Oxford Internet Institute marks 15 years of Wikipedia
The Oxford Internet Institute is holding a Wikipedia Editathon today to celebrate Wikipedia's 15th birthday. Researchers have prepared a list of articles that they think needs improving: whether writing from scratch, updating existing articles, or adding citations. They aim to improve Wikipedia entries about the "The Social Internet", which potentially covers everything from Uber to sexting, electoral predictions to the digital divide, freedom of speech to Emoji and data surveillance. Around 30 experts and lay people have signed up already for the 'editathon', which will start at 2pm today lasting three hours. There will also be short research presentations from OII faculty, showing how Wikipedia can help answer questions like: What are the most controversial topics in different cultures, and how do editing wars get resolved? How much interaction is there between the 290 language editions? What does "the world's knowledge" actually look like when overlaid on a map of the world? Who determines what knowledge is recorded and why is the world not represented equally? Launched on January 15, 2001, Wikipedia is ranked among the ten most popular websites and constitutes the Internet's largest and most popular general reference work. Wikipedia got this far by relying on billions of individual contributions by ordinary people. To help celebrate this remarkable encyclopaedic phenomenon, the Oxford Internet Institute is hoping anyone interested in the internet and society will come along.


