450:, which showed the parts of the world involved most intensively in on-wiki conflicts. The index was conceived as a less complex but more immediate and comprehensive supplement to existing widely used socio-economic indices, which have been criticized for producing results that are difficult to reproduce and to compare across different time-periods. According to the researchers, the Knowledge (XXG) Dispute Index "correlates with metrics of governance, political or economic stability about as well as they correlate with each other, and though faster and simpler, it is remarkably stable over time despite constant changes in the underlying disputes."
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East, the countries making up the former state of
Yugoslavia, and North Korea, while articles concerning Western European and North American countries attracted the least conflict. Disputes over events and individuals of historical or current interest that are sensitive to differences of interpretation among those of varying political persuasions were found to be the main contributors to the Index.
393:(66). Credit for its success was attributed to its non-commercial nature. The social media sector overall performed relatively poorly, behind all but the airline, subscription television, and newspaper industries; Knowledge (XXG) was "the only social media site to beat the e-business (75.4) and national (75.6) averages for customer satisfaction". The website American consumers rated most highly was
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210:. After being caught attempting to take the computer out of the building at MIT, he was arrested and then charged in US Federal Court, although JSTOR have said they intend not to pursue civil litigation and have asked the US Attorney's Office to not pursue criminal charges against Swartz. He has pleaded not guilty and has been bailed on a $ 100,000 unsecured bond.
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as I just said above, Knowledge (XXG) is an encyclopedia. The purpose of the talk pages is to facilitate collaboration and help run the project. As long as people keep lumping
Knowledge (XXG) in with such nonsensical timesinks as Facebook and Twitter, Knowledge (XXG) will never be as trusted or respected as it deserves.
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On a mostly unrelated note, I echo Mat Honan's statement. I think that the
Feedback tool, while spawned from the desire to get inside the heads of readers (a good idea), is implemented in a way that will produce little constructive feedback. A better idea would be to attach a comment box to the tool,
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Knowledge (XXG) more like a social network by implementing or planning to implement such features as WikiLove and the MoodBar, even though WikiLove has stirred some resentment, and if the WMF bothered to properly ask
Knowledge (XXG) about MoodBar, it would get even more opposition than Wikilove. But,
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The
Wikimedia Foundation’s mission is to spread free knowledge globally. We support Gregory Maxwell’s lawful efforts to freely distribute and share valuable scientific journal articles that are in the public domain. Our projects are built on volunteer efforts to collaboratively build the world's body
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The existence of multiple rating categories, instead of one, is partially designed to counter or detect rating bias. For example, you could look for raters who rate in extremes across categories, or specifically look for raters who rate articles both as 1 in "objectivity" (a rating category that is
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Compiling the index was hampered by insufficient data to reliably assess the majority of countries and regions, and by their uneven coverage in
Knowledge (XXG), but the researchers expect the Index to improve as the encyclopedia expands. The greatest frequencies of disputes were found in the Middle
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They could mean merely that they aren't ones who do the criminal prosecution (the government does), which is quite different from asking not to prosecute. For the
Federal government to undertake such a prosecution against the expressed wishes of the main victim is possible, but it's odd enough to
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in a post on
Reuters' MediaFile, describing how many academics frequently bend copyright law with regard to scholarly publishing, and suggesting that Swartz may have been intending to do data analysis on the JSTOR collection rather than distributing the files on the Internet—a theory supported by
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and then have volunteer editors filter though the comments, filter out useless "8==D" style comments, sort the rest, and pass their findings onto the foundation. Insight on why a reader gives something 2 stars is more valuable than the simple knowledge that a reader clicked the two stars button.
