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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost | Single

The Signpost
Single-page Edition
WP:POST/1
27 January 2016

Op-ed
Lila Tretikov: the WMF needs your input in developing our strategy

News and notes
Geshuri steps down from the Board

In the media
Media coverage of the Arnnon Geshuri no-confidence vote

Recent research
Bursty edits; how politics beat religion but then lost to sports; notability as a glass ceiling

Traffic report
Death and taxes

Featured content
This week's featured content

 

2016-01-27

Lila Tretikov: the WMF needs your input in developing our strategy

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  • ByLila Tretikov

    In 2010, the Wikimedia community and the Wikimedia Foundation collaborated to develop a five-year strategy for the movement. The final strategy focused on major priorities such as increasing the number and diversity of contributors to our movement, the amount and quality of knowledge in our projects, and the number of people we reached every month.

    Last year, in anticipation of the end of those five years, the Foundation began reviewing our progress. In 2015 the movement reached a long-standing goal of stabilizing the overall number of highly active editors on the projects. In other areas, such as increasing Global South contributors and improving gender diversity, more progress is needed. Overall, the movement targets adopted by the Wikimedia Foundation’s Board of Trustees in 2010 have not been reached yet and are still applicable today.

    Therefore this year, we decided to focus on the role of the Foundation in supporting our movement and our vision, which we see as conceptual triangle of reach, communities, and knowledge:

    While these provide a framework for our overarching goals, the Foundation needs a practical plan that will:

    To make our plan as effective as possible, we will limit the scope of this strategic planning to the Foundation as one global organization within the broader movement. We are inspired by the efforts of the communities and Wikimedia movement affiliates, which support overall movement goals through independent local strategies tailored to their own strengths, capacities, and operating environments.

    Last week, we launched a community discussion about this planning, focused on the topics of reach, communities, and knowledge. Building on the outcomes of our spring 2015 consultation with readers and editors, we have identified a number of approaches that could guide the the Foundation’s future plan and actions. Today, we’re asking for your input and contributions. The community is the primary catalyst of the movement, and the success, health, and participation of contributors is central to any Wikimedia Foundation strategy. Your thoughts will be essential in informing how the Foundation can best contribute to the Wikimedia movement going forward.

    The consultation will be open until February 15. We invite you to participate and look forward to your thoughts.

    Lila Tretikov is the executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation.



    Reader comments

    2016-01-27

    Geshuri steps down from the Board

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  • ByGamaliel


    One of the two new members of the WMF's Board of Trustees has resigned. Arnnon Geshuri's appointment 22 days ago sparked controversy in the Wikimedia community. His selection and departure come amid growing concerns about not only the composition of the Board, but the direction of the Foundation itself.

    Ina message on Wednesday, January 27 to the Wikimedia-l mailing list, board members Patricio Lorente and Alice Wiegand wrote:

    The surprise announcement came just a day after Geshuri had made his first public statement on his new role, with the Board expressing its intention to stand by Geshuri's appointment. But by that time, concerns about Geshuri's background and selection process, as well as worries regarding the links to Google and other Silicon Valley technology corporations on the Board, were growing in the Wikimedia community and were becoming news items in the mainstream press. A non-binding vote of no confidence in Geshuri has been reported in Ars Technica, BBC News and Le Monde, among others, which is likely to have been a factor in Geshuri's resignation (see this week's "In the media").

    Only yesterday, Wiegand posted on Wikimedia-l that the Board would be standing by their choice. She wrote that while the Board was "listening to your worries" and "discussing the concerns" raised by the community, she concluded: "we want to be clear that the Board approved Arnnon unanimously and still believes he is a valuable member of the team." Geshuri had commented publicly for the first time on the same list about an hour before Wiegand's message:

    While some praised Geshuri for speaking out at all, his paean to Wikipedia's community and culture did little to sway those who wanted him to address the issue of his participation in the High-Tech Employee Antitrust Litigation more directly. Among epithets used by community members to describe his message were "a public-relations exercise" and "unctuous". Votes on Meta in favor of Geshuri's removal grew to 291 before the RFC was closed following the announcement of Geshuri's departure. The supports included six current employees of the Wikimedia Foundation, as well as a number of former WMF employees, including former senior designer Brandon Harris (Jorm) and Frank Schulenburg, currently executive director of the Wiki Education Foundation. Many of the support votes cited the comments of former Board of Trustee chairs Florence Devouard (Anthere) and Kat Walsh (Mindspillage), who had raised concerns about Geshuri's appointment in previous weeks. Another former trustee (and the Signpost founder), Michael Snow, raised his own concerns following Geshuri's message, making him the third former chair of the Board of Trustees to speak out regarding Geshuri's appointment. He wrote, in part:

    Discussion of the vetting and selection process is likely to continue following Geshuri's departure. On his talk page two days before Geshuri's resignation, Jimmy Wales conceded that he needed to shoulder some of the blame ("I feel remorse"). He wrote:

    Beyond a discussion by Wales and other members of Board regarding their Google searches for Geshuri's name, nothing has been said publicly about how Geshuri was vetted or how the candidates were found, weighed, and selected. Also unknown is the involvement of the staff of the Wikimedia Foundation, whose VP of Human Resources, Boryana Dineva, worked as Head of HR Systems, HR Operations & Data Analytics under Geshuri at Tesla Motors from 2013 to 2015.

    Also of concern to many is the fear that the selection of Geshuri, whose actions as director of human resources at Google were troubling to the community, may be symptomatic of a desire to instill a similar corporate culture in human resources at the Foundation itself. Adam Wight, a fundraising tech lead at the WMF, wrote:

    Earlier this month the Signpost covered employee discontent at the Wikimedia Foundation. Wight's message echoes similar complaints that other WMF staffers have made to the Signpost about a perceived cultural shift at the Foundation. One of them described it as "a culture of risk-management and fear", while another noted that they were "terrified" of speaking out in public for fear of retaliation. They are just two of several staffers who have privately expressed similar concerns to the Signpost. At least one speculated that the way recent employee departures from the WMF have been handled may be related to these changes.



    Reader comments

    2016-01-27

    Media coverage of the Arnnon Geshuri no-confidence vote

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  • ByAndreas Kolbe and Gamaliel

    The news media often does a poor job of covering or even understanding the internal workings of Wikipedia, the Wikimedia movement, and the Wikimedia Foundation. However, the recent appointment of Arnnon Geshuri to the WMF Board of Trustees and the growing community complaints regarding his involvement in the High-Tech Employee Antitrust Litigation cases resulted in some substantial and accurate news coverage.

    The first publications to cover the matter were ZDNet in France and Ars Technica in the United States. On January 25, Joe Mullin, Tech Policy Editor at Ars Technica, published "Wikipedia editors revolt, vote 'no confidence' in newest board member", in which he noted:

    A flurry of similar stories in other news outlets followed – among them the BBC and Le Monde – in languages including English, French, German, Spanish, Japanese and Chinese. Many of these linked to the no-confidence vote itself as well as to The Signpost's prior coverage; a number of them, including the BBC, Ars Technica, and Fortune, noted that Jimmy Wales, Arnnon Geshuri, and/or the Wikimedia Foundation did not respond to requests for comment.

    The media narrative, as told in snippets

    List of media articles, in rough order of publication

    Jan. 25
    Jan. 26
    Jan. 27

    G, AK

    Jimmy Wales has joined the board of the Guardian Media Group.

