Category: Online Encyclopedias - Page 21

Leona Whitcombe

Wikidata as a Bridge: Connecting Wikipedia Languages with Shared Facts

Wikidata connects over 300 Wikipedia language editions by storing shared facts in one central database, ensuring consistency and enabling smaller language communities to access accurate, up-to-date information without manual translation.

Leona Whitcombe

Huggle for Wikipedia: Fast Vandalism Reversion Workflow

Huggle is a fast, browser-based tool used by Wikipedia volunteers to quickly identify and revert vandalism. It filters out noise and highlights suspicious edits in real time, letting users revert spam and malicious changes in seconds.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Use the Wikipedia Library for Accessing Paywalled Sources in Journalism

The Wikipedia Library gives journalists free, legal access to paywalled academic journals, historical newspapers, and government archives. Learn how to use it without editing Wikipedia or paying fees.

Leona Whitcombe

GLAM-Wiki Partnerships: Recent Collaborations with Wikipedia

GLAM-Wiki partnerships connect museums, libraries, and archives with Wikipedia to improve public knowledge. Recent collaborations have expanded access to cultural heritage, corrected historical biases, and empowered underrepresented communities.

Leona Whitcombe

Using Preprints on Wikipedia: Risks and Policy Guidance

Wikipedia bans preprints as sources because they haven't been peer-reviewed. Learn when and why preprints are risky, what reliable sources to use instead, and how to follow Wikipedia's policy correctly.

Leona Whitcombe

Privacy Policy: How Wikipedia Protects Editor Information

Wikipedia protects editor privacy by hiding IP addresses, avoiding tracking, and allowing anonymous edits. No personal data is collected unless you create an account - and even then, your real identity stays secret.

Leona Whitcombe

Latest Edition of The Signpost: Key Highlights for Wikipedia Editors

The latest edition of The Signpost highlights key updates for Wikipedia editors, including policy changes, new tools, declining editor numbers, and community stories that keep the encyclopedia alive.

Leona Whitcombe

The Sister Projects Task Force: Wikimedia Foundation's Review of Wikinews

Wikinews, Wikimedia Foundation's volunteer-run news site, underwent a major review in 2025. The Sister Projects Task Force found declining participation but strong value among educators and researchers - leading to new tools, training, and language support to ensure its survival.

Leona Whitcombe

How CentralNotice Banners on Wikipedia Are Approved and Governed

Wikipedia’s CentralNotice banners are carefully approved to maintain neutrality and trust. Learn how fundraising and policy messages are reviewed, who controls them, and why commercial or biased content is never allowed.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Administrators Are Elected in 2025: Key Changes

In 2025, Wikipedia changed how its administrators are elected to prioritize experience over popularity. New rules require proven editing history, limit voting to active users, and replace majority votes with consensus-based approval.

Leona Whitcombe

Accessibility Considerations for Educational Use of Wikipedia

Wikipedia is widely used in education, but its accessibility issues can exclude students with disabilities. Learn how teachers and students can make Wikipedia work for everyone through simple fixes, tools, and teaching strategies.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Improve Stub Articles to B-Class Status on Wikipedia

Learn how to expand Wikipedia stub articles into B-Class status by adding structure, citations, context, and neutral tone. A practical guide for new editors looking to improve article quality.