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The current logo trademark with the new typeface, Linux Libertine
Australia Square Sydney

What is Wikipedia?[edit]

Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge.[1]

Wikipedia is a free global information resource.[2] It is an encyclopedia created and managed by a global community of volunteers who work on what interests them.[3] There are about 20 million registered editors; 80,000 active users; 1,400 "administrators"; and only about 200 employees. It is the sixth or seventh biggest website in the world containing 30 million articles, in 286 languages, with 2 billion edits, 8000 views per second and over 500 million monthly visitors.[4][5]

Wikipedia is written by volunteer editors and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization that also hosts a range of other volunteer projects:

Wikipedia is free to read and all content in Wikipedia is released under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License (CC-BY-SA). This means that it is free to use as well. As long as you attribute it (that is, acknowledge the item's creator), all material from Wikipedia can be used by anyone, for any purpose, including commercial purposes.

The genre[edit]

Time lapse video of experts from the British Museum editing the article Hoxne Hoard (2010)

Wikipedia is a publication whose genre is "Encyclopaedia". It is not journalism, it is not a series of essays, blogs or research papers. Wikipedia articles are not commentary. Neither do they make a case for any editor's point of view. Wikipedia strives to provide a fact-based, neutral, balanced account of what is known about a notable topic. "Notability" is the encyclopedia's idea of an accession policy and the first paragraph of every article is supposed to set out what makes the topic or individual notable enough for inclusion.

The encyclopaedia has become part of the educational process at all levels - primary, secondary and tertiary, either as a first port of call for information and sources or as a means of learning to check sources and be discriminating about them.[6] Writing the encyclopedia is a useful means of learning about the topic; learning about providing good references; collaborating with others; abiding by editorial policies; page layout as well as translating.[7][8]

Truth[edit]

Wikipedia is part of the Free Culture Movement - one of many endeavours dedicated to producing and sharing knowledge rather than consuming it or locking it away. As "the world’s largest repository of human knowledge", it defends the "right to speak, share and create freely".[9] Transparency is a core value.[10] It makes knowledge available about and through a range of media - words and images; music and sounds. The content of the encyclopaedia is free to use and re-use. That is, it is both gratis and libre.

Free and open software[edit]

Large scale integrated circuit chip (CSIRO)

There is an ambiguity about the word "free" in the English language. Free in English means either liberty and/or cost. There is a difference between open source and free with regard to software. Free software can be referred to as F/OSS, FOSS or FLOSS.[11] OSS = open source software (anyone can read it); L = libre (anyone can edit and use it). The transparency and openness (truth) is the best guard against bugs (software and political), which is why security agencies won’t use it. Everything in FLOSS and WP is open and traceable – the editors, the dates, the changes.

Sharing[edit]

Property destroyed by fire at Kinglake after the 2009 Black Saturday bushfires (CSIRO Science Image)

Copyright (it's important but complicated!)[edit]

Text Plagiarising is a copyright violation. Plagiarised text will be deleted.

Images must be either in the public domain or have a Creative Commons licence.[18]

  • Uploading your own photos onto Commons is fine because you are giving them a Creative Commons licence. (If you don't want to given them this licence, do not upload them.)
  • Photographs from prior to 1955 are in the public domain, after that they are still in copyright for 70 years after the death of their creator and cannot be used.
  • "Freedom of Panorama" is a legal aspect of Copyright Law. The EU is currently making an effort to harmonise laws.[19][20] Australia has Freedom of Panorama but it does not cover temporary works such as Sculpture-by-the-Sea or Vivid.
  • Digital legal deposit is a recent Australian development.[21]

Creative remix[edit]

  • Creative remix of Archibald Prize Winners. (Not freely licenced.)
  • Google Translate provides an unexpected and surprising re-use of data. From Wikipedia's freely licensed natural language corpus Google Translate creates an average word length histogram for automatic language detection in order to “guess” what language is required by the user. It uses Wikipedia as its “natural language” reference.

Cultural partnerships[edit]

Shot tower Tasmania 1870 (CSIRO donated image)

Examples of relationship between Australian libraries and Wikipedia.