  • Bangalore Blue: The Times of India reports on content generation in the area of Indian regional arts and crafts: "India has 213 goods and crafts with geographical indication (GIs) tags. The GI mark is a kind of trademark, which indicates that a product's reputation is linked to its origins in a particular area. Of 213 GI tags, only 70 have English entries. So while intricacies of Muga silk-making in Assam and cultivating Bangalore Blue grapes are explained in detail in English, Alleppey coir has only a sketchy Malayalam entry." (Jan. 27) AK
  • Corbin Bleu – huge in Wikipedia if not in our hearts

    • Corbin Bleu: BuzzFeed wonders "why the hell is Corbin Bleu such a huge deal on Wikipedia?" He has Wikipedia articles in 193 languages, more than anyone else except Jesus Christ (214) and Barack Obama (200). Speculation on the Wikipedia Weekly Facebook group is that the source of Corbin Bleu's world-beating coverage is in Saudi Arabia, based on contributing IP ranges and the fact that the Arabic biography is the only one to have achieved featured status. (Jan. 27) AK
  • Konkani: Goa News reportsonGoa University's efforts to establish the Konkani language on the Internet, which includes work on the Konkani Wikipedia. (Jan. 24) AK
  • #1Lib1Ref: The Hub at Johns Hopkins and The Daily Athenaeum were among publications covering the #1Lib1Ref movement, an initiative by the Wikipedia Library aimed at creating "a world in which every librarian added a reference to Wikipedia". (Jan. 12, Jan. 15) AK


  • Do you want to contribute to "In the media" by writing a story or even just an "in brief" item? Edit next week's edition in the Newsroom or contact the editor.



    Reader comments

    2016-01-27

    Bursty edits; how politics beat religion but then lost to sports; notability as a glass ceiling

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  • ByBrian Keegan, Piotr Konieczny, and Tilman Bayer

    A monthly overview of recent academic research about Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects, also published as the Wikimedia Research Newsletter.

    Burstiness in Wikipedia editing

    Reviewed by Brian Keegan

    Wikipedia pages are edited with varying levels of consistency: stubs may only have a dozen or fewer revisions and controversial topics might have more than 10,000 revisions. However, this editing activity is not evenly spaced out over time either: some revisions occur in very quick succession while other revisions might persist for weeks or months before another change is made. Many social and technical systems exhibit "bursty" qualities of intensive activity separated by long periods of inactivity. In a pre-print submitted to arXiv, a team of physicists at the Belgian Université de Namur and Portuguese University of Coimbra examine this phenomenon of "burstiness" in editing activity on the English Wikipedia.[1]

    The authors use a database dump containing the revision history until January 2010 of 4.6 million English Wikipedia pages. Filtering out pages and editors with fewer than 2000 revisions, bots, and edits from unregistered accounts, the paper adopts some previously-defined measures of burstiness and cyclicality in these editing patterns. The measures of editors' revisions' burstiness and memory fall outside of the limits found in prior work about human dynamics, suggesting different mechanisms are at work on Wikipedia editing than in mobile phone communication, for example.

    Using a fast Fourier transform, the paper finds the 100 most active editors have signals occurring at a 24-hour frequency (and associated harmonics) indicating they follow a circadian pattern of revising daily as well as differences by day of week and hour of day. However, the 100 most-revised pages lack a similar peak in the power spectrum: there is no characteristic hourly, daily, weekly, etc. revision pattern. Despite these circadian patterns, editors' revision histories still show bursty patterns with long-tailed inter-event times across different time windows.

    The paper concludes by arguing, "before performing an action, we must overcome a “barrier”, acting as a cost, which depends, among many other things, on the time of day. However, once that “barrier” has been crossed, the time taken by that activity no longer depends on the time of day at which we decided to perform it. ... It could be related to some sort of queuing process, but we prefer to see it as due to resource allocation (attention, time, energy), which exhibits a broad distribution: shorter activities are more likely to be executed next than the longer ones."

    Reviewed by Brian Keegan

    Google Trends is widely used in academic research to model the relationship between information seeking and other social and behavioral phenomenon. However, Wikipedia pageview data can provide a superior – if underused – alternative that has attracted some attention for public health and economic modeling, but not to the same extent as Google Trends. The authors cite the relative openness of Wikipedia pageview data, the semantic disambiguation, and absolute counts of activity in contrast to Google Trends' closed API, semantic ambiguity of keywords, and relative query share data. However, Trends data (at a weekly level) does go back to 2004, while pageview data (at an hourly level) is only available from 2008.

