User:Alvaro
works
[edit]- River
- Alène Lignon (Ardèche) Chère Ibie Mortagne (river) Ailette (river) Albarine Smagne Yon Lay (river) Abloux Auroue Diège Rhue (river) Céou Céor Brame Aubetin Asse (river) Othain Verzée Voueize Tardes (river) Semnon Salleron Briance Bouble Arz (river) Orbieu Barguelonnette Barguelonne Gijou Senouire Gesse Vère Guil Airain Vauvise Rupt de Mad Chée Chéran Indrois Clouère Auzoue Sorgues (river) Aujon Bléone Côle Ével Luzège Triouzoune Rère Chalaronne Vallière (river) Sevron Sâne Vive Sâne Morte Solnan Thoré Lizonne Fier (river) Colagne Chavanon Veyle Galaure Séoune Bourbre Lèze Petite Baïse Côney Chapeauroux Vaige Semme Barse Benaize Sormonne (river) Maronne Oudon (river) Lignon du Forez Blaise (Marne) Lignon du Velay Grosne (river) Madon Layon Boutonne Vègre Calavon Dadou Anglin Bouzanne Chassezac Dourdou de Camarès Arconce Meu Cérou Èvre Moder (river) Osse (river) Petite Creuse Bourbince Lunain Cosson Aveyron (Loing) Ouanne (river) Suippe Solin (river) Seugne Louge Touch (river) Ource
- Canal
- Canal du Loing ☭ Canal de Bourbourg ☭ Canal de Bergues ☭ Canal de l'Aisne à la Marne ☭ Canal des Ardennes ☭ Canal latéral à l'Aisne ☭ Canal latéral à la Marne ☭
- Related
- Aiguillon Rhue Hugues Cosnier Plateau de Lannemezan Aveyron (disambiguation) Moder
Useful :
- {{WikiProject France| importance=low | class=Start }} {{river}}
- {{iw-ref|fr|Alette|April 29, 2009|oldid=38280739}}
- Special:OldReviewedPages
- {{subst:uw-vandalism1|}} 1, 2, 3, 4
- {{subst:uw-test1|}} 1, 2, 3, 4
- WP:WARN
Alvaro
[edit]- commons:User:Alvaro/Ma galerie My gallery.
-
War memorial in Dammarie-sur-Loing
fr | Cet utilisateur a pour langue maternelle le français. |
en-2 | This user can contribute with an intermediate level of English. |
de-1 | Dieser Benutzer hat grundlegende Deutschkenntnisse. |
This user participates in WikiProject France. |
This user is a participant in WikiProject Rivers. |
stats
[edit]- 14:52, 1 April 2009 (UTC) : 162,946
- 16:33, 6 April 2009 (UTC) : 161,230
- 18:14, 7 April 2009 (UTC) : 160,436
- 15:11, 15 April 2009 (UTC) : 157,493
- 12:20, 16 April 2009 (UTC) : 158,336
- 13:28, 25 April 2009 (UTC) : 157,401
- 16:25, 1 May 2009 (UTC) : 157,979
- 12:18, 5 May 2009 (UTC) : 157,258
- 20:35, 19 May 2009 (UTC) : 160,202
- 10:25, 5 June 2009 (UTC) : 158,605
- 14:19, 13 July 2009 (UTC) : 148,258
- 17:27, 24 August 2009 (UTC) : 146,307
- 14:40, 2 September 2009 (UTC) : 147,793
- 22:37, 18 September 2009 (UTC) : 150,234
- 16:13, 20 December 2009 (UTC) : 153,356
- 15:36, 5 March 2010 (UTC) : 163,136
- 06:50, 19 April 2010 (UTC) : 153,727
- 10:06, 19 August 2010 (UTC) : 135,534
- 19:17, 13 September 2010 (UTC) : 132,532
- 09:25, 20 September 2010 (UTC) : 133,133
- 23:03, 26 October 2010 (UTC) : 135,528
- 18:49, 30 October 2012 (UTC) : 133,153
- 04:52, 26 July 2013 (UTC) : 121,689
- 14:07, 18 February 2014 (UTC) : 130,769
- 22:52, 15 August 2015 (UTC) : 118,983
Current {{NUMBEROFACTIVEUSERS}} : 126,690
tools
[edit]- Pour Vienne : {{otheruses4|the French department|the French city|Vienne, Isère}}
- Pour Vienne : {{distinguish|Vienna}}
- Sur Asse : {{for|a tributary of the [[Durance]]|Asse River}}
people
[edit]Through my watchlist, I often meet Ksnow (talk · contribs), Markussep (talk · contribs), Dickeybird (talk · contribs)...
signpost
[edit]Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/From the editors
A wild drive
- This traffic report is adapted from the Top 25 Report, prepared with commentary by Igordebraga, Vestrian24Bio, GN22, Wizzito and CAWylie (January 12 to 18); by Igordebraga, Shuipzv3, Vestrian24Bio, and GN22 (January 19 to 25); and by Igordebraga, Clubette, GN22, Royiswariii, Rebestalic, Vestrian24Bio, and Wizzito (January 26 to February 1).
