Wikipedia News Desk

When you think of Wikipedia, the free online encyclopedia built by volunteers around the world. Also known as the world’s largest crowd-sourced reference, it’s not just a static site—it’s a living project shaped by thousands of editors, policy debates, and tech updates every week. Behind the scenes, the Wikimedia movement, the global network of volunteers, chapters, and organizations supporting Wikipedia is constantly adjusting rules, tools, and priorities. From new anti-vandalism bots to changes in how edits are reviewed, these shifts affect every article you read.

Editor trends are shifting too. Fewer people are joining as regular contributors, while more focus is going into fixing bias, improving citations, and fighting misinformation. Meanwhile, events like Wikimania, the annual global gathering of Wikipedia editors and developers reveal what’s next—whether it’s better mobile tools, AI-assisted editing, or new ways to involve non-English communities.

Here, you’ll find clear, no-nonsense updates on what’s actually changing on Wikipedia—not rumors, not hype. Just what’s happening, why it matters, and who’s driving it.

Leona Whitcombe

K-12 Wikipedia Activities: Age-Appropriate Ways to Use the Wiki in Class

Learn how to integrate Wikipedia into K-12 classrooms with age-appropriate activities that teach digital literacy, citation verification, and critical thinking.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Test Wikipedia Bots in Sandboxes: Best Practices

Learn the best practices for testing Wikipedia bots in sandboxes. Avoid site-wide errors with dry runs, API management, and a structured approval process.

Leona Whitcombe

Fact-Checking AI: How Wikipedia Works as a Truth Benchmark

Explore how Wikipedia serves as a critical benchmark for fact-checking AI, reducing hallucinations through RAG, knowledge graphs, and grounding techniques.

Leona Whitcombe

Best Seasonal and Cultural Topics for Multilingual Wikipedia Campaigns

Learn how to execute high-impact multilingual Wikipedia campaigns by aligning cultural topics with seasonal trends to maximize visibility and knowledge equity.

Leona Whitcombe

Closing AfD Discussions on Wikipedia: How Closers Evaluate Consensus

Learn how Wikipedia administrators evaluate consensus during the AfD process and why quality arguments beat the number of votes in article deletion discussions.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Use Wikipedia Pageviews for Academic Research and Teaching

Learn how to leverage Wikipedia Pageviews for academic research and teaching to track public interest and enhance digital humanities projects.

Leona Whitcombe

Writing Long-Form Journalism About Wikipedia: Feature Writing Best Practices

Master the art of long-form journalism about Wikipedia. Learn how to turn edit logs into narratives and technical data into human-centric feature stories.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Cross-Check Wikipedia Facts Using Multiple Sources

Learn a professional strategy for cross-checking Wikipedia facts. Use the triangulation method and source hierarchy to ensure content quality and accuracy.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Stops Misinformation During Breaking News

Discover how Wikipedia uses a mix of human moderators, automated bots, and strict sourcing rules to stop misinformation during breaking news events.

Leona Whitcombe

Common Wikipedia Bot Tasks: Automating Typos, Templates, and Maintenance

Explore the essential role of Wikipedia bots, from fixing mass typos and updating templates to fighting vandalism and organizing categories.

Leona Whitcombe

Wikipedia's Biographies of Living Persons Policy: A Guide to BLP Rules

Master Wikipedia's Biographies of Living Persons (BLP) policy. Learn about notability, sourcing, and how to avoid bans when writing about living people.

Leona Whitcombe

Wikipedia Controversies: A Timeline of Major Governance Conflicts

Explore the history of Wikipedia's biggest governance battles, from edit wars and NPOV disputes to the tension between volunteers and the Wikimedia Foundation.