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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:The Wikipedia Library | Newsletter

The Wikipedia Library

Books & Bytes
Issue 19, September–October 2016
byNikkimaria, Sadads and UY Scuti

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In this issue we announce several new partnerships, spotlight recent research and events, and, as always, present a roundup of news and community items related to libraries and digital knowledge.

New research accounts![edit]

We're excited about several new research partnerships:

There is also several expanded partnerships:

Sign up for these and many others!

Introducing the Wikipedia Library Card Platform[edit]

The Wikipedia Library has long run into inefficiencies in processing applications for access to the many available resources. The Wikipedia Library Card Platform, created by the amazing developer Andromeda Yelton, hopes to address that problem: it provides a single portal for applying for and reviewing applications for access, greatly streamlining existing processes. Hosted by WMF Labs and using OAuth for authentication, the Library Card Platform will be the venue for signups for the new partnerships announced above, and existing partnerships soon.

Check out the Library Card Platform and try signing up for a partnership there

Events[edit]

The Wikipedia Library team attended several events during the last couple months including:

Spotlight: Fixing one million broken links[edit]

This post was originally published on the Wikimedia Blog. It was written by Mark Graham of Internet Archive.

The partnership has brought the maintenance backlog for deadlinks to a record low. If you haven't yet, we recommend checking out how small the maintenance category is!

The Internet Archive, the Wikimedia Foundation, and volunteers from the Wikipedia community have now fixed more than one million broken outbound web links on English Wikipedia. This has been done by the Internet Archive's monitoring for all new, and edited, outbound links from English Wikipedia for three years and archiving them soon after changes are made to articles. This combined with the other web archiving projects, means that as pages on the Web become inaccessible, links to archived versions in the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine can take their place. This has now been done for the English Wikipedia and more than one million links are now pointing to preserved copies of missing web content.

What do you do when good web links go bad? If you are a volunteer editor on Wikipedia, you start by writing software to examine every outbound link in English Wikipedia to make sure it is still available via the "live web." If, for whatever reason, it is no longer good (e.g. if it returns a "404" error code or "Page Not Found") you check to see if an archived copy of the page is available via the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. If it is, you instruct your software to edit the Wikipedia page to point to the archived version, taking care to let users of the link know they will be visiting a version via the Wayback Machine.

That is exactly what Maximilian Doerr and Stephen Balbach have done. As a result of their work, in close collaboration with the non-profit Internet Archive and the Wikimedia Foundation's Wikipedia Library program and Community Tech team, now more than one million broken links have been repaired. For example, footnote #85 from the article about Easter Island now links to the Wayback Machine instead of a now-missing page. Pretty cool, right?

"We are honored to work with the Wikipedia community to help maintain the cultural treasure that is Wikipedia," said Brewster Kahle, founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive, home of the Wayback Machine. "By editing broken outbound links on English Wikipedia to their archived versions available via the Wayback Machine, we are helping to provide persistent availability to reference information. Links that would have otherwise lead to a virtual dead end."

"What Max and Stephen have done in partnership with Mark Graham at the Internet Archive is nothing short of critical for Wikipedia's enduring value as a shared repository of knowledge. Without dependable and persistent links, our articles lose their backbone of reliable sources. It's amazing what a few people can do when they are motivated by sharing—and preserving—knowledge," said Jake Orlowitz, head of the Wikipedia Library. "Having the opportunity to contribute something big to the community with a fun task like this is why I am a Wikipedia volunteer and bot operator. It's also the reason why I continue to work on this never-ending project, and I'm proud to call myself its lead developer," said Maximilian, the primary developer and operator of InternetArchiveBot.

So, what is next for this collaboration between Wikipedia and the Internet Archive? Well... there are nearly 300 Wikipedia language editions to rid of broken links. And, we are exploring ways to help make links added to Wikipedia self-healing. It's a big job and we could use help.

Bytes in brief[edit]

Community roundup[edit]

Newsworthy[edit]

Worth reading (or watching)[edit]

Data dump[edit]


Thanks for reading! To receive a monthly talk page update about new issues of Books & Bytes, please add your name to the subscriber's list. To suggest items for the next issue, please contact the editor, The Interior (talk · contribs) at Wikipedia:The Wikipedia Library/Newsletter/Suggestions.


About The Wikipedia Library



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This page was last edited on 12 May 2021, at 19:48 (UTC).

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