Archive for March, 2017

Greg Gutfeld on Anniversary of Breitbart’s Death: ‘He Would Have Kicked the Alt-Right Goons to the Curb’ – Mediaite

Fox News hostGreg Gutfeld honored the five-year anniversary of his friend Andrew Breitbartspassing by writing an op-edremembering his views and implying he would disapprove of some of the content coming from the site that still bears his name.

Andrew loved more than he hated, Gutfeld wrote on FoxNews.com.If you are one of those angry types who shouts in all caps on Twitter about how X needs to be fired and Y needs to be in jail Andrew would have avoided you like the plague.

Andrew would have loved the new right, but he would have kicked the alt-right goons to the curb, Gutfeld wrote. He hated creepy people of any political stripe and would have rejected all the assorted David Duke wannabes trying toclimb their way in. He would have known thatthe weirdos on the alt-right are just a mirror image of the weirdos on the hard left. They get off on fear.

Its too bad Andrew isnt around to call these ghouls out. Hed be great at it, he lamented.

Gutfeld admitted that he didnt know where Breitbart wouldve stood on Trump.I know he would have relished the implosion of pernicious tribal politics he wrote. Would Andrew be suspicious of Trumps autocratic outbursts, impulsiveness and disdain for critics? Or would he embrace Trump not just as a natural ally, but as the first real candidate in a post-ideological world? I dont know, but hed be enjoying every minute of it.

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Greg Gutfeld on Anniversary of Breitbart's Death: 'He Would Have Kicked the Alt-Right Goons to the Curb' - Mediaite

The Wikipedia Battle Over Really Short Articles – Slate Magazine

How short is too short?

Photo illustration by Slate. Ruler image by iStock.

You probably wouldnt expect a blood protein to create a major fuss about one of the internets largest platforms. Yet here we are.

As Andrea James described on Boing Boing in February, Wikipedia editors recently went to battle over the removal of an article on the blood protein hemovanadin. (It has since been restored.) Even though the article is three sentences long, it is well-sourced, and while it is unlikely to become much longer, it obviously is scientific and potentially useful to Wikipedia readers. After all, good coverage of obscure, academic topics is one of Wikipedias advantages. In a follow-up piece, James argued that the hemovanadin incident is an example of deletionism,an extreme version of Wikipedia editing philosophy. Whats more, James said that deletionism is a threat to Wikipedia, as it leads to eliminating valuable seed contributions. If you, like so many, rely on Wikipedia to settle dinner-table disputes or start work on a term paper, reading about a threat to Wikipedia should be alarming.

But its a complicated story that requires you to understand certain things about how Wikipedia actually works. Wikipedia is edited entirely by volunteers, who create articles and stubs, debate changes, and try to enforce the sites many policies and guidelines. Subjects must meet certain notability standards to be included, but those standards vary depending on the topic. While in some areas, like the notability of academics, the criteria are quite clear, in others there is a lot of interpretive freedom and different editors make judgment calls about leaving or deleting articles basing on their gut feeling (which very well may have been the case of hemovanadin).

Deleting is much easier than writing.

Even if we optimistically assumed that Wikipedia volunteers all know the policies by heart (and it is virtually impossibleI once checked and found that the different regulatory documents on Wikipedia are more than 150,000 words), they all interpret them differently. The removal of the hemovanadin article and other examples dont necessarily mean that the whole system of selecting articles for deletion is broken. People make mistakes, even Wikipedians, who are typically hard-working, dedicated to common good, and generally knowledgeable people. Still, the way Wikipedia treats short articles, and how it approaches deleting content in general, is detrimental to it in the long run.

Deletionists, as opposed to inclusionists, generally believe that the threshold for notability of topics covered on Wikipedia should be high. They also think that all content added to Wikipediaeven if it is meant as a stub to be developed later, like the hemovanadin itemshould meet the high editorial standards of the worlds leading encyclopedia.

This approach can be utterly frustrating and demotivating, especially to new editors. They can get frustrated when their stub articles get deleted and they dont really understand why, and no one tells them how they can improve their work for the future. To make matters worse, even a relatively small number of dedicated deletionists can make a huge impact, as deleting is much easier than writing.