She wore blue velvet, bluer than velvet was the night (January 12 to 18)
[edit]Rank | Article | Class | Views | Image | Notes/about |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | David Lynch | 2,785,081 | A widely acclaimed filmmaker known for works full of mystery and surreal imagery such as the movies Eraserhead, Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive, and the TV show Twin Peaks, David Lynch died at 78 as his already decayed health caused by emphysema (consequence of decades smoking) took a dive once he was forced to leave his Los Angeles home due to wildfires. Along with the directing gigs that even landed him an Academy Honorary Award, Lynch also worked on music, photography and literature, and also acted on occasion, such as a memorable appearance as John Ford on The Fabelmans. | ||
2 | MrBeast | 1,868,297 | His reality competition show Beast Games, which is currently releasing weekly episodes on Amazon Prime Video, has become their most-streamed unscripted show in history. Despite its success, the show has received negative reviews from critics and some contestants alleged that they were mistreated during its production, with five of the contestants filing a class action lawsuit against MrBeast and his company. | ||
3 | Game Changer (film) | 1,160,501 | Like past mainstay of this list Pushpa 2: The Rule, this is also from Tollywood, but a box-office bomb. This is the directorial debut of S. Shankar (pictured) in the Telugu industry but it ultimately became his fourth consecutive overall film to fail at box office. Yet, what really worries me is another film (from Kollywood) directed by him is releasing next week and its a sequel to the biggest disappointment of 2024. | ||
4 | Kumbh Mela | 1,079,008 | An important Hindu pilgrimage that happens every 6 to 12 years, with the 2025 Prayag Kumbh Mela scheduled to take place from 13 January to 26 February at the Triveni Sangam in Prayagraj. | ||
5 | Pete Hegseth | 1,073,626 | #8's pick for the United States Secretary of Defense had his confirmation hearings this week. | ||
6 | Deaths in 2025 | 1,052,510 | From one of #1's movies: Turn off the sun; pull the stars from the sky The more I give to you, the more I die! | ||
7 | Pam Bondi | 999,773 | #8's pick for the United States Attorney General had her confirmation hearings this week. | ||
8 | Donald Trump | 776,542 | It’s been a long four years since Trump was last in the Oval Office, but, starting Monday, he will be sitting behind the Resolute desk once again. On his successful campaign to reclaim the Presidency, the 45th and 47th President sustained four indictments and 34 felony convictions, narrowly survived an assassination attempt at a rally by less than an inch, and kept going despite a swap at the top of the Democratic ticket. He won all seven battleground states and (narrowly) even the popular vote, robbing Grover Cleveland of his sole claim to fame in American history (before this point he was the only President elected to nonconsecutive terms). Whether you love him, loathe him, or simply don’t care about him, it’s indisputable that Trump definitely knows something about the art of the comeback! | ||
9 | Severance (TV series) | 749,163 | This American science fiction psychological thriller series, filmed mostly at Bell Labs (pictured), debuted on Apple TV+ in 2022. Its first season received 14 Emmy nominations but only won creative ones (title design and music). It was renewed for future seasons soon after the release of the first, the second of which premiered January 16. | ||
10 | Squid Game season 2 | 699,841 | Set three years after Seong Gi-hun won the Squid Game, he returns to the game in season 2 to stop them once and for all. Joining the cast are Park Sung-hoon as a transgender woman seeking a gender reassignment surgery, Im Si-wan as a former YouTube star who lost his fortune, Lee Jin-wook as a man trying to win the money for his cancer-battling daughter, Kang Ae-shim and Yang Dong-geun as mother and son who enter the game individually in a desperate bid to clear his debts just to find each other there, Choi Seung-hyun as a purple-haired rapper, known by his stage name "Thanos", and Jo Yu-ri as a heavily pregnant woman hoping to win enough money to support her baby as a single mother. The season garnered positive reviews and big viewership numbers, set record for highest premiere viewership for Netflix surpassing Wednesday season 1, and it is expected to be followed by the third and final season this year. |
He's at it again and he's gonna win (January 19 to 25)
[edit]Rank | Article | Class | Views | Image | Notes/about |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Donald Trump | 3,884,456 | On January 20, he was sworn in (#8) as the 47th President of the United States, taking over from Joe Biden. He immediately issued a series of executive orders to fulfil his agenda. They include withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization and the Paris Agreement, re-declaring a national emergency at the Mexico–United States border, directed the federal government to only recognize two genders, estabishing the Department of Government Efficiency to be headed by #6, rescinding artificial intelligence policy goals, reversed sanctions on Israeli settlers, pardoned around 1,200 January 6 defendants, commuted sentences for members of Oath Keepers and Proud Boys, ordered the federal renaming of #9 to the "Gulf of America" and Denali back to Mount McKinley, and delayed a ban on TikTok by 75 days. An order to end birthright citizenship was quickly blocked by a federal judge. Several inspectors general were also informed of their immediate termination, which may be "inconsistent with the law" and subject to court challenge. | ||
2 | MrBeast | 3,666,653 | From most-subscribed YouTube channel to most viewed show on Amazon Prime Video and now he's biding to buy TikTok. | ||
3 | JD Vance | 2,319,253 | The new Vice President, who prior to inauguration met his Chinese equivalent Han Zheng, and after getting in the role swore in Secretary of State Marco Rubio and cast the tie-breaking vote to confirm Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense. | ||
4 | Melania Trump | 2,173,494 | The Slovenian First Lady and the Hindu American Second Lady of the United States. | ||
5 | Usha Vance | 2,139,252 | |||
6 | Elon Musk | 2,041,055 | Elon Musk, Elon Musk. Why you choose that to greet me?
