Archive for the ‘Wikipedia’ Category

When should courts rely on Wikipedia? – Washington Post

In D Magazine Partners v. Rosenthal, someone described as a welfare queen in a magazine article sued the magazine for libel. One question was what the phrase welfare queen meant, and the Texas Court of Appeals resolved this by referring to, among other sources, Wikipedia. In FridaysTexas Supreme Court decision in the case, Justice Debra H. Lehrmanns majority opinion considered whether this reliance was proper:

Citing Wikipedia, along with additional sources cited in the Wikipedia article, the court [of appeals] stated:

The term Welfare Queen has two meanings; it can mean either (1) a woman who has defrauded the welfare system by using false information to obtain benefits to which she is not legally entitled, and it can also mean (2) a woman who has exploited the welfare system by having children out of wedlock and avoiding marital relationships for the purpose of continuing to qualify legally for government benefits.

The court explained that the second definition does not apply to Rosenthal and that the articles title therefore necessarily references a woman who is committing fraud to receive government-assistance benefits illegally.

Wikipedia is a self-described online open-content collaborative encyclopedia. This means that, except in certain cases to prevent disruption or vandalism, anyone can write and make changes to Wikipedia pages. Volunteer editors can submit content as registered members or anonymously. Each time an editor modifies content, the editors identity or IP address and a summary of the modification, including a time stamp, become available on the articles history tab. Wikipedia is one of the largest reference websites in the world, with over 70,000 active contributors working on more than 41,000,000 articles in 294 languages.

References to Wikipedia in judicial opinions began in 2004 and have increased each year, although such references are still included in only a small percentage of opinions. These cites often relate to nondispositive matters or are included in string citations. But, some courts have taken judicial notice of Wikipedia content, based their reasoning on Wikipedia entries, and decided dispositive motions on the basis of Wikipedia content. While there has been extensive research on Wikipedias accuracy, the results are mixed some studies show it is just as good as the experts, [while] others show Wikipedia is not accurate at all.

Any court reliance on Wikipedia may understandably raise concerns because of the impermanence of Wikipedia content, which can be edited by anyone at any time, and the dubious quality of the information found on Wikipedia. Cass Sunstein, legal scholar and professor at Harvard Law School, also warns that judges use of Wikipedia might introduce opportunistic editing. The Fifth Circuit has similarly warned against using Wikipedia in judicial opinions, agreeing with those courts that have found Wikipedia to be an unreliable source of information and advising against any improper reliance on it or similarly unreliable internet sources in the future.

For others in the legal community, however, Wikipedia is a valuable resource. Judge Richard Posner has said that Wikipedia is a terrific resource because it [is] so convenient, it often has been updated recently and is very accurate. However, Judge Posner also noted that it wouldnt be right to use it in a critical issue. Other scholars agree that Wikipedia is most appropriate for soft facts, when courts want to provide context to help make their opinions more readable. Moreover, because Wikipedia is constantly updated, some argue that it can be a good source for definitions of new slang terms, for popular culture references, and for jargon and lingo including computer and technology terms. They also argue that open-source tools like Wikipedia may be useful when courts are trying to determine public perception or community norms. This usefulness is lessened, however, by the recognition that Wikipedia contributors do not necessarily represent a cross-section of society, as research has shown that they are overwhelmingly male, under forty years old, and living outside of the United States.

Given the arguments both for and against reliance on Wikipedia, as well as the variety of ways in which the source may be utilized, a bright-line rule is untenable. Of the many concerns expressed about Wikipedia use, lack of reliability is paramount and may often preclude its use as a source of authority in opinions. At the least, we find it unlikely Wikipedia could suffice as the sole source of authority on an issue of any significance to a case. That said, Wikipedia can often be useful as a starting point for research purposes. Selectively using Wikipedia for minor points in an opinion is an economical use of judges and law clerks time. In this case, for example, the cited Wikipedia page itself cited past newspaper and magazine articles that had used the term welfare queen in various contexts and could help shed light on how a reasonable person could construe the term.

