User talk:Emijrp
Talk archives: 2012 · 2013 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016 · 2017 · 2018
Village in China again
[edit]Hi :)
If I send you a pull request with more descriptions, would you mind running your bot on the "village in China" items again?
The translations I'd like to add come from MechQuester, he asked a lot of people for translations and had been adding them with QuickStatements but is currently blocked (for sockpuppetry, not because of the descriptions). QuickStatements isn't ideal for that and when I checked them I found quite a few mistakes which need fixing, so if you can do it with your bot, that would be great.
- Nikki (talk) 19:38, 18 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Nikki: Sure, send me the translations in a pull request. Emijrp (talk) 08:35, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
- Done :) - Nikki (talk) 13:53, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Nikki: Wouldn't more specific descriptions be preferable? If we add "place on earth" to any item with coordinates in 500 languages, would this advance us?
--- Jura 11:39, 20 June 2018 (UTC)- @Jura1: There is a saying that's appropriate here: en:Perfect is the enemy of good. We don't have translations for more specific descriptions, so the choice is between an informative description and no description. Even when it doesn't provide enough information to distinguish villages in China which have the same name, it still helps to distinguish things which are not villages or not in China from things which are. Nobody is proposing to add "place on Earth" to everything with coordinates, so that question is irrelevant. - Nikki (talk) 13:53, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
- I don't think the description is much more explicit than "place on Earth". Even if it can be seen as step towards a better description, we found that bots just add chunks of descriptions in countless languages and don't maintain them going forward (bot users who add them don't routinely correct them when they are found to be incorrect). The result is that we have countless items with 100 descriptions that are incorrect and can't be efficiently corrected.
--- Jura 04:59, 21 June 2018 (UTC)
- I don't think the description is much more explicit than "place on Earth". Even if it can be seen as step towards a better description, we found that bots just add chunks of descriptions in countless languages and don't maintain them going forward (bot users who add them don't routinely correct them when they are found to be incorrect). The result is that we have countless items with 100 descriptions that are incorrect and can't be efficiently corrected.
- @Jura1: There is a saying that's appropriate here: en:Perfect is the enemy of good. We don't have translations for more specific descriptions, so the choice is between an informative description and no description. Even when it doesn't provide enough information to distinguish villages in China which have the same name, it still helps to distinguish things which are not villages or not in China from things which are. Nobody is proposing to add "place on Earth" to everything with coordinates, so that question is irrelevant. - Nikki (talk) 13:53, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
The Signpost: 29 June 2018
[edit]- Special report: NPR and AfC – The Marshall Plan: an engagement and a marriage?
- Op-ed: What do admins do?
- News and notes: Money, milestones, and Wikimania
- In the media: Much wikilove from the Mayor of London, less from Paekākāriki or a certain candidate for U.S. Congress
- Discussion report: Deletion, page moves, and an update to the main page
- Featured content: New promotions
- Arbitration report: WWII, UK politics, and a user deCrat'ed
- Traffic report: Endgame
- Technology report: Improvements piled on more improvements
- Gallery: Wiki Loves Africa
- Recent research: How censorship can backfire and conversations can go awry
- Humour: Television plot lines
- Wikipedia essays: This month's pick by The Signpost editors
- From the archives: Wolves nip at Wikipedia's heels: A perspective on the cost of paid editing
Structured Data on Commons Newsletter - Summer 2018
[edit]Welcome to the newsletter for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons! You can update your subscription to the newsletter and contribute to the next issue. Do inform others who you think will want to be involved in the project!
- Community updates
- Our dedicated IRC channel: wikimedia-commons-sd webchat
- Since our last newsletter, the Structured Data team has moved into designing and building prototypes for various features. The use of multilingual captions in the UploadWizard and on the file page has been researched, designed, discussed, and built out for use. Behind the scenes, back-end work on search is taking place and designs are being drawn up for the front-end. There will soon be specifications published for the use of the first Wikidata property on Commons, "Depicts," and a prototype is to be released to go along with that.
- A workshop on what Wikidata properties Commons will need. This workshop will be open for the entire month of July 2018 at minimum.
- Join the community focus group!
- Do you want to help out translating messages about Structured Data on Commons from English to your own language? Sign up on the translators page.
- Contribute to the next newsletter.
- Discussions held
- In late February there was a discussion around how Commons generally sees data being modeled.
- The first discussion on copyright and licensing with Commons was held in March. This was a "high level" discussion, there will be a consultation later this summer about the deeper mapping of copyright and licensing in a structured way.
- In April there was an exercise for GLAM partners in metadata and ontology mapping.
- A discussion about the design for Multilingual Captions on the file page took place in May. You can still review the designs and leave feedback.
- There was an IRC office hour in June to discuss progress so far and future plans.
- Wikimania 2018
- Three sessions about Structured Commons are officially scheduled for Wikimania 2018 - Cape Town, South Africa - July 2018.
- Wikimedia Commons and GLAM needs around the world (Friday 20 July, 10:30 local time)
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons and knowledge equity (Friday 20 July, 14:00 local time)
- Design challenge workshop: How can multilingual structured metadata bring knowledge equity to Commons? (Friday 20 July, 14:30 local time)
- Structured Data on Commons is also a focus area during the Wikimania 2018 Hackathon. We will, among other things, do 'live' modelling of Wikidata properties for Commons - an offline spin-off of the community consultation taking place on wiki.
- Partners and allies
- We are still welcoming (more) staff from GLAMs (Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums) to become part of our long-term focus group (phabricator task T174134). You will be kept in the loop of the project, and receive regular small surveys and requests for feedback. Get in touch with Sandra if you're interested - your input in helping to shape this project is highly valued!
- Structured Data on Commons was presented to GLAM audiences during EuropeanaTech 2018 in Rotterdam (15 May 2018) and at the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek Forum in Berlin (4 June 2018).
- Research
Two research projects about Wikimedia Commons are currently ongoing, or in the process of being finished:
- Research:Curation workflows on Wikimedia Commons—a project that seeks to understand the current workflows of Commons contributors who curate media (categorize it, delete it, link to it from other projects, etc.).
- Research:Technical needs of external re-users of Commons media—soliciting feedback from individuals and organizations that re-use Commons content outside of Wikimedia projects, in order to understand their current painpoints and unmet needs.
- Prototypes will be available for Depicts soon.
- Stay up to date!
- Follow the Structured Data on Commons project on Phabricator: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/project/profile/34/
- Subscribe to this newsletter to receive it on a talk page of your own choice.
- Join the next IRC office hour and ask questions to the team! The date for next quarter will be announced soon.
-- Keegan (WMF) (talk)
Message sent by MediaWiki message delivery - 21:07, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
Structured Data Newsletter - Research link fix
[edit]Greetings,
The newsletter omitted two interwiki prefixes, breaking the links on non-meta wikis as you might see above. Here are the correct links:
- m:Research:Curation workflows on Wikimedia Commons—a project that seeks to understand the current workflows of Commons contributors who curate media (categorize it, delete it, link to it from other projects, etc.).
- m:Research:Technical needs of external re-users of Commons media—soliciting feedback from individuals and organizations that re-use Commons content outside of Wikimedia projects, in order to understand their current painpoints and unmet needs.
My apologies, I hope you find the corrected links helpful.
This Month in GLAM: June 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 31 July 2018
[edit]- From the editor: If only if
- Opinion: Wrestling with Wikipedia reality
- Discussion report: Wikipedias take action against EU copyright proposal, plus new user right proposals
- Featured content: Wikipedia's best content in images and prose
- Arbitration report: Status quo processes retained in two disputes
- Traffic report: Soccer, football, call it what you like – that and summer movies leave room for little else
- Technology report: New bots, new prefs
- Recent research: Different Wikipedias use different images; editing contests more successful than edit-a-thons
- Humour: It's all the same
- Essay: Wikipedia does not need you
This Month in GLAM: July 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 30 August 2018
[edit]- From the editor: Today's young adults don't know a world without Wikipedia
- News and notes: Flying high; low practice from Wikipedia 'cleansing' agency; where do our donations go? RfA sees a new trend
- In the media: Quicksilver AI writes articles
- Discussion report: Drafting an interface administrator policy
- Featured content: Featured content selected by the community
- Special report: Wikimania 2018
- Traffic report: Aretha dies – getting just 2,000 short of 5 million hits
- Technology report: Technical enhancements and a request to prioritize upcoming work
- Recent research: Wehrmacht on Wikipedia, neural networks writing biographies
- Humour: Signpost editor censors herself
- From the archives: Playing with Wikipedia words
This Month in GLAM: August 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 1 October 2018
[edit]- From the editor: Is this the new normal?
- News and notes: European copyright law moves forward
- In the media: Knowledge under fire
- Discussion report: Interface Admin policy proposal, part 2
- Arbitration report: A quiet month for Arbcom
- Technology report: Paying attention to your mobile
- Gallery: A pat on the back
- Recent research: How talk page use has changed since 2005; censorship shocks lead to centralization; is vandalism caused by workplace boredom?
