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Archive for the 'WikiRage' Category

All the Rage #7: Iron Mom

We’ll keep it short this week, as I’m under the weather and already filing this late. But here’s what Wikipedians cared about last week, courtesy the Wikipedia-monitoring tool WikiRage:

  1. Article: Cyclone Nargis
    Why: Nargis is the name of the tropical storm that hit burma this past week, killing between 60,000 to 100,000 or more.
    Detail: This is Wikipedia at its best: when a major news story, such as the 2004 Indian ocean earthquake and tsunami, breaks and then continues to develop, Wikipedia can become an important news source. Although the page was created barely a week ago, it has been edited nearly 1,000 times and registered nearly 300,00 page views. Abd I’ll predict now that the earthquake near Chengdu will be in this slot next week.

  2. Article: Burma
    Why: See above.
    Detail: The page carries this warning at the top: “The current title of this article, Burma, is disputed. An alternate proposed title is Myanmar.” Not a big surprise to anyone who knows about the debate, but the tragedy seems to have fixed a spotlight on the issue. Since May 9, Wikipedians have expended more than 23,000 words debating it. Right now, I’d say the consensus is leaning back toward Myanmar.

  3. Article: Iron Man (film)
    Why: The number one movie in America, two weeks running.
    Detail: If Cyclone Nargis is Wikipedia at its best, this is Wikipedia at its most fanboyish. And that’s not a criticism, it’s just the fact: Wikipedia brings free information to the masses, but it can’t make them any more interested in weighty subjects than they might have been before.

  4. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: The most consistent page on this list, and probably will be as long as people keep dying.
    Detail: Although the list of those passing this week includes an astronaut and a country singer, you probably haven’t heard of them.

  5. Article: David Archuleta
    Why: This 17-year-old pop singer is the odds-on favorite to win this season’s “American Idol.”
    Detail: How do you think 26-year-old American kickboxer David Archuleta feels about this? Until February 14, his page resided at /David_Archuleta. Now it’s /David_Archuleta_(kickboxer)

  6. Article: American Idol
    Why: The flagship article of the popular TV show.
    Detail: With two more weeks to go, these two pages and possibly others will definitely stay active.

  7. Article: Mother’s Day (United States)
    Why: What could really be said about Mother’s Day? The page isn’t even very long.
    Detail: Oh, there’s plenty to vandalize. I coudn’t seem to find it, but apparently at one time there was a whole section devoted to NASCAR.

  8. Article: American Idol (season 7)
    Why: The page specific to the current season.
    Detail: I can’t quite figure out why this page doesn’t rank higher than the main page for the show, since there is in fact plenty more information about Season 7 here. My guess is that most American Idol fans are not Wikipedia experts, and don’t bother to drill down far enough — though it’s not exactly far — to find this page.

  9. Article: 2008 unrest in Lebanon
    Why: Another current event.
    Detail: What’s that, more violence in the Middle East? I’ll confess to not having followed this one closely, and probably this is true of many. It would almost be more noteworthy if Lebanon was not in crisis. In fact, the so-called Cedar Revolution in 2005 drew more attention than this.

  10. Article: Iron Man
    Why: The page for the superhero featured in the movie discussed above.
    Detail: Is there more more to say? Not really: most of the activity appears to be vandalism and the reverting of said vandalism.

  11. Holdovers this week: Deaths in 2008 is the lone page still on the list from 2 weeks ago.

    Falling off the list: Everything else.

    Recurring themes: You know, kind of… nothing, really.

    Honorable mention: How about one that didn’t recur? This time, to my surprise, none of the pages listed in the top-edited for the week were Featured Articles on the home page of the English-language Wikipedia. This certainly comes as a surprise, and I don’t expect it to be the case next week.

All the Mea Culpas #1

Just a note here that there was/will be no installment of All the Rage this week. This feature leans very heavily on the website WikiRage, which has been down for several days this week. I sent a note to WikiRage developer Craig Wood on Sunday, and he sent back a brief note saying that he’d look into it. Assuming WikiRage is operational again before too long this week, installment #7 will appear as normal next weekend.

Update: As noted by Mr. Wood in the comments, the error was easily fixed, WikiRage is back in action, and so will be our regularly scheduled Wikipedia excavation, next Sunday afternoon.

