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News and notes

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Lead story one

The logo of the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine launched a "Mega Campaign To Saturate Wikipedia With Unbiased Information On Ukraine and the World" on April 22, in cooperation with Wikimedia Ukraine. The initiative is aimed at stemming disinformation about Ukraine and spreading "unbiased facts about the country in various languages on Wikipedia". The campaign is set to begin with a 'Month of Ukranian diplomacy' and will ask editors of Wikipedia to 'correct' and fill gaps on information about the nation. In order to help these movements, the ministries plan to publish various data for incorporation into Wikipedia.

After Раммон posted the article to Jimbo Wales' talk page, users had mixed responses. Guy commented "Good news, well-informed Ukraininans to counter the GRU disinformation campaign", but Carrite considers the campaign tantamount to an "assault on NPOV".

This is not the Ukranian government's first attempt to influence information on their nation. Notably, KyivNotKiev is a campaign begun on October 2, 2018 to get English media to use Kyiv over Kiev when writing about the capital city of Ukraine. As part of a larger "CorrectUA" campaign, the government has seen some success, with various large news companies changing their usage, including the BBC, the Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and The New York Times.

Access to information during the pandemic

Since the beginning of the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic, various information sharing organizations have responded by making some (or all) of their content freely available. JSTOR announced that they were dramatically increasing the content available to 'participating institutions', expanding the free article limit for registered users from six to one-hundred articles a month, and making over 6,000 articles related to the disease free through June 30, 2019. Project MUSE made various resources free to the public (list here), including over 25,000 books and 300 journals.

Hathitrust announced a similar service on April 22, giving member libraries who have disruptions to their services the ability to access materials from Hathitrust that match physical copies the libraries hold. The Internet Archive announced it would would modify its controlled digital lending to lift check-out limits for 1.4 million non-public domain books in its Open Library, becoming a "National Emergency Library" through June 30 or later.

Various authors and writer advocacy groups slammed the Internet Archive, calling its decision "an excuse for piracy". The Authors Guild stated it was "shocked that the IA would use the COVID-19 epidemic as an excuse to push copyright law further out to the edges, and in doing so, harm authors, many of whom are already struggling".

A very big long term project

There are more than 3,000,000 stub articles on the English Wikipedia. That's right – more than half of enWiki's articles are stubs. The 50,000 Destubbing Challenge is taking the bull by the horns. Encyclopædius helped start the project and 25 contributors are now signed up on the main project page. They've destubbed 1,105 articles as of April 21, having started in March with The Great Britain and Ireland Destubathon. The goal is to destub 5,000 articles per year for ten years and ideally move on to a 1 million Destubbing Challenge.

Brief notes

External videos
video icon WikiSeder, 1:05:36, April 13, 2020, from Wikipedia Weekly, (series contents)

References