- Humour: Signpost Crossword Puzzle
- Essay: Expressing thanks
This Month in GLAM: September 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 28 October 2018
[edit]- From the editors October original: The Signpost is still afloat, just barely
- News and notes: WMF gets a million bucks
- In the media: Bans, celebs, and bias
- Discussion report: Mediation Committee and proposed deletion reform
- Traffic report: Unsurprisingly, sport leads the field – or the ring
- Technology report: Bots galore!
- Special report: NPP needs you
- Special report 2: Now Wikidata is six
- In focus: Alexa
- Gallery: Out of this world!
- Recent research: Wikimedia Commons worth $28.9 billion
- Humour: Talk page humour
- Opinion: Strickland incident
- From the archives: The Gardner Interview
This Month in GLAM: October 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 1 December 2018
[edit]- From the editor: Time for a truce
- Special report: The Christmas wishlist
- Discussion report: Farewell, Mediation Committee
- Arbitration report: A long break ends
- Traffic report: Queen reigns for four weeks straight
- Gallery: Intersections
- From the archives: Ars longa,vita brevis
Structured Data on Commons Newsletter - Fall 2018 edition
[edit]Welcome to the newsletter for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons! You can update your subscription to the newsletter. Do inform others who you think will want to be involved in the project!
- Community updates
- Multilingual Captions, the first feature release for Structured Data, is coming in January of 2019
- Be on the lookout for the beta testing announcement
- Help using captions has been set up, if you'd like to go ahead and see the workflow
- Two IRC office hours were held since the last newsletter
- Our dedicated IRC channel: wikimedia-commons-sd webchat
Current:
- Help determine and propose properties on Wikidata for Commons
- Review designs for structured licensing and copyright
- Join the community focus group!
Since the last newsletter:
- Review a prototype for searching structured Commons (October 2018)
- "Good coverage" for depicts tagging (Sept. 2018)
- Review and discuss mockups for displaying the new metadata section of the file page (18 September - 9 October 2018)
- Depicts statements draft requirements (14 August - 31 August 2018)
- Identify Wikidata properties that Commons will need (26 June - 14 August 2018)
- Presentation by Keegan on the first features to be released for Structured Data, presented at Wikiconference North America, Columbus, Ohio, October 2018.
- Sandra presented a project update at the GLAM-Wiki conference in Tel Aviv, Israel, November 2018, as part of an update and panel discussion.
- Structured Data on Commons was the subject of a keynote presentation by Sandra (see slides) at the Baltic Audiovisual Archives Council conference in Tallinn, Estonia, November 2018.
- Partners and allies
- The info portal on Structured Commons now includes a section on GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums).
- We are currently planning the first GLAM pilot projects that will use structured data on Wikimedia Commons. One project has already started: the Swedish Heritage Board researches and develops a prototype tool to provide improved metadata (translations, data additions...) from Wikimedia Commons back to the source institution. Read the project brief.
- The documentation for batch uploads of files to Wikimedia Commons will be improved in 2019, as part of preparing for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons. To prepare, the GLAM team at the Wikimedia Foundation wants to understand better which types of documentation you already use, and how you like to learn new GLAM-Wiki skills and knowledge. Fill in a short survey to provide input!
- Stay up to date!
- Follow the Structured Data on Commons project on Phabricator: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/project/profile/34/
- Subscribe to this newsletter to receive it on a talk page of your own choice.
-- Keegan (WMF) (talk)
Message sent by MediaWiki message delivery - 17:58, 7 December 2018 (UTC)
This Month in GLAM: November 2018
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 24 December 2018
[edit]- From the editors: Where to draw the line in reporting?
- News and notes: Some wishes do come true
- In the media: Political hijinks
- Discussion report: A new record low for RfA
- WikiProject report: Articlegenesis
- Arbitration report: Year ends with one active case
- Traffic report: Queen dethroned by U.S. presidents
- Gallery: Sun and moon, water and stone
- Blog: News from the WMF
- Humour: I believe in Bigfoot
- Essay: Requests for medication
- From the archives: Compromised admin accounts – again
Captions in January
[edit]Structured Data - file captions coming this week (January 2019)
[edit]My apologies if this is a duplicate message for you, it is being sent to multiple lists which you may be signed up for.
Hi all, following up on last month's announcement...
Multilingual file captions will be released this week, on either Wednesday, 9 January or Thursday, 10 January 2019. Captions are a feature to add short, translatable descriptions to files. Here's some links you might want to look follow before the release, if you haven't already:
- Read over the help page for using captions - I wrote the page on mediawiki.org because captions are available for any MediaWiki user, feel free to host/modify a copy of the page here on Commons.
- Test out using captions on Beta Commons.
- Leave feedback about the test on the captions test talk page, if you have anything you'd like to say prior to release.
Additionally, there will be an IRC office hour on Thursday, 10 January with the Structured Data team to talk about file captions, as well as anything else the community may be interested in. Date/time conversion, as well as a link to join, are on Meta.
Thanks for your time, I look forward to seeing those who can make it to the IRC office hour on Thursday. -- Keegan (WMF) (talk) 21:09, 7 January 2019 (UTC)This Month in GLAM: December 2018
[edit]
|
(Q61053047)
[edit]Hallo Emijrp
your bot is very smart. It can export information from articles, which never existed. There is nothing like en:Hannah Epperson --Bahnmoeller (talk) 22:01, 28 January 2019 (UTC)
- @Bahnmoeller: I see. It was a bug, it said in comment that info was extracted from enwp, though it added dewp as reference correctly. I fixed the code now. Thanks for the notice. Emijrp (talk) 22:09, 28 January 2019 (UTC)
Adding Descriptions
[edit]Hello Emilio,
I add German descriptions and now I think about get involved in a project for descriptions. Are you interested to participate in a WikiProject for descriptions to coordinate the translations of descriptions and the adding to Wikidata. The WikiProject already exists at Wikidata:WikiProject_Labels_and_descriptions but as far as I see is there no activity at this page at the moment. -- Hogü-456 (talk) 20:47, 30 January 2019 (UTC)
- @Hogü-456: Sure, most of my work here is on descriptions. My scripts are on GitHub and I frequently receive new translations. I check User:Pasleim/Language statistics for items weekly to see progress. The language with more descriptions is NL because Edoderoo work, but some descriptions are poor. Emijrp (talk) 21:25, 30 January 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 31 January 2019
[edit]- Op-ed: Random Rewards Rejected
- News and notes: WMF staff turntable continues to spin; Endowment gets more cash; RfA continues to be a pit of steely knives
- Discussion report: The future of the reference desk
- Featured content: Don't miss your great opportunity
- Arbitration report: An admin under the microscope
- Traffic report: Death, royals and superheroes
- Technology report: When broken is easily fixed
- News from the WMF: News from WMF
- Recent research: Ad revenue from reused Wikipedia articles; are Wikipedia researchers asking the right questions?
- Essay: How
- Humour: Village pump
- From the archives: An editorial board that includes you
This Month in GLAM: January 2019
[edit]
|
bonjour !
[edit]"La page Antoine Pecqueur a été reliée à l’élément Wikidata Q61671739, où les données relatives au sujet peuvent être récupérées." merci bien pour le message ! mais pourquoi voudriez-vous donc que je récupère ce que j'ai donné ? Mandariine (talk) 17:08, 10 February 2019 (UTC)
- Bonjour Mandariine,
en faite, je crois que le bot te prévient qu'il a relié la page que tu as crée Antoine_Pecqueur sur wp avec la page wd qu'il a crée ici https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q61671739, et que donc que tu n'as pas besoin de faire. Cdt Speltdecca (talk) 03:07, 5 March 2019 (UTC)
wrong import of birthdate
[edit]Even in the first version of de:Kurt-Ulrich Jäschke his date of birth was exactly mentioned. Your bot just transfered the year. --Bahnmoeller (talk) 10:25, 20 February 2019 (UTC)
Dein Bot arbeitet schlampig
[edit]und trägt ungenaue Geburtsdaten ein. --Bahnmoeller (talk) 10:06, 27 February 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 28 February 2019
[edit]- From the editors: Help wanted (still)
- News and notes: Front-page issues for the community
- Discussion report: Talking about talk pages
- Featured content: Conquest, War, Famine, Death, and more!
- Arbitration report: A quiet month for Arbitration Committee
- Traffic report: Binge-watching
- Technology report: Tool labs casters-up
- Gallery: Signed with pride
- From the archives: New group aims to promote Wiki-Love
- Humour: Pesky Pronouns
Don't send me a message
[edit]Please, it is possible do not to send me any more notifications ? thank you. Speltdecca (talk) 03:10, 5 March 2019 (UTC)
- @Speltdecca: You can disable it in your preferences. Preferences -> Notifications -> Wikidata (uncheck). Emijrp (talk) 09:02, 5 March 2019 (UTC)
- Thank you Emijrp, have a nice day Speltdecca (talk) 21:51, 5 March 2019 (UTC)
This Month in GLAM: February 2019
[edit]
|
wrong import of birthdate again
[edit]Please import the full birthdate. In german articles you will find it usually under "Personendaten" - do not use the Category "geboren xxxx" --Bahnmoeller (talk) 10:41, 9 March 2019 (UTC)
- I can't at this moment to do that. Emijrp (talk) 10:55, 9 March 2019 (UTC)
- Hello Emijrp, it could be done using Harvest Templates. For examples see User:M2k~dewiki/Tools#Geburtsdatum. --M2k~dewiki (talk) 11:28, 9 March 2019 (UTC)
New Wikipedia Library Accounts Available Now (March 2019)
[edit]Hello Wikimedians!