    In a peer-reviewed paper published by PLoS ONE, a team of physicists perform a variety of time series analyses to evaluate changes in attention around the "big data" topic of Hadoop.[2] Defining two key constructs of relevance and representation based on the interlanguage links as well as hyperlinks to/from other concepts, they examine changes in these features over time. In particular, changes in the articles' content and attention occurred in concert with the release of new versions and the adoption of the technology by new firms.

    The time series analyses (and terms used to refer to them) will be difficult for non-statisticians to follow, but the paper makes several promising contributions. First, it provides a number of good critiques of research relying exclusive on Google Trends data (outlined above). Second, it provides some methods for incorporating behavioral data from strongly related topics and examining these changes over time in a principled manner. Third, the paper examines behavior across multiple languages editions rather than focusing solely on the English Wikipedia. The paper points to ways in which Wikipedia is an important information sources for tracking publication and recognition of new topics.

    "Hidden revolution of human priorities: An analysis of biographical data from Wikipedia"

    Reviewed by Piotr Konieczny

    This paper[3] data mines Wikipedia's biographies, focusing on individuals' longevity, profession and cause of death. The authors are not the first to observe that the majority of Wikipedia biographies are about sportspeople (half of them soccer players), followed by artists and politicians. But they do make some interesting historical observations, such as that the sport rises only in the 20th century (particularly from the 1990s), that politics surpassed religion in the 13th century, until it was surpassed by sport, and so on. The authors divide the biographies into public (politicians, businessmen, religion) and private (artists and sportspeople) and note that it was only in the last few decades that the second group started to significantly outnumber the first; they conclude that this represents a major shift in societal values, which they refer to as "hidden revolution in human priorities". It is an interesting argument, though the paper is unfortunately completely missing the discussion of some important topics, such as the possible bias introduced by Wikipedia's notability policies.

    "Women through the glass-ceiling: gender asymmetries in Wikipedia"

    Reviewed by Piotr Konieczny

    This paper[4] looks into gender inequalities in Wikipedia articles, presenting a computational method for assessing gender bias in Wikipedia along several dimensions. It touches on a number of interesting questions, such as whether the same rules are used to determine whether women and men are notable; whether there is linguistic bias, and whether articles about men and women have similar structural properties (e. g., similar meta-data, and network properties in the hyperlink network).

    They conclude that notability guidelines seem to be more strictly enforced for women than for men, that linguistic bias exists (ex. one of the four words most strongly associated with female biographies is "husband", whereas such family-oriented words are much less likely to be found in biographies of male subjects), and that as the majority of biographies are about men and men tend to link more to men than to women, this lowers visibility of female biographies (for example, in search engines like Google). The authors suggest that Wikipedia community should consider lowering notability requirements for women (controversial), and adding gender-neutral language requirements to the Manual of Style (a much more sensible proposal).

    Briefly

    Wikipedia influences medical decisionmaking in acute and critical care

    Reviewed by Tilman Bayer

    A survey[5] of 372 anesthesists and critical care providers in Austria and Australia found that "In order to get a fast overview about a medical problem, physicians would prefer Google (32%) over Wikipedia (19%), UpToDate (18%), or PubMed (17%). 39% would, at least sometimes, base their medical decisions on non peer-reviewed resources. Wikipedia is used often or sometimes by 77% of the interns, 74% of residents, and 65% of consultants to get a fast overview of a medical problem. Consulting Wikipedia or Google first in order to get more information about the pathophysiology, drug dosage, or diagnostic options in a rare medical condition was the choice of 66%, 10% or 34%, respectively." (A2012 literature review found that "Wikipedia is widely used as a reference tool" among clinicians.)

    Other recent publications

    A list of other recent publications that could not be covered in time for this issue – contributions are always welcome for reviewing or summarizing newly published research.