All the Rage #6: Grand Theft Most Popular Idol

Consulting the WikiRage oracle this week, we discover to my mind the most interesting collection of edited articles since we started the feature. But then I will admit, I already have “Grand Theft Auto IV” pre-ordered.

  1. GTA IV screen cap courtesy Coneee on Flickr.Article: Grand Theft Auto IV soundtrack
    Why: The blockbuster video game commonly known as “GTA IV” will be released Tuesday, but there are reports it has leaked online, and the list of songs and artists has to date not been fully listed.
    Detail: A conscientious editor has tried to call the mob to reason: “This page has zero sources. I understand the game comes out on Tuesday, and there are leaked copies that people have (pirated and otherwise), but unless a credible source lists the soundtrack for the game it has no business being on wikipedia. This entire page is original research or speculation. This page needs to be re-done, or mostly deleted until we can verify the soundtrack from a reliable source.” He tried creating a version based entirely on previously published facts, but his version has not prevailed. But as he acknowledges, if the information is accurate, the page will be verifiable on short order. A losing battle.

  2. Article: Thierry Henry
    Why: French soccer player, the Featured Article (FA) on the Wikipedia Main Page on April 23.
    Detail: 82.69.66.147 of London and 82.20.251.226 of Portsmouth, England really have it in for the guy.

  3. Article: Danica Patrick
    Why: The comely young IndyCar driver/GoDaddy spokesbabe won her first IndyCar race — and became the first woman ever to do so.
    Detail: In contrast to Henry, Patrick has enthusiastic supporters in Ciley Myrus (”YOU GO GIRL!”) and Happy Halter-topped Hippie Chick (”WE LOVE YOU, DANICA!”) but they aren’t helping, either.

  4. Danica Patrick photo courtesy mattindy77 on Flickr.Article: Ocean sunfish
    Why: FA on April 23.
    Detail: Sometimes I wonder why people bother promoting their articles for the recognition, considering the high level of tedious vandalism that frequently occurs, as it did in this case. On the other hand, if I was really into the Ocean sunfish, I would probably take pride in defending its honor.

  5. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Week in, week out, people keep shuffling off this mortal coil.
    Detail: For two weeks in a row, nobody of any significant fame (at least in North America) passed away. Judging by the history page, the most intense interest surrounded the shooting death of a New Orleans rapper named VL Mike.

  6. Article: Super Fun Time
    Why: The mid-season finale of “South Park.”
    Detail: As he has in previous weeks, Professor Chaos — deployer of more userboxes than any other editor I’ve seen — has valiantly defended the page from the inclusion of a Trivia section. Some of his fellow editors are very much annoyed by his insistence that material from the section be moved into the main article, but he is correct that Trivia sections are frowned upon, and there is none in the article now.

  7. Article: Vasa (ship)
    Why: As you may have figured out by now, if the subject has been obsolete for 30 years or more, it must be a FA, as this was on April 24.
    Detail: Seriously, who vandalizes an article about a shipwrecked 17th century Swedish warship? Is it the Swedish part?

  8. Article: American Idol
    Why: It’s still going on, right?
    Detail: It’s come to the point in the season where even I, an ardent non-watcher, know the name of at least one person on the show. But the fact that related articles haven’t appeared on the WikiRage top 10 most-edited much over the past few weeks has to count against its continued relevance.

  9. Pearl Jam concert courtesy _Jer_ on Flickr.Article: Pearl Jam
    Why: FA on April 22.
    Detail: Although considered good enough to be featured on the front page, the article also continued to include fanboy POV like “Pearl Jam continues to generate hit albums, tour successfully, and garner critical acclaim into the 21st century.” in the first section, and still includes a quote asserting they were “the most popular American rock & roll band of the ’90s” just because some guy at All Music Guide said so. Nirvana fans strenuously object.

  10. Article: E=MC² (Mariah Carey album)
    Why: As the title of the article indicates, Mariah Carey’s latest album goes highbrow. Okay, not really.
    Detail: In late March, an editor pointed out on the Talk page, “It should be mentioned in the intro that its a play on the famous formula by einstein.” Why he or she did not simply add it then I don’t know, but it’s better than (but not nearly as fun as) this comment from the Talk page a month before: “whats with that title written on the page???……..is that the new title??…….has it been confirmed??……isnt ‘that Chick’ the official title?? and if it is the official title,whats does the ‘E’ stand for…..d” In any case, today the article helpfully notes the reference, and explains: “The album name means ‘(E) Emancipation (=) equals (MC) Mariah Carey (²) to the second power’.” And I am not sure I am glad we have that cleared up.

