lots of memes about speedy wikipedia editors — quick thread about what went down on wikipedia in the minutes after her death was announced
at 17:31 UTC, the first reputable sources reported queen's death. and BAM, just like that, edit conflicts ensued grafana.wikimedia.org/d/000000213/ed…
her page had been pretty exciting the whole day, though. here's a post from hours before where people are deciding which historical pic is best (once someone dies, wikipedia generally uses a good historical pic instead of a recent elderly pic)
the FIRST editor to update her death was Sydwhunte, whose edit came in at 17:32 — seconds after the first sources broke the news. Sydwhunte now has bragging rights and a talk page full of fans en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk…
but there was more to do! the Queen Elizabeth II article had more than 55 edits in the next 15 minutes — changing verbs to past tense, updating categories, updating the infobox, etc
A six-membered task force called WikiProject London Bridge cropped up to maintain the following articles. reminder that everyone is doing this for free. they just think it's fun an important en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia…
Note that there's separate article "Death of Elizabeth II"! Two hours before her majesty’s death, user Thriley created a draft article. ~3 minutes after the official death announcement, it was moved from draft to mainspace article en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_and…
and then 10 minutes after the death announcement, the article "Reactions to the death of Elizabeth II" hit the mainspace and immediately there were reactions to "Reactions to the death of Elizabeth II." editors are discussing a merge with "Death of Elizabeth II"
Charles' article changed titles five times while people waited for his official regnal name (it's — surprise —Charles III). Charles, Prince of Wales --> Charles III --> Charles, King of the United Kingdom --> Charles III --> Charles, King of the United Kingdom --> Charles III
btw, Dutch Wikipedian @hayify coined a name for the people who race to change the tense: "deaditors." in a blog post, he discusses that deaditors are more likely to be anonymous users and smartphone editors haykranen.nl/2018/06/15/the…
also heads up that if you're brand new to editing, news topics are not the most beginner-friendly places — they're a bloodbath
one of my favorite data viz projects ever is this @puddingviz project about how public figures' articles get huuuge pageview spikes when they die pudding.cool/2018/08/wiki-d…
it takes some hours for the pageview stats to update but you can already see how much they spiked on September 8th!
that's all I have for now. sorry if this isn't "funny" or "depths" but I think it's cool to see how editors write history in real time! pageviews.wmcloud.org/?project=en.wi…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
inspired by this complaint, which prompted English Wikipedia to switch its sandwich photo from boiled eggs to baloney, here is a thread of the photos used in different language versions of the "sandwich" article
Italian Wikipedia uses a pic of an Italian hoagie uploaded by a guy in New York
Spanish Wikipedia has separate articles for sandwich and bocadillo
Wikipedia editors spent seven years and 140,000 words (longer than Homer's Odyssey) fighting over A SINGLE LETTER in the name of this dairy product. Thread!
In 2002, an anonymous volunteer created the article "Yogurt." Everything was fine until Christmas 2003 when someone named Derek randomly changed it to "Yughurt," the British Commonwealth spelling. An argument EXPLODED. It was like the Revolutionary War had never ended
BTW in the 2000s, tons of British vs. American battles were breaking out — Petrol vs Gasoline, Humor vs Humour, "Orange (colour)" vs. "Orange (color)," corn vs maize (which I posted about last year)
Sometimes Wikipedians get SO sick of people making the same edits over and over and over that they'll add angry invisible comments that pop up when you try to make a change. Thread of my favorites! 1. From "Beyoncé" (Texas birth certificates don't allow accented letters)
way too many people were changing the official wikipedia dog photo to a pic of their own dog
people were trying to mention The Hunger Games in the "See also" section of the Wikipedia article "Apartheid"
Not sure if Wikipedia admin drama translates well to a wide audience but last week, some of the most bizarre and perplexing shit went down??? thread
first of all, there's an article in the @wikisignpost that probably will give a more concise summary of this than I will en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia…
Okay so for a few years, there was this Wikipedia editor named Lourdes who would *occasionally* drop TINY hints that her true identity was Lourdes Hernandez Gonzalez, a moderately popular indie musician from Spain. Everyone was basically like, "okay, cool!"
Wikipedia editors got this article up minutes after the picture was released. Here's how
at 8:19pm ET Thursday night, a French woman with the username Tataral created the article "Donald Trump mug shot." At this point, the article didn't even contain the photo itself because the copyright is a little sticky
Federal mug shots are public domain but this is a state mug shot by Georgia, a state that does NOT classify mug shots as public domain (side note: I just learned that Georgia literally tried to copyright its own laws one time in Georgia v. , Inc).Public.Resource.Org
The Wikipedia editor dog is quite possibly my favorite photo on Wikipedia. Here's the story behind it!
First of all, he has a name! It's Graf, after Poligraf Poligrafovich, the dog in the Russian novella Heart of a Dog. Graf is literally all over Wikipedia. Here he is on the "Mongrel" article
(photo by his owner, Smallbones)
And here he is blocking the driveway
(pic via Smallbones)