Bibliotecología
2011:10:38, 3 November 2022 (UTC)
1924:02:40, 1 November 2022 (UTC)
1500:That's what I remember too.
746:essay in the first place. --
476:Miss Universe 2013 delegates
7:
3998:}} me in replies)
3974:At least it's not just us:
3850:}} me in replies)
3783:}} me in replies)
3478:LD4 Wikidata Affinity Group
2589:self-licking ice cream cone
2195:
2172:can be a good alternative (
1329:the times you should shout
30:
10:
4415:
3832:Queering Knowledge session
3491:Perhaps that group and/or
3370:See also the wikiproject:
3324:Wikidata Project Libraries
3056:News from Wiki Education:
2625:the DGC's and GC's by 10%,
2446: (he/him •
1908:Not a fan of that. –
2882:
2839:✠ SunDawn ✠
2798:✠ SunDawn ✠
2678:✠ SunDawn ✠
1850:Thanks for finding that.
4096:navigate within the page
3569:Very nice. –
3282:'s library of choice...
1463:, the correct plural is
1115:09:42, 21 May 2024 (UTC)
654:most potentially harmful
2789:Oh, but they do have a
2640:the CT/CO's by 28%, and
2442:became a reality. ~ 🦝
2357:not include contractors
1628:. There may be more. ☆
1375:Thinking inside the box
1059:5, 10, and 15 years ago
1043:and they will like it!
45:Knowledge talk:Signpost
3976:Virtual Access Apology
3486:
3015:" makes it sound like
2900:boop that talk button!
2559:As I mentioned before
1970:
1950:
1829:
1610:
1268:Has about 8.1% of all
1175:Has about 8.1% of all
1135:Man, I love this stuff
1030:Has about 8.1% of all
945:Has about 8.1% of all
912:Has about 8.1% of all
880:Has about 8.1% of all
855:Efficacy of homeopathy
724:Has about 8.1% of all
687:Has about 8.1% of all
490:and it was a complete
318:
304:
290:
262:Has about 8.1% of all
3994:; please {{
3980:Chicago Worldcon 2022
3846:; please {{
3779:; please {{
3586:Roseville, California
3474:
2921:Mr. Stradivarius
2694:deliberately fostered
2455:As the author of the
2346:full-time equivalents
2032:Definition definition
1958:
1945:
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1605:
1489:shortly afterward...
837:during the discussion
314:
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54:Boarding the Trustees
4306:. Very nicely done.
3792:Open Publishing Fest
2989:a discussion on Meta
1393:Trainsandotherthings
1333:in a crowded theatre
4070:Technology report:
1147:P.I. Ellsworth
1057:From the archives:
968:RAF Shepherds Grove
395:Under what part of
52:Discussion report:
3556:Category:1lib2pics
2969:
2862:Hacker News thread
2484:Fundraising emails
2438:if a project like
2066:Gråbergs Gråa Sång
1830:
1719:Indeed. Very, uh,
1327:Looks like one of
1189:CommonsComix No. 1
999:Featured content:
585:I've overhauled a
4128:The Woman Citizen
4112:Tips and tricks:
3999:
3949:insightful thread
3851:
3799:
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3453:comment added by
3449:— Preceding
3209:
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3141:Recent research:
3132:
3077:comment added by
3073:— Preceding
2982:was also observed
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2637:the CCO's by 25%,
2634:the CAO's by 22%,
2631:the CTO's by 17%,
2628:the CFO's by 11%,
2583:
2565:Awards and grants
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2318:WMF 2020 Form 990
2302:
2105:Do I smell toast?
2054:
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2010:
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1874:Published today:
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1689:previously pinged
1511:And consequently
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472:Miss Denmark 2022
414:WP:INDISCRIMINATE
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3673:Special report:
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3261:Maplestrip/Mable
3258:though :) ~
3255:our list article
3243:(13,318 bytes ·
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2614:2020 Form 990
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512:or similar).
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4304:The Signpost
4303:
4236:, thanks! --
4215:the better.
