Here's to the next 20.
A monthly series from the Web Foundation
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Illustrations by Jasmina El Bouamraoui & Karabo Poppy Moletsane ([link removed]) , Wikimedia Foundation ([link removed]) , CC0 ([link removed])
** Happy birthday, Wikipedia!
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Today, we’re celebrating 20 years of Wikipedia, ([link removed]) one of the web’s greatest achievements and a shining example of the open, collaborative space Tim Berners-Lee imagined when he invented the web.
When you want to find something out, you go to Wikipedia. It’s difficult to overstate—and impossible to fully measure—the impact that this engine of information has had on our world. Beyond that, the site is also a truly global community ([link removed]) , one of the most collaborative projects in the history of earth,[link removed] perhaps the closest thing we have to an online public square ([link removed]) .
Since it launched in 2001, Wikipedia has become one of the most beloved and trusted sites on the web, notching up more than 15 billion visits ([link removed]) each month across 1.5 billion devices ([link removed]) , making it the eighth-most-visited site in the world ([link removed]) .
As part of an internet riddled with problems and dysfunction ([link removed]) , Wikipedia stands tall as an example of the web at its best, serving humanity. Though of course, our favourite online encyclopedia is not perfect. If it is truly to be for everyone ([link removed]) , it must address a number of challenges—a lack of diversity in its editing ranks ([link removed]) and patterns of harassment and toxic behaviour ([link removed]) chief among them.
Here we celebrate all things Wikipedia as “thefree ([link removed]) encyclopedia ([link removed]) that anyone can edit ([link removed]) ” turns 20 and untangle questions it must answer as it heads into a new decade.
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Imagine a world in which every single person on the planet is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge. That's what we're doing.
Jimmy Wales
Founder of Wikipedia ([link removed])
20 years of Wikipedia, in numbers
53 million+ — Wikipedia has more than 53 million articles (Wikipedia 20 ([link removed]) ).
317 — Wikipedia articles have been created in 317 languages, with 307 languages currently active. As of January 12, English language articles ([link removed]) accounted for 11.2% of all articles, followed by Cebuano ([link removed]) language articles ([link removed]) at 9.8% (Wikipedia ([link removed]) ).
250,000+ — Wikipedia is written by a community of more than 250,000 volunteer editors from across the globe (Down the Rabbit Hole ([link removed]) ).
6,000 — Wikipedia is viewed 6,000 times every second (Wikipedia 20 ([link removed]) ).
83,764,908 — The COVID-19 page ([link removed]) , the most viewed English Wikipedia article of 2020, was viewed 83,764,908 times, almost double the views of Avengers: Endgame ([link removed]) , 2019's most popular page ([link removed]) (Down the Rabbit Hole ([link removed]) ).
20 percent — Fewer than 20 percent of Wikipedia editors identify as women (Wikipedia 20 ([link removed]) ).
97 percent — Clicking the the first link in the main text of a Wikipedia article, and then repeating the process for subsequent articles, usually leads to the Philosophy ([link removed]) article. As of February 2016, this was true for 97 percent of articles on Wikipedia (Wikipedia: Getting to Philosophy ([link removed] ) ).
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So [there is] this huge systematic bias against women, against people of color, against people from the global south, against people who are from any kind of particular marginalized group. So it's kind of two things—one, we have not a very diverse editorship, and two, the things they write about are not very diverse.
Jess Wade
One Page at a Time, Jess Wade is Changing Wikipedia | via NPR ([link removed])
Recommended reading
✏️ Learn to edit: Jump into editing ([link removed]) with Art+Feminism—a global initiative addressing the gender gap on Wikipedia—as your guide. ▸ Art + Feminism Resources ([link removed])
💉 Chronicling Covid: The Covid-19 pandemic and accompanying infodemic put Wikipedia to the test ([link removed]) , but its editors rose to the challenge. Here's how. ▸ The Washington Post ([link removed])
🦸♀️ Wikipedia's superheroes: Each year, Wikipedia's founder Jimmy Wales ([link removed]) celebrates the people going above and beyond to make sure everyone has access to trusted information. Meet Sandister Tei ([link removed]) , the 2020 Wikimedian of the Year. ▸ Down the Rabbit Hole ([link removed])
📆 2020's time capsule: From Post Malone ([link removed]) to MF Doom ([link removed]) , here are the most read ([link removed]) English language Wikipedia pages for each day of last year. ▸ Quartz ([link removed])
📰 History as it unfolds: What's it like to document a breaking news event in realtime ([link removed]) ? Software engineer and Wikipedian Molly White shares her experience during this month's rioting at the US Capitol. ▸ ([link removed]) Molly White via Twitter ([link removed])
♀ Mind the gender gap: On English Wikipedia, slightly more than 18 percent ([link removed]) of biographies are about women. Women in Red ([link removed]) wants you to help change that ([link removed]) . ▸ WikiProject Women in Red ([link removed])
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This is the gnawing challenge for Wikipedia. After a period of wild, unrestrained growth, it needs some civilizing laws. The equivalent of a fair housing act and safety inspections to ensure it won't exclude certain groups from its pages and allow harmful material to grow and fester.
Just as it takes more than bricks to build a city, it takes more than facts to build a thriving encyclopedia.
Noam Cohen
Wikipedia's Biggest Challenge Awaits in 2021 | via WIRED ([link removed])
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Let's test how much you know about the world's largest online source of free knowledge.
Join us on Twitter ([link removed]) to show off your Wikipedia trivia prowess.
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