In a rally shortly after the inauguration (#8) of #1, the centibillionaire who will head DOGE saluted the crowd in a way that instantly caused a ruckus. His defenders and a few other organizations tried to claim it was not as it seemed, but as The Hollywood Reporter put it, "Sometimes a Nazi Salute is a Nazi Salute.” Then, on January 25, Musk made a surprise appearance via video link at a Alternative for Germany campaign rally, expressing his support for the far-right party. | ||
7 | Ross Ulbricht | 1,840,003 | Ulbricht created and operated Silk Road, a marketplace on the dark web in which illegal products and services could be traded. In October 2013, the website was shut down by the FBI and he was arrested. Ulbricht was serving a life imprisonment sentence when #1 granted him a full pardon. | ||
8 | Second inauguration of Donald Trump | 1,073,356 | Due to freezing temperatures in DC, this was held inside the United States Capitol rotunda, the first indoors inauguration since the one for Reagan's reelection in 1985. Among the ones in attendance were all the living U.S. presidents, and lots of rich people - a much divulged picture had tech moguls #6, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and Google’s Sundar Pichai. | ||
9 | Gulf of Mexico | 1,066,060 | #1 signed an executive order to rename this to the "Gulf of America" for federal use. Even still, most of the world, including the majority of everyday Americans, will continue to call it the Gulf of Mexico. | ||
10 | Mariann Budde | 1,061,367 | As the Bishop of Washington, she gave a prayer service the day after #8, urging #1 to show mercy and compassion to vulnerable people, specifically citing the LGBTQ community, immigrants, and war refugees. #1 responded with insults and demanded an apology. |
Dance little tin goddess, dance (January 26 to February 1)
[edit]Rank | Article | Class | Views | Image | Notes/about |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | DeepSeek | 2,542,555 | Actually, I’m not sure why I bother. In the end, it too will probably be Made in China.
An arms race to build the best large language model (LLM). OpenAI with ChatGPT, Google with Gemini, Microsoft with Copilot, character.ai, and so on. Established tech giants putting everything into AI. Billions of dollars and thousands of people working on LLMs. The U.S. president investing $500 billion in AI. An obscure Chinese company releasing DeepSeek. 20 times cheaper, 10 times less processing power, still just as good. People thinking, "Maybe we don't need to pump so much money into the industry?" A trillion-dollar stock market crash. | ||
2 | Karoline Leavitt | 1,719,534 | This gentlewoman is President #6's fifth White House Press Secretary, when including first-term predecessors Sean Spicer, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Stephanie Grisham, and Kayleigh McEnany. Raised Catholic and hailing from the Live Free or Die state New Hampshire, she recently claimed that $50 million in taxpayer funds were to go to fund "condoms in Gaza". | ||
3 | 2025 Potomac River mid-air collision | 1,585,882 | On January 29, a Bombardier CRJ700 airliner collided mid-air with a Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter of the United States Army over the Potomac River a half-mile (0.8 km) from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. All 67 people on board the two aircraft were killed in what was the deadliest air disaster on United States soil since 2009. | ||
4 | List of Super Bowl champions | 1,246,947 | As of this writing, a total of 20 franchises have won the NFL Super Bowl. The winner of each Super Bowl receives the famed Vince Lombardi Trophy. Super Bowl LIX next Sunday will have a repeat winner between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles. | ||
5 | Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | 1,188,293 | One more in the influential Kennedy Family, Mr. Robert F. K. Jr. is President #6's nominee for Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, highest-spending of all Government Departments by more than double the second-placed D. of Defense (see here; 2023 numbers). At a spunky 71 years young, environmental law and health topics have been among his interests; while appraising efforts like the Green New Deal and championing the adoption of solar-cell magic, he also denounces vaccines, claiming they cause autism. | ||
6 | Donald Trump | 1,079,557 | Trump’s back (both in this report and to the presidency), and so are his tariffs. Several of his executive orders are being challenged in court such as the ones attempting to redefine birthright citizenship guaranteed under the 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution and freeze federal spending. | ||
7 | Marianne Faithfull | 1,052,186 | An English singer and actress who died at the age of 78. Faithfull achieved popularity in the 1960s, with some help from The Rolling Stones (she dated Mick Jagger, co-wrote "Sister Morphine" with him, and he let Faithfull record "As Tears Go By" first, giving her a top 10 single), only for the following decade to have her face hardships, including laryngitis and drug abuse that led to what James Hetfield described as a "weathered, smellin'-the-cigarettes-on-the-CD voice" hauntingly employed in one of his songs. | ||