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Of course it is legal to possess and distribute free works, including works that are out of copyright, within the public domain, or available under a creative commons license. Works in the public domain should be freely available to all, and we believe that academic researchers should distribute
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While I'm not criticizing this part of the story, as it's been widely echoed in the media, just as a comment it's not clear to me if it's actually true that "JSTOR have said they ... have asked the US Attorney's Office to not pursue criminal charges against Swartz". The JSTOR statement is very
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The experience of Reddit has been that no amount of pleading will stop people from downvoting things they disagree with. One interesting idea is to give the user two votes, one for article quality and one to express approval/disapproval of the topic. A possible further refinement would be to
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I look at it from the other direction - just as a statement of fact, he's both at low risk from people wanting to use
Knowledge (XXG) to attack him, and has a high likelihood of being defended against any attacks which happen to be made. Of course there's favoritism, and that's wrong. I'm not
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promises to "help everyone from high school students to scientists working in the field to quickly find the latest and most reliable information on this important topic". Hickman invited two critics of the global warming skeptics to submit material by email. Perhaps unsurprisingly, their
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To my mind, this comment is really illustrative of the problems that we continue to have dealing with the BLP policy. It seems as though, since Swartz is "one of our own", that we're not as concerned with "protecting" him. Contrast that viewpoint with what's going on surrounding the
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a "social media site". It's an encyclopedia. Yes, we cover popular things, often very well, but at the very least very thoroughly. Yes, some people do use their talk pages as chat boards or "walls", although that's technically frowned upon. Yes, the WMF has shown a desire to
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that the level of geopolitical instability of a nation-state is positively correlated with the frequency of disputes on
Knowledge (XXG) about content related to the country. Drawing from methodologies used in biological network research, the researchers compiled a
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is popular enough with the sort of person who edits Knowledge (XXG) that his biography page will be treated well. This does not provide any guidance for the general case, especially someone NOT popular with that sort of person. --
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thinks the Article Feedback Tool "won't work" and is "ripe for abuse", echoing a frequent complaint—that users "are going to give subjects they don't agree with shitty ratings just to express disapproval, even when the stories are
206:, an academic paper repository containing archives from more than a thousand journals, mostly in the humanities. Swartz placed a laptop running a script, written specifically for downloading, inside a computer cabinet at
202:), an open-access activist, open-source developer, and 2006 candidate for the Wikimedia Foundation Board, is being criminally prosecuted for a variety of charges after he attempted to download a dump of all the PDFs on
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Similarly, with AFT, the feedback tool simply represents a first view of what a tool like this can be used for. You can see that we've been thinking about many possible different future directions for this tool on
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I can say that we're aware of Greg Maxwell's efforts in terms of the upload of out-of-copyright papers from the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society to a peer-to-peer network.
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by documenting Indian society with audio and video and to test whether the current situation where printed texts are "privileged" in the citation system can be reversed. See
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Hey, I think it's great. If the Swartz article were new though, there's no way that it would survive here with the current climate surrounding biographical articles.
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301:. The legal status of Maxwell's document releases and the differences between UK and US law are explored in a blog-post by Knowledge (XXG) administrator and
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more likely to elicit approval/disapproval) and in "well-written" (a rating category that should be fairly independent of the rater's view on the topic).--
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discount votes on quality by voters who always mark articles they disagree with as low quality and always mark articles they agree with as high quality.
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Of course it's a social media site. Anywhere people gather is social; Knowledge (XXG) has a society; and we are definitely in the media business.
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it says that, but close inspection shows it does not in fact say that anywhere. Which is a good signal to wonder if one is being fed a PR line. --
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takes its responsibility towards its subjects seriously, and if readers are concerned by our coverage of living people, I want to hear about it.
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article and it's pretty clear that there is a (rather severe) double standard in the community when it comes to dealing with BLP articles.
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Swartz's indictment was widely reported in the international news media and the technology press, including the
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on the day of her death and 2.3 million the following day. This marks the third-highest daily hit-rate
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High Knowledge (XXG) customer satisfaction explained by user interface stability and non-profit nature
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the "social media site" that American consumers find most satisfactory. Knowledge (XXG) improved its
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legalistic, and I've dealt with enough lawyers and PR flacks to be suspicious of their phrasing. --
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has an article discussing the Oral Citations Project, a pilot program to look into countering
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is based. Maxwell's document releases are in some ways similar to actions by Derrick Coetzee (
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The incident occurred in a week when the Wikimedia Foundation affirmed its commitment to
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showing the countries of greatest predicted instability according to the Index
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of free knowledge, work that can and should be shared freely with everyone.
