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Archive for June, 2010

Wikimedia Commons Picture of the Year 2009

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Picture of the Year 2009 – Sikh pilgrim at the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) in India

Each year the Wikimedia Commons community picks out the best “Picture of the Year“, based on the images that have passed through its Featured Picture process during the course of the year. 890 pictures became Featured Pictures in 2009; of these, 38 made it into the final round. On 19 June 2010, the 2009 winner was announced — “Sikh pilgrim at the Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) in India“, taken by Wikimedian Paul Rudd.

The Featured Pictures considered in this competition can be from anywhere – entries are eligible regardless of whether they were taken by a Wikimedian or released by the creator under a free license elsewhere and then uploaded by someone else to Wikimedia Commons. Of the top 10 positions (held by 13 images), eight were created by Wikimedians, two were from Flickr, two from the US military (all US government works are in the public domain) and one was from the European Southern Observatory.

If you want to enter your photographs into the 2010 competition, all you need to do is upload it under a free license to Wikimedia Commons — and then get it past the grueling Featured picture candidacy process.

Pending Changes trial on the English Wikipedia

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

For the next two months, starting at midnight last night, the English Wikipedia will be testing a new tool, called Pending Changes, that re-enables the editing of articles that have previously been protected from editing. The Wikimedia Foundation, who have developed this tool, have posted the following announcement via their blog:

Over the next few days, English language Wikipedia users may notice a small change on some articles: a little magnifying glass where a lock once was. The icon, on the upper right corner of the article, represents an important step that Wikipedia volunteers have taken to open up articles that were previously protected from editing. Starting Tuesday at 11pm UTC, the English Wikipedia community will begin a two-month trial of a new tool called “Pending Changes” (formerly known as Flagged Protection).

Articles that are frequently subjected to malicious edits have long been locked, sometimes for years, and protected from editing by new and anonymous users. Over the last year, the Wikimedia Foundation and volunteers from the community have been working to develop Pending Changes, a softer alternative to these editing restrictions. At present, only about 0.1 percent of the 3.3 million articles on the English Wikipedia are under edit protection. This tool should help reduce disruptive edits or errors to articles while maintaining open, collaborative editing from anyone who wants to contribute.

When Pending Changes is applied to an article, the article will be open for editing by anyone, including anonymous and new users. When edits are made by new or anonymous users, changes will be reviewed before they appear on the main version of the article. Anyone can view these proposed edits by clicking on the “Pending Changes” tab alongside the “Edit” and the “History” tabs. In addition, by scrolling over the magnifying glass icon, you can quickly see exactly how many changes are pending review.

During this trial, the community will select which articles will use Pending Changes, with an initial 2,000 page maximum. If you’re interested in learning more about how Pending Changes works, or to test it out yourself, you can read our Q&A and the community-written help pages or check it out in Wikimedia Labs.

Mike Peel, Company Secretary of Wikimedia UK, commented that “This is an important step forward for Wikipedia. Pending Changes heralds a time when all Wikipedia articles, even those on topics that attract high levels of vandalism, can be edited and improved by anyone. I encourage everyone to help improve the articles that will be opened up by Pending Changes in order to help share the sum of human knowledge with the world.”

You can find out more at these pages:

Britain Loves Wikipedia pictures on Commons

Monday, June 14th, 2010
Britain Loves Wikipedia

In February 2010 we ran Britain Loves Wikipedia – encouraging people to visit 20 museums across the UK to take photographs for Wikipedia, and win prizes in the process. Our thanks go to all of you that submitted over 500 high quality photographs into the competition!

You can now find all of these photographs on Wikimedia Commons – take a look at Category:Britain Loves Wikipedia! We now need your help to categorize all of these images, and make use of them on Wikipedia. Can you spare a few minutes to look through them and help out?

We have three judges that are currently in the process of identifying the prize-winning photos, which we hope to announce soon.

Featured Article prizes from the British Museum

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

 Back stage at the British Museum. More photos from the day.

Following from the successful Backstage Pass event held at the British Museum on 4 June, attended by around 40 Wikipedians and resulting in the creation of a number of new articles, the British Museum have announced a competition for the creation of Featured Articles related to the British Museum’s collections!

The competition page gives the following summary:

The British Museum is offering five prizes of £100 (≈$140USD/€120) at their shop/bookshop for new Featured Articles on topics related to the British Museum in any Wikipedia language edition. Ideally, the topics will be articles about collection items.

This is the first time an organisation in the UK has put out a prize that recognises the value of fine articles on Wikipedia. This is a recognition that Wikipedia work is not only good quality but is consistent with the outreach aspect of the Museum’s mission to engage the public. It is likely to have a positive effect for the Museum in terms of usage of the deeper resources and links back to their research material. It is a win–win situation for free cultural products, and more broadly for the cultural sector.

The museum has curators dedicated to answering phone and email questions about their specialist areas and they recognise that editing Wikipedia articles, especially about items in the BM’s collections, counts for those purposes. If you require assistance in approaching the British Museum curators, please contact Liam Wyatt (User:Witty lama).

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