8 | Deaths in 2025 | 999,735 | Speaking of said song: And can't the band play on? Just listen, they play my song Ash to ash Dust to dust Fade to black... | ||
9 | Royal Rumble (2025) | 952,745 | WWE Royal Rumble 2025 held Lucas Oil Stadium at Indianapolis, Indiana. We shocked and surprised on the returning on the royal rumble like WWE Hall of Famer Trish Stratus, Nikki Bella, Alexa Bliss and many more. But, we didn't expect that AJ Lee not return on Royal Rumble. We didn't forget that IShowSpeed like... what the...?. We surprised too that in audience, RVD (Rob... Van... Dam!), Ron Simmons (Damn!) watching Royal Rumble too. 30 Men Royal Rumble, while Jey Uso and John Cena are fighting, we did not expect or was not in my bingo card! that Uso eliminated Cena and he will go and be the main event on WrestleMania 41. WWE Fans was disappointed too that in 30 Women Royal Rumble that Charlotte Flair has won, fans called "a predictable" and Flair will go on WrestleMania 41 too. I wonder if Drew Carey can go again on Royal Rumble just like he did on Royal 2001 Royal Rumble. Hmm... much worse. | ||
10 | Sky Force (film) | 920,762 | This Bollywood action drama film centred around India's first airstrike – the attack against Pakistan's Sargodha airbase in the Indo-Pakistani air war of 1965 – was released last week coinciding with the Indian Republic Day weekend. The film stars Akshay Kumar in the lead role and is directed by Abhishek Anil Kapur and co-produced by Ambani's Jio Studios. It received positive reviews and has almost recovered its budget as of this writing. |
Exclusions
[edit]- These lists exclude the Wikipedia main page, non-article pages (such as redlinks), and anomalous entries (such as DDoS attacks or likely automated views). Since mobile view data became available to the Report in October 2014, we exclude articles that have almost no mobile views (5–6% or less) or almost all mobile views (94–95% or more) because they are very likely to be automated views based on our experience and research of the issue. Please feel free to discuss any removal on the Top 25 Report talk page if you wish.
Most edited articles
[edit]For the December 27 – January 27 period, per this database report.
Title | Revisions | Notes |
---|---|---|
Bigg Boss (Tamil TV series) season 8 | 3725 | Kollywood didn't have a good 2024 with many expected films being met with criticism and becoming box-office bombs, line-up for 2025 isn't very promising either; but this reality show from Tamil Nadu which is part of the Big Brother franchise has made it here. The eighth season hosted by Vijay Sethupathi for the first time premiered on last October and concluded with the Finale on 19 January. |
Deaths in 2025 | 2013 | New year, new notable deaths, and the two biggest of January 2025 were directors, the aforementioned David Lynch and Jeff Baena, which aside from one exception made a few unconventional comedies featuring his wife Aubrey Plaza. |
January 2025 Southern California wildfires | 1920 | California has been hit by extreme weather in the last decade, with an extensive drought from 2011 to 2017, floods last year, and now a combination of dry weather and strong winds leading to massive fires in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. 27 people died and hundreds of thousands were forced to evacuate, many of whom wound up losing their homes as the flames destroyed lots of buildings. |
2025 New Orleans truck attack | 1547 | At around 3:15 a.m. on January 1, a man drove a pickup truck into a crowd celebrating the New Year in New Orleans, then engaged in a shootout with police before being shot dead. Fifteen people were killed, including the perpetrator (identified as Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar) and 35 more wounded. According to investigators, the perpetrator had been radicalized in 2024, and pledged allegiance to Islamic State in the minutes before the attack. |
Jeju Air Flight 2216 | 1506 | Jeju Air Flight 2216 was a scheduled passenger flight operated by Jeju Air from Bangkok, Thailand to Muan International Airport in South Korea. On December 29, the aircraft operating the flight landed on its second attempt with no landing gear, possibly due to damage from a bird strike. It skidded down the runway, overrunning it and crashed into an embankment, where it immediately burst into flames. Out of the 181 occupants, two cabin crew survived. |
Margaret Sanger | 1475 | Noleander did extensive work on the page for the Planned Parenthood founder so it could become a Good Article. |
Bigg Boss (Hindi TV series) season 18 | 1246 | We mentioned the Kollywood Big Brother, here's the Bollywood one. |
Donald Trump | 1061 | Four more years with this guy splitting his time between Mar-a-Lago and the White House. |
2024–25 NFL playoffs | 918 | The lead-up to Super Bowl LIX ended up in a slightly disappointing match-up that is also a rerun of the 2023 edition, namely the Philadelphia Eagles facing the two-time defending champion Kansas City Chiefs. At least there will be Kendrick Lamar at the half-time show! |
Bigg Boss Kannada season 11 | 895 | Again, the Sandalwood Big Brother (there are eight Indian versions of the famed reality show). |
2025 Australian Open – Men's singles | 854 | Jannik Sinner successfully defended his title in Melbourne, postponing the dream Alexander Zverev has of a first Grand Slam. |