  11. Holdovers this week: Nothing from last week returns.

    Falling off the list: Everything from last week.

    Recurring themes: The latest episode of South Park, and Deaths in 2008 makes a comeback.

    Honorable mention: David Archuleta, whose name I alluded to at least recognizing, was in fact #13 for the week.

Images courtesy Coneee, mattindy77 and Jer on Flickr.

All the Rage #5: Alien Altissima

Like we always do about this time, let’s check in with the top 10 most edited Wikipedia articles of the past week, courtesy of the online statistical tool WikiRage.

  1. Article: Virginia Tech massacre
    Why: April 16 is the first anniversary of the tragedy in Blacksburg, Virginia.
    Detail: As you might expect, there was some controversy in choosing this to be the Featured Article on the very first anniversary. And yet Wikipedian self-importance still manages to shine through. Take this comment from the Talk page: “Has anyone else brought up the idea that MAYBE Virginia Tech ribbon courtesy KeyExpert on Flickr.it might be a bad idea to list this as a featured article? I wonder how many other mentally disturbed people like that man might think ‘Wow, I might even get a featured article out of doing something like this!’” Um, that may be overstating the case. Others have pointed out that stories only can be Featured once, so this will not be on the cover again. Meanwhile, debate continues about whether the article should be called something else, such as “Virginia Tech shootings,” “Virginia Tech Tragedy” or “Virginia Tech episode,” as some feel the term “massacre” expresses too much a point of view.

  2. Article: Mark Speight
    Why: The British children’s television show host committed suicide by hanging.
    Detail: That increasingly rare (it seems) most-edited article which is not a “FA,” in Wikipedia short hand, this is a story so sad I hesitate to even explain it here. But in short, I first heard of Speight in January when his fiancee and co-host Natasha Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. After a night of hard partying — too hard by any standards: lots of cocaine, vodka and sleeping pills — Collins was found dead in the couple’s bathtub. Whether overdose or overheat from the bath, Collins’ body was scalded by the water. Speight was initially arrested, but her death was soon ruled “death by misadventure.” Distraught, Speight quit his television show in late February, went missing a few weeks later, and was found just this week. I said it was sad. Meanwhile, Wikipedians try to figure out how and what to say about it.

  3. Article: Over Logging
    Why: In happier news, the latest episode of “South Park” again returns to the list of most-edited articles.
    Detail: In one of this season’s better episodes, the Internet “dries up” and the show turns into an extended riff on “The Grapes of Wrath” as Stan’s family heads to “Californee,” where the old-timers believe there’s a “whole mess of Inernet.” The Internet itself is represented as a ginormous Linksys router in an underground military facility, and the humans try to communicate with it like the spaceship from “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” Eventually, Kyle figures out they just need to unplug it from the wall and plug it back in. Meanwhile, Wikipedians wrestle with the question of references — “Ghostbusters”? Almost, but not obvious enough to warrant mention. “Moonraker”? No, that too was riffing on “Close Encounters.” The recently-cancelled “Jericho”? Apparently not enough people have seen the show to agree or disagree.

  4. Article: The Fires of Pompeii
    Mona Lisa in Japanese characters, courtesy ciro@tokyo on Flickr. Why: Here’s where the U.S.-centric bias of this list comes into play: this was the latest episode of “Doctor Who” on BBC One.
    Detail: I can speak at great length about “South Park” and not at all about “Doctor Who” but when it comes to who produces the better articles — it’s the Brits. Perhaps this owes something to the fact that “Doctor Who” has been on the air for much, much longer than even the veteran cartoon show, and perhaps this owes something as well to the fact that more people are involved in writing, acting and shooting those episodes. This seems to generate coverage that “South Park” — usually written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone the week before it airs — just doesn’t get. That said, fans of the Doctor are in the habit of breaking the article into sections, whereas “South Park” fans tend to write one big paragraph summarizing the episode.