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It's interesting to note that BLP concerns (hysteria?) don't seem to reach
470:, the late singer's Knowledge (XXG) article saw a surge in attention, with
283:. Maxwell's actions were reported in a variety of news sources, including
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by one point to 78 (on a scale of 1 to 100), beating such titans as
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approving of it. I'm simply saying he's one of the favorites. --
332:. Jay Walsh, the Head of Communications at the Foundation, told
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The second annual survey of the e-business sector by the
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wonder about JSTOR's PR. Note their statement does not
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Will the article feedback tool ruin Knowledge (XXG)?
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Readers rush to Knowledge (XXG) after singer's death
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Drama imitates life in geopolitical stability stakes
713:If your comment has not appeared here, you can try
397:(83 points), closely followed by search competitor
191:papers in response to the prosecution of Swartz.
588:this week's News and Notes for more information
262:Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society
189:Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society
529:contributions have not made it onto the site.
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441:, researchers at Heidelberg University have
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255:Following Swartz's arrest, Greg Maxwell (
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512:s Environment Blog has an article by
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366:Knowledge (XXG) tops the charts again
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371:American Customer Satisfaction Index
268:Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp.
244:. Software engineer Kevin Webb gave
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764:For god's sake, Knowledge (XXG) is
724:For god's sake, Knowledge (XXG) is
564:, an off-Broadway autobiographical
820:There's a VP thread about MoodBar
501:The climate wiki anyone can't edit
323:WikiProject Royal Society Journals
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698:These comments are automatically
643:Wikimedian in Residence interview
520:focused on climate change by the
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432:In a new paper published in the
330:joining forces with open science
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535:: Educator Anne Nelson wrote a
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941:What else could they mean? --
709:add the page to your watchlist
533:PBS covers ambassadors program
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448:Knowledge (XXG) Dispute Index
281:the National Portrait Gallery
251:"Who Writes Knowledge (XXG)?"
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405:(82). (See also last year's
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985:. That's kinda refreshing.
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673:Arbitration report
663:WikiProject report
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42:← Back to Contents
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54:25 July 2011
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700:transcluded
653:In the news
526:ClimateWiki
514:Leo Hickman
409:coverage: "
403:Foxnews.com
309:, entitled
242:Threatlevel
65:In the news
497:accurate".
240:Wired News
155:Tom Morris
79:Share this
74:Contribute
22:2011-07-25
1199:Subscribe
1094:Skomorokh
892:Eloquence
865:Guy Macon
844:Eloquence
704:talk page
478:, behind
401:(82) and
287:MetroDesk
151:Skomorokh
1218:Category
1194:Newsroom
1189:Archives
1171:Mastodon
1167:Facebook
1142:Bennylin
1118:Contribs
1052:Contribs
1013:I think
1000:Contribs
599:Previous
458:In brief
443:proposed
438:PLoS ONE
426:heat map
407:Signpost
391:Facebook
319:his blog
303:Signpost
234:PC World
174:userpage
121:LinkedIn
101:Facebook
20: |
1163:Twitter
798:anguard
774:Slashme
745:anguard
558:reports
539:of the
516:on the
494:Gizmodo
387:YouTube
315:User:Sj
111:Twitter
1108:V = IR
1042:V = IR
990:V = IR
912:Powers
772::-) --
578:: The
395:Google
299:Gawker
294:GigaOm
237:, and
131:Reddit
91:E-mail
1184:About
961:think
560:that
383:score
317:) on
204:JSTOR
16:<
1179:Home
1146:talk
1114:Talk
1068:talk
1048:Talk
1024:talk
996:Talk
969:talk
932:talk
869:talk
840:here
822:here
806:Wha?
794:ven
778:talk
753:Wha?
741:ven
731:make
607:Next
482:and
399:Bing
297:and
289:blog
153:and
141:Digg
1169:or
1161:on
957:say
871:)
766:not
726:not
545:PBS
413:")
208:MIT
149:By
76:—
1220::
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1116:•
1105:—
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1050:•
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1026:)
998:•
987:—
971:)
934:)
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597:←
553::
503::
424:A
359:”
345:“
336::
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225:,
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