Wikipedia – The New York Times

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On any day, Mr. Trumps entry usually attracts more views than those of his Republican rivals, and on some days, more than all of them combined.

By JEREMY B. MERRILL

Google Maps is a good general navigation tool, but there are other map apps that provide directions with features designed for cyclists.

By J. D. BIERSDORFER

Were supposed to believe hes more thoughtful, but the evidence suggests otherwise.

By ANDREW ROSENTHAL

Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting interesting stories from around the web. In this installment, great reads from Matt Apuzzo, Stacy Cowley and others.

So far, no buyer has emerged for the full 7,600-volume, 5.4-million-page set, which is priced at $500,000. But several dozen individual volumes have been sold.

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER

Many Hollywood public relations firms have pledged to observe Wikipedias policies against covert editing. But one firm continued to change entries.

By MICHAEL CIEPLY

The rise of mobile devices is worsening a longtime shortage of volunteer editors.

By ANDREW LIH

The interdisciplinary artist Michael Mandibergs exhibition, From Aaaaa! to ZZZap! at the Denny Gallery, features his larger project called Print Wikipedia.

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER

The N.S.A.s surveillance undermines the free exchange of knowledge on which we all depend.

By JIMMY WALES and LILA TRETIKOV

The group Art + Feminism is organizing its second edit-a-thon to address gender imbalance on Saturday, with tutorials at the Museum of Modern Art and satellite sessions around the world.

Students and faculty at the university, one of the nations pre-eminent historically black higher education institutions, set out Thursday to expand entries and create new ones.

An eight-person committee advising Google on complying with a landmark privacy ruling by Europes highest court said it should apply only in the 28-nation European Union.

By MARK SCOTT

Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Peter Eavis, Graham Bowley and others.

The encyclopedias main Ebola article has had 17 million page views in the last month, rivaling pages from the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

By NOAM COHEN

Plus, writing about yourself on Wikipedia.

The paper said that an article in the culture section improperly used specific language and details from a Wikipedia article without attribution.

On any day, Mr. Trumps entry usually attracts more views than those of his Republican rivals, and on some days, more than all of them combined.

By JEREMY B. MERRILL

Google Maps is a good general navigation tool, but there are other map apps that provide directions with features designed for cyclists.

By J. D. BIERSDORFER

Were supposed to believe hes more thoughtful, but the evidence suggests otherwise.

By ANDREW ROSENTHAL

Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting interesting stories from around the web. In this installment, great reads from Matt Apuzzo, Stacy Cowley and others.

So far, no buyer has emerged for the full 7,600-volume, 5.4-million-page set, which is priced at $500,000. But several dozen individual volumes have been sold.

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER

Many Hollywood public relations firms have pledged to observe Wikipedias policies against covert editing. But one firm continued to change entries.

By MICHAEL CIEPLY

The rise of mobile devices is worsening a longtime shortage of volunteer editors.

By ANDREW LIH

The interdisciplinary artist Michael Mandibergs exhibition, From Aaaaa! to ZZZap! at the Denny Gallery, features his larger project called Print Wikipedia.

By JENNIFER SCHUESSLER

The N.S.A.s surveillance undermines the free exchange of knowledge on which we all depend.

By JIMMY WALES and LILA TRETIKOV

The group Art + Feminism is organizing its second edit-a-thon to address gender imbalance on Saturday, with tutorials at the Museum of Modern Art and satellite sessions around the world.

Students and faculty at the university, one of the nations pre-eminent historically black higher education institutions, set out Thursday to expand entries and create new ones.

An eight-person committee advising Google on complying with a landmark privacy ruling by Europes highest court said it should apply only in the 28-nation European Union.

By MARK SCOTT

Get recommendations from New York Times reporters and editors, highlighting great stories from around the web. Today, great reads from Peter Eavis, Graham Bowley and others.

The encyclopedias main Ebola article has had 17 million page views in the last month, rivaling pages from the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

By NOAM COHEN

Plus, writing about yourself on Wikipedia.

The paper said that an article in the culture section improperly used specific language and details from a Wikipedia article without attribution.

Continued here:
Wikipedia - The New York Times

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