  5. Article: Prom Night (2008 film)
    Why: This PG-13 horror/thriller was released in theaters last weekend.
    Detail: The what? The who? I hadn’t even heard of it until just now, but Box Office Mojo says it was the number one grossing film in America last week, and this weekend it’s holding on to third place. The plot summary is very long already, so that appears to be most of the editing activity. And like “American Idol” edits in recent weeks, this article is edited by a significant percentage of unregistered users. In this case, they may even be a majority.

  6. Article: Lisa del Giocondo
    Why: FA on April 13.
    Detail: You know the woman who posed for Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa? No? Well, this is her. The article was the target of an unusual level of vandalism, even for a FA. Worse, most of it wasn’t even clever.

  7. Article: Trevor Immelman
    Why: He beat Tiger Woods to win the 2008 Masters.
    Detail: I think it’s interesting to look at his his article on the day before won and the state of the article today. It’s not substantially longer or better, but if you compare the Biography sections, there is no question the writing is much stronger.

  8. Tree of heaven, the ghetto palm, courtesy spike55151 on Flickr.Article: Ailanthus altissima
    Why: FA on April 15.
    Detail: Yes, but what is it? A tree. The tree of heaven, it’s called in China to which it is native. Unlike most topics, this one has acquired a (potentially short-lasting) editor who has given themselves the handle Ailanthus altissima editor.

  9. Article: List of Omnitrix aliens
    Why: If I understand this correctly, there is a Cartoon Network show called “Ben 10,” and in this show he can turn into a variety of aliens to fight a variety of villains. A bracelet-like device called the Omnitrix allows him to transform into these creatures. I think the show has just completed its run, and now another series is beginning, “Ben 10: Alien Force.”
    Detail: All I can tell you is that apparently there is a lot to be said about these aliens. And all of a sudden, I can imagine what my parents must have thought when I once might have tried to explain the game “Mega Man.”

  10. Article: Rob & Big
    Why: Another recently concluded television series I’ve never heard of.
    Detail: This one ran on MTV2 and seems to have been a reality show about a professional skateboarder and his best friend/bodyguard. This article might be of some interest to the philosophical debate between Wikipedia “mergists” and “separatists” (don’t worry, it’s not like racial separatism). Roughly speaking, the issue at stake is whether more information should be included in a main article to avoid creating too many short pages vs. whether to break out information into multiple pages to avoid making the main article too long. In this case, every single episode of Rob & Big’s three-season run is summarized on this, the main page. My preference would be to create three new pages, one for each season. However, that would leave almost no content on the main page. So what we have here is an article without much information besides capsule summaries of each episode. A real dilemma. But also not of any great importance compared to, say, the Virginia Tech massacre. I’ll be an Eventualist on this one and assume someone else with more knowledge will come along and improve the article another time.

  11. Holdovers this week: For the first time in the five weeks I’ve been writing this, there are none.

    Falling off the list: Everything from last week.

    Recurring themes: Nothing really, besides the predictable prominence of FAs and pop culture.

    Honorable mention: Deaths in 2008, a hardy perennial of the WikiRage top-edited articles, is nowhere to be found this week. Either nobody you’ve heard of died this week (which is probably true) or WikiRage occasionally misses some. (This may have happened last week with the previous episode of “South Park.”) Considering that this page has been edited more than 500 times since April 14, that’s my guess. I’ll look into the situation a little more, but it’s a reminder that on the web, frustratingly, no metric is completely reliable.

Images courtesy KeyExpert, ciro@tokyo and spike555151 on Flickr.

All the Rage #4: Flame On (and Off)

It’s time once again to turn our attention to what Wikipedians turned their attention to this week, according to the most-edited list at WikiRage.

  1. Article: Suleiman the Magnificent
    Why: This fourteenth century Ottoman sultan was the Featured Article on April 8.
    Detail: As usual, the front-paging of an article results in some vandalism. But the overall effect is salutary, as the article gets closer scrutiny by serious editors. In the meantime, you get enjoyable debates like this: “Article says: ‘Suleiman married a harem girl Roxelana, who became Hürrem Sultan’. I understand that PC or indifference thereto is a controversial subject, but is ‘harem girl’ (although perhaps literally correct) really the best way for us to phrase this? … As a female member of the household, she would still have been part of the harem. I don’t really see a problem with the term. I suppose we could change ‘girl” to ’slave,’ if that’s what the problem is.”

