
Wikimedia Foundation endorses open-access petition to the White House; pending changes RfC ends
28 May 2012
The future of pending changes
16 April 2012
The pending changes fiasco: how an attempt to answer one question turned into a quagmire
29 August 2011
Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
11 October 2010
French million, controversial content, Citizendium charter, Pending changes, and more
27 September 2010
Page-edit stats, French National Library partnership, Mass page blanking, Jimbo on Pending changes
13 September 2010
Pending changes analyzed, Foundation report, Main page bias, brief news
6 September 2010
Pending changes poll, Public policy classes, Payment schemes debate, and more
23 August 2010
Collaboration with the British Museum and in Serbia, Interaction with researchers, and more
21 June 2010
Wikipedia better than Britannica, Pending changes as a victory of tradition, and more
21 June 2010
Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
14 June 2010
Pending changes goes live, first state-funded Wikipedia project concludes, brief news
14 June 2010
Hoaxes in France and at university, Wikipedia used in Indian court, Is Wikipedia a cult?, and more
14 June 2010
"Pending changes" trial, Chief hires, British Museum prizes, Interwiki debate, and more
7 June 2010
The two-month trial ofpending changes isnow over. (See also earlierSignpost coverage:"Pending changes" trial to start on June 14,Pending changes goes live) Pending changes makes use of theFlaggedRevs extension to add a new kind of protection to articles, allowing them to be edited as usual but displaying to readers only the most recent version edited or confirmed by a trusted user. Flagged revisions was praised by some users as a way to guard against vandalism on high-profile articles, and criticized by others as a contradiction of Wikipedia's "open editing" model.
Astraw poll is ongoing to decide whether the feature should be disabled, retained in its current form (in which 1409 pages have received protection), gradually added to a limit of 10k articles in the mainspace, or expanded to include allBiographies of living people (BLP) articles, an area notorious for the impact vandalism has beyond Wikipedia. As of 15:56 (UTC), 24 August 2010, there are 197 votes to keep and 111 votes to close, approximately a 65/35 ratio. Because the three support groups have been put under one section, consensus is not entirely clear;Sceptre hassuggested that the poll be restarted, and that apreferential voting system be used instead. In addition,Us441 has suggested at thevillage pump that allFeatured articles be placed on Pending changes.
A detailed preliminary analysis of the trial's impact can be foundhere. One of the stated goals of Pending changes is to open upsemi-protected pages to editing by anons, but data indicates 84% of the articles under pending changes received an average of less than one anon edit daily. On the other hand, the most heavily edited pages under Pending changes have had over 50% of their anon edits reverted; the highest article by revert rate,Alvin Greene, stands at 88%. In addition a working summary of the pros and cons of the system can be foundon the closure page.

The Wikimedia Foundation'sPublic Policy Initiative hasannounced the names of the universities participating in its pilot program to bring Wikipedia editing intopublic policy classes. The initiative is a project aiming to include Wikipedia editing in the college classroom environment (see earlierSignpost article:Introducing the Public Policy Initiative). Five US universities are included in the trial:

As part of the program,Campus Ambassadors have been selected to facilitate the courses (see earlierSignpost coverage). The initiative is still recruiting moreOnline Ambassadors, which are being coordinated bySage Ross.
In related news, students at theUniversity of Michigan have formed the first Wikipediastudent club in the US (as mentioned inlast week'sSignpost). Started by Cheryl Moy, a chemistry major, the club has already reached 25 members, according to apost on the Foundation's blog. Although it is the first Wikipedia club in the US, it is not the first Wikipedia club ever created; aMcGill University club was formed last year in Canada, and students atJames Madison University in Virginia are in the process of forming their own group as well. Severalfree culture groups already exist in various universities.

The German Wikipedia recently discussed ideas for using the "social payment" systemFlattr to enable readers to donate to Wikipedia authors, or to Wikimedia.
Flattr is a start-up co-founded earlier this year byPeter Sunde (known for his involvement with filesharing siteThe Pirate Bay). Web surfers can open an account and load it with a fixed monthly amount, which is distributed at the end of each month among those of the participating sites where the surfer has chosen to reward pages by clicking on the embedded Flattr buttons. So far, it is most widespread in Germany, where it is used by many high-profile blogs and on the web sites of two daily newspapers – one of them,die tageszeitung, earned €1420 via Flattr in July. Since this month, Flattr is also being used byWikileaks. Similar micro-donation systems includeKachingle.
In April, a simpleMediaWiki extension was written that allows the embedding of Flattr buttons on sites running MediaWiki. It does not appear to be in use on any Wikimedia Foundation wiki. However, instead of the one-click donation via the embedded button, it is also possible to donate on a corresponding page on the Flattr site, which can be linked using a normal weblink.
On Wikimedia Commons, such Flattr links have alreadyappeared on image description pages, inviting a donation to the photographer of the image. Two of them were added in June[1][2] byAlexanderKlink (after he hadasked on the Village pump whether the community would find this acceptable and had received no objections). He toldThe Signpost that the more popular of the two photos had received 9 Flattr clicks in June, corresponding to €2 in earnings, and 3 clicks in July resulting in €0.50. However, he noted that a large proportion of the clicks appeared to have come from the Flattr site itself (which displays a list of flattr-able web pages), rather than from the Flattr link on Commons.
On August 1,Mathias Schindler (a project manager at Wikimedia Deutschland) published some "unsorted observations" (in German) on his private blog, musing the idea of having a Flattr button in every Wikipedia article. He listed several issues that would arise, among them:
Astraw poll started on the German Wikipedia on August 16 to evaluate support for two proposals, both of which tried to avoid the "collaboration" issue:
After one week, a large majority has voted against both proposals.
In 2008 and 2009, the German Wikipedia sawprolonged debates about the possible use of a different system for a financial remuneration of authors. In 2007, the Germancollecting societyVG Wort had set up a system called "METIS" to pay royalties to authors of web pages. The money – an estimated €15 million in 2008 – comes from fees imposed on the sale of CD and DVD burners in Germany. The rationale for including web pages is that, according to consumer surveys, around half of the copyrighted texts that are copied using these devices have been downloaded from the Internet. To be eligible, the web page has to be registered with METIS and usually needs to carry aweb bug from their server (the payments are based on page impressions). METIS had indicated that the system might include the German Wikipedia, too; its free license notwithstanding (apparently it is assumed that enough copies would not satisfy the terms of the GFDL/CC-BY-SA 3.0. The latter's "legal code" contains clauses about "non-waivable" and "waivable" compulsory license schemes). The German Wikimedia chapter was in contact with METIS, but stated that some legal issues required evaluation and a commmunity decision would be needed after that. Several German Wikipedians advocated using METIS, but others objected, often on the grounds that a fair distribution between authors and non-authors – such as those doing administrative work or software development – would be difficult.
Out of curiosity, I checked what "data indicates 84% of the articles under pending changes recieved an average of less than one anon edit daily." means. Assuming 1 anon edit daily (so an upper limit), with 1,393 articles under pending changes this gives ~500,000 edits a year by anonymous editors. Even halving that number (average of 0.5 edits per day), hence a quarter of a million, that's still an awful lot of edits...Mike Peel (talk)19:57, 24 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]
How exactly does pending changes interact with transcluded content? If pcp was applied to a template, would subsequent edits to that template have to be approved before they would be visible in transclusions?「ダイノガイ千?!」? ·Talk⇒Dinoguy100020:56, 24 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]