The Wikipedia Library is announcing signups today for free, full-access, accounts to published research as part of our Publisher Donation Program. You can sign up for new accounts and research materials on the Library Card platform:
- Kinige – Primarily Indian-language ebooks - 10 books per month
- Gale – Times Digital Archive collection added (covering 1785-2013)
- JSTOR – New applications now being taken again
Many other partnerships with accounts available are listed on our partners page, including Baylor University Press, Taylor & Francis, Cairn, Annual Reviews and Bloomsbury. You can request new partnerships on our Suggestions page.
Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects: sign up today!
--The Wikipedia Library Team 17:40, 13 March 2019 (UTC)
- You can host and coordinate signups for a Wikipedia Library branch in your own language. Please contact Ocaasi (WMF).
- This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message tool to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.
Question about Emijrpbot creations
[edit]Hello! Thanks for creating Emijrpbot. I've noticed it automatically creates items remarkably quickly after Wikipedia articles are created (e.g. Sally Hoyt Spofford a mere 10 minutes after the creation of her Wikipedia article). Are there certain triggers that make the bot more likely (or more quickly) to automatically create items, such as if categories for birth/death year or occupations are added, a new Wikidata item with instance of human? And if so, does Emijrpbot work with similar rules for non-human entities on Wikipedia or Commons? For Commons, one shortcut might be to utilize the Commons:Category:Categories by name, where individual entities are named, thus any category in Category:Newspapers by name might automatically get a new item with "instance of: newspaper", and similar for Category:Companies by name, with subsequent properties (country of origin, year of establishment, etc.) added based on sub-categorization. Just a thought, please ping me with reply. Cheers! Animalparty (talk) 19:23, 19 March 2019 (UTC)
- @Animalparty: Hello! Yes, the bot checks Special:Newpages on English Wikipedia (and French/German editions), detecting biographies through birth/death/living_people categories and other features (counting he/she his/her words for gender, and occupation categories). At the moment it doesn't create items for other kind of entities, but I will try to expand it in the future for movies, books, and other examples, which aren't error-prone. Regards! Emijrp (talk) 15:30, 20 March 2019 (UTC)
- Thanks! All the best. Animalparty (talk) 19:51, 21 March 2019 (UTC)
Two entries on Princess Awata
[edit]Q62598523 is a fork of Q11604627. Sorry -- I didn't notice ja.wiki had an article before I published the en.wiki one. Hijiri88 (talk) 04:39, 31 March 2019 (UTC)
- @Hijiri88: There is a feature in the tabs to "merge" duplicated items. I just did it. Emijrp (talk) 08:25, 31 March 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 31 March 2019
[edit]- From the editors: Getting serious about humor
- News and notes: Blackouts fail to stop EU Copyright Directive
- In the media: Women's history month
- Discussion report: Portal debates continue, Prespa agreement aftermath, WMF seeks a rebranding
- Featured content: Out of this world
- Arbitration report: The Tides of March at ARBCOM
- Traffic report: Exultations and tribulations
- Technology report: New section suggestions and sitewide styles
- News from the WMF: The WMF's take on the new EU Copyright Directive
- Recent research: Barnstar-like awards increase new editor retention
- From the archives: Esperanza organization disbanded after deletion discussion
- Humour: The Epistolary of Arthur 37
- In focus: The Wikipedia SourceWatch
- Special report: Wiki Loves (50 Years of) Pride
- Community view: Wikipedia's response to the New Zealand mosque shootings
This Month in GLAM: March 2019
[edit]
|
Editing speed of User:Emijrpbot
[edit]Hi!
It seems that User:Emijrpbot does not comply with the maxlag mechanism at the moment, or that the value of the maxlag parameter used is too high. Please ensure you set maxlag=5
to all your requests and respect the Retry-After
headers sent by the server. This should enforce a 30 edit/min rate, by which most other bots abide.
The editing throughput of Wikidata is a limited resource, so it is important to share it with others.
Thanks! − Pintoch (talk) 09:58, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Pintoch: Who says my bot isn't complying with maxlag? Maxlag is set to 5 in my user-config.py. Editrate and maxlag are different things. My bots has been editing at 65 edits/min on average in the last 24 hours. Around 60 edits/min was the last consensus I remember we discussed in Phabricator. Where is the 30 edits/min discussion? Emijrp (talk) 10:12, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Emijrp: well, I am saying that, because I am observing that the tools that use
maxlag=5
generally edit at around 30 edits/min now that the WDQS lag is taken into account for the lag computation (see this list). Is it possible that this configuration parameter might not be taken into account properly by your bot? Or would you be willing to voluntarily halve your editing speed to adjust that? It would be great if you could inspect the HTTP requests actually made by your tool to check that. Note that this is not specifically about your bot, I will also try to get QuickStatements v2 to comply (at the moment, it seems that maxlag is only used in background mode, not in browser mode). − Pintoch (talk) 10:29, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Emijrp: well, I am saying that, because I am observing that the tools that use
- @Pintoch: I don't know if the 30 edits/min by the bots in the list is due to the maxlag or a coincidence. My bot uses wikitech:Help:Toolforge/Pywikibot (I assume it is updated, I haven't control over it) and my user-config.py has maxlag=5. I have reduced the tasks of my bot regardless, so it should edit slower now. Emijrp (talk) 10:48, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Emijrp: thank you very much! − Pintoch (talk) 10:54, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Emijrp: ah, now I get it. The difference between the 60 edits/min and the 30 edits/min tools is that the faster ones only use maxlag for the API queries which perform the edit, whereas the others also apply it when getting editing tokens (which does not do any edit by itself). So you were surely right about your tool respecting maxlag. Sorry about that and thanks again for slowing down! − Pintoch (talk) 14:21, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
- @Emijrp: thank you very much! − Pintoch (talk) 10:54, 24 April 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 30 April 2019
[edit]- News and notes: An Action Packed April
- In the media: Is Wikipedia just another social media site?
- Discussion report: English Wikipedia community's conclusions on talk pages
- Featured content: Anguish, accolades, animals, and art
- Arbitration report: An Active Arbitration Committee
- Traffic report: Mötley Crüe, Notre-Dame, a black hole, and Bonnie and Clyde
- Technology report: A new special page, and other news
- Gallery: Notre-Dame de Paris burns
- News from the WMF: Can machine learning uncover Wikipedia’s missing “citation needed” tags?
- Recent research: Female scholars underrepresented; whitepaper on Wikidata and libraries; undo patterns reveal editor hierarchy
- From the archives: Portals revisited
This Month in GLAM: April 2019
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 31 May 2019
[edit]- From the editors: Picture that
- News and notes: Wikimania and trustee elections
- In the media: Politics, lawsuits and baseball
- Discussion report: Admin abuse leads to mass-desysop proposal on Azerbaijani Wikipedia
- Arbitration report: ArbCom forges ahead
- News from the WMF: Wikimedia Foundation petitions the European Court of Human Rights to lift the block of Wikipedia in Turkey
- Technology report: Lots of Bots
- Essay: Paid editing
- From the archives: FORUM:Should Wikimedia modify its terms of use to require disclosure?
This Month in GLAM: May 2019
[edit]
|
Emijrpbot down?
[edit]Hello! It appears that Emijrpbot has been inactive since 30 April 2019. This is most unfortunate, as it was an incredibly efficient time- and energy-saver in starting items for recently created Wikipedia articles, especially people. Is there a reason for the inactivity, and/or are there plans to revive it (or a similar bot that serves the same purpose)? Thanks again for all you've done, -Animalparty (talk) 23:04, 14 June 2019 (UTC)
- Hello! Another editor wondering about the status of the wonderful Emijrpbot. Please ping me if/when you respond. Thanks! WomenArtistUpdates (talk) 19:32, 29 June 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 30 June 2019
[edit]- Discussion report: A constitutional crisis hits English Wikipedia
- News and notes: Mysterious ban, admin resignations, Wikimedia Thailand rising
- In the media: The disinformation age
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- Special report: Did Fram harass other editors?
- Traffic report: Juneteenth, Beauty Revealed, and more nuclear disasters
- Technology report: Actors and Bots
- Recent research: What do editors do after being blocked?; the top mathematicians, universities and cancers according to Wikipedia
- From the archives: Women and Wikipedia: the world is watching
- In focus: WikiJournals: A sister project proposal
- Community view: A CEO biography, paid for with taxes
This Month in GLAM: June 2019
[edit]
|
The Signpost: 31 July 2019
[edit]- In the media: Politics starts getting rough
- Discussion report: New proposals in aftermath of Fram ban
- Arbitration report: A month of reintegration
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- Community view: Video based summaries of Wikipedia articles. How and why?
