From Frenemies to Friends
Transcription
From Frenemies to Friends
From Frenemies to Friends: Wikipedia and your Library Image by Jenny Overview: ● Scope of Wikipedia and why we should care ● Ethics of Wikipedia ● Wikipedia as an opportunity for reference and instruction ● Promoting the visibility of our digital collections through Wikipedia ● Linking Online Resources ● Using Wikipedia to introduce your library to Google ● Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon! / Wikipedia Loves Libraries events A Mission that Deserves our Support Wikipedia’s Scale 30 million articles 288 languages 2 billion edits 8000 views per second 500 million monthly visitors 5th most popular website 2000x larger than Britannica Wikipedia’s volunteers 20 million registered 80,000 active users 1,400 admins Alexa’s Top 500 Sites on the Web 1. Google.com 2. Facebook.com 3. Youtube.com 4. Yahoo.com 5. Baidu.com 6. Amazon.com 7. Wikipedia.org Library Bill of Rights I. Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation. II. Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval. IV. Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups concerned with resisting abridgment of free expression and free access to ideas. (http://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/librarybill) Wikipedia is free content that anyone can use, edit, and distribute: Since all editors freely license their work to the public, no editor owns an article and any contributions can and will be mercilessly edited and redistributed. Respect copyright laws, and never plagiarize from sources. Borrowing non-free media is sometimes allowed as fair use, but strive to find free alternatives first. Five pillars of Wikipedia - Pillar #1 Five pillars of Wikipedia - Pillar #2 Wikipedia Changelogs on The Iraq War: 2004-2009 Five pillars of Wikipedia - Pillar #3 Five pillars of Wikipedia - Pillar #4 Five pillars of Wikipedia - Pillar #5 “Wikiquette” 1. Assume good faith 2. Use the Golden Rule 3. Recognize your own biases and keep them in check 4. Be focused single-mindedly on editing an encyclopedia 5. Do not bite the newcomers 6. No Wikihounding 7. Communicate, communicate, communicate Common Mistakes 1. Creating autobiographical or company articles 2. Using Wikipedia Talk pages as a chat room 3. Getting annoyed when others edit or delete your work. 4. Deleting without explanation 5. Over Wikifying Raise your hand if… you create access to information. you promote information and digital literacy. you teach people how to evaluate information. Wikipedia gives you an OPPORTUNITY to do all three!!! Field Trip! Why edit? ● Be a part of the conversation! ● Contribute to knowledge and constructions of knowledge ● Offer different points of view ● “Digital Outreach” [[WP:TWL/COI]] Alignment-of-interest REGISTER: Create an account, for you individually – not your organization DISCLOSE: Mention and explain your institutional affiliation HIGHLIGHT: Expose your most relevant, substantial collections neutrally INCLUDE: Add relevant collections from other archives that you know of ENGAGE: Respond thoughtfully and clearly to any community concerns “Curators, librarians, archivists, and similar are encouraged to help improve Wikipedia, or share their information in the form of links to their resources.” wikipedia policy Orlowitz, J., & Stinson, A. (2015). Source Discovery Anyone Can Edit [Google slides]. Available here. Case Study #1 Ball State University (Indiana) ● 57 separate links to 40 items in their digital library were added over a 3-month period ● Links mostly added in “External Links” section ● 40 assets viewed 13,000 times - a 600% increase ● 10,000 pageviews were referred via Wikipedia ● 5X greater than pageviews from any other source ● Pageviews for the entire 149 item collection tripled “An overwhelming success, remarkable in its efficiency” “Using Wikipedia to Enhance the Visibility of Digitized Archival Assets”. Michael Szajewski. Ball State University. “Archivists organize records by collections. Therefore, archivists and digital librarians may be susceptible to the tendency to think solely at the collection level when promoting resources. However, the results of this study show that an outreach strategy that limits visibility-raising efforts solely to the collection level is limited in its ability to reach numerous potential digital patrons.” “Using Wikipedia to Enhance the Visibility of Digitized Archival Assets”. Michael Szajewski. Ball State University. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/march13/szajewski/03szajewski.html Linking Online Resources Where to start? The resources to get you on your way! ● See “Contributing to Wikipedia” ● Also: “Wikipedia Editing Policies” ● And for the whole story: “ Editing Wikipedia: A guide to improving content on the online encyclopedia” Edit According to Your Interests! ● Wikiprojects are groups of editors that improve articles on certain topics. ● Browse topics here to get started! ● WikiProjects helps you find pages that are new or that need attention in your subject area ● Another way to edit? Browse Wikipedia articles; click on the “Talk” button to see what an article is rated; if an article is rated lower, it needs your help! ● For article ratings and assessments info, go here! How to get involved: Host an event! Panels Train the trainers Edit-a-thons Meetups Trainings for the general public Using Wikipedia to introduce your library to Google Does Google know your library? Google “J Willard Marriott Library” Case Study - MSU Library - 2012 Where does Google get its information? ● “Trusted sources” for search engines o o o o Wikipedia/DBPedia (most important) Google Places/ Google My Business Google+ FreeBase ● If you don’t have a Wikipedia presence, you don’t exist as a recognized “entity” or “thing”. From “strings” to “things” In the past (and now)… ● Web of documents ● Google searched text as strings. ● Word frequency ● Meaningful links Now… ● Moving into structured data ● “Linked Open Data” ● Defined entities not just character strings. Why are we talking about this? ● Libraries have not done a good job of defining ourselves in Google’s Knowledge Base. ● If Google does not know you exist as an entity, it is a lot less likely to send people to your website or represent you well in a Google search. Case study - Montana State Library Wikipedia - 2012 DBPedia - 2012 MSU Library Wikipedia - 2014 MSU Library DBPedia - 2014 Google Maps - fixed wrong information MSU Library Google+ entry MSU Library Google Search - 2014 How can you introduce your library to Google? Create a Wikipedia article (But beware of Wikipedia culture) What else can you do? ● Engage with other “trusted sources”. ● Mark up your metadata with schema.org. o Library-centric metadata schemas (MARC, Dublin Core, etc.) are not recognized or supported by search engines. Wikipedia Training and Edit-a-thon Training - August 4th Edit-a-thon - September (exact date TBD)