In fact, the very ease of this process may be the reason for deletionisms prevalence: Many Wikipedians suffer from editcountitis, the state of being overly obsessed with the number of edits one makes. Deleting is a quick and easy way to score. The phenomenon is dangerous, as a lot of Wikipedias powerful model relies on micro-contributions. Most people first get involved with Wikipediaone of the largest social movements in historyby making some minor corrections or starting a small article that is missing. If their contributions get deleted, especially if there is no sufficient explanation why, they are likely to quit. It is quite destructive to the communitys long-term survival, as Wikipedia has struggled for quite a while with editor retention. Deletionism also often affects very specialized fields: For niche topics, an editor who is unfamiliar with them can find it really difficult to ascertain notability correctly.

On the other hand, deletionists have some points, too. After all, we dont need encyclopedic articles for every single Pokmon. In fact, Wikipedia used to have them all described under separate articles. At some point inclusionists even referred to a Pokmon test as an argument for a given articles inclusion: They argued that if a single Pokmon can have its own article, then surely the discussed topic is encyclopedic, too. But in early 2007, many of the articles about Pokmon were merged into one main entry, and others were deleted. Now the prevailing thought is that just because something can be described by verifiable sources doesnt necessarily mean its notable.

Stubs are a particular point of contention for deletionists. When a stub is created, a link to the article from elsewhere on Wikipedia turns from red to blue, and the article no longer appears to be missing. Editors are generally encouraged to create red links to nonexistent articles, if they want to indicate that the topic is notable and worth covering. Research shows that red links help Wikipedia grow, or at least they did in the past: Editors perceive such red links as invitations to creating articles. But if only a short stub is created, editorsno longer seeing those red links that scream outmay feel the topic is already covered. Short stubs can exist for years, and they do not do justice to the typical high accuracy and informational saturation of Wikipedia articles.

In theory, instead of deleting, Wikipedia editors could just add more references or slightly expand the stub to make it better. Still, deleting is much quicker. Also, sometimes stubs are deleted not just because of a lack of information or references but because of their style. An article about early childhood trauma and resilience is a great example: While the knowledge contained in the article is really useful and well-developed, it is different stylistically from typical encyclopedic articles, and it does not follow the typical referencing syntax. It is perfectly understandable why it may be easier to delete the article rather than help improve it.

Nevertheless, deletionism in its current form and the general approach to stubs are damaging to Wikipedia. We need a cultural shift to prioritize support for goodwill, to encourage generation of fleshed-out articles about notable topics, and to be more forgiving and more inviting to the general public.

First, it would be useful if stub articles were not deleted as often, but instead flagged for expansion or improvement, with clear notation that it is a work in progress. This change would require a behavioral change of Wikipedians, so it will likely turn out to be difficult. After all, Wikipedia already has a work in progress template, which could and should be used for this purpose. But unfortunately, it is not very popular among editors.

Second, better sorting of stubs would help. Even though stubs already are marked as such, Wikipedians do not often focus on expanding them, possibly due to the fact that it is not easy to filter out stubs from specific areas of interest that one may have. Sadly, categorization of stubs is not consistently applied, although some important efforts are made in this respect. (A dedicated task force spends considerable time sorting stubs).

Third, in an even bolder move, we could consider introducing a different color for links leading to stubs and more aggressive flagging of incomplete articles. Such a change would go against the historical trend, though: On some projects (like the German and Polish ones), stubs are already not marked at all.

Fourth, the editors with deletionist inclination should put effort intoconstructive criticismafter all, the authors put considerable effort into developing the articles. Just like in academia, writing useful suggestions for improvement is difficult, but it also helps achieve a much better result in the end, while not frustrating the newcomers with sheer, imprecise negativity. If the Wikipedia community wanted to enforce this behavior, deleting promising, easily expandable stubs on clearly notable subjects without proper feedback to the author should be considered damaging to Wikipedia.

Fifth, whatever threshold for notability criteria we agree on, it is even more important for them not to be selectively biased. For instance, if we have very detailed articles about popular culture, we should make sure we put even more effort in developing articles, not just about the sciences, but also about topics that are simply more culturally diverse, and referring to different phenomena, institutions, and people from other countries with the same notability threshold (in practice, not just theory) as the one used on the English-language Wikipedia. A lot of misunderstandings and conflicts stem from the fact that Wikipedias notability criteria seem to be very uneven across fields, and they are also prone to possible gender bias.

Finally, more experienced editors should make a more serious effort to expand their contributions, if they can. Sometimes it is better to create one solid starting article than three stubs. Writing three stubs is much more useful than deleting six stubs. Experienced Wikipedians usually know other editors and can ask them for help in developing the articles, thus they should at least make an effort to not leave poor stubs unattended. Some of them should be also politely advised to use their own personalized sandboxes before publishing half-baked stubs.