Education[edit]

Templeborough Roman Fort visualised 3D flythrough - Rotherham

Free access for the developing world and children[edit]

Wikipedia helping to break down the digital divide.

Secondary education[edit]

"...it is more important than ever for higher education to teach students to apply metacognitive skills — searching, retrieving, authenticating, critically evaluating and attributing material ..." [28]

University education[edit]

It is no longer about simply consuming knowledge. For students as much as for teachers, it is about producing knowledge and sharing it.

Research[edit]

Wikidata: Video introduction for beginners

Beauty[edit]

Holy Mountains Monastery (Complex of the architecture monuments of national significance in Sviatohirsk, Ukraine)
Winner of the 2014 WLM contest.
Sydney skyline at dusk

A musical visualisation of Wikipedia editing activity

Wikimedia Commons is the central media repository for the encyclopaedia. It is not to be confused with Creative Commons, which is an organisation that "provides copyright licences to facilitate sharing and reuse of creative content".[31] Architecture is just one of the categories that attract photographers who contribute freely-licensed images.[32]

Wiki Loves Monuments (WLM) is a global photography competition through which Wikimedians contribute clear photographs to record and make available good images of the world’s built heritage.[33]

Wiki Loves Earth (WLE) A global photographic contest for natural heritage.[34]

Goodness[edit]

The work is done by volunteers who are committed to sharing knowledge, education and freedom of access to information. Free-licence documentary video about Aaron Swartz: The Internet's Own Boy (Run time: 120 minutes) [35][36]

How does Wikipedia work?[edit]

Cleaning up is continuous on WP (Chau Chak Wing Building)

Editors work collaboratively on articles. There are no deadlines. No one "owns" any article. Each article improves by virtue of the oversight and contributions of others. Considerations of balance, facts, structure, indeed everything, are carried out on "Talk" pages. Disagreements are resolved by discussion and consensus is reached, sometimes after a long time, with reference to policies.

Essentials[edit]

Wikipedia:The answer to life, the universe, and everything.

Columns of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, Greece

The Five Pillars of Wikipedia set out its principles. In brief, articles must:

Quality[edit]

Virtuous Circle

Quality improvement[edit]

As the encyclopedia is a work in progress, the quality of an article varies according to the effort and time given to it. Quality is determined in particular by the referencing (about which the policy is strict), and also by the writing (conciseness, clarity, tone, accuracy) as well as the layout (images, structure). There are policies to support all these aspects. There is also a quality matrix which accords a quality status to an article ranging from a "Stub"[37] to "Featured Article".[38]

Quality control[edit]

People use Wikipedia and want it to be accurate. Vandalism[39] is controlled by:

  • Every edit is recorded - the history and origin of edits is always available;
  • Automatic abuse filter for common patterns of vandalism;
  • Recent change patrollers monitor recent edits;
  • Watchers oversee articles in topics of interest;
  • Projects such as Wikiproject Medicine have a specific focus on quality;[40]
  • Quality of images is assessed against a range of criteria, which include technical merit and encyclopaedic value.[41]

Navigating the encyclopaedia[edit]

Hobo–Dyer projection
Computer model image of a rogue wave smashing into a semi-submersible platform weighing around 32000 tonnes (CSIRO)
Tacking Point Lighthouse, Port Macquarie
Jamison Valley, Blue Mountains

Editors are called "users" and they each have a "User name" and a "User page" through which they introduce themselves to you and often give their motivation, particular interests and reveal their skills. The Username sticks with every edit you make and is best if it is "real-world anonymous". It becomes your Wikipedia identity and your wiki reputation is built on it.

You can watch some of the activity happening on Wikipedia live around the globe through this feed of Wikipedia Vision.

Tabs

  • Read
  • Edit
  • History

Functionalities

  • Links are the blue words in every article that connect you with that topic in another article.
  • Disambiguation pages give you the chance to choose what article you want to read from among those with the same name.
    Example: Seidler is a disambiguation page.
  • Redirects Common errors in searching will be redirected.
    Example: If you type Railway or Railroad into the search bar, you will be redirected to Rail transport.
  • References in every article give its sources under the heading "References". (See below) Readers (and students) are encouraged to verify the accuracy of claims in Wikipedia's articles by going to the source documents. The article List of Australian diarists of World War I has 1197 references.