    Papers about medical content on Wikipedia and its usage

    Papers analyzing community processes and policies

    Papers about visualizing or mining Wikipedia content

    References

    1. ^ Gandica, Yerali; Carvalho, Joao; Aidos, Fernando Sampaio Dos; Lambiotte, Renaud; Carletti, Timoteo (2016-01-05). "On the origin of burstiness in human behavior: The wikipedia edits case". arXiv:1601.00864 [physics.soc-ph].
  • ^ Kämpf, Mirko; Tessenow, Eric; Kenett, Dror Y.; Kantelhardt, Jan W. (2015-12-31). "The Detection of Emerging Trends Using Wikipedia Traffic Data and Context Networks". PLOS ONE. 10 (12): e0141892. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1041892K. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0141892. PMC 4699901. PMID 26720074.
  • ^ Reznik, Ilia; Shatalov, Vladimir (February 2016). "Hidden revolution of human priorities: An analysis of biographical data from Wikipedia". Journal of Informetrics. 10 (1): 124–131. doi:10.1016/j.joi.2015.12.002. ISSN 1751-1577. Closed access icon
  • ^ Wagner, Claudia; Graells-Garrido, Eduardo; Garcia, David (2016-01-19). "Women through the glass ceiling: Gender asymmetries in Wikipedia". EPJ Data Science. 5. arXiv:1601.04890. doi:10.1140/epjds/s13688-016-0066-4. S2CID 256239395. Jupyter notebooks
  • ^ Rössler, B.; Holldack, H.; Schebesta, K. (2015-10-01). "Influence of wikipedia and other web resources on acute and critical care decisions. a web-based survey". Intensive Care Medicine Experimental. 3 (Suppl 1): –867. doi:10.1186/2197-425X-3-S1-A867. ISSN 2197-425X. S2CID 19754943. (Poster presentation)
  • ^ Devraj, Nikhil; Chary, Michael (2015). "How Do Twitter, Wikipedia, and Harrison's Principles of Medicine Describe Heart Attacks?". Proceedings of the 6th ACM Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology and Health Informatics. BCB '15. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 610–614. doi:10.1145/2808719.2812591. ISBN 978-1-4503-3853-0.
  • ^ Brigo, Francesco; Otte, Willem M.; Igwe, Stanley C.; Ausserer, Harald; Nardone, Raffaele; Tezzon, Frediano; Trinka, Eugen (2015). "Information-seeking behaviour for epilepsy: An infodemiological study of searches for Wikipedia articles". Epileptic Disorders. 17 (4): 460–466. doi:10.1684/epd.2015.0772. PMID 26575365.
  • ^ Brigo, Francesco; Igwe, Stanley C.; Nardone, Raffaele; Lochner, Piergiorgio; Tezzon, Frediano; Otte, Willem M. (July 2015). "Wikipedia and neurological disorders". Journal of Clinical Neuroscience. 22 (7): 1170–1172. doi:10.1016/j.jocn.2015.02.006. ISSN 1532-2653. PMID 25890773. S2CID 25821260.
  • ^ Choi-Lundberg, Derek L.; Low, Tze Feng; Patman, Phillip; Turner, Paul; Sinha, Sankar N. (2015-05-01). "Medical student preferences for self-directed study resources in gross anatomy". Anatomical Sciences Education. 9 (2): 150–160. doi:10.1002/ase.1549. ISSN 1935-9780. PMID 26033851. S2CID 23191. Closed access icon
  • ^ Matei, Sorin Adam; Foote, Jeremy (2015). "Transparency, Control, and Content Generation on Wikipedia: Editorial Strategies and Technical Affordances". In Sorin Adam Matei; Martha G. Russell; Elisa Bertino (eds.). Transparency in Social Media. Computational Social Sciences. Springer International Publishing. pp. 239–253. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-18552-1_13. ISBN 978-3-319-18551-4. Closed access icon
