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Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2016-01-27/In the media

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In the media

Media coverage of the Arnnon Geshuri no-confidence vote

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.
  • Another board change: The Guardian announces that Jimmy Wales has joined the board of the Guardian Media Group, along with Baroness Rebuck. (Jan. 27) AK
  • 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 reports on Goa 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



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