- News from the WMF: Designing ethically with AI: How Wikimedia can harness machine learning in a responsible and human-centered way
- Recent research: Most influential medical journals; detecting pages to protect
- Special report: Administrator cadre continues to contract
- Traffic report: World cups, presidential candidates, and stranger things
This Month in GLAM: July 2019
[edit]
|
Small error with your bot
[edit]When your bot write French descriptions for scientific papers, the correct description is : "article scientifique (publié en YEAR)". So, it forgets the "en". Please, correct it! Thanks :) Zarisi (talk) 06:57, 29 August 2019 (UTC)
The Signpost: 30 August 2019
[edit]- News and notes: Documenting Wikimania and our beginnings
- In focus: Ryan Merkley joins WMF as Chief of Staff
- Discussion report: Meta proposals on partial bans and IP users
- Traffic report: Once upon a time in Greenland with Boris and cornflakes
- News from the WMF: Meet Emna Mizouni, the newly minted 2019 Wikimedian of the Year
- Recent research: Special issue on gender gap and gender bias research
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
translate articles
[edit]hi I can help you to translate articles in Persian with your bot example this https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q66966485
article published in 2010 مقاله منتشر شده در ساله 2010
This Month in GLAM: August 2019
[edit]
|
Typo in Hebrew
[edit]This edit added דיפולמט which is typo of the word דיפלומט. Please correct all 7K appearances of this typo. Uziel302 (talk) 18:13, 15 September 2019 (UTC)
- I fixed 8000 typos, please don't upload another Hebrew typo.Uziel302 (talk) 14:42, 16 September 2019 (UTC)
Structured Data - blogs posted in Wikimedia Space
[edit]There are two separate blog entries for Structured Data on Commons posted to Wikimedia Space that are of interest:
- Working with Structured Data on Commons: A Status Report, by Lucas Werkmeister, discusses some ways that editors can work with structured data. Topics include tools that have been written or modified for structured data, in addition to future plans for tools and querying services.
- Structured Data on Commons - A Blog Series, written by me, is a five-part posting that covers the basics of the software and features that were built to make structured data happen. The series is meant to be friendly to those who may have some knowledge of Commons, but may not know much about the structured data project.
The Signpost: 30 September 2019
[edit]- From the editors: Where do we go from here?
- Special report: Post-Framgate wrapup
- Traffic report: Varied and intriguing entries, less Luck, and some retreads
- News from the WMF: How the Wikimedia Foundation is making efforts to go green
- Recent research: Wikipedia's role in assessing credibility of news sources; using wikis against procrastination; OpenSym 2019 report
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
The Signpost: 31 October 2019
[edit]- In the media: How to use or abuse Wikipedia for fun or profit
- Special report: “Catch and Kill” on Wikipedia: Paid editing and the suppression of material on alleged sexual abuse
- Interview: Carl Miller on Wikipedia Wars
- Community view: Observations from the mainland
- Arbitration report: October actions
- Gallery: Wiki Loves Broadcast
- Recent research: Research at Wikimania 2019: More communication doesn't make editors more productive; Tor users doing good work; harmful content rare on English Wikipedia
- News from the WMF: Welcome to Wikipedia! Here's what we're doing to help you stick around
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
The Signpost: 29 November 2019
[edit]- From the editor: Put on your birthday best
- News and notes: How soon for the next million articles?
- In the media: You say you want a revolution
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- Arbitration report: Two requests for arbitration cases
- Traffic report: The queen and the princess meet the king and the joker
- Technology report: Reference things, sister things, stranger things
- Gallery: Winter and holidays
- Recent research: Bot census; discussions differ on Spanish and English Wikipedia; how nature's seasons affect pageviews
- Essay: Adminitis
- From the archives: WikiProject Spam, revisited
The Signpost: 27 December 2019
[edit]- From the editors: Caught with their hands in the cookie jar, again
- News and notes: What's up (and down) with administrators, articles and languages
- In the media: "The fulfillment of the dream of humanity" or a nightmare of PR whitewashing on behalf of one-percenters?
- Discussion report: December discussions around the wiki
- Arbitration report: Announcement of 2020 Arbitration Committee
- Traffic report: Queens and aliens, exactly alike, once upon a December
- Technology report: User scripts and more
- Gallery: Holiday wishes
- Recent research: Acoustics and Wikipedia; Wiki Workshop 2019 summary
- From the archives: The 2002 Spanish fork and ads revisited (re-revisited?)
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- WikiProject report: Wikiproject Tree of Life: A Wikiproject report
The Signpost: 27 January 2020
[edit]- From the editor: Reaching six million articles is great, but we need a moratorium
- News and notes: Six million articles on the English language Wikipedia
- Special report: The limits of volunteerism and the gatekeepers of Team Encarta
- Arbitration report: Three cases at ArbCom
- Traffic report: The most viewed articles of 2019
- News from the WMF: Capacity Building: Top 5 Themes from Community Conversations
- Community view: Our most important new article since November 1, 2015
- From the archives: A decade of The Signpost, 2005-2015
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- WikiProject report: WikiProject Japan: a wikiProject Report
The Signpost: 1 March 2020
[edit]- From the editor: The ball is in your court
- News and notes: Alexa ranking down to 13th worldwide
- Special report: More participation, more conversation, more pageviews
- Discussion report: Do you prefer M or P?
- Arbitration report: Two prominent administrators removed
- Community view: The Incredible Invisible Woman
- In focus: History of The Signpost, 2015–2019
- From the archives: Is Wikipedia for sale?
- Traffic report: February articles, floating in the dark
- Gallery: Feel the love
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- Opinion: Wikipedia is another country
- Humour: The Wilhelm scream
The Signpost: 29 March 2020
[edit]- From the editors: The bad and the good
- News and notes: 2018 Wikipedian of the year blocked
- WikiProject report: WikiProject COVID-19: A WikiProject Report
- Special report: Wikipedia on COVID-19: what we publish and why it matters
- In the media: Blocked in Iran but still covering the big story
- Discussion report: Rethinking draft space
- Arbitration report: Unfinished business
- In focus: "I have been asked by Jeffrey Epstein …"
- Community view: Wikimedia community responds to COVID-19
- From the archives: Text from Wikipedia good enough for Oxford University Press to claim as own
- Traffic report: The only thing that matters in the world
- Gallery: Visible Women on Wikipedia
- News from the WMF: Amid COVID-19, Wikimedia Foundation offers full pay for reduced hours, mobilizes all staff to work remote, and waives sick time
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
The Signpost: 26 April 2020
[edit]- News and notes: Unbiased information from Ukraine's government?
- In the media: Coronavirus, again and again
- Discussion report: Redesigning Wikipedia, bit by bit
- Featured content: Featured content returns
- Arbitration report: Two difficult cases
- Traffic report: Disease the Rhythm of the Night
- Recent research: Trending topics across languages; auto-detecting bias
- Opinion: Trusting Everybody to Work Together
- On the bright side: What's making you happy this month?
- In focus: Multilingual Wikipedia
- WikiProject report: [[w:en:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2020-04-26/WikiProject report|The Guild of Copy Editors]]
The Signpost: 31 May 2020
[edit]- From the editor: Meltdown May?
- News and notes: 2019 Picture of the Year, 200 French paid editing accounts blocked, 10 years of Guild Copyediting
- Discussion report: WMF's Universal Code of Conduct
- Featured content: Weathering the storm
- Arbitration report: Board member receives editing restriction
- Traffic report: Come on and slam, and welcome to the jam
- Gallery: Wildlife photos by the book
- News from the WMF: WMF Board announces Community Culture Statement
- Recent research: Automatic detection of covert paid editing; Wiki Workshop 2020
- Community view: Transit routes and mapping during stay-at-home order downtime
- WikiProject report: Revitalizing good articles
- On the bright side: 500,000 articles in the Egyptian Arabic Wikipedia
The Signpost: 28 June 2020
[edit]- News and notes: Progress at Wikipedia Library and Wikijournal of Medicine
- Community view: Community open letter on renaming
- Gallery: After the killing of George Floyd
- In the media: Part collaboration and part combat
- Discussion report: Community reacts to WMF rebranding proposals
- Featured content: Sports are returning, with a rainbow
- Arbitration report: Anti-harassment RfC and a checkuser revocation
- Traffic report: The pandemic, alleged murder, a massacre, and other deaths
- News from the WMF: We stand for racial justice
- Recent research: Wikipedia and COVID-19; automated Wikipedia-based fact-checking
- Humour: Cherchez une femme
- On the bright side: For what are you grateful this month?
- WikiProject report: WikiProject Black Lives Matter
The Signpost: 2 August 2020
[edit]- Special report: Wikipedia and the End of Open Collaboration?