2025 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election | 850 | Justin Trudeau, who's been prime minister of Canada since 2015, announced on January 6 his pending resignation, to take effect once his party elects a new leader on March 9. His announcement came after a series of by-election losses and the resignation of several members of his cabinet in 2024, most notably his deputy Chrystia Freeland, which triggered the 2024–2025 Canadian political crisis. |
2025 | 795 | All is quiet on New Year's Day A world in white gets underway I want to be with you Be with you night and day Nothing changes on New Year's Day... |
Death and state funeral of Jimmy Carter | 794 | 39th president of the United States Jimmy Carter died on December 29, 2024. His state funeral took place from January 4 to 9, starting in his home state of Georgia, where his body laid in repose at the Carter Center from January 4 to 7. His body was then flown to the capital, where it laid in state in the United States Capitol rotunda until January 9, when a state funeral service was conducted at Washington National Cathedral, attended by the Carter family as well as domestic and foreign dignitaries. After the service, his remains were transported to the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter House in Plains, Georgia, where Carter lived for decades and spent his final years, for a private burial. |
Palisades Fire (2025) | 793 | The most affected area of the aforementioned wildfire was Pacific Palisades, which were basically all burned down, destroying homes of celebrities and commoners alike. |
Wikipedia is an extension of legacy media propaganda, says Elon Musk
A Roman salute?
[edit]
A gesture made on stage by Elon Musk at the 2025 Donald Trump presidential inauguration was interpreted by some as a Nazi or Roman salute, and by others as an ambiguous wave. The Wikipedia article on the Elon Musk gesture controversy covers both possibilities, but this didn't prevent it from being the focus of attention in the media.
- Neutrality-preserving processes at work
On Elon Musk's Wikipedia biography, a long paragraph about the controversy is currently included, following the closure of a request for comment on the article's talk page as accepting that a limited mention should be included. An articles for deletion nomination for Elon Musk's arm gesture was closed with a rough consensus to keep the article. Sarah Grevy Gotfredsen wrote for the Columbia Journalism Review that "Wikipedia's update on Musk's salute is a case in point" of the encyclopedia's neutrality in describing controversial events, as it "includes Musk's physical arm movement and how it was viewed by some as a Nazi gesture, but also notes that Musk denied such intent" (emphasis added).
- Reactions, and reactions to reactions
The Independent reported that "Elon Musk was furious" after his Wikipedia page referred to his controversial gesture as a "Nazi salute":
(Musk) called out the online encyclopedia site on X after the gesticulation he made at a rally at the Capital One Arena was referred to as "a Nazi salute or fascist salute" on his Wikipedia page – something the Tesla/X CEO vehemently denies.
But the link to the "denial" is less than it first seemed. Also, Vanity Fair's article on the same matter said that "Elon Musk Sure Isn’t Denying That His Inaugural Gesture Was a Nazi Salute".
Numerous tweets were tweeted (or X'd). A Newsweek piece stated in its title that Wikipedia "fired back" at Musk, but it was actually talking about Jimmy Wales's response to a Musk tweet – both posts were linked to in the aforementioned Independent article:
I think Elon is unhappy that Wikipedia is not for sale. I hope his campaign to defund us results in lots of donations from people who care about the truth. If Elon wanted to help, he'd be encouraging kind and thoughtful intellectual people he agrees with to engage.
– Jimmy Wales
What is certain is that Musk's gesture caused different reactions within Jewish political organizations: The Forward – formerly known as Forverts when it was published in Yiddish – quoted a "conciliatory" statement by the Anti-Defamation League, who said that Musk "made an awkward gesture in a moment of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute". The ADL statement is discussed in the Wikipedia article about the controversy, which also mentions a former director of the association, Abraham Foxman, being at odds with their take. On the other hand, as reported by The Guardian, the head of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Amy Spitalnick, expressed more concern over the gesture, saying that "there was nothing ambiguous" about the salutes, and that they "should be enough to warrant condemnation and attention".
Swedish national public broadcaster Sveriges Television added more details about Musk's criticism of Wikipedia (in Swedish), highlighting his claim that the site relies on "legacy media propaganda" for sourcing. It also includes another direct response from Jimmy Wales, who defended Wikipedia's neutrality, stating that the article simply reports verifiable facts: Musk made the gesture, it was widely compared to a Nazi salute, and he denied any intent. Wales also took the opportunity to remind Musk of the failure of his supposed bid to buy Wikipedia.