  2. Article: J.K. Rowling
    Why: The children’s author who is wealthier than the Queen was the Featured Article on April 11.
    Detail: At 23:42 GMT on April 12, David4674 reduced the entire article to… nothing. His edit summary was surprisingly forthright: “Blanked the page.” But don’t worry, David4674 isn’t a real editor: he’s a sock puppet of… Dan 689. Both appear to have been banned.

  3. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Passing this week: Monk’s psychiatrist and numerous people I’ve never heard of.
    Detail: Abu Ubaidah al-Masri, an al Qaeda operative in Pakistan is believed to have died of hepatitis in December 2007, but U.S. government sources didn’t announce this until just the past week, hence his inclusion in the list.

  4. Article: Victoria Cross
    Why: Not a television actress from the 1980s, but in fact the highest military decoration in the British Commonwealth. Featured Article? Good guess! It was on April 9.
    Detail: Only the Talk page will tell you that Major General Candy in “The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp” was a fictional recipient of the VC, if it matters, and I am not sure it does.

  5. Article: Yi So-yeon
    Why: As of April 8, this 29 year-old astronaut is the first Korean and second Asian woman in space
    Detail: If you’re envious now, just wait until she starts doing TV commercials. Although you might have to be in South Korea to see them, I’m sure the money is just as good.

  6. Article: 2008 Summer Olympics torch relay
    Why: The ceremonial relay has been in the news for controversy: Human rights protesters have targeted the ceremony, even snuffing out the flame a couple times in France.
    Detail: Not yet making the page: Complaints about the environmental impact of carrying the torch around the globe.

  7. Article: Chrono Trigger
    Why: Not that Wikipedians are opposed to editing video game articles already, but this was the Featured Article on April 10.
    Detail: When the article appeared on Wikipedia’s main page on Thursday, the box art was not included, even though it is included in the article. I’m not sure I quite follow the reasoning, but Wikipedia is lately in the habit of keeping fair use images off the front page, only including an image if it is free use.

  8. Article: Tomb of Antipope John XXIII
    Why: The only question is, when was it the Featured Article? The answer is April 6.
    Detail: I have to admit, this question from the Talk page crossed my mind, too: “If he’s the anti pope, does that mean he worships the anti christ?”

  9. Article: American Idol (seaon 7)
    Why: It’s dominating the iTunes top 10 list, so why shouldn’t it be on the Wikipedia top ten list?
    Detail: Let’s be clear about this: “Also, regarding David Hernandez: As far as I’ve read, only incriminating pictures of him working at the bar were released. I have NEVER heard about any nude pics floating around out there on the net. Could anyone find a source to prove this? (And a link to these alleged ‘nude’ pictures. Not even for personal reasons. I’m just pretty certain only clothed pics of him with the name of the bar he works at were at VFTW and that’s it.)”

  10. Article: Olympic Flame
    Why: See #5.
    Detail: I find all this torch business a little silly, but did you know that in a ceremony involving eleven “priestesses” the torch is lit by the sun’s rays using a parabolic mirror? That’s kind of cool.

  11. Holdovers this week: Deaths in 2008, articles related to controversy involving China and the Olympics (returning from week 2)

    Falling off the list: April 1, 2008; Ima Hogg; Celine Dion; April Fool’s Day; Canada on Strike; Earth Hour; NATO; Google’s hoaxes; Bette Davis

    Recurring themes: Featured Articles being the most-edited of the week.

    Honorable mention: Eek, a Penis! was the episode of South Park this week, and even though it was edited 220 times this week, somehow that wasn’t enough to make the top 100. I’m suspicious; #100 was controversial talk show host Randi Rhodes, and her page was edited less than 100 times in the past week. Hmm.

All the Rage #3: Fools Rush In

Wikipedia vandalism has long been a subject of interest here at Blog P.I. It’s more of a nuisance than a real problem, and it will never go away. No, the better question is, when is it likely to be more common? Do you remember what Tuesday was?

  1. Article: April 1, 2008
    Why: This page is the repository for lists of April Fools Day jokes and pranks, and it goes into the hundreds.
    Detail: April Fool’s Day is in no danger of falling into obscurity: the page was only created on March 31 and subequently edited 1023 times, more than double and nearly triple the number of edits on last week’s most-edited page.

