Apr
13
2009
mlinksva writes “A Wikipedia community vote is now underway on migrating to Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike as the main content license for Wikimedia Foundation projects. This would remove a legal barrier to reusing Wikipedia content (now under the Free Documentation License, intended for narrow use with software documentation, because Wikipedia started before CC existed) in other free culture projects and vice versa.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Wikipedia Community Vote On License Migration | tags: google, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Apr
6
2009
From analyzing internet trends based on the popularity of an entry to using a special browser created for Wikipedia, these five tools will help you get the most out of Wikipedia
Comments Off on 5 Wikipedia Tools For The Information Junkie | tags: wikipedia | posted in technical news
Apr
4
2009
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales’ open source, human-powered Google killer died a quiet death Tuesday, making Wikia.com the latest object lesson in the futility of trying to unseat Google as the king of search engines.
Comments Off on Wikia Death Proves Google Is Search-Startup Killer | tags: google, open source, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Apr
2
2009
By Nicholas Kolakowski Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales announced that Wikia Search, a community-based search engine, is officially shutting down.
Comments Off on Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales Declares Wikia Search Dead | tags: wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
30
2009
o you remember what came in between printed encyclopedias and Wikipedia? For many, the answer is Microsoft Encarta
Comments Off on Microsoft Encarta Officially Succumbs to Wikipedia | tags: microsoft, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
30
2009
Raul654 writes “In December, we discussed the German Federal Archive’s agreement, at the urging of Wikimedia Deutschland, to donate 100,000 pictures to Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. At the time that was the largest picture donation ever to Wikipedia, and thought to be largest in the history of the free culture movement. Now Wikimedia Deutschland has reached a similar agreement with the Saxon State and University Library, which will donate 250,000 pictures to Wikipedia under CCA-ShareAlike. On a not-unrelated note: Microsoft has announced that it will discontinue its Encarta encyclopedia.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Huge German Donation Marks Wikipedia’s Evolution | tags: google, microsoft, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
27
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Who needs crusty old rubbish like the Victorian era or World War II? Instead, an Ofsted report leaked to The Guardian details proposals to teach UK primary school children how to use Wikipedia, Twitter, podcasts and blogs. Presumably they’re already au fait with b3ta and 4chan. And you already can’t get the kids off Bebo without a crowbar.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Proposal Suggests UK Students Study Wikipedia and Twitter | tags: google, news, twitter, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
Kugrian writes “Showing that it’s not just the British and the French who have trouble seeing each other on the high seas, a US Nuclear submarine yesterday crashed into a US Navy heavy cruiser. The USS Hartford, a nuclear-powered attack submarine, was submerged as it crashed into the USS New Orleans in the strait of Hormuz, resulting in the spillage of 95,000 litres of diesel fuel. Both vessels were heading in the same direction when the collision occurred in the narrow strait and were subsequently heading to port for repairs. A spokesman for the 5th Fleet said that the USS Hartford suffered no damage to its nuclear propulsion system.” According to the USS New Orleans’ Wikipedia page, it’s actually an amphibious transport dock.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on US Nuclear Sub Crashes Into US Navy Amphibious Vessel | tags: google, news, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
mask.of.sanity writes “Australia’s secretive Internet filter blacklist held by its communications watchdog has been leaked, revealing the government has understated the amount of banned Web pages by more than 1000. Multiple legitimate businesses and Web sites have been banned including two bus companies, online poker sites, multiple Wikipedia entries, Google and Yahoo group pages, a dental surgery and a tour operator. Betfair, a billion-dollar business blocked by the blacklist, CEO Andrew Twaits was furious the government has potentially annexed tens of millions of dollars in revenue after its Betfair.com gambling site was blacklisted. The blacklists were reportedly leaked by a Web filter operator to wikileaks which has published the full list of banned URLs. Outraged privacy advocates say the government has effectively lied about the amount of URLs included in the blacklists, totalling more than 2300, and the type of content which it would ban. The leak follows a series attacks on the watchdog in which irate users successfully lobbied for web sites to be banned, only to be threatened with an ,000 fine for publishing the link contained in the PR response. It was also revealed the watchdog can ban Web sites at a whim, with no accountability.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Australia’s Vast, Scattershot Censorship Blacklist Revealed | tags: google, privacy, web, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
pnorth writes “Editors at Wikipedia have removed a link to a blacklisted web site that sat uncontested for over 24 hours in the main body of the Australian regulator’s own Wikipedia entry. The link, which directs readers to a site containing graphic imagery of aborted foetuses, was inserted into ACMA’s Wikipedia entry by a campaigner against Internet filtering to determine whether Australia’s communications regulator had a double-standard when it came to censoring web content. The very same link motivated the regulator to serve Aussie broadband forum Whirlpool’s hosting company with a ‘link deletion notice’ and the threat of an ,000 fine. Last night, the link became the subject of “warring” between several Wikipedia administrators in the lead up to it’s removal, with administrators saying they didn’t want to be used to prove a point.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Activists Use Wikipedia To Test Aussie Net Censors | tags: google, web, wikipedia | posted in technical news