- And the truth is...
France 24 gave a comprehensive video analysis of Musk's gesture, while DW News (a channel of Deutsche Welle) stated what may be the last word on the meaning of the gesture. According to analyst Matthew Moore, "there's only one person I think that really knows whether this was a fascist salute, and that is Elon Musk".
Palestine-Israel Articles decision
[edit]The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) report on the Arbitration Committee's Palestine-Israel Articles 5 decision was the core of several stories in The Times of Israel and The Jerusalem Post, both Israeli media, as well as The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
- The Times of Israel: "ADL: Wikipedia bans several editors for spreading antisemitic rhetoric, misinformation on Gaza war"
- The Jerusalem Post: "Anti-Israel Wikipedia editors face bans after spreading hate, misinformation"
- The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles: "Wikipedia's Supreme Court On the Verge of Topic Banning 8 Editors from Israel-Palestine Area – Group would include two editors who are pro-Israel"
Several Wikipedians provided a mix of anonymous and attributed responses to the Jewish Journal, expressing a range of opinions from optimistic – "I like the idea of something like the article titles restriction...the vacuum [caused by bans of individuals] will be filled by experienced editors who have heretofore been afraid to edit in the topic area" – to ascerbic – "[it is] flabby and insufficient ... the arbs in general were lazy, robotic, and are utterly unsuited to provide 'adult supervision' of Wikipedia."
The decision was also covered by Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), with less emphasis on the ADL commentary.
- Jewish Telegraphic Agency "Edit wars over Israel spur rare ban of 8 Wikipedia editors — from both sides"
The JTA was in turn syndicated by several US newspapers, including Miami's South Florida Sun Sentinel (read here) and Brooklyn's Jewish Press (read here).
See related Signpost coverage at this issue's Arbitration report. – B
Big picture
[edit]Stephen Harrison's latest piece for Slate combines topics we also discuss below, most specifically the Heritage Foundation's plans to "identify and target" Wikipedia editors – see prior Signpost coverage – plus the aforementioned conclusion of an ArbCom case involving Israeli and Palestinian supporters.
Harrison noted how it is not encouraging that "in the long term, Wikipedians, and the rest of us, can ask for stronger privacy protections from both lawmakers and the companies", but "until then, there is not much that users can do to protect themselves from mass surveillance."
The beat reporter sees the Heritage's alleged plan to out editors as a form of harassment to force its views into contentious articles, fearing that, if these tactics were implemented and proved to be successful, they might drive away all but the most strident editors:
Faced with the risk of harassment or real-world retaliation, many volunteer editors—especially those covering politically sensitive topics—may simply stop contributing. Those who remain are likely to be the most ideologically driven voices, further eroding Wikipedia's stated goal of neutrality.
The free encyclopedia will become too toxic to sustain.
– S
John Green's ties to AFC Wimbledon now officially acknowledged on his Wikipedia page
[edit]In a recent video for the vlogbrothers YouTube channel, author and philantropist John Green recently shared more details about "something ridiculous", that is, the latest achievement of his charity community, Nerdfighteria: the completion of a real-life soccer transfer. Green, together with his wife and about 1,100 members of Nerdfighteria, helped English League Two club AFC Wimbledon pay for the transfer of Marcus Browne, having collected most of the money through donations on several livestreams hosted at Green's solo channel.
AFC Wimbledon was founded in 2002 by former fans of Wimbledon F.C., in dissent to the controversial relocation of the club to Milton Keynes, which eventually led to the foundation of MK Dons. The phoenix club is majority-owned by a fan association, the Dons Trust, and Green – despite being a life-long fan of Liverpool F.C. – has sponsored them since July 2014, when Nerdfighteria was first announced as a back-of-shorts sponsor.
In his video about the Browne transfer, Green stated that supporting AFC Wimbledon was "one of my great achievements of my life", and that he had "no idea why it's not on my Wikipedia page". As reported by several users in the comment section, the author's call-to-action (of sorts) prompted editor Hameltion to add new information to the Personal life section of his Wikipedia article, so that the "ridiculous" milestone could be celebrated properly. In the words of Green himself, "The ridiculous is perilously close to the sublime!" – O
In brief
[edit]- Actually gotten better: In her analysis for CNN, titled "In a minefield of glitchy AI search and social media, Wikipedia becomes one of the most reliable places on the internet", Allison Morrow elaborated on how Wikipedia has not just resisted the platform decay that hit its 2000s-era peers, but it's actually gotten better and even maintains a sort of truth-in-advertising list of hoaxes that have been perpetrated against it. Morrow notably interviewed editor Molly White (known as GorillaWarfare) for her article.
- Wikipedia's birthday noted: Associated Press and the Chicago Tribune dedicated an article to the 24th birthday of Wikipedia, which has been celebrated on January 15; the city of Chicago itself has hosted Wikipedia Day four days later, alongside other nationwide and international events previously highlighted on the Signpost.
