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View Full Version : Wikipedia 'loses' 49,000 editors



Perdita
26-11-2009, 06:12
Online encyclopaedia Wikipedia "lost" 49,000 of its volunteer editors in the first three months of 2009, University research suggests.

The figure compares with a loss of 4,900 over the same period in 2008.

The encyclopaedia-style website encourages editorial changes from everybody who comes to the site.

Wikimedia UK, a chapter of the organisation that operates Wikipedia, has denied that it means the site is struggling.

It says that it is seeking more expert contributors.

"We're trying to engage a bit more at the moment with people who are very knowledgeable, people who are experts, so working with museums was the obvious next step," said Michael Peel of Wikimedia UK.


"Wikipedia is definitely not dying. It's freely licensed which means that content that has been added will be there forever," he added in an interview with The Times newspaper.

The research was carried out by Felipe Ortega, from the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid.

Mr Ortega said that if the downward trend continued it could spell problems for the site.

"If the negative trend is maintained for too much time, say one or two years, eventually the project could enter a problematic phase," he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8379566.stm

Perdita
17-01-2012, 06:33
Wikipedia will be taken offline for 24 hours this Wednesday in protest at the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).

Jimmy Wales, founder of the web encyclopaedia, previously threatened to suspend the service indefinitely in the US if the controversial bill is passed.

The English version of Wikipedia will now go down for 24 hours across the world on January 18 from Midnight EST (5am in the UK).

"Student warning! Do your homework early. Wikipedia protesting bad law on Wednesday! #sopa," he posted on Twitter.

Wikipedia will be replaced by a page displaying contact details for local members of Congress, which Wales hopes "will melt phone systems in Washington".

SOPA aims to help service providers tackle websites deemed to be in violation of copyright infringement. Opponents of the bill warn that it could be harmful to the internet as a whole, bringing repercussions for legitimate websites.

A similar bill called the Protect IP Act (PIPA) was approved by a Senate committee last year and is scheduled to go before the full Senate on January 24.

"We have no indication that SOPA is fully off the table," Wales tweeted. "PIPA is still alive and kicking. We need to send Washington a BIG message."