However, the court of appeals utilized Wikipedia as its primary source to ascribe a specific, narrow definition to a single term that the court found significantly influenced the articles gist. Essentially, the court used the Wikipedia definition as the lynchpin of its analysis on a critical issue. As a result, the court narrowly read the term welfare queen to necessarily implicate fraudulent or illegal conduct, while other sources connote a broader common meaning. See, e.g., Oxford Living Dictionaries, https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/welfare_queen (broadly defining welfare queen as a woman perceived to be living in luxury on benefits obtained by exploiting or defrauding the welfare system); YourDictionary, http://www.yourdictionary.com/welfare-queen (broadly defining welfare queen as a woman collecting welfare, seen as doing so out of laziness, rather than genuine need). In addition, and independent of the Wikipedia concerns, the court of appeals overwhelming emphasis on a single term in determining the articles gist departed from our jurisprudential mandate to evaluate the publication as a whole rather than focus on individual statements.

Justice Eva M. Guzman concurred, in an opinion that began with this image, and a footnote reading Screenshot of unsaved edits to Welfare Queen, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W elfare_queen.

The opinion went on:

I write to emphasize the perils of relying on Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia as an authoritative source for any controverted, decisive, or critical issue. As a general proposition, I believe Wikipedia is not a sufficiently reliable source of information to serve as the leading authority on a case-determinative matter, particularly when the courts reliance is sua sponte without notice to the parties, as it was in this case.

Wikipedia has many strengths and benefits, but reliance on unverified, crowd-generated information to support judicial rulings is unwise. Mass-edited collaborative resources, like Wikipedia, are malleable by design, raising serious concerns about the accuracy and completeness of the information, the expertise and credentials of the contributors, and the potential for manipulation and bias. In an age when news about fake news has become commonplace, long-standing concerns about the validity of information obtained from consensus websites like Wikipedia are not merely the antiquated musings of luddites.

To the contrary, as current events punctuate with clarity, courts must remain vigilant in guarding against undue reliance on sources of dubious reliability. A collaborative encyclopedia that may be anonymously and continuously edited undoubtedly fits the bill.

Legal commentators may debate whether and to what extent courts could properly rely on online sources like Wikipedia, but the most damning indictment of Wikipedias authoritative force comes directly from Wikipedia:

WIKIPEDIA MAKES NO GUARANTEE OF VALIDITY

Please be advised that nothing found here has necessarily been reviewed by people with the expertise required to provide you with complete, accurate or reliable information.

Wikipedia cannot guarantee the validity of the information found here.

Wikipedia is not uniformly peer reviewed.

[A]ll information read here is without any implied warranty of fitness for any purpose or use whatsoever.

Even articles that have been vetted by informal peer review or featured article processes may later have been edited inappropriately, just before you view them.

Indeed, Wikipedias radical openness means that any given article may be, at any given moment, in a bad state: for example, it could be in the middle of a large edit or it could have been recently vandalized. Even if expeditiously remediated, transient errors are not always obvious to the casual reader. As Wikipedia states more pointedly, Wikipedia is a wiki, which means that anyone in the world can edit an article, deleting accurate information or adding false information, which the reader may not recognize. Thus, you probably shouldnt be citing Wikipedia.

Apart from these candid self-assessments, which no doubt apply with equal force to other online sources and encyclopedias, a more pernicious evil lurks opportunistic editing. Because [a]nyone with Internet access can write and make changes to Wikipedia articles and can contribute anonymously, [or] under a pseudonym, reliance on Wikipedia as an authoritative source for judicial decision-making incentivizes self-interested manipulation. Case in point: a Utah court of appeals recently described how the Wikipedia definition of jet ski provided stronger support for one of the parties in a subsequent appeal than it had when considered by the court in the parties previous appeal. The court observed the difficulty of discerning whether the change was instigated by the courts prior opinion, perhaps at the instance of someone with a stake in the debate.

Still, some have argued Wikipedia is a good source for definitions of new slang terms, for popular culture references, and for jargon and lingo including computer and technology terms. Perhaps, but not necessarily. While Wikipedias openly editable model may be well suited to capturing nuances and subtle shifts in linguistic meaning, there is no assurance that any particular definition actually represents the commonly understood meaning of a term that may be central to a legal inquiry.

