Archive: 2026/03 - Page 5
Phabricator: Wikipedia's Issue Tracking and Task Management System
Phabricator is the task and bug tracking system powering Wikipedia's technical infrastructure. Used by thousands of volunteers and engineers, it coordinates code changes, bug fixes, and feature development across all Wikimedia projects. Learn how it works and why it's critical to keeping Wikipedia running.
Reliability of Wikipedia: Myths vs Reality for Scholars
Wikipedia is often dismissed by academics, but research shows scholars use it daily to find context and sources. This article separates myths from reality, showing how Wikipedia supports - not replaces - scholarly work.
Wikipedia Administrators: Roles and Responsibilities Explained
Wikipedia administrators are volunteer editors with special tools to handle vandalism, block abusive users, and protect articles. They don't control content - they enforce policies. Learn how they're chosen, what they do, and how they're held accountable by the community.
Protecting Wikipedia Pages During Crisis and Vandalism Surges
Wikipedia faces massive vandalism surges during global crises. Learn how volunteer editors, protection levels, and community checks keep facts alive when misinformation spreads fastest.
Measuring Knowledge Integrity Across Encyclopedias with Open Benchmarks
Open benchmarks now measure how accurately encyclopedias like Wikipedia and Britannica present facts. Learn how knowledge integrity is being tested, what the results show, and why transparency matters more than ever.
Press Reviews: How Media Coverage of Wikipedia Stacks Up
Many media stories misrepresent how Wikipedia works, calling it unreliable or chaotic. But the truth is more nuanced: Wikipedia's volunteer-driven system often corrects misinformation faster than traditional news. This article breaks down how press coverage gets it wrong - and what good reporting looks like.
Open Questions: Can Wikipedia Survive in an AI-Dominated World?
Wikipedia faces an existential challenge as AI tools outpace human editors in delivering fast, but often inaccurate, information. Can open knowledge survive when no one is left to verify it?
When Wikipedia Should Not Be Used: Red Flags for Reporters
Wikipedia is a useful tool for journalists - but never a source. Learn the red flags that mean you should walk away from Wikipedia and how to find real, reliable information instead.
How to Maintain a Neutral Point of View in Partisan Political News
Maintaining a neutral point of view in partisan political news is essential for public trust and democracy. This article explains how journalists can report facts without bias, avoid false balance, and rebuild credibility in a polarized media landscape.
Wikipedia Editor of the Week Recognition Winners
Wikipedia's Editor of the Week recognizes volunteers who make quiet, powerful contributions to knowledge. No pay, no fame-just real impact on how the world understands history, science, and culture.
WikiProject Governance: How Consensus, Roles, and Decision-Making Keep Wikipedia Projects Running
WikiProject governance keeps Wikipedia's collaborative editing system running through consensus, clear roles, and structured decision-making. Learn how volunteer-driven groups shape content without formal authority.
Forecasting Wikipedia Traffic for Events and Holidays
Wikipedia traffic spikes predictably around major events and holidays. Learn how to use historical data and public tools to forecast page views with 90%+ accuracy for recurring events like the World Cup, Christmas, and Diwali.