  2. An actual Rick roll, courtesy Rakka on Flickr.
  3. Article: Ima Hogg
    Why: With a name like that, how could it not be vandalism?
    Detail: Well, there’s more to it than that. Wikipedia itself made this the Featured Article on the main page of the English Wikipedia on April 1, with a skewed blurb visible on this user page. Just skewed, not contra-factual. But then the real article itself was indeed beset by April Fool’s jokesters, especially after being mentioned on the Houston Chronicle’s website.

  4. Article: Celine Dion
    Why: This was the Featured Article on April 3rd.
    Detail: A complaint from the talk page: “A few days ago when the FA was a pro wrestling show, there were many complaints, but no one has complained about this? Interesting.”

  5. Article: April Fools’ Day
    Why: This is the article where the greatest hits are collected, under the phrase “Well-Known Pranks.”
    Detail:A disproportionate number of recent additions concern themselves with video game companies.

  6. Article: Canada on Strike
    Why: Not only is this the latest South Park episode, it even made extensive reference to viral videos and Internet celebrities, from Star Wars Kid to Tay Zonday.
    Detail: Unsurprisingly, commentary on Internet phenomena can inspire and inform new ones. From the article: “In the days following the airing of the episode in the U.S., many of the featured videos as linked above hosted on Youtube have received thousands of comments parodying the episode in return, notably the ‘I’m not your…’ sequence, forming a meme of its own.”

  7. Charlton Heston at the Lincoln Monument, courtesy Discover Black Heritage on Flickr.
  8. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: As of week three, still the only page to appear on all three lists.
    Detail: Kind of a down week for the Grim Reaper. Until Charlton Heston passed away last night, just barely making this roundup, we lost… an American-born mad bomber in Bolivia, the last Turkish veteran of WWI, minor hip hop figure Frosty Freeze, a British race horse, and someone who was, until Saturday, Japan’s oldest living woman.

  9. Article: Earth Hour
    Why: A one-hour holiday in which businesses, governments, monuments and websites worldwide turned off the lights to save a bit of energy to demonstrate their nominal concern with the depletion of Earth’s precious resources. A whole hour!
    Detail: Obviously I’m cynical, but I’m far from the only one. Someone in Australia is primarily responsible for the “Criticisms” section, which is no less than a fourth of the entry. All from an Australian perspective. Not mentioned, but I’m thinking of adding: Google drew some flak for turning its home screen black for the hour, even though on many common monitors it actually requires more energy.

  10. Article: NATO
    Why: The Cold War institution was in the news this week, as Croatia and Albania have been invited to start talking about future membership. Putin can’t be happy about that.
    Detail: Many of the edits concern recent developments, but it seems this has also brought attention to other aspects of the article which needed work.

  11. Earth Hour balloon over Sydney, Australia, courtesy Earth Hour on Flickr.
  12. Article: Google’s hoaxes
    Why: Nobody does April Fool’s Day like Google does April Fool’s Day.
    Detail: Google has been known for pulling one big prank in an announcement for every April 1st going back to 2000, but this year they outdid themselves, pranking visitors on many of their sites and services across the world. It seems like just about every division got a chance to dupe its public users. This year was the first for YouTube, which Rickrolled anyone who clicked on the featured videos.

  13. Article: Bette Davis
    Why: Friday was the actress’ 100th birthday, and Wikipedia made her article the Featured Article for the day. Thereby inviting vandals.
    Detail: On the talk page, one person complained: “Why are there tanks at the top of the page?” Some time later, another complained: “Where did the tanks go?”

  14. Holdovers this week: Deaths in 2008

    Falling off the list: Major Boobage, Fitna (film), 2008 Tibetan unrest, American Idol (season 7), Sea otter, iCarly, 2008 unrest in Tibet, Stephen Curry (basketball), American Idol

    Recurring themes: The most recent episode of South Park, a vandalized front page article

    Honorable mention: Rickroll came in at #15.

Images courtesy Rakka, Discover Black Heritage and Earth Hour on Flickr.