In truth, Wikipedias own policies disclaim the notion: Wikipedia is not a dictionary, phrasebook, or a slang, jargon or usage guide. Whatever merit there may be to crowdsourcing the English language, Wikipedia simply lacks the necessary safeguards to prevent abuse and assure the level of certainty and validity typically required to sustain a judgment in a legal proceeding.

Take, for example, the Wikipedia entry for welfare queen, which was first created in November 2006 by the user Chalyres. Since the entry was first drafted, 239 edits have been made by 146 users. But there is no reliable way to determine whether these edits (1) deleted or added accurate information, (2) deleted or added false or biased information, (3) were made by individuals with expertise on the terms usage, or (4) were made by individuals actually representative of the community.

As a court, one of our chief functions is to act as an animated and authoritative dictionary. In that vein, we are routinely called upon to determine the common meaning of words and phrases in contracts, statutes, and other legal documents. Though we often consult dictionaries in discharging our duty, rarely, if ever, is one source alone sufficient to fulfill the task. To that end, I acknowledge that Wikipedia may be useful as a starting point for serious research, but it must never be considered an endpoint, at least in judicial proceedings.

Wikipedias valuable role in todays technological society cannot be denied. Our society benefits from the fast, free, and easily-accessible information it provides. A wealth of information is now available at the touch of a few key strokes, and a community of Wikipedia editors serves to increase the accuracy and truth of that information, promoting the public good through those efforts. However, in my view, Wikipedia properly serves the judiciary only as a compendium a source for sources and not as authority for any disputed, dispositive, or legally consequential matter.

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When should courts rely on Wikipedia? - Washington Post

UMF Art Gallery hosts Art + Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, March 25 – Farmington Flyer

March 16, 2017

FARMINGTON, ME (March 16, 2017)The UMF Art Gallery is hosting an Art + Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon on Saturday, March 25. The event will begin with a panel discussion at 10 a.m. followed by Wikipedia editing workshops from 12-5 p.m. The event is open to all; no previous experience is required and beginners are welcome. Light refreshments and childcare will be provided.

This is the fourth year Art + Feminism Edit-a-thons will be taking place internationally and the first year the program comes to Farmington. The event is one of hundreds of Art + Feminism Edit-a-thons happening all around the world throughout the month of March.

The event aims to improve coverage of women online and also to promote female editorship, noting that the gender imbalance on Wikipedia is well documented, reporting less than 10% of its editors were women as of 2014.

The day will feature a panel discussion about navigating information online and how to meaningfully address the underrepresentation of women on the internet. The panel will include artists Ann Bartges (new media) and Melissa Thompson (performance), Hope Williams (sophomore), Sarah Maline (curator) and arts activator Abby Flanagan.

Wikipedia is both praised and criticized for its democratic model, said Flanagan, It is shared by all of us, the users and the editors. By contributing content to this growing body of knowledge, we directly combat terms such as alternative facts, and fake news by becoming more engaged and aware of online sources.

According to event coordinators, the event is incredibly inclusive in that rural communities can tap into the larger network, needing only access to the internet. Participants are encouraged to bring a laptop and power cord, though some loaners will be available.

Each year, the core group of Art+Feminism organizers meets in New York City at the Museum of Modern Art and they report over 300 node events happening in six continents. (http://www.artandfeminism.org/our-story/)

Please RSVP by emailing artandfeminism.edit.me@gmail.com or find the event on the UMF Art Gallery Facebook page. Childcare is available and requires advance registration: please include details on number and age of children when you RSVP if applicable.

More on the UMF Art Gallery

The UMF Art Gallery is a teaching gallery dedicated to bringing contemporary art and artists to campus and the regional community. In its focus on innovative and challenging new work, the gallery reinforces the academic vision of the university and the Department of the Visual and Performing Arts in celebrating art as a powerful agent of community and cultural identity. The gallery develops interdisciplinary educational opportunities for students and community and works with local schools to integrate art into their curricula.

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UMF Art Gallery hosts Art + Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, March 25 - Farmington Flyer

‘Wikipedia, for Generation Z’ – Philly.com (blog)

Birthdays of the young and social-media-famous are big business, insists Evan Britton, the Plymouth Whitemarsh H.S. and Pitt grad who runs FamousBirthdays.com from offices in Santa Monica, Calif.