- Now exiled activist meets Jimbo: Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, a former candidate in the 2020 Belarusian presidential election who is now leader of the opposition forces in exile, revealed that she met with Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales at Davos.
- On guard (aka "Wokepedia", part 72): In a recent edition of his TechScape newsletter for The Guardian, Blake Montgomery reflected on the main differences in how Facebook, Instagram and Wikipedia are dealing with attempts to "politicize the truth", citing a recent Forward report on the Heritage Foundation's plans to identify and target Wikipedia editors – see prior Signpost coverage.
- Total control? (aka "Wokepedia", part 73): In her latest piece for The Atlantic, titled "Elon Musk Wants What He Can’t Have: Wikipedia" (paywalled), Lila Shroff reports on the recent "campaign to delegitimize the digital encyclopedia" by Elon Musk and other right-wing tech figures, and how the most concerning results of their strategy could look like.
- That time when the Polish PM used his Wikipedia page as ID: A viral video shared on X purported to show former Prime Minister of Poland Mateusz Morawiecki at the Capital One Arena – in connection with the latest U.S. presidential transition – showing the National Guard his cellphone so they could check his identity on his Wikipedia page before granting him entry. Too bad, it probably wasn't so; according to a fact-check article from AOL, it seems like he was just getting directions.
- It's 'Easy' to get rich with Wikipedia: Actually, not, as the UK Intellectual Property Office recently told EasyJet founder Stelios Haji-Ioannou. According to Alistair Osborne's report for The Times (paywalled), Haji-Ioannou had threatened various businesses with High Court for allegedly infringing his "easy" brand, and even used a Wikipedia entry about the London Underground as one of the proofs of the genuine use of his trademarks, which have now been revoked by the UK IPO.
- ...or Wikipedia can just write you've got the money: French magazine Entrevue reports that businessman and musician Omar Harfouch plans to take legal action against Wikipedia and X, accusing them of defamation and harassment. Harfouch alleges that his Wikipedia page has been repeatedly altered to remove references to his musical career while spreading misleading claims, including an exaggerated estimate of his wealth; he argues that Wikipedia enables misinformation by giving credibility to baseless claims and failing to prevent coordinated reputational attacks.
- "Anti-Israel Club" allegedly "exposed": A French group called Urgence Palestine ("Palestine Emergency"), which had previously been involved in protests against the Gaza war across France, conducted an off-wiki coordination campaign for biased Wikipedia editing, according to an investigative journalist writing for news magazine Le Point, whose article was then re-reported in English by the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. It is worth-noting that Le Point and the French Wikipedia have already been at the center of controversy in the past, as reported by user Jules* in a previous Signpost issue.
- You know... it's not exactly a page move: In his January 27 monologue for The Daily Show, host Jon Stewart referred to the executive order telling U.S. agencies to rename the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America as "Making Wikipedia-like edits to the literal globe".
Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Technology report Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Essay
Fathoms Below, but over the moon
This is a re-adapted version of user Fathoms Below's own reflections – published with their permission – about their Request for Adminship, which passed in February 2024, when they were known as The Night Watch. Enjoy!
A year on from my RfA, I have some thoughts that I'm willing to share. While I won't go into heavy detail regarding what occurred there and what led to it becoming probably the closest RfA of 2024, I suggest that anyone who reads this essay just look into what happened and come to their own conclusions what I could have done differently. What I do know is that there isn't any response that will satisfy everybody, and so I'm just going to leave the matter to itself. If you were looking for an overview of my week at RfA, there isn't much to talk about and this essay won't focus much on it. But I do want to push back against the idea that "RfA can be fun", because that's not true at all, and frankly, it makes me upset to hear that. Usually, I'd give more restraint to that line of thinking, but I've also remembered someone saying that one of the worst RfAs in several years was just a rare fluke, as if its occurrence was akin to "in order to make an omelet, you have to break some eggs". So, this essay is focused towards those people, and although there is a likelihood that there really isn't another RfA as toxic as mine with the advent of Administrator elections, and that there's probably people out there that just dismisses this essay as the ramblings of a temperamentally unfit admin, but I really don't want some up-and-coming but clueless newbie like me to go down my path.
The week of my RfA was busy for me in real life, though it was six straight days of stress from the very start. Waking up early in the morning and seeing who !voted, pacing around the streets near me to try and relax, listening to music to help cope with the intensity... it wasn't a good ride. But I didn't expect that things would be so hard, and newbie me thought in 2022 that the process wasn't nearly as traumatizing. I think they thought that it might have been "fun" in a way. In the summer of that year, after I helped promote the article Elden Ring to good article status, I read about the RfA that the GA reviewer, Vami IV, had experienced. Now, say and think what you will about Vami, but I try to remind myself that we're all humans here. We do good and bad things, and while Vami did bad things, he also did good. A lot of good that was shared. And newbie me was clueless about how to discuss the RfA with Vami in private. I realized what I had said then by the time it was too late, and it kind of created a "cloud" between us that I thought had gone away about a year or so later.