Useful

The menu bar at the left contains a number of links to useful information, including:

  • Languages (Each language version is independently created, not usually simply translated)
    Example: Sydney Opera House has many language versions, including Ópera de Sídney (in Spanish), 悉尼歌剧院 (in Chinese).
  • What links here
  • Cite this page
  • Print/export

WikiProjects

People interested in particular topics join groups to work together

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wikipedia:Purpose
  2. ^ Wikipedia:Size in volumes
  3. ^ Lih, Andrew (2009). The Wikipedia revolution: how a bunch of nobodies created the world's greatest encyclopedia. New York: Hyperion. ISBN 9781401303716.
  4. ^ "The top 500 sites on the web". Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  5. ^ People who run Wikipedia by Stephen Lurie, The 36 People Who Run Wikipedia (5 November 2014)
  6. ^ Heppell, Stephen (16 February 2015). "Schools of the future must adjust to technology needs". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  7. ^ "The RA President attended the opening of the office of Wikimedia Armenia". Armedia. 19 June 2015. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  8. ^ Johnson, Ayana Elizabeth (12 June 2015). "How Hosting an Edit-A-Thon Made Me Trust Wikipedia". National Geographic. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  9. ^ Paulson, Michelle (22 July 2014). "Victory in Italy: Court rules Wikipedia "a service based on the freedom of the users"". Global blog. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  10. ^ "Wikimedia Foundation releases third transparency report « Wikimedia blog". Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  11. ^ See: Alternative terms for free software
  12. ^ CSIRO images released
  13. ^ Gallery of CSIRO images in Commons
  14. ^ Image donation from the Bundesarchiv (German Federal Archives)
  15. ^ Gallery of images from the German archive donation
  16. ^ Commons:KITLV donation 2015
  17. ^ Wyatt, Liam (22 July 2014). "Sharing multimedia on Wikipedia now easier with new tool". http://pro.europeana.eu/. Europeana. Retrieved 24 July 2014. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  18. ^ "Creative Commons licences". Wikimedia Commons.
  19. ^ McKinney, Conor James (29 June 2015). "The EU, the Gherkin and 'freedom of panorama'". Full Fact. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  20. ^ Zhang, Michael (9 July 2015). "Anti-Freedom of Panorama Rejected by EU". PetaPixel. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  21. ^ Digital legal deposit
  22. ^ "Print Wikipedia".
  23. ^ Mandiberg, Michael (19 June 2015). "7,473 volumes at 700 pages each: meet Print Wikipedia « Wikimedia blog". Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  24. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer (13 July 2015). "Print Wikipedia Project Reaches Final Entry". Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  25. ^ Statistics of Australia Commons Category
  26. ^ Examples:Demographic maps of Australia
  27. ^ Image of Afripedia USB on Commons
  28. ^ Antonio, Amy (27 March 2014). "Navigating the online information maze: should students trust Wikipedia?". The Conversation (Australia). Retrieved 13 July 2014. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  29. ^ KLF2 article traffic statistics
  30. ^ Academic profile of Stuart Fraser (University of Sydney)
  31. ^ Official website of Creative Commons Australia
  32. ^ Featured pictures of architecture in Commons
  33. ^ Kozlowski, Tomasz (1 September 2015). "In September, we love monuments". Wikimedia Blog. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  34. ^ Voropai, Ievgen (27 April 2015). "Join Wiki Loves Earth 2015: help capture our natural heritage". Wikimedia Blog. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  35. ^ Buhr, Sarah (27 June 2014). "Watch This Film About Why Aaron Swartz Matters More Than Ever". TechCrunch.com. TechCrunch. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  36. ^ "Movie Review: The Internet's Own Boy - The Story of Aaron Swartz". The Hacker News. 29 June 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
  37. ^ For an example of a "Stub" article, see Shed style
  38. ^ For an example of a Featured Article, see History of the Australian Capital Territory
  39. ^ For examples of speedy restoration see: Revision history of "Fun"
  40. ^ Wikiproject medicine Quality matrix
  41. ^ See Commons:Quality images