- COI and paid editing: Some strange people edit Wikipedia for money
- News and notes: Abstract Wikipedia, a hoax, sex symbols, and a new admin
- In the media: Dog days gone bad
- Discussion report: Fox News, a flight of RfAs, and banning policy
- Featured content: Remembering Art, Valor, and Freedom
- Traffic report: Now for something completely different
- News from the WMF: New Chinese national security law in Hong Kong could limit the privacy of Wikipedia users
- Obituaries: Hasteur and Brian McNeil
The Signpost: 30 August 2020
[edit]- News and notes: The high road and the low road
- In the media: Storytelling large and small
- Featured content: Going for the goal
- Special report: Wikipedia's not so little sister is finding its own way
- Op-Ed: The longest-running hoax
- Traffic report: Heart, soul, umbrellas, and politics
- News from the WMF: Fourteen things we’ve learned by moving Polish Wikimedia conference online
- Recent research: Detecting spam, and pages to protect; non-anonymous editors signal their intelligence with high-quality articles
- Arbitration report: A slow couple of months
- From the archives: Wikipedia for promotional purposes?
Wrong description "Anna Mghwira"
[edit]Hi, i'm from Catalan Wikipedia and I realized that when I was doing the general elections in Tanzania, one of its candidates, Anna Mghwira, had all wrong description put by your bot in WikiData. Mghwira is a politician of Tanzania, not Nigeria, two completely different countries. I would appreciate it if you would monitor whatever the bot has done in WD similar to Mghwira. I will change her profile now. --KajenCAT (talk) 08:04, 1 September 2020 (UTC)
New Wikipedia Library Collections Now Available (September 2020)
[edit]
Hello Wikimedians!
The Wikipedia Library is announcing new free, full-access, accounts to reliable sources as part of our research access program. You can sign up for new accounts and research materials on the Library Card platform:
- Al Manhal – Arabic journals and ebooks
- Ancestry.com – Genealogical and historical records
- RILM – Music encyclopedias
Many other partnerships are listed on our partners page, including Adam Matthew, EBSCO, Gale and JSTOR.
A significant portion of our collection now no longer requires individual applications to access! Read more in our recent blog post.
Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects!
--The Wikipedia Library Team 09:49, 3 September 2020 (UTC)
- This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message tool to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.
The Signpost: 27 September 2020
[edit]- Special report: Paid editing with political connections
- News and notes: More large-scale errors at a "small" wiki
- In the media: WIPO, Seigenthaler incident 15 years later
- Featured content: Life finds a Way
- Arbitration report: Clarifications and requests
- Traffic report: Is there no justice?
- Recent research: Wikipedia's flood biases
The Signpost: 28 December 2020
[edit]- Arbitration report: 2020 election results
- Featured content: Very nearly ringing in the New Year with "Blank Space" – but we got there in time.
- Traffic report: 2020 wraps up
- Recent research: Predicting the next move in Wikipedia discussions
- Essay: Subjective importance
- Gallery: Angels in the architecture
- Humour: 'Twas the Night Before Wikimas
The Signpost: 31 January 2021
[edit]- News and notes: 1,000,000,000 edits, board elections, virtual Wikimania 2021
- Special report: Wiki reporting on the insurrection
- In focus: From Anarchy to Wikiality, Glaring Bias to Good Cop: Press Coverage of Wikipedia's First Two Decades
- Technology report: The people who built Wikipedia, technically
- Videos and podcasts: Celebrating 20 years
- News from the WMF: Wikipedia celebrates 20 years of free, trusted information for the world
- Recent research: Students still have a better opinion of Wikipedia than teachers
- Humour: Dr. Seuss's Guide to Wikipedia
- Featured content: New Year, same Featured Content report!
- Traffic report: The most viewed articles of 2020
- Obituary: Flyer22 Frozen
New Wikipedia Library Collections Available Now (February 2021)
[edit]Hello Wikimedians!
The Wikipedia Library is announcing new free, full-access, accounts to reliable sources as part of our research access program. You can sign up to access research materials on the Library Card platform:
- Taxmann – Taxation and law database
- PNAS – Official journal of the National Academy of Sciences
- EBSCO – New Arabic and Spanish language databases added
We have a wide array of other collections available, and a significant number now no longer require individual applications to access! Read more in our blog post.
Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects!
- This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message tool to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.
--12:57, 1 February 2021 (UTC)
The Signpost: 28 February 2021
[edit]- News and notes: Maher stepping down
- Disinformation report: A "billionaire battle" on Wikipedia: Sex, lies, and video
- In the media: Corporate influence at OSM, Fox watching the hen house
- News from the WMF: Who tells your story on Wikipedia
- Featured content: A Love of Knowledge, for Valentine's Day
- Traffic report: Does it almost feel like you've been here before?
- Gallery: What is Black history and culture?
The Signpost: 28 March 2021
[edit]- News and notes: A future with a for-profit subsidiary?
- Gallery: Wiki Loves Monuments
- In the media: Wikimedia LLC and disinformation in Japan
- News from the WMF: Project Rewrite: Tell the missing stories of women on Wikipedia and beyond
- Recent research: 10%-30% of Wikipedia’s contributors have subject-matter expertise
- From the archives: Google isn't responsible for Wikipedia's mistakes
- Obituary: Yoninah
- From the editor: What else can we say?
- Arbitration report: Open letter to the Board of Trustees
- Traffic report: Wanda, Meghan, Liz, Phil and Zack
New translator for da and sv
[edit]I added myself to https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:Emijrp/Friendly_users_for_translations#Translators, how do we proceed?--So9q (talk) 09:33, 30 March 2021 (UTC)
The Signpost: 25 April 2021
[edit]- From the editor: A change is gonna come
- Disinformation report: The Trump Organization's paid editors
- In the media: Fernando, governance, and rugby
- Opinion: The (Universal) Code of Conduct
- Op-Ed: A Little Fun Goes A Long Way
- Changing the world: The reach of protest images on Wikipedia
- Recent research: Quality of aquatic and anatomical articles
- Traffic report: The verdict is guilty, guilty, guilty
- News from Wiki Education: Encouraging professional physicists to engage in outreach on Wikipedia
The Signpost: 27 June 2021
[edit]- News and notes: Elections, Wikimania, masking and more
- In the media: Boris and Joe, reliability, love, and money
- Disinformation report: Croatian Wikipedia: capture and release
- Recent research: Feminist critique of Wikipedia's epistemology, Black Americans vastly underrepresented among editors, Wiki Workshop report
- Traffic report: So no one told you life was gonna be this way
- News from the WMF: Searching for Wikipedia
- WikiProject report: WikiProject on open proxies interview
- Forum: Is WMF fundraising abusive?
- Discussion report: Reliability of WikiLeaks discussed
- Obituary: SarahSV
The Signpost: 25 July 2021
[edit]- News and notes: Wikimania and a million other news stories
- Special report: Hardball in Hong Kong
- In the media: Larry is at it again
- Board of Trustees candidates: See the candidates
- Traffic report: Football, tennis and marveling at Loki
- News from the WMF: Uncapping our growth potential – interview with James Baldwin, Finance and Administration Department
- Humour: A little verse
Welcome back?
[edit]Hi, welcome back? I see you and your bot have started editing again recently. While you've been away I've been running Wikidata:Requests for permissions/Bot/Emijrpbot 6 (following a request) using User:Pi bot, did you want to take that task back over again? I've also made various tweaks to the code, see the links on the bot user page for the latest version. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 13:21, 28 July 2021 (UTC)
- ... or not? If you are around, you might be interested in phab:T290718 to improve matching between new Wikipedia articles and Wikidata items, which I'm proposing as an Outreachy project. Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 09:55, 10 September 2021 (UTC)
New Wikipedia Library collections and design update (August 2021)
[edit]Hello Wikimedians!
The Wikipedia Library is pleased to announce the addition of new collections, alongside a new interface design. New collections include:
- Cabells – Scholarly and predatory journal database
- Taaghche - Persian language e-books
- Merkur, Musik & Ästhetik, and Psychologie, Psychotherapie, Psychoanalyse - German language magazines and journals published by Klett-Cotta
- Art Archiv, Capital, Geo, Geo Epoche, and Stern - German language newspapers and magazines published by Gruner + Jahr
Additionally, De Gruyter and Nomos have been centralised from their previous on-wiki signup location on the German Wikipedia. Many other collections are freely available by simply logging in to The Wikipedia Library with your Wikimedia login!
We are also excited to announce that the first version of a new design for My Library was deployed this week. We will be iterating on this design with more features over the coming weeks. Read more on the project page on Meta.
Lastly, an Echo notification will begin rolling out soon to notify eligible editors about the library (T132084). If you can translate the notification please do so at TranslateWiki!
--The Wikipedia Library Team 13:23, 11 August 2021 (UTC)
- This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message tool to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.
Your bot
[edit]Hi. We are grateful to your bot for its contributions, but sometimes it serves as a conductor of typos as I explain here. Please do the necessary. Thanks. --E4024 (talk) 19:02, 18 August 2021 (UTC)
The Signpost: 29 August 2021
[edit]- News and notes: Enough time left to vote! IP ban
- In the media: Vive la différence!
