The Top 10 Wikipedia Stories of 2012 (Part 1)
In these waning days of 2012, let's take this opportunity—for a third year in a row—to look back and come up with a list of the most important Wikipedia news and events in the last 12 months. Like our first installment in 2010 and our follow-up in 2011, the list will be arbitrary but hopefully also entertaining. There is no methodology to be found here, just my own opinion based on watching Wikipedia, its sister projects and parent organization, and also thumbing through the Wikipedia Signpost, Google News and other news sites this past week. So what are we waiting for?
Wait, wait, one more thing: this post ended up being much longer than I expected, and so I've decided to split this in two. Today we publish the first five items in the list, 10-6. On Monday 12/31 we'll publish the final five. Enjoy!
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10. Wikipedia bans a prominent contributor — Let's start with something that did not make the news outside of the Wikipedia / Wikimedia community at all, but which took up a great deal of oxygen within it. It's the story of a prominent editor and administrator who goes by the handle Fæ. In April of this year, he was elected to lead a new organization within the community based on his leadership of the UK chapter. The move was not without controversy: Fæ's actions both on Wikipedia and the sister site Wikimedia Commons (best known as a vast image repository) and interactions with editors became the subject of intense scrutiny, and even an ArbCom case (the Arbitration Committee is sort of like Wikipedia's Supreme Court). Fæ ended up resigning his adminship—he basically jumped to avoid being pushed—and the end result had him banned from editing Wikipedia, which he still is. Not that he's gone away—he's still a contributor to Commons, and a very active one.
This might sound like a lot of insider nonsense, and I'm not about to dissuade you from this viewpoint. (Sayre's law applies in spades.) But the key issue involved is about governance: is the Wikimedia community's organizational structure and personnel capable of the kind of leadership necessary to maintain and build on this important project? The Fæ incident (along with other incidents in this list) suggests the answer may be no.
9. Confusing software development — Not all of Wikipedia's contributors are focused on editing articles. Some are also developers, working on the open source software to keep Wikimedia sites running and, perhaps, improving. Some (but not all) are paid staff and contractors, and the hybrid part-volunteer, part-professional organizational structure can make it difficult to get projects off the ground.
One longtime project that has yet to see wide implementation is a "visual editor" for Wikipedia articles, to make editing much easier for users. Everyone knows that the editing interface for Wikipedia articles feels like software programming, and almost surely turns away some potential contributors (though it's not the main reason people don't contribute, as a 2011 Wikimedia survey showed). But the visual editor is a bigger technical challenge than one might think (as recently explained by The Next Web), and the outcome of a current trial run (also not the first) is anyone's guess.
Another announced with a great deal of hype but which no one really seems to understand is Wikidata. It calls itself a "common data repository" which by itself sounds fairly reasonable, but no one really knows how it will work in practice, even those now developing it. Wikidata could be a terrifically innovative invention and the very future of Wikimedia... but first we need to find out what it does.
Other projects have been released, but have received thoughtful criticism for adding little value while diverting resources from more worthy projects. For example, a feature briefly existed asking you to choose whether a smiley face or frowny face best represented your Wikipedia experience. Uh, OK? Some projects have been better-received: the Wikipedia iPhone app, for example, is a definite improvement over the mobile site. But there are some odd decisions here, as well: does Wikipedia really need an app for the failed Blackberry Playbook?
8. Sum of human knowledge gets more human knowledge — If you've ever seen a [citation needed] tag on Wikipedia—and I know you have—then you know that, well, citations are needed. And while citations do actually kind of grow on trees (if by "trees" we mean "the Internet") there is a lot of information out there which isn't readily searchable on Google, and sometimes that information costs money. This year, some of those paid services cracked the door open just a bit.
The interesting story to the HighBeam Research partnership is that there really isn't one. First of all, HighBeam is a news database which charges for reader access to its vast collection of articles. But in March, a volunteer Wikipedia editor who goes by the name Ocaasi reached out to HighBeam and asked if they would be willing to grant free access to Wikipedia editors. They said yes—and supplied one-year, renewable accounts to editors with at least one year's experience and 1,000 edits. For Wikipedia, it meant greater access to information. For Highbeam, it meant a 600% increase in links to the site in the first few months of the project. Seems like a fair trade.
More recently, the Wikimedia Foundation announced an agreement with the academic paper storehouse JSTOR, making one-year accounts available to 100 of the most-active Wikipedia editors. With almost 240 editors petitioning for access, if you haven't spoken up yet, chances are you're a bit too late.
7. The first person to 1 million edits — OK, how about a fun one? In April, a Wikipedia editor named Justin Knapp, who uses the handle Koavf, became the first person to make 1 million edits to Wikipedia. To the surprise of everyone, perhaps none more than Knapp himself, this made him an overnight international celebrity of the Warhol variety. Jimmy Wales even declared April 20 "Justin Knapp Day" on Wikipedia.
It's worth pointing out that most editors with many, many edits to their name typically are involved in janitorial-style editing activities, such as fighting vandals or re-organizing categories. And many very active editors spend a lot of time squabbling with others on the so-called "drama boards" such as Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents. Not Knapp: his edits over time have overwhelmingly focused on creating new articles, plus researching and improving content in existing ones. In short: Wikipedia doesn't need more editors—it needs more Justin Knapps.
Also, this is one I actually played a small role in, as verified by Knapp's own timeline of events. I'd happened to see someone note the fact on Jimmy Wales' Talk page that day, which I tweeted, and was then picked up by Gawker's Adrian Chen, and the rest is history. Actually, then Knapp kept right on editing Wikipedia. As of this writing, he's closing in on 1.25 million edits.
6. Philip Roth's Complaint — Wikipedia has been extraordinarily sensitive to complaints by living people the subject of articles ever since a 2005 incident where a veteran newspaper editor found his article maliciously vandalized to implicate him in the murder of the brothers Kennedy.
In what was arguably the biggest row since then, in September 2007 the celebrated, prickly author of Portnoy's Complaint, American Pastoral and numerous other novels took to the pages of The New Yorker to issue "An Open Letter to Wikipedia" complaining that the site had the inspiration for his 2000 novel The Human Stain all wrong. And this wasn't his first resort: Roth's first attempt had been to authorize his biographer to change the article directly, which was rebuffed. His consternation here: not inexplicable.
But Roth's complaint was not really with Wikipedia. Several book reviewers had speculated (apparently incorrectly) about the real-life basis for the novel's central figure, and it was these speculations which had been introduced to Wikipedia. Roth's publicity campaign brought the issue to much wider attention, which got his personal explanation of the novel's inspiration into Wikipedia. However, in a twist on the Streisand effect, the controversy is now the subject of a longish and somewhat peevish section written by editors perhaps irked by Roth's campaign. So he got what he wanted, plus more that he didn't. Shall we call it the Roth effect?
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Look here on Monday for the thrilling conclusion to The Top 10 Wikipedia Stories of 2012!