  • ^ Sandrine Cristina de Figueirêdo Braz, Edivanio Duarte de Souza: Políticas para produção de conteúdos na Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre (Policies For The Production Of Contents In The Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia). In: ENCONTRO NACIONAL DE PESQUISA EM CIÊNCIA DA INFORMAÇÃO, 15., 2014, Belo Horizonte. Anais ... Belo Horizonte: UFMG, 2014. PDF (in Portuguese, with English abstract)
  • ^ Marcio Gonçalves, Clóvis Montenegro de Lima: Pretensões de validade da informação diante da autoridade do argumento na wikipédia (Validity claims of information in face of authority of the argument on wikipedia). In: ENCONTRO NACIONAL DE PESQUISA EM CIÊNCIA DA INFORMAÇÃO, 15., 2014, Belo Horizonte. Anais ... Belo Horizonte: UFMG, 2014. PDF (in Portuguese, with English abstract)
  • ^ Phillips, Murray G. (2015-10-07). "Wikipedia and history: a worthwhile partnership in the digital era?". Rethinking History. 20 (4): 523–543. doi:10.1080/13642529.2015.1091566. ISSN 1364-2529. S2CID 143213332. Closed access icon
  • ^ Yiwei Zhou, Alexandra I. Cristea and Zachary Roberts: Is Wikipedia really neutral? A sentiment perspective study of war-related Wikipedia articles since 1945. 29th Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation pages 160–68. Shanghai, China, October 30 – November 1, 2015 PDF
  • ^ Menking, Amanda; Erickson, Ingrid (2015). "The heart work of Wikipedia: gendered, emotional labor in the world's largest online encyclopedia". Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. CHI '15. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 207–210. doi:10.1145/2702123.2702514. ISBN 978-1-4503-3145-6. Closed access icon , also as draft version on Wikimedia Commons
  • ^ Zhan, Liuhan; Wang, Nan; Shen, Xiao-Liang; Sun, Yongqiang (2015-01-01). "Knowledge quality of collaborative editing in Wikipedia: an integrative perspective of social capital and team conflict". PACIS 2015 Proceedings.
  • ^ Hai-Jew, Shalin (2016). "Visualizing Wikipedia Article and User Networks". Developing Successful Strategies for Global Policies and Cyber Transparency in E-Learning. Advances in Educational Marketing, Administration, and Leadership. pp. 60–81. doi:10.4018/978-1-4666-8844-5.ch005. ISBN 9781466688445.
  • ^ Qureshi, Muhammad Atif (2015-10-08). Utilising Wikipedia for text mining applications (Thesis). (PhD thesis, U Galway)
  • ^ Chu, Chenhui; Nakazawa, Toshiaki; Kurohashi, Sadao (December 2015). "Integrated parallel sentence and gragment extraction from comparable corpora: a case study on Chinese-Japanese Wikipedia". ACM Trans. Asian Low-Resour. Lang. Inf. Process. 15 (2). doi:10.1145/2833089. hdl:2433/265843. ISSN 2375-4699. S2CID 18363124. Closed access icon
  • ^ Halatchliyski, Iassen; Cress, Ulrike (2014-11-03). "How structure shapes dynamics: knowledge development in Wikipedia – a network multilevel modeling approach". PLOS ONE. 9 (11): e111958. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...9k1958H. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0111958. PMC 4218828. PMID 25365319.



