Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2016-05-17/In the media



In The Washington Post, resident digital culture critic Caitlin Dewey surmises (May 11) that the Post's readers "probably haven't even noticed Google's sketchy quest to control the world's knowledge":

The problem, Dewey argues, is that the information snippets arrive on Google users' screens without any indication of their source, yet by their placement gain an unearned air of authority. She quotes the Wikimedia Foundation's Dario Taraborelli in support of her thesis:

Dewey points out that the Google Knowledge Graph is "an advanced database sourced largely from Wikipedia and constructed in part from user search patterns" and references a study by Mark Graham and Heather Ford pointing out instances of bias and lack of nuance in Google's knowledge panel answers (see previous Signpost coverage):

Dewey's article ends with a hopeful reference to Wikidata, described as

It's a fond hope. Bearing in mind that Wikidata is published under a no-attribution-required CC-0 licence and itself lacks sources for many of its statements, it seems quite possible that many other commercial re-users will jump at the opportunity to use Wikidata content without attribution in order to follow Google's lead and build their own aura of omniscience, replicating and broadening the problem Dewey and Taraborelli lament.



In brief
Do you want to contribute to "In the media" by writing a story or even just an "in brief" item? Edit next week's edition in the Newsroom or contact the editor.
 * Editor retention study: In a guest blog post on Scientific American, Sarah Guminski wonders "What makes Wikipedia's volunteer editors volunteer?" Apparently, it's all about community: in an experiment run on the German-language Wikipedia, researchers found that giving new contributors an award during their first month of participation increased retention by 20 per cent. The "symbolic recognition ... made editors feel like they were part of an exclusive group ... the key takeaway is not how to attract volunteers, but how to keep them." (May 12)
 * Wikipedia remains popular: The Atlantic finds that "Wikipedia remains the most popular informational site around." (May 11)
 * Nigerian vandals: igberetvnews.com and nigeriannewspapers.today write about vandalism to the biography of Muhammadu Buhari. The article was semi-protected on May 11 after a spate of vandalism edits. (May 11)
 * Unloved picture: Seventeen.com chronicles Ansel Elgort's Twitter-based efforts to have his Wikipedia image changed. So far, Elgort seems to have been unsuccessful. (May 10)
 * Death and taxes: Death and Taxes looks at edits to the biography of Tim Moore (North Carolina politician). (May 5)
 * Popular reptiles: ScienceDaily, Australian Network News, home.bt.com and others report on a study by Oxford University and Tel Aviv University to identify the world's most popular reptiles, ranked according to page views on the English Wikipedia. The Komodo dragon came top, followed by the black mamba and the saltwater crocodile. (May 4–5)
 * Celebrity deaths: Gizmodo UK relies on Wikipedia to establish that 2016 is truly a "bizarrely bad year for celebrity deaths", in a piece also picked up by The Daily Mail. (May 4)