Archive: 2026/02 - Page 3
Case Study: German Wikipedia’s Quality and Policy Rigour
German Wikipedia stands out for its strict sourcing rules, trained editors, and policy-driven editing culture. With fewer articles but far fewer errors, it offers one of the most reliable encyclopedias in the world.
How News Desks Monitor Wikipedia for Breaking Background Information
News desks use Wikipedia as a real-time tool to track breaking events, verify details, and find leads before official sources respond. It’s not a source - it’s a live sensor for what’s happening.
Editorial Workflows: Integrating Wikipedia Research Into Newsroom Fact-Checking
Wikipedia is now a critical first step in newsroom research. Journalists use it not as a source, but as a map to find original documents, track changes, and uncover hidden leads - accelerating fact-checking without sacrificing accuracy.
How RFCs Change Wikipedia Policies: Procedure and Timelines
Wikipedia policies change through open community discussions called RFCs-no votes, no admins, just careful, slow consensus. Learn how the process works, how long it takes, and why it’s designed to be deliberate.
How Wikipedia Uses Category and Taxonomy Systems to Organize Its Content
Wikipedia uses a detailed system of categories and taxonomies to organize its millions of articles. These tools help users navigate topics, connect related ideas, and find reliable information quickly-making it one of the most powerful knowledge systems ever built.
Where AI Fits in Wikipedia’s Editing Culture: Community Debates
Wikipedia's editing community is grappling with AI's growing role in content creation. From automated bots to AI-generated edits, the debate centers on trust, verification, and whether machines can uphold Wikipedia's human-centered values.
XTools and Other Wikipedia Editor Analysis Platforms
XTools and other Wikipedia editor analysis platforms help monitor human and bot edits, revealing patterns that keep Wikipedia running smoothly. These tools detect anomalies, track automation, and support community oversight without requiring technical skills.
From Wikipedia Editor to Signpost Reporter: How to Build a Career in Community Journalism
Many Wikipedia editors become community journalists by tracking edits, exposing bias, and writing for the Signpost newsletter. No degree needed-just curiosity, consistency, and a commitment to truth.
Reducing Western-Centric Sources in Global Topic Articles on Wikipedia
Wikipedia's reliance on Western sources distorts global narratives. Learn how to identify and add non-Western perspectives to create more accurate, balanced articles - and why this matters for everyone who uses the encyclopedia.
Archiving on Wikinews: How to Preserve News Pages and Source Links
Archiving source links on Wikinews ensures news stories remain verifiable over time. Learn how to use the Wayback Machine and Archive.today to preserve citations, avoid broken links, and uphold journalistic integrity.
AbuseFilter Examples on Wikipedia: Building Effective Rules to Stop Vandalism
AbuseFilter on Wikipedia uses smart rules to stop vandalism automatically. Learn real examples of effective filters, how to build your own, and why human reviewers still matter.
How Mentorship Keeps Wikipedia Editors Coming Back
Mentorship is the hidden force behind Wikipedia’s most loyal editors. Simple, kind feedback turns new contributors into lifelong volunteers-and keeps the encyclopedia alive.