4160:
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4100:BilledMammal
4095:
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4034:Musa Vacho77
4020:
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3796:T.Shafee(Evo
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3424:d:Q111593928
3384:Madamebiblio
3376:Vanbasten_23
3362:
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3206:T.Shafee(Evo
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3044:CiphriusKane
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2693:
2595:... hmmm. ☆
2592:
2490:
2467:LWyatt (WMF)
2456:
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2199:
2179:
2149:do something
2148:
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1927:As detailed
1918:
1880:
1794:a prior post
1765:
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1292:LordPickleII
1286:
1280:Adam Cuerden
1264:Adam Cuerden
1262:
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1213:Tagged with
1199:
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1171:Adam Cuerden
1169:
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720:Adam Cuerden
718:
683:Adam Cuerden
681:
656:of content.
653:
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514:T.Shafee(Evo
457:BilledMammal
417:
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280:Silver seren
258:Adam Cuerden
256:
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237:BilledMammal
191:BilledMammal
170:
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51:
40:
36:
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4361:(0 bytes ·
4008:really good
3986:OwenBlacker
3838:OwenBlacker
3771:OwenBlacker
3619:Daniel Case
3590:AlexisRUS Z
3572:Philosopher
3420:d:Q63468534
3397:WikiShootMe
3338:OlafJanssen
2825:Nosebagbear
2612:versus the
2202:Nosebagbear
1721:fascinating
1517:Daniel Case
1428:Begun, the
1041:Intolerance
600:WP:PRESERVE
229:Silverseren
88:Ward's wiki
56:(0 bytes ·
4145:we can see
3904:Randy Kryn
3883:Randy Kryn
3861:Randy Kryn
3428:Wiki Loves
3416:d:Q6133813
3120:HairedGirl
3040:Cobra 3000
2993:Emufarmers
2944:GamerPro64
2770:small jars
2547:Randy Kryn
2512:Clovermoss
2400:NPP letter
1373:In focus:
1109:Contrib's.
1097:JWilz12345
1046:GamerPro64
1015:GamerPro64
565:80/20 Rule
554:Of course
4265:kencf0618
4217:kencf0618
3990:(he/him;
3889:Bahnfrend
3842:(he/him;
3775:(he/him;
3690:Bahnfrend
3287:kencf0618
3280:Unabomber
3107:Me too, @
2846:(contact)
2805:(contact)
2711:User:Elli
2685:(contact)
2491:ethically
2463:Shushugah
2444:Shushugah
1975:Regards,
1881:Knowledge
1755:. –
1723:if true.
1644:diff post
1389:Userboxes
1350:Tlhslobus
1337:Philh-591
1311:Tlhslobus
1121:Gallery:
978:(discuss)
645:consensus
618:(discuss)
436:(discuss)
389:(discuss)
233:Bahnfrend
217:Bahnfrend
4277:Headbomb
4234:Headbomb
4183:Headbomb
4141:WorldCat
3560:Vysotsky
3463:contribs
3451:unsigned
3437:messages
3344:Vysotsky
3129:contribs
3087:contribs
3075:unsigned
3005:Signpost
2905:contribs
2746:Jayen466
2435:Dutchy45
2424:Dutchy45
2350:Levivich
2196:Salaries
2078:Headbomb
1936:Techdirt
1741:Jayen466
1715:Jayen466
1491:AnonMoos
1479:contribs
1256:how the
1246:AnonMoos
1187:Humour:
973:Hawkeye7
935:POV fork
736:Jclemens
711:Jclemens
699:Jclemens
670:Jclemens
658:Jclemens
613:Hawkeye7
431:Hawkeye7
384:Hawkeye7
295:response
248:WP:MEDRS
169:done in
141:a·po·des
101:a·po·des
41:Signpost
37:Signpost
31:Comments
20: |
4340:Johnson
4238:Doncram
4151:and/or
4059:wbm1058
4017:
3978:, from
3965:Bawolff
3953:Legoktm
3947:had an
3941:DebConf
3879:Kudpung
3661:MartinD
3633:MartinD
3604:Kmccook
3497:Doncram
3435:(
3433:Pelagic
3431:⁓
3380:Rodelar
3305:Rhagfyr
3230:Riband►
3109:Llywrch
3098:llywrch
3026:
3011:, but "
2866:Andreas
2815:SunDawn
2718:Andreas
2658:Andreas
2572:Andreas
2561:on Meta
2529:Andreas
2366:Andreas
2291:Andreas
2181:CX Zoom
2178:—
2139:CX Zoom
2136:—
2053:}}
1999:Andreas
1915:
1886:Andreas
1852:Andreas
1809:Andreas
1776:Andreas
1762:
1753:article
1697:Andreas
1258:Titanic
1218:FeRDNYC
1206:Riband►
548:Riband►
540:Titanic
532:WP:CORP
340:FeRDNYC
309:subject
235:, and
118:massive
72:Essay:
4323:Bilorv
4311:(talk)
4155:, and
3713:(talk)
3706:Clover
3512:MeegsC
3483:Agenda
3334:&
3178:Naraht
3125:(talk)
3079:Naraht
2892:Minkai
2883:Admins
2760:(talk)
2753:Clover
2504:(talk)
2497:Clover
2158:話して下さい
1955:Also:
1568:Silver
1453:話して下さい
1287:really
1158:
1088:Ainali
1076:Ainali
560:should
402:Silver
397:WP:NOT
379:WP:NOT
366:Silver
357:always
336:purely
332:employ
204:Silver
177:Silver
127:話して下さい
22:Single
4349:Talk!