Deleting someones work without proper feedback has a very bad effect on his or her engagement. Sometimes, if the person is a troll, thats a good thingbut if it affects good editors, it damages Wikipedia in the long term. After all, the two most typical reactions to ones work being deleted is fighting or fleeing. And obviously, it is not only the newcomers who get upset when their articles disappearit affects well-seasoned Wiki-veterans, too. This is why it is so important to put sufficient effort into explaining the reasons for justified deletion and to support the goodwill contributors, even if their work is not good enough to keep.

Though the author currently serves on the board of trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation, the views expressed in this article are solely his own.

This article is part of Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy, and culture. To read more, follow us on Twitter and sign up for our weekly newsletter.

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The Wikipedia Battle Over Really Short Articles - Slate Magazine

Help expand Wikipedia’s entries on women in the arts at these local edit-a-thons – Generocity

An average of 800 Wikipedia articles are being created per day, but theres always more work to be done in making sure theres information correct information on the people, places and events that have shaped our history.

Hence the many edit-a-thons being held where people gather to edit and create entries together, as well as learn how to do it themselves. Philadelphians have been pretty good at organizing these events, such aswhen Bryn Mawr College hosted an edit-a-thon for women in STEM or when WHYYs Terry Gross wanted more entries on the guests shes interviewed on air.

March is dedicated to the annual Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, started in 2014, in whichpeoplearound the world gather to enhance the information available on women inthe arts.

Temple University just hosted its edit-a-thon this past Friday and got some pretty good work done 17 editors edited a total of 19 articles, with 137 total edits made.

With the Moore College of Art and Design set to host its event next on March 17, plus one at University of the Arts on March 18 and one at the Philadelphia Museum of Art on March 26, you still have plenty of time to get prepared and get involved.

The PMA even has a crowdsourced list of suggestions for entries to create and improve upon and as you can see, its pretty extensive. The list includes a bunchof historical figures such as paintersSusan H. Bradley andBlanche Dillaye,who both studied at PAFA.

But there are plenty of people and organizations around today that we at Generocity feel could always use some fine-tuning with their entries maybe someone like Michelle Taylor, a.k.a. Feminista Jones, program manager for Witnesses to Hunger.

Register for any of the above events here.

Albert Hong is Generocity's contributing reporter. He started hanging around the Technically Media office as a summer intern for Technical.ly and eventually made his way to freelancing for both news sites. While technology and video games are two of his main interests, he's grown to love Philadelphia as a city and is always excited to hear someone else's story.

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Help expand Wikipedia's entries on women in the arts at these local edit-a-thons - Generocity

Intellipedia: How to Access the Wikipedia of US Secret Services – Guiding Tech (blog)

Were well aware of Wikipedia and the plethora of information it stores about everything in this world, but are you aware the US government maintains their own secret Wiki Intellipedia which stores information in a similar fashion as Wikipedia, just with a few tweaks containing facts about the issue.

Intellipedia is an encyclopaedia for US government secret services as well as other government organisations with similar clearance and the website has been active for a little more than a decade.

The website has three levels of classification of the contained data one consists sensitive but unclassified documents, the mid-level one contains secret information and another for top secret information.

The top secret wiki contains almost 40% of a total of 269,000 articles on the website.

Since 2014, multiple applications have been filed under the Freedom of Information Act, which has allowed public access to several unclassified documents present in the secret service encyclopaedia.

The pages of Intellipedia are essentially copies of Wikipedia pages for the same topic but with additional sensitive and critical information added by analysts of the intelligence community.

Official access to Intellipedia is restricted to authorised personnel only which presumably are members of the 17 intelligence agencies of the US government and if anyone else is found trying to gain unauthorised entry into the database, theyll face criminal prosecution asthe website mentions.

However, since the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) grants the right to the citizenry to ask for information even from the intelligence agencies, news media outlets such as MuckRock and other websites such as The Black Vault have been hoarding their websites with findings from applications under FOIA.

You can access multiple files from Intellipedia which includes information about Area 51, Benghazi, JFK assassination, Project MK Ultra, UFOs, Greenbrier files, Freemasonry, Bay of Pigs files and many more interesting reads which have been unclassified.

There are loads of other interesting topics that you might wish to learn about on this secret wiki and John Greenwalds Black Vault is a sure stop if you undertake this journey of finding out what extra information do the secret service guys hold.