  • Reader comments

    2016-01-27

    Death and taxes

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  • ByMilowent

    Notable deaths continue to draw high notice on Wikipedia for another week. And though Glenn Frey's (#1) passing didn't generate nearly as much attention as David Bowie (#1 last week, #4 this week), it is yet another high profile death leading the chart. And even the pop culture entries are serious, with convict Steven Avery (#3), the subject of the documentary Making a Murderer (#7), riding high for yet another week, and survival epic The Revenant at #2. Isn't it time for another vacuous chart topper we can simply get a laugh from, like twerking?

    For the full top-25 list, see WP:TOP25. See this section for an explanation of any exclusions. For a list of the most edited articles of the week, see here.

    For the week of January 17 to 23, 2016, the 10 most popular articles on Wikipedia, as determined from the report of the most viewed pages, were:

    Rank Article Class Views Image Notes
    1 Glenn Frey C-class 1,861,483
    The founding member of American rock band the Eagles (#8) died on January 18. Though only about 15% of the whopping 11.7 million views David Bowie got on last week's chart, Frey was a highly successful artist on a much more human scale.
    2 The Revenant (2015 film) C-class 1,283,947
    Alejandro González Iñárritu's Western survival epic starring Leonardo di Caprio (#23, pictured) continues to be popular.
    3 Steven Avery Start-class 1,062,963 Avery is an American prisoner who is the subject of the popular new Netflix documentary series Making a Murderer which was released on December 18. (Episode 1 is available free on YouTube.) Avery served 18 years in prison, from 1985 to 2003, after being framed by the local police for a sexual assault he plainly did not commit. During his subsequent civil lawsuit for compensation, during a period of explosive depositions, he was charged with the murder of a local photographer, and later convicted. The documentary is compelling to watch, and it causing a fair amount of controversy, and thus bringing continuing attention to this article.
    4 David Bowie Featured Article 1,052,526
    Contrary to popular belief, chameleons do not change colour to match their surroundings; they change colour to reflect their mood and their relationships with others. From the moment that David Robert Jones changed his name to David Bowie, he proved himself chameleonic in the true sense. His career was a kaleidoscope of reinventions; not just of music and appearance but of persona, profession and gender identity, each time anticipating the reactions of his audience, and usually forcing them to catch up with him. Fiercely intelligent and unafraid to show it, he also anticipated the effects of technological change, releasing Space Oddity five days before the launch of Apollo 11, and using the Internet to interact with fans years before the age of social media. His work as an actor also frequently ran leaps ahead of audiences, whether as an alien in Nicolas Roeg's initially ill-regarded but now lauded The Man Who Fell To Earth, or as Jareth the Goblin King in Jim Henson's Labyrinth, a critical bomb that would go on to become a fixture of children's video libraries, and earn him an entire new generation of fans. But his death earlier this month at the age of 69 may prove his greatest leap ahead yet; while ill with cancer for the preceding 18 months, he refused to publicise his condition and instead used his last time on Earth to compose Blackstar, one of his best reviewed albums in decades. Just as Bowie lived as art, he died as art, and the video for "Lazarus", the second single from Blackstar, which featured a suddenly aged Bowie blindfolded on a hospital bed, would become an epitaph to the world. Once again, we had to catch up with him, and the shock of his unexpected death shivered across his pan-generational fanbase, pushing Blackstar to #1 in the US album chart, astoundingly for the first time, and giving him not only the highest single-day tally of YouTube VEVO views ever recorded, but also, incidentally, the first ever eight-figure weekly Wikipedia viewcount, with over 11.7 million views on last week's chart.
    5 Martin Luther King, Jr. Good Article 945,522 The American holiday dedicated to him fell on January 18 this year.
    6 Star Wars: The Force Awakens C-class 884,009
    The reignition of the Star Wars remains in the Top 10 for another week.
    7 Making a Murderer Start-class 801,724 See #3.
    8 Eagles (band) B-class 782,648
    See #1. The Eagles of Death Metal were on the chart in November, and they got their name from this band, as a sarcastic reference. Do people in their 20s listen to the Eagles today? I have no idea. Though wildly popular in their time, their music is also clearly of their time, and did not pretend to be otherwise.
    9 Deaths in 2016 List 684,964
    The annual list of deaths is usually fairly consistent in weekly views, but is up again for second week.
    10 Suicide Squad (film) C-class 681,863 A superhero film slated for release on August 5 in the United States.




    Reader comments

    2016-01-27

    This week's featured content

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  • ByArmbrust
    Peresvet was the lead ship of the Peresvet class.

    This Signpost "Featured content" report covers material promoted from 17 to 23 January.
    Text may be adapted from the respective articles and lists; see their page histories for attribution.
    Title page of Isabella Beeton's 1861 book Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management.
    The Lexington-Concord Sesquicentennial half dollar's design had to satisfy the committees from both Lexington and Concord.
    Sofia Coppola received numerous awards for Lost in Translation, including the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay.

    Six featured articles were promoted this week.

    Three featured lists were promoted this week.

    Seven featured pictures were promoted this week.



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