By scraping and packaging popular smartphone social media profiles, Britton says he's picked up 14 million unique users, and a ranking on the edge of Alexa.com's 1,000 most-visited U.S. sites. That's attracted enough Google program advertising to support a staff of 25, including 2 software developers, plus his own growing family of four.

"This is the next Wikipedia. For Generation Z," he tells me on a visit home to Philadelphia to see family and friends.

The site started out writing celebrity profiles linked to birth dates of the stars. But Britton says he drew Google-program-advertising-sized traffic by focusing not on much-exposed A-listers but on young and popular Instagram, YouTube, SnapChat and Musical.ly regulars.

The threshhold is to have many thousands of followers and a high degree of engagement -- fans reacting to daily posts. Britton says the site picks its subjects; it doesn't accept paid listings.

"Gen Z -- that's 13 to 24 year olds -- lives on social platforms," Britton says. "These platforms have spawned a new type of celebrity -- a social media celebrity.Famous Birthdays is the platform where Gen Z learns about and discovers these social media stars."

Britton revels in tales of "Social Media Celebrities" celebrating their FamousBirthdays profiles as junior reporters or faculty mark their first Wikipedia reference and article: "They tell their fans about it."

New this month is FamousBirthdays video, with "4full-time editors" keeping profiles to YouTube-friendly 30 seconds. Britton says the site works with the Disney, Nickelodeon, AwesomenessTV, and Influencer Marketing agencies, who "use our platform daily to learn more about rising social media stars that they can potentially work with."

He hasn't taken on outside investors, though he's gotten inquiries. He says he's learned a lot from watching Shark Tank -- mostly about how to focus and not get distracted. He built FamousBirthdays after a string of experiments, including a search site, Sency, and an "anti-content farm" focused on hobbyists, ResourceWebs.

Britton settled in California after he couldn't get into the Wharton MBA program. "A lot of New York and California tech entrepreneurs -- think of Michael Dubin, of Dollar Shave, which he sold for $1 billion to Unilver -- they come from Philadelphia but go somewhere else to build their companies," he said over greens at Tom's Dim Sum.

"Maybe Wharton ought to concentrate more on people who will stick around and build something in the neighborhood. Like they do at Stanford."

Published: March 17, 2017 4:24 PM EDT

Over the past year, the Inquirer, the Daily News and Philly.com have uncovered corruption in local and state public offices, shed light on hidden and dangerous environmental risks, and deeply examined the regions growing heroin epidemic. This is indispensable journalism, brought to you by the largest, most experienced newsroom in the region. Fact-based journalism of this caliber isnt cheap. We need your support to keep our talented reporters, editors and photographers holding government accountable, looking out for the public interest, and separating fact from fiction. If you already subscribe, thank you. If not, please consider doing so by clicking on the button below. Subscriptions can be home delivered in print, or digitally read on nearly any mobile device or computer, and start as low as 25 per day. We're thankful for your support in every way.

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'Wikipedia, for Generation Z' - Philly.com (blog)

Listen to Wikipedia on the App Store – iTunes

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iTunes

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To download the free app Listen to Wikipedia by Michael Oltman, get iTunes now.

Open iTunes to buy and download apps.

See and hear every change to every article on Wikipedia in real-time. Bells are sounded for additions and strings are plucked for subtractions. The pitch changes with the size of the edit the larger the edit, the deeper the note. Green circles show edits from unregistered contributors, and purple circles mark edits performed by automated bots. Orchestral swells and a blue banner welcome new editors.

The app has support for English, German, Spanish, Swedish, Russian, and 27 other languages.

Developed by Bryan Oltman (bryanoltman.com). Based on Listen to Wikipedia by Hatnote (listen.hatnote.com).

This is beautiful! I would easily pay for this app anyday. The sensual sounds, the lovely circles that appear and fade, this app truly is one of a kind... It's wonderfully relaxing, simplistic, and well put together. It downloads fast so there is no reason not to give it a try! I've spent over 50 dollars purchasing all kinds of apps and this one is a favorite; goes to show how beautiful the power of community (wikipedia) truly is when combined in real time!