- Wikimedians of the year: Seven Wikimedians of the year
- Gallery: Our community in 20 graphs
- News from Wiki Education: Changing the face of Wikipedia
- Recent research: IP editors, inclusiveness and empathy, cycles, and world heritage
- WikiProject report: WikiProject Days of the Year Interview
- Traffic report: Olympics, movies, and Afghanistan
- Community view: Making Olympic history on Wikipedia
Inappropriate alias(es) by your bot
[edit]Hello. Your bot has been repeatedly adding as an alias to Firouz Nosrat-ed-Dowleh III (Q983416) : « Prince Firouz Nosrat-ed-Dowleh III », which I had to repeatedly revert. May I remind you that a title or function followed by a name (Mr, Mrs, Prince, King, General, President, Surgeon general, etc) does not constitute an alias of the said name. I hope the bot has not been doing this to too many other pages. Can you please do the necessary. Thanks. --Sapphorain (talk) 20:48, 12 September 2021 (UTC)
- Sapphorain: Why isn't appropiate? Where can I read such Wikidata policy about aliases? Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 18:05, 13 September 2021 (UTC)
- Alias means « otherwise known as ». As a substantive it means « pseudonym » or « false name » or « nickname » or « pen name » . A title or quality is not part of such: "Mister John Smith" is not an alias for "John Smith". "Jijé (Q741204)" is an alias for "Joseph Gillain" (and conversely), but "Mr Joseph Gillain" is not. « Charles the Bald (Q71231) » is an alias for "Charles II" (and conversely), but not "King Charles the Bald", nor "King Charles II" .--Sapphorain (talk) 23:54, 13 September 2021 (UTC)
- ... And may I add that apparently your bot indiscriminately add as aliases unsourced names read in Wikipedia article, and even stupid pranks put there by a vandal, as it recently did in Gabriel Cramer (Q122331) ("Gabriel Guzzy" for Gabriel Cramer). Aliases should not be retrieved automatically by a bot, but should be verified by a human. Can you please do the necessary. Thanks.--Sapphorain (talk) 07:38, 14 September 2021 (UTC)
- Alias means « otherwise known as ». As a substantive it means « pseudonym » or « false name » or « nickname » or « pen name » . A title or quality is not part of such: "Mister John Smith" is not an alias for "John Smith". "Jijé (Q741204)" is an alias for "Joseph Gillain" (and conversely), but "Mr Joseph Gillain" is not. « Charles the Bald (Q71231) » is an alias for "Charles II" (and conversely), but not "King Charles the Bald", nor "King Charles II" .--Sapphorain (talk) 23:54, 13 September 2021 (UTC)
- Sapphorain: Mister ABC is not comparable to Prince ABC. Mister could apply to any person (male), so it is redundant. Prince ABC is a possible search term, and it helps. Think about General Douglas MacArthur or General Augusto Pinochet. Aliases work as redirects here. Gabriel Guzzy is an unfortunate case, it is a vandalism (thanks for the revert), and it applies to any automated copy of data from Wikipedia to Wikidata. Any bot importing data from Wikipedia (birth dates, names, birth places) can be fooled by vandals, it happens in a little percent of cases. Please, can you show the Wikidata policy on aliases or it is just your opinion/feeling? I think that Prince/General, etc, are valid aliases. Still, in good faith, I am going to stop that bot script by now. Emijrp (talk) 17:47, 14 September 2021 (UTC)
- Concerning the sense of the word « alias » I don’t really care if a Wikidata policy on aliases exists or not. If I need an information on lexicography or grammar I look in a dictionary or encyclopedia, not in Wikidata which has no authority whatsoever in that matter. The fact that Augusto Pinochet was a general is well documented in his Wikidata page. But this title of general is not part of any name, and a fortiori cannot be part of any alias, by definition of the word « alias ».--Sapphorain (talk) 08:30, 15 September 2021 (UTC)
- Your view of the scope of aliases is needlessly narrow and myopic, Sapphorain. They're strings which help users, human or software, to find items. Far from "a fortiori cannot be part of any alias, by definition of the word", any string which can or might be used to locate the item is useful and is for WD purposes, an alias. The probability that somewhere, someone or something will try to access the Pinochet article starting from strings such as 'General Pinochet' or 'General Augusto Pinochet' is pretty much certain. It is better that the item is found when either of those strings is the start point, than that the item is not found because you have a limited conception of the functions of an alias. In general the robustness principle applies to aliases: be liberal in what you accept as aliases; don't try to whittle alias lists down on spurious & irrelevant grounds. --Tagishsimon (talk) 19:47, 15 September 2021 (UTC)
- (after edit conflict) @Sapphorain: Wikidata is a multi-lingual project. Relying on the dictionary definition of a word in one language is a very poor basis for an argument here. If we have a case where there are small variations in meaning between English, Arabic, Russian and Spanish, whose language takes precedence in an argument? That is why the consensus of editors takes precedence here. I am not sure what the consensus is on this subject but the dictionary definition of a word in a single language is not relevant. From Hill To Shore (talk) 19:51, 15 September 2021 (UTC)
- If the purpose of an entry called « alias » is « any string which can or might be used to locate the item », then please do not call it an « alias », because nearly any other denomination would be more appropriate.
- Also, the « multi-lingual project » argument doesn’t appear convincing. Each language (should) use its correct description for … how did you say? … « any string which can or might be used to locate the item ».--Sapphorain (talk) 22:28, 15 September 2021 (UTC)
- Concerning the sense of the word « alias » I don’t really care if a Wikidata policy on aliases exists or not. If I need an information on lexicography or grammar I look in a dictionary or encyclopedia, not in Wikidata which has no authority whatsoever in that matter. The fact that Augusto Pinochet was a general is well documented in his Wikidata page. But this title of general is not part of any name, and a fortiori cannot be part of any alias, by definition of the word « alias ».--Sapphorain (talk) 08:30, 15 September 2021 (UTC)
- Sapphorain: Mister ABC is not comparable to Prince ABC. Mister could apply to any person (male), so it is redundant. Prince ABC is a possible search term, and it helps. Think about General Douglas MacArthur or General Augusto Pinochet. Aliases work as redirects here. Gabriel Guzzy is an unfortunate case, it is a vandalism (thanks for the revert), and it applies to any automated copy of data from Wikipedia to Wikidata. Any bot importing data from Wikipedia (birth dates, names, birth places) can be fooled by vandals, it happens in a little percent of cases. Please, can you show the Wikidata policy on aliases or it is just your opinion/feeling? I think that Prince/General, etc, are valid aliases. Still, in good faith, I am going to stop that bot script by now. Emijrp (talk) 17:47, 14 September 2021 (UTC)
The Signpost: 26 September 2021
[edit]- News and notes: New CEO, new board members, China bans
- In the media: The future of Wikipedia
- Op-Ed: I've been desysopped
- Disinformation report: Paid promotional paragraphs in German parliamentary pages
- Discussion report: Editors discuss Wikipedia's vetting process for administrators
- Recent research: Wikipedia images for machine learning; Experiment justifies Wikipedia's high search rankings
- Community view: Is writing Wikipedia like making a quilt?
- Traffic report: Kanye, Emma Raducanu and 9/11
- News from Diff: Welcome to the first grantees of the Knowledge Equity Fund
- WikiProject report: The Random and the Beautiful
The Signpost: 31 October 2021
[edit]- From the editor: Different stories, same place
- News and notes: The sockpuppet who ran for adminship and almost succeeded
- Discussion report: Editors brainstorm and propose changes to the Requests for adminship process
- Recent research: Welcome messages fail to improve newbie retention
- Community view: Reflections on the Chinese Wikipedia
- Traffic report: James Bond and the Giant Squid Game
- Technology report: Wikimedia Toolhub, winners of the Coolest Tool Award, and more
- Serendipity: How Wikipedia helped create a Serbian stamp
- Book review: Wikipedia and the Representation of Reality
- WikiProject report: Redirection
- Humour: A very Wiki crossword
The Signpost: 29 November 2021
[edit]- In the media: Denial: climate change, mass killings and pornography
- WikiCup report: The WikiCup 2021
- Deletion report: What we lost, what we gained
- From a Wikipedia reader: What's Matt Amodio?
- Arbitration report: ArbCom in 2021
- Discussion report: On the brink of change – RFA reforms appear imminent
- Technology report: What does it take to upload a file?
- WikiProject report: Interview with contributors to WikiProject Actors and Filmmakers
- Serendipity: "Did You Know ..." featured a photo of the wrong female WWII pilot
- News from Diff: Content translation tool helps create one million Wikipedia articles
- Traffic report: Reporting ticket sales on the edge of the Wiki, if Eternals should fail
- Recent research: Vandalizing Wikipedia as rational behavior
- Humour: A very new very Wiki crossword
Adding (human) data to Wikimedia disambiguation pages
[edit]Considering your bot's recent edits to Ove Hansen (Q108532650) (and a few others which I've reverted today), I suggest that your bot does not add data to any Wikimedia disambiguation page (Q4167410) items.--Hjart (talk) 09:34, 19 December 2021 (UTC)
- @Hjart: Thanks for the notice. I have fixed the bot code. Regards. Emijrp (talk) 14:29, 22 December 2021 (UTC)
Why not import the more precise dates?