All the Rage #2: All the Truthiness that’s Fitna to Vandalize

Stephen Colbert once said of Wikipedia, “any site that’s got a longer entry on ‘truthiness’ than on Lutherans has its priorities straight.” I remember checking on this at the time, and he was correct about the length of the respective articles. And I tend to share his actual point, that people are too interested in entertainment — such as Colbert himself. But that isn’t the end of the story: the spotlight Colbert shone on Wikipedia surely led to the current status quo: the articles for Truthiness and Lutheranism are currently about the same length.

Which is a good jumping off point for the second installment of our look at the top-edited articles on Wikipedia.

  1. Article: Major Boobage
    Why: It’s third episode of South Park’s twelfth season.
    Detail: Last week, the entry for the previous episode was number four on this list. Because a new article will be created for each new episode over the next few weeks, expect weird titles like the above to wind up somewhere on this list each week. And how many edits, total? 433 by noon Sunday EDT.

  2. Article: Fitna (film)
    Why: A 15-minute documentary film criticizing Islam and the Koran, written, directed and produced by Dutch politician Geert Wilders, released on the Internet this week.
    Egg McMuffin, courtesy iiraa on Flickr.Detail: The movie credits actually lists the official website as being at wikipedia.org/wiki/Fitna on both the Dutch (.nl) and English (.en) editions. Problem is, in each case this is a disambiguation page, because it’s an Arabic word with a few related entries already. Was this a simple mistake, or an attempt to supersede the other Wikipedia articles? Either way, whether to move the article for the movie into the space occupied by the disambiguation page has been the most controversial issue surrounding this article, and remains unresolved.

  3. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Passing on this week: actor Richard Widmark, Beatles music executive Neil Aspinall, pioneering radio talker Wally Phillips, NFL draft prospect Heath Benedict, Cambodian photojournalist Dith Pran and my favorite: Herb Peterson, inventor of the Egg McMuffin.
    Detail: This was number three last week as well, although last week’s deaths were more publicized. Also resolved since last week: Abigail Taylor, the Minnesota girl who died following injuries sustained from a public swimming pool, passed muster for notability and has an article again.

  4. Article: 2008 Tibetan unrest
    Why: Violence has subsided but not ended entirely, and governments around the world are weighing whether to boycott the Olympic Games.
    Detail: Last week, this article was on the list as 2008 unrest in Tibet (see below). The article was suggested to be renamed when it became apparent the protests were no longer confined to Tibet. However, the move didn’t actually occur until more than a week later.

  5. Protest of Chinese involvement in Tibet, courtesy Taekwonweirdo on Flickr.Article: American Idol (season 7)
    Why: It’s the current season, and contestants are being eliminated every week.
    Detail: A high number of edits from IP addresses suggest that people unlikely to edit Wikipedia articles otherwise are contributing heavily to this one. My favorite edit summary: “Chikezie’s name has been revealed and known throughout the season, you incompetent twatwaffle. He goes solely by his first name on the show.”

  6. Article: Sea otter
    Why: It was on the Wikipedia Main Page as a Featured Article on Monday, bringing renewed attention to this otherwise uncontroversial subject.
    Detail: Well, not entirely uncontroversial. It was also the target of vandalism in November 6 because of… South Park. Comedy Central is so far out ahead of Wikipedia it’s not even worth keeping count.

  7. Article: ICarly
    Why: The Nickelodeon show just finished its first season, is being released on the Internet and seems to be getting plenty of coverage lately. Aside from that, I’m stumped.
    Detail: That’s really iCarly, but for some reason, the software powering Wikipedia changes lowercase first letters to uppercase. See also: IPod and IPhone.

  8. Article: 2008 unrest in Tibet
    Why: See number four.
    Detail: Had the name not changed mid-week, it would have been the top-edited article of the week.

  9. Davidson star Stephen Curry, courtesy Sail Whitestone on Flickr.Article: Stephen Curry (basketball)
    Why: The son of former Charlotte Hornets star player and current Charlotte Bobcats assistant Del Curry, the younger Curry leads this year’s NCAA playoffs Cinderella team, the Charlotte-area Davidson Wildcats. Later today he’ll lead the Wildcats against Kansas as both vie to crack the Final Four.
    Detail: Curry’s rivals must be turning out, because a high percentage of these edits are vandalism and then the reversion of said vandalism. And I’ll admit, some of it is funny.

  10. Article: American Idol
    Why: See number five.
    Detail: I’m really not the best person to be writing this. After all, I get most of my American Idol news from Tony Kornheiser.