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Intellipedia: How to Access the Wikipedia of US Secret Services - Guiding Tech (blog)

ANN COULTER: How to provide universal health care with one weird trick – St. Augustine Record

The first sentence of Congress Obamacare repeal should read: There shall be a free market in health insurance.

Right there, Ive solved the health insurance crisis for 90 percent of Americans. Unfortunately, no one can imagine what a free market in health care looks like because we havent had one for nearly a century.

On NBCs Meet the Press this weekend, for example, Chuck Todd told Sen. Tom Cotton that his proposal to create affordable health care that would be widely available, sounds good, but do you understand why some people think thats an impossible promise to keep?

(The do you understand ? formulation is a condescension reserved only for conservatives, whose disagreement with liberals is taken as a sign of stupidity.)

Todd continued: To make it affordable, making it wider, I mean, that just seems like you know, it seems like youre selling something that cant be done realistically.

Dream Sequence: Chuck Todd on Russias Meet the Press after the fall of the Soviet Union: Do you understand why some people think thats an impossible promise to keep? To make bread affordable, making it wider, I mean, that just seems like you know, it seems like youre selling something that cant be done realistically.

It turns out that, outside of a communist dictatorship, all sorts of products are affordable and widely available! We dont need Congress to provide us with health care any more than we need them to provide us with bread. What we need is for health insurance to be available on the free market.

With lots of companies competing for your business, basic health insurance would cost about $50 a month. We know the cost because Christian groups got a waiver from Obamacare, and thats how much their insurance costs right now. (Under the law, it cant be called insurance, but thats what it is.)

Even young, healthy people would buy insurance at that price, expanding the risk-sharing pools and probably bringing the cost down to $20 or $30 a month.

In a free market, there would be an endless variety of consumer-driven plans, from catastrophic care for the risk-oblivious to extravagant plans for the risk-averse.

You know just like every other product in America.

You should visit America sometime, Chuck! The orange juice aisle in a Texas grocery store knocked the socks off Russian president Boris Yeltsin. (Imagine how cheap a double screwdriver must be in America!)

Just as there are rows of different types of orange juice in the grocery store and loads of grocery stores there will be loads of health insurance plans and insurance companies offering them.

Americans would finally be able to buy whatever insurance plans they liked, as easily as they currently buy flat-screen TVs, cellphones and whats that product with the cute gecko in its commercials? I remember now! car insurance.

Evidently, insurance is not impervious to the iron law of economics that every product sold on the free market gets better and cheaper over time.

The only complicated part of fixing health care is figuring out how to take care of the other 10 percent of Americans the poor, the irresponsible and the unlucky. And the only reason that is complicated is because of fraud.

Needless to say, the modern nanny state already guarantees that no one will die on the street in America. The taxpayer spends more than a trillion dollars every year on Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security disability insurance so that everyones health is taken care of, from cradle to grave.

Unfortunately, probably at least half of that sum is fraud.

Policing fraud is difficult because: (1) the bureaucrats dispensing government benefits believe there is no fraud and, if there is, its a good thing because it redistributes income; and (2) we keep bringing in immigrants for whom fraud is a way of life.

Consequently, after the first sentence establishing a free market in health insurance, the entire rest of the bill should be nothing but fraud prevention measures to ensure that only the truly deserving and the truly American are accessing taxpayer-supported health care programs.

Id recommend sending as much as possible back to the states, and also paying bounties to anyone who exposes a fraud against Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security. Anyone caught committing health care fraud should get 10 years. Not in prison, in a Medicaid doctors waiting room.

But Im sure you guys in Congress have come up with lots of great ideas for policing fraud in the seven years youve had to think about it.

Then, Congress can start removing all the bad stuff from the U.S. Code, such as:

n Tthe requirement that hospitals provide free care to anyone who shows up (how about separate health clinics for poor people with the sniffles?);

n The exemption of insurance companies from the antitrust laws (where all our problems began); and

n The tax breaks only for employer-provided health insurance (viciously and arbitrarily punishing the self-employed).

The goal of universal health care is very simple to achieve, just as the goal of universal wearing of clothing seems to have been taken care of.

The government can provide for those who cant provide for themselves, but the rest of us need to be allowed to buy health insurance on the free market an innovation that has made America the richest, most consumer-friendly country in the world.

Its taken 50 years, but, thanks to Hillarys losing the election, we finally have liberals on the record opposing the Soviet Union. Cant all of Washington come together and end our soviet health care system?

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ANN COULTER: How to provide universal health care with one weird trick - St. Augustine Record