[edit]Why doesn't your bot import the more precise birth/death dates from i.e. Palle Hansen?--Hjart (talk) 18:49, 23 December 2021 (UTC)
The Signpost: 28 December 2021
[edit]- From the editor: Here is the news
- News and notes: Jimbo's NFT, new arbs, fixing RfA, and financial statements
- Serendipity: Born three months before her brother?
- In the media: The past is not even past
- Arbitration report: A new crew for '22
- By the numbers: Four billion words and a few numbers
- Deletion report: We laughed, we cried, we closed as "no consensus"
- Gallery: Wikicommons presents: 2021
- Traffic report: Spider-Man, football and the departed
- Crossword: Another Wiki crossword for one and all
- Humour: Buying Wikipedia
What's going on?
[edit]What prompted these edits? Is that intentional? Regards — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 21:41, 28 January 2022 (UTC)
- A response would be appreciated, thank you — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 13:38, 31 January 2022 (UTC)
- Yes, it was intentional. Just a test. Emijrp (talk) 21:02, 31 January 2022 (UTC)
- Okay, copying unicode characters to different language labels does not seem helpful, would you agree? Should the bot be blocked if it makes these kinds of edits again? — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 12:38, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- What edits are you talking about? Emijrp (talk) 17:01, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- @MSGJ And why are you reverting the aliases added in that edit? Other languages include those unicode emojis as aliases. Why other languages aren't allowed to have them? Emijrp (talk) 17:16, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- Suppose we put aside, for the moment, whether these edits are actually "allowed" or not by policy. What benefit does that edit serve the project? And does your bot have approval to make such edits? I didn't really understand what you meant above when you said "just a test" - please can you explain? — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 18:40, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- Wikidata:Aliases doesn't say anything about excluding emojis. That is the nearest thing to a policy about aliases we have. If you want to exclude emojis from being added to aliases, please open a discussion for community input. Currently, they are used in many items.
- I don't need a bot request to add aliases to Q2. It is just an item, that is why I said it was a test.
- Reading your comment, I think that you have deleted emojis from aliases before, right? 🤔 Emijrp (talk) 21:40, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- Suppose we put aside, for the moment, whether these edits are actually "allowed" or not by policy. What benefit does that edit serve the project? And does your bot have approval to make such edits? I didn't really understand what you meant above when you said "just a test" - please can you explain? — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 18:40, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- Okay, copying unicode characters to different language labels does not seem helpful, would you agree? Should the bot be blocked if it makes these kinds of edits again? — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 12:38, 1 February 2022 (UTC)
- Yes, it was intentional. Just a test. Emijrp (talk) 21:02, 31 January 2022 (UTC)
The Signpost: 30 January 2022
[edit]- Special report: WikiEd course leads to Twitter harassment
- News and notes: Feedback for Board of Trustees election
- Interview: CEO Maryana Iskander "four weeks in"
- Black History Month: What are you doing for Black History Month?
- Deletion report: Ringing in the new year: Subject notability guideline under discussion
- WikiProject report: The Forgotten Featured
- Arbitration report: New arbitrators look at new case and antediluvian sanctions
- Traffic report: The most viewed articles of 2021
- Gallery: No Spanish municipality without a photograph
- Obituary: Twofingered Typist
- Op-Ed: Identifying and rooting out climate change denial
- Essay: The prime directive
- Opinion: Should the Wikimedia Foundation continue to accept cryptocurrency donations?
- In the media: Fuzzy-headed government editing
- Recent research: Articles with higher quality ratings have fewer "knowledge gaps"
- Serendipity: Pooh entered the Public Domain – but Tigger has to wait two more years
- Crossword: Cross swords with a crossword
The Signpost: 27 February 2022
[edit]- From the team: Selection of a new Signpost Editor-in-Chief
- News and notes: Impacts of Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Special report: A presidential candidate's team takes on Wikipedia
- In the media: Wiki-drama in the UK House of Commons
- Technology report: Community Wishlist Survey results
- WikiProject report: 10 years of tea
- Featured content: Featured Content returns
- Deletion report: The 10 most SHOCKING deletion discussions of February
- Recent research: How editors and readers may be emotionally affected by disasters and terrorist attacks
- Arbitration report: Parties remonstrate, arbs contemplate, skeptics coordinate
- Gallery: The vintage exhibit
- Traffic report: Euphoria, Pamela Anderson, lies and Netflix
- News from Diff: The Wikimania 2022 Core Organizing Team
- Crossword: A Crossword, featuring Featured Articles
- Humour: Notability of mailboxes
the 1.5 billionth edit
[edit]Although this edit was made last September, But I still want to inform you that your robot has made oldid=1500000000's edit. Congratulations!--Q28 is not live in Q28 05:27, 3 March 2022 (UTC)
- Q28: Thanks for the notice. That's cool, I didn't know about it. Emijrp (talk) 16:53, 3 March 2022 (UTC)
Unicode characters
[edit]Since I saw special:Diff/1569658645, feel free to add "символ Юникода" as the Russian translation and "Unicode-Zeichen" as the German one. 𝟙𝟤𝟯𝟺𝐪𝑤𝒆𝓇𝟷𝟮𝟥𝟜𝓺𝔴𝕖𝖗𝟰 (𝗍𝗮𝘭𝙠) 13:26, 14 March 2022 (UTC)
Esperanto descriptions
[edit]Hi, why isn't your bot adding feminine descriptions in Esperanto, as it does in Spanish, French etc.? Is that on purpose? See here for an example (it should have added brazila aktorino). Regards, —capmo (talk) 02:06, 22 March 2022 (UTC)
New Wikipedia Library Collections Available Now - April 2022
[edit]Hello Wikimedians!
The Wikipedia Library has free access to new paywalled reliable sources. You can these and dozens more collections at https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/:
- Wiley – journals, books, and research resources, covering life, health, social, and physical sciences
- OECD – OECD iLibrary, Data, and Multimedia published by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
- SPIE Digital Library – journals and eBooks on optics and photonics applied research
Many other sources are freely available for experienced editors, including collections which recently became accessible to all eligible editors: Cambridge University Press, BMJ, AAAS, Érudit and more.
Do better research and help expand the use of high quality references across Wikipedia projects: log in today!
--The Wikipedia Library Team 13:17, 26 April 2022 (UTC)
- This message was delivered via the Global Mass Message tool to The Wikipedia Library Global Delivery List.
[fr] for scientific articles
[edit]Hi Emijrp !
Can you please change your description article scientifique (publié xxxx) in article scientifique publié en xxxx please ?