  11. Holdovers this week: 2008 unrest in Tibet, Deaths in 2008.

    Falling off the list: Arthur C. Clarke, Britney’s New Look, Bear Sterns, David Paterson, 2008 NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament, Horton Hears a Who! (film), Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Brian Posehn

Images courtesy iiraa, Taekwonweirdo and Sail Whitestone.

All the Rage #1: Sir Arthur and the Green Knight

Today Blog P.I. launches a new feature, or what I hope will actually become one: a look at the Top 10 most-edited pages on the English-language Wikipedia for the past week, with an explanation for why each page made the top ten. Some will be obvious to anyone who keeps tabs on current events, so rather than giving a terse “duh” I’ll endeavor to pull a non-obvious detail or amusing factoid from the edit history.

This would be completely impossible without WikiRage, an online resource keeping track of the most-edited pages for various time periods and categories. We’ll be using the previous week and the raw number of edits. Also, credit for the concept goes to the podcast Wikipedia Weekly which has done something similar before. However, as I count just three episodes 2008 YTD, it is weekly in name only. Let’s hope that doesn’t happen to us. With that, let’s look at the list for the week of March 16-22:

  1. Article: Arthur C. Clarke
    Why: The celebrated author of “2001: A Space Odyssey” and many other science fiction stories passed away this week at age 90.
    Detail: His death loosed a number of obituaries and many, many edits clarifying many aspects of his life and stories.

  2. Article: 2008 unrest in Tibet
    Why: It’s more than a current event; it’s the worst political turmoil in mainland China since the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations.
    Detail: Despite China’s attempts to keep the lid on news coverage it has generated plenty, and no small amount of disagreement about what belongs in the article.

  3. Article: Deaths in 2008
    Why: Among the notables passing away in the past week: Science fiction writer Clarke, film director Anthony Minghella, actor Paul Scofield, former child aviator Vicki Van Meter.
    Detail: Not currently evident from the page, an editing skirmish over whether to include Abigail Taylor, a six-year-old Minnesota girl who drew headlines when her intestines were partially sucked out by the drain of a public swimming pool.

  4. Article: Britney’s New Look
    Why: It was the new episode of South Park this week. It was also about Britney Spears, which must count for something.
    Detail: Fans of the show take the plot summaries very seriously.

  5. Article: Bear Stearns
    Why: Facing imminent collapse, the brokerage firm sold to JP Morgan Chase for $2 a share, down from $30 the week before and $172 at its height.
    Detail: Bear Stearns has its defenders; the “Controversy” section dealing with the crisis itself is still yo-yoing between deletion and re-inclusion. Who will win? I’d bet on a slightly toned-down and retitled version of that section. One can’t argue the plunge in share price and sale is not a key event in the company’s history.

  6. Article: David Paterson
    Why: Not only is he the new governor of New York, but he’s already embroiled in a controversy over whether he abused state resources in conjunction with admitted romantic affairs.
    Detail: Prior to taking over for Eliot Spitzer this week, Paterson was said to be the first legally blind governor of any U.S. state. However, that may be a matter of dispute.

  7. Article: 2008 NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament
    Why: Productivity plummets (not really) as March Madness sweeps office spaces across the country.
    Detail: This page is amazingly detailed. Whomever designed the bracket templates, I salute you.

  8. Article: Horton Hears a Who! (film)
    Why: It was the number one movie at the U.S. box office this week. Detail: Now that the film has been released, moviegoers are building out the entry. Oh, the things some people see fit to add to Wikipedia entries.

  9. Article: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
    Why: This staple of college-level English courses hasn’t changed in 500 years… right?
    Detail: Turns out there is a new translation of the poem out. At least, that’s where I think what is causing a number of edits aiming to emphasize Freudian and homoerotic subtext in the tale. However, other Wikipedians disagree — and both have been debated on the discussion page. Literary fight! Then again, some vandals want others to confuse it with Monty Python.

  10. Article: Brian Posehn
    Why: On March 19, the comedian and actor mentioned editing his own Wikipedia entry on Late Night with Conan O’Brien
    Detail: It’s amusing how would-be Wikipedia editors can’t even agree on what Posehn actually said.

Well, that’s it for this week. If you have questions or comments about this feature, please let us know.