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

How to Handle Contentious Topics on Wikipedia Talk Pages

Learn the essential protocols for handling content disputes on Wikipedia Talk Pages, from the BRD cycle to NPOV and reaching a community consensus.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Get Funding for WikiProjects: Grants, Pilots, and Impact Strategies

Learn how to secure funding for WikiProjects through grants and pilot programs. Discover strategies for measuring impact and ensuring project sustainability.

Leona Whitcombe

Is Wikipedia Reliable? Truth, Bias, and the Fight for Accuracy

Explore the reliability of Wikipedia, from its consensus-driven accuracy and battle with vandalism to the challenges of systemic bias and governance conflicts.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Editors Manage Breaking News Events

Discover how Wikipedia editors maintain accuracy and neutrality during breaking news events through verifiability, page protection, and community consensus.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Coordinate Across Wikipedia Language Editions During Major Events

Learn how to synchronize Wikipedia language editions during breaking news events using Meta-Wiki, Wikidata, and Content Translation to ensure global factual consistency.

Leona Whitcombe

Wikipedia's Biggest Scandals and How the Press Covered Them

Explore how the media reports on Wikipedia's most famous scandals, from political edit wars to the gender gap and the rise of paid editors.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Avoid False Equivalence in Wikipedia Content

Learn how to identify and fix false equivalence in Wikipedia content. Master the weight of evidence principle to maintain true neutrality and avoid bothsidesism.

Leona Whitcombe

How The Signpost Manages Conflicts of Interest in Community News

Discover how The Signpost manages journalistic ethics and conflicts of interest to maintain trust and objectivity in tight-knit community news reporting.

Leona Whitcombe

Systemic Bias on Wikipedia: How Editor Demographics Shape Coverage

Explore how editor demographics create systemic bias on Wikipedia, leading to content gaps in gender, geography, and culture, and how the community is fighting back.

Leona Whitcombe

Inside the Wikipedia Culture: Community Norms and Values

Explore the fascinating social dynamics of Wikipedia. Learn about the community norms, editor demographics, and the hidden rules that maintain the world's largest encyclopedia.

Leona Whitcombe

How Global Classrooms Collaborate Across Different Wikipedias

Explore how students worldwide use Wikipedia to bridge language gaps, fight systemic bias, and collaborate on global knowledge through cross-wiki editing projects.

Leona Whitcombe

Foundation-Community Consultations: How Wikipedia Policy Changes Are Debated

Explore how the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikipedia's volunteer community negotiate policy and technical changes through Foundation-Community Consultations.