Category: Online Encyclopedias - Page 30
Why Wikipedia and Wikidata Are Recognized as Digital Public Goods
Wikipedia and Wikidata are recognized as digital public goods because they provide free, open, and non-excludable access to knowledge for everyone worldwide. Built by volunteers and funded by donations, they operate without ads or corporate control, making them essential infrastructure for education, research, and innovation.
How Wikipedia Documents Sensitive War Crimes and Human Rights Topics
Wikipedia documents war crimes and human rights violations through open, source-based editing by volunteers. It doesn't decide truth - it maps claims, verifies evidence, and preserves records when governments try to erase them.
How Wikipedia Protects High-Profile Articles During Breaking Events
Wikipedia uses automated alerts and volunteer editors to lock down high-profile articles during breaking events, preventing vandalism and misinformation. Protection levels vary based on threat level, and decisions are made rapidly by a global team of trusted editors.
Avoiding Original Research in Wikipedia Real-Time Coverage
Wikipedia's real-time coverage must avoid original research by relying only on confirmed, published sources. Adding speculation, rumors, or personal analysis during breaking news undermines its credibility and spreads misinformation.
Best Refill and Citation Cleanup Tools for Wikipedia References
Learn how refill and citation cleanup tools automatically fix broken, incomplete, or messy Wikipedia references - saving hours of manual work and improving article reliability. Essential for editors who care about accuracy.
Translating Citations Across Wikipedia Languages: Formatting Tips
Translating citations between Wikipedia language editions requires more than word-for-word translation. You need to adapt the citation format to match each version's template rules. Learn how to restructure parameters, use the right templates, and avoid common errors that break verifiability.
How The Signpost Handles Corrections and Retractions About Wikipedia News
The Signpost, Wikipedia’s community-run newspaper, handles corrections and retractions with transparency and accountability. By publicly labeling errors, preserving original content, and explaining mistakes, it sets a rare standard for journalistic integrity in online communities.
Student Safety on Wikipedia: Managing On-Wiki Interactions
Student editors on Wikipedia often face hostile feedback that can discourage participation. This guide explains why it happens, how to stay safe, and what schools and Wikipedia can do to make editing a positive experience.
Wikipedia Verifiability Policy: What Counts as a Reliable Source and Why
Wikipedia's verifiability policy ensures every claim is backed by reliable, published sources. Learn what counts as credible-like peer-reviewed journals and major newspapers-and why personal blogs, social media, and self-published content are rejected.
Sports Transfer and Draft Days: Why Wikipedia Traffic Spikes on Big Move Days
On sports transfer and draft days, Wikipedia sees massive traffic spikes as fans seek verified player histories. Unlike news sites, it offers deep, permanent records of trades and draft picks - updated by volunteers, not journalists.
Notability Thresholds for Incidents on Wikipedia: When to Create
Wikipedia doesn't create pages for every breaking news event. Learn the real thresholds for when an incident deserves its own article-and why most don't make the cut.
AI Tools for Source Discovery: Helping Wikipedia Editors Find Reliable References
AI tools are helping Wikipedia editors find reliable sources faster and more accurately, reducing edit reverts and improving content quality. These tools match claims to peer-reviewed studies, official reports, and trusted news outlets - without replacing human judgment.