3945:TheDJ
3821:goxer
3798:&
3737:Kerry
3330:Sic19
3208:&
3118:Brown
2316:It's
2061:Here
1962:after
1573:seren
1503:Katie
1430:Clone
1402:lol —
1387:It's
815:never
761:Kevin
650:worst
571:Green
536:after
516:&
494:. ☆
492:whiff
482:, or
478:, or
407:seren
371:seren
328:exist
252:those
209:seren
182:seren
110:years
16:<
4329:talk
4269:talk
4257:chat
4242:talk
4221:talk
4163:Pres
4157:then
4136:OCLC
4104:talk
4063:talk
4051:talk
4047:Ziko
4038:talk
4021:Talk
3996:ping
3992:Talk
3969:talk
3957:talk
3923:talk
3908:talk
3893:talk
3881:and
3865:talk
3848:ping
3844:Talk
3816:Rema
3800:Evo)
3781:ping
3777:Talk
3761:talk
3741:talk
3727:talk
3709:moss
3694:talk
3665:talk
3651:talk
3637:talk
3623:talk
3608:talk
3594:talk
3564:talk
3545:talk
3532:talk
3516:talk
3501:talk
3459:talk
3406:talk
3388:talk
3382:and
3348:talk
3322:See
3309:talk
3291:talk
3267:chat
3227:Blue
3210:Evo)
3182:talk
3102:talk
3083:talk
3048:talk
3030:Talk
2991:.) —
2829:talk
2756:moss
2714:here
2603:talk
2551:talk
2500:moss
2471:talk
2448:talk
2428:talk
2412:talk
2285:Czar
2275:czar
2265:talk
2246:czar
2236:talk
2217:czar
2206:talk
2125:talk
2070:talk
2047:Sdkb
1981:talk
1977:HaeB
1948:not.
1929:here
1919:Talk
1870:Czar
1843:czar
1800:czar
1766:Talk
1687:was
1648:and
1636:talk
1616:czar
1537:jc37
1532:bold
1521:talk
1495:talk
1473:talk
1459:Per
1438:talk
1416:Talk
1406:k6ka
1397:talk
1366:talk
1354:talk
1341:talk
1331:fire
1315:talk
1298:talk
1250:talk
1237:chat
1222:talk
1203:Blue
1103:Talk
1080:talk
961:talk
928:talk
898:talk
823:talk
806:TALK
740:talk
703:talk
662:talk
641:this
634:talk
626:this
595:zero
556:many
545:Blue
518:Evo)
502:talk
484:2015
480:2014
461:talk
344:talk
323:said
221:talk
195:talk
138:Wug·
98:Wug·
4343:524
4014:MJL
3541:agr
3342:--
3127:• (
3023:MJL
2960:Mel
2875:466
2727:466
2701:not
2667:466
2598:Bri
2581:466
2538:466
2375:466
2300:466
2260:Bri
2231:Bri
2117:not
2008:466
1912:MJL
1895:466
1861:466
1818:466
1785:466
1759:MJL
1751:Vox
1706:466
1663:-20
1656:SCP
1631:Bri
1309:).
1270:FPs
1177:FPs
1155:ed.
1032:FPs
957:agr
947:FPs
924:agr
914:FPs
894:agr
882:FPs
819:agr
726:FPs
689:FPs
652:or
591:may
587:lot
510:USA
497:Bri
361:yes
264:FPs
171:all
4363:💬
4291:·
4287:·
4283:·
4197:·
4193:·
4189:·
4143:,
4118:💬
4098:.
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