Thanks you,
Chaton (Wyslijp16)
- Pull request: https://github.com/emijrp/wikidata/pull/86 -Framawiki (please notify !) (talk) 18:07, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
- done, thanks. Emijrp (talk) 19:35, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
Vandalism in Amber Heard (Q229166)
[edit]Hi, the bot keeps including a vandalic alias in Amber Heard (Q229166) [1][2]. I don't know how that works but it seems something to bring it to your attention.—Frodar (talk) 16:02, 13 May 2022 (UTC)
Vandalized aliases
[edit]Hello! Just curious, where does the bot pull the information to add to the aliases? This edit is vandalism, so the bot must have copied bad data from somewhere – wondering where, so it can be fixed. :) –FlyingAce✈hello 05:51, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
- @FlyingAce: Bot gets it from the Wikipedia in that language, in this case Spanish (es), in that date. Emijrp (talk) 14:38, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
- Thanks! I'll keep it in mind in case I see similar, more recent edits. –FlyingAce✈hello 16:31, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
- I completely understand that this edit was the result of the bot responding to enwiki vandalism. But when the vandalism was reverted some days later, shouldn't the bot have responded to that also, by undoing its own addition to WD? DS (talk) 22:02, 20 August 2022 (UTC)
- Thanks! I'll keep it in mind in case I see similar, more recent edits. –FlyingAce✈hello 16:31, 23 June 2022 (UTC)
knowledge panel
[edit]Hello. It is a knowledge panel that I created; however, it only appears after I add the following link to my browser: https://g.co/kgs/RmhvoG And it does not appear after a Google search. There might be a technical problem. It worked a couple of months ago, before I remove a website (an expired website). Thank you in advance! HoumanKia (talk) 18:03, 3 August 2022 (UTC)
Irish grammar
[edit]Hi — unfortunately it looks like your bot has added many Irish language descriptions with incorrect grammar. For example, "Viciméid catagóir" should be "catagóir Wikimedia"... wrong word order. Is there source code somewhere where I can provide the correct translations? Do you have a way of having the bot go back and correct these errors? Thanks. Kevin Scannell (talk) 12:26, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
- Sure, the code is here (line 1593 for gaelic). Thanks for your comment. Emijrp (talk) 16:32, 2 September 2022 (UTC)
Slovene descriptions: kategorija Wikimedije > kategorija Wikimedie
[edit]Hello, Emijrp. You've added kategorija Wikimedije to a number of pages for description in Slovene (sl) (e.g. here), but the correct spelling would be kategorija Wikimedie (for the rationale, see e.g. [3], [4]). Could you please correct that? It will be much appreciated. --TadejM (talk) 14:01, 21 February 2023 (UTC)
- Hello, Emijrp. Are you still active here? I look forward to your reply. Thank you. --TadejM (talk) 03:00, 26 February 2023 (UTC)
- @TadejM: Hello! I can add your fix to the code, but I don't know when I will run the bot again. I am a bit busy right now. Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 18:49, 26 February 2023 (UTC)
- Hello, Emijrp. This is much appreciated. I have posted a request to fix this at Wikidata:Bot requests, so I expect it will get fixed by somebody else in the meantime. --TadejM (talk) 18:54, 26 February 2023 (UTC)
monotypic taxon
[edit]Здравствуйте. Бот неправильно себя ведёт: не делает такие правки [5], если P31=monotypic taxon (Q310890), а не P31=taxon (Q16521). Я думаю, что с остальными подклассами Q16521 ана��огично. Исправьте, пожалуйста. Online translation: Hello. Bot behaves incorrectly: does not make such edits [6], if P31=monotypic taxon (Q310890), and not P31=taxon (Q16521). I think it's the same with the rest of the Q16521 subclasses: Q713623, Q857968, Q855769, Q2612572, Q58051350; Q2568288, Q59278506, Q47487597. Please fix it. -- VladXe (talk) 15:11, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
- Hello @VladXe:. I am only adding labels. In Gomontiellales (Q122842224), why is "Gomontiellales" label correct for English but not for Spanish or German? Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 20:27, 30 September 2023 (UTC)
- В Q122842224 всё правильно, ошибка в том, что, например, в Q122832363 и любых других элементах, где P31=Q310890, такой правки нет. Online translation: Everything is correct in Gomontiellales (Q122842224), the error is that, for example, in Geitlerinematales (Q122832363) and any other elements where P31=monotypic taxon (Q310890), there is no such edit. -- VladXe (talk) 05:49, 4 October 2023 (UTC)
- Как я понял по отсутствию правок бота, исправлять недочёт Вы не собираетесь? Печально. Online translation: As I understand from the lack of edits of the bot, you are not going to fix the flaw? Sadly. VladXe (talk) 06:58, 8 October 2023 (UTC)
Здравствуйте. Элемент Microcaldia (Q124380516) создан месяц назад, а бот до сих пор не добавил метки. Online translation: Hello. The Microcaldia (Q124380516) element was created a month ago, and the bot still hasn't added labels. --VladXe (talk) 06:23, 28 February 2024 (UTC)
Footballers from Wikipedia
[edit]Hello, when you create an item for a footballer on Wikidata based on Wikipedia data, could you add the full date of birth, and not only the year of birth ? Regards Frenchl (talk) 08:33, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
- Can you answer please ? Full date of birth are important for matching with external websites. Frenchl (talk) 14:36, 8 March 2024 (UTC)
- I accept pull requests with code. Emijrp (talk) 15:37, 8 March 2024 (UTC)
citizenship
[edit]Hello,
I see you are automatically adding claims about citizenships people have. Based on what information do you make such claims? If for example all it is is that a description contains words like "Algerian-German rapper" and then you add claims that they hold an Algerian passport that has high likelihood of claiming wrong information. Double citizenship/passport/laws/immigration are highly complex topics and vary from country to country and each individual case. I would highly suggest to refrain from making such claims where people have migrated from one country to another in their lifetime and without knowing the actual facts. Best, Mutante (talk) 18:56, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
- @Mutante Can you provide a diff? I don't think I am adding claims, but references. Emijrp (talk) 19:32, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
Human?
[edit]Why does the bot believe that an elephant is human? This has led to Wikipedia, particularly Women in Red, looking ridiculous in a national newspaper: see https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/mar/08/the-guardian-view-on-wikipedias-female-volunteers-a-hive-heroism-that-changes-history "Though this can lead to some eccentric entries (Louis XIV’s elephant is among Women in Red’s additions)" .... PamD (talk) 23:24, 8 March 2024 (UTC)
- PamD, I have removed the properties human and female from Q1326205. TSventon (talk) 21:49, 17 March 2024 (UTC)
inferring from full name
[edit]Hi! Can you please check this edit? Label is not necessarily the full name. There are many items for people with alias/pseudonym set as the label. -- Meisam (talk) 21:15, 18 March 2024 (UTC)
Inferred from person's full name - incorrect script
[edit]Hello. I've noticed that your bot adds Latin script names for Russian names of Kazakhstani citizens instead of Cyrillic variant: diff. Nyuhn (talk) 23:56, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Emijrpbot adds incorrect description in Bengali
[edit]Emijrpbot translates "Palestinian" as "ফিলিস্তিনীয়" in Bengali. But the correct translation is "ফিলিস্তিনি". Please make necessary correction to your bot. — T@hmid (T@lk) 13:17, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
- I just noticed that the edit where I saw this error had been made in 2017. So, if you already made correction, plase ignore this message. — T@hmid (T@lk) 13:20, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
Hola, @Emijrp, como operador del bot, te solicito por favor de no insistir en colocar el alias del idioma bretón ya que además de los apellidos del presidente contiene un término (un cubanismo) cuyo significado es un insulto. Ya he limpiado manualmente, deshecho las ediciones (en el resumen de edición mencioné que es un insulto) y el bot insiste en agregarlo. Al artículo en bretón le acabo de corregir su entradilla. Gracias por tu colaboración. Madamebiblio (talk) 16:22, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
- Hola. Al haber corregido el vandalismo de la página en bretón, ya no será copiado más a Wikidata. Saludos. Emijrp (talk) 16:35, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Ted Schwinden
[edit]The date you added to the picture in Ted Schwinden (Q880356) can not be 2022. Se text in [7]. I do not think the bot can use the date in commons since it can be anything. Maundwiki (talk) 20:36, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
- Hello. I have added some more checks. The date in the infobox, EXIF and SDC must be the same. Also, dates after death are discarded. And photos must have valid EXIF (camera manufacturer, to exclude scans pictures not made with a digital camera). Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 06:29, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Similar case: [8]. Photography said to have been taken in 2017, yet the depicted person died in 2014. --Matěj Suchánek (talk) 07:15, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- Same here. Please, fix it. — Draceane talkcontrib. 18:26, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
Wayne Wickelgren
[edit]I am very worried about the reliability of your bot's edits. In Wayne Wickelgren (Q126733830) it added a date of birth which looks completely incorrect and was never included in the article en:Wayne Wickelgren. Is also added an incorrect occupation. Where did it get this data from? How can we trust all of its other edits? — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 10:51, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
mul support
[edit]Hi there! Wikipedia rolled out mul for labels today, which allows us to specify a default label for an item. By adding a mul label, we no longer need to duplicate that value for each language.
Are we able to update the bot to check if a "mul" label is defined, and avoid adding any new language labels with the same value?
If the value is different from the mul's value, it should continue to be added.
Keep in mind that mul has not been fully rolled out, and mul values shouldn't be added by bots yet.
Thank you for your consideration, and let me know if I can provide any additional details or examples. Iamcarbon (talk) 07:19, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
- Hi, +1. Cheers, VIGNERON (talk) 11:05, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
- @Iamcarbon: Hello. As soon as I learnt about one month ago that mul: was going to be deployed, I stopped the scripts which added labels for multiple languages. That was a feature should has existed from the beginning, but it's fine, it's here finally. Anyway, I think it will establish a difference between big languages and small languages. I think that nobody is going to remove English labels, even if they are the same than in mul:. For example, you removed many small languages labels here but you kept en: es: it:, etc. Finally, there is plenty of stuff to do here in Wikidata, my bot will focus now in those areas. Congratulations for the new awesome feature. Cheers! Emijrp (talk) 13:23, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
- Hi! Thank you for your work, and I want to double-check that we are not missing anything. This is a today's edit. What needs to be done to prevent the bot from adding these labels? Does it copy from another language label that hasn't been removed then? —putnik 14:30, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
- That's from a script that reconciles sitelinks and labels. Now it checks for mul: before adding. Tell me if you see more from now. Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 15:04, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
- Hi! Thank you for your work, and I want to double-check that we are not missing anything. This is a today's edit. What needs to be done to prevent the bot from adding these labels? Does it copy from another language label that hasn't been removed then? —putnik 14:30, 30 July 2024 (UTC)
I came here to mention the same thing, thanks for already been on top of it all! :) ·addshore· talk to me! 10:39, 31 July 2024 (UTC)
Samson Colebrooke
[edit]I fixed but I could not see how the bot 31 juli 2021 kl. 04.56 in Samson Colebrooke (Q107722217) added date of birth (P569) 1999 with English Wikipedia as reference. In the English Wikipedia from 04:46, 31 July 2021 it was 10 May 1997. Maundwiki (talk) 12:52, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- Hello Maundwiki. Check the categories, it says 1999 births. Bot parses from categories. Thanks. Emijrp (talk) 16:17, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks, one of the places with typos. Maundwiki (talk) 20:59, 28 October 2024 (UTC)