It would be awesome if you guys made it do background play.. I mostly use this app to calm me down when I have anxiety so it would be great if I didn't have to keep tapping to keep my phone from locking- other than that it's flawless

To all people who downloaded the app: the sounds of the app are nice, but aren't we missing the point of the app, which is the real time edits. I like the sounds as well.

I don't know why this app was created sooner, good work. Keep up with updates & everything.

This app is designed for both iPhone and iPad

Free

Compatibility: Requires iOS7.0 or later. Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.

Discover and share new apps.

Follow us on @AppStore.

Discover and share new music, movies, TV, books, and more.

Follow us @iTunes and discover new iTunes Radio Stations and the music we love.

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Listen to Wikipedia on the App Store - iTunes

V for Wikipedia on the App Store – itunes.apple.com

Description

Wikipedia, better than everon iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch. Discover the world and enjoy beautiful typography with this sleek app. ***App Store Best of 2016*** ***Gold Winner of the German Design Award 2017***

If you love learning new things on Wikipedia but want a gorgeous interface to interact with the valuable information, then you should check out [this app]. Christine Chan, AppAdvice

Best typography on the small screen yet [] Get this app, a brilliant Wikipedia reader. Erik Spiekermann, Typographer

[This app] is an exceptionally crafted app for experiencing Wikipedia on your iOS devices. [] the wonderful visualization sweeps you off your feet. Preshit Deorukhkar, Beautiful Pixels

# Heres why youll like this app:

NEARBY PLACES: Discover interesting Wikipedia articles about the area around your location. Or explore any other spot in the world. Its fun with our signature map visualization.

MOST READ ARTICLES: See what other people read and find out whats going on in the world. The brand-new Most Read section makes discovering hot topics a breeze.

SEARCH RESULTS: Powered by both Wikipedias full-text and prefix search, youll find what youre looking for. Matches are displayed as rich article previews, tweaked for both legibility and high information density.

READING INTERFACE: Were passionate about great typography! So its only natural that the layout is designed to make reading Wikipedia articles pleasant and efficient.

BOOKMARKS & HISTORY: Add bookmarks to the list of your favorite articleswith one tap. Your searches and articles will be conveniently listed in the History tabautomatically.

# More Features

SMART LAYOUT: A combination of advanced layout optimizations analyze and reformat every article for ideal readability and great looks.

NATIVE iOS EXPERIENCE: For some Wikipedia Apps, iOS is just another platform but for us, its the beloved one and only platform! Youll feel right at home.

BEAUTIFUL TYPE: Carefully crafted typography and high-quality typefaces in twelve different styles create a world-class Wikipedia reading experience.

MULTILINGUAL: Switch effortlessly between languagesif you read more than one. Or check out an articles title in all available languages. We promise, its fun!

DARK MODE: Switch to the dark theme for relaxed reading at night. Easy to toggle with the pinch-to-zoom gestureright in the article view.

# Even More Features

Efficient images load high-resolution versions right before you view them, saving time and bandwidth Large tables are shrunk proportionally to fit on screen Table of contents panel for quick navigation Wikipedia editing in Safari just tap the share icon Search for text within the article youre reading Show and hide footnotes for references without scrolling Slide Over and Split View support on iPad Open articles from Safaris share menu Search from any other app via the text-selection context menu Dynamic Type respects your devices font size settings VLC integration to play Wikipedias esoteric media file formats Natural image zoom with swipe-to-dismiss Syntax highlighting for source code examples in articles Sophisticated sharing that youll actually want to use Support for portrait and landscape orientations Supports VoiceOver Supports 3D Touch for previewing articles

# Wikipedia On Your Apple Watch

NEARBY PLACES: Quickly find articles about points of interest around you

VOICE SEARCH: Easily find anything on Wikipedia using your voice

HANDOFF: Swipe up on the lock screen to continue reading on your iPhone

BOOKMARKING: To read later, just force-touch and transmit a bookmark to your iPhone

UNCOMPLICATION: Launch the app right from your favorite clock face

Whether youre exploring the city with an Apple Watch or being productive on an iPad Proit looks and feels great. At any size.

You knew you loved Wikipedia. You didnt know it could feel this good on iOS.

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V for Wikipedia on the App Store - itunes.apple.com