Fast forward to February 11, 2024, and I speak to him for the last time. That tension hadn't really gone away, and by that point I was dazed about how my RfA went that I could not concentrate on Vami, and I tried recovering from the damage to my esteem. It's weird how traumatic events get burned into your mind and phase in at odd moments. I reread my RfA many, many times over the next few months that it had hurt my mental health. I felt guilty that I passed while my friend was left with more baggage and nothing gained. I really can't describe the feeling, and I don't expect to be able to communicate it here. After all, Wikipedia articles are written in a dispassionate tone that bleeds over into our processes. And when you can't see the human on the other end, the average person doesn't care enough.
But for all of that drama and pushback, I still continued as a relatively unremarkable admin for a few months, resigned as I tried to process a difficult period in my real life, and returned last November. It seems that it's typical of Wikipedia's processes that so much volunteer time is spent on discussions and things that don't objectively matter so much. This article comes to mind immediately. But someone was hurt in real life, and the people around them were hurt too by RfA. That's why I'm upset to hear that RfA can be "fun". So yeah, I'm writing this to all the people out there that see RfA as cluelessly as I did in the Summer of 2022. Maybe some newbie down the line will find this essay and be a bit wiser, à-la The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Or, perhaps, the lessons of the debriefs written by Moneytrees, Tamzin, and Vami IV will fall on deaf ears.
I'd like to acknowledge the following people:
- Ingenuity and Moneytrees, for being amazing nominators. If either of you are reading this, I really don't feel like I deserved your support and advice. A part of me feels ashamed that you had to watch all of that unfold, and I feel like I let you all both down in a way. I'm not a ScottishFinnishRadish, or GorillaWarfare, or... a Moneytrees, but I suppose I've done some good work in a way and I hope that work gives back to you both somehow. You guys are both awesome.
- Panini, Shushugah, and the others who reached out to me on my talk page, and Maliner and a few others who reached out to me privately. I was in a really hard point of my life and everything you all said helped give some endurance I needed to reach the end. If you gave me both reasonable and constructive criticism, I really appreciate it, too. Hopefully among you all will be the people who lead Wikipedia to a better future, even in the days that I may no longer be as active as I used to be.
- Vami IV's sister, for her support and compassion. We miss your brother so much.
- An anonymous editor. Hopefully I was a source of goodness in your life as you were in mine.
- And Clovermoss, for her encouragement for me to publish this essay. I doubt my debrief would be as good as your debrief, and I still don't think it's on a comparable level, but I hope it means something to some reader out there. You had my back throughout a lot of last year, and I see how you demonstrated that big things have small beginnings. It's all because of the butterfly effect, y'know? You're an amazing friend, and I would not have gotten this far without you.
See more RfA debriefs here – eds.
Let's talk!
January 2025 update from the Wikimedia Foundation
[edit]The executive team at the Wikimedia Foundation, led by CEO Maryana Iskander, presents periodic updates about the states of their projects. The January 2025 update presents and links to narratives categorized as technological developments, legal challenges, the state of Wikimedia Movement fundraising, the budget for spending those funds, staff-organized communication into Wikimedia audiences, and the Wikimedia Foundation-developed pilot projects which are the alternative direction from the now deprecated Wikimedia Community Movement Charter.
The Wikimedia Movement has always aspired to community governance and oversight. As such, letters such as this one are Wikimedia Foundation staff responses to Wikimedia user community requests, petitions, and calls for action. As is usual for these things, the letter is rich with links to even more documentation, and that documentation is often the present culmination of hundreds of Wikimedia user community discussions over years. Aspects of this kind of shared governance which work well include mutual good will, the intent of transparency, invitations for community inclusion, and the Wikimedia platform's history of success in inviting and collecting community conversations which often satisfy the volunteers who participate and the Wikimedia community organizations which promote and observe them.
Any Wikimedian who has participated in these process will be able to offer either criticism or suggestions for improvement, but whatever anyone says, they will want to know that the Wikimedia Movement empowers staff, volunteers, and allies of all backgrounds to grow their ability to advance Wikimedia project goals and to distribute power and resources appropriately.
Interested readers should check out the update, and are invited to post questions on the talk pages of various projects. Those with lots of questions are invited to interview Wikimedia Foundation staff for upcoming articles in The Signpost, and outspoken commentators are invited to submit opinion pieces for publication here. – Br
EU policy report: Is age verification coming?
[edit]In its European Policy Monitoring Report for January 2025, Wikimedia Europe shared smaller updates on several legal developments in the European Union, including regarding AI liability rules, geoblocking, ANTI-SLAPP measures, and obligations for online platforms, including Wikipedia, under the Digital Services Act (DSA) – see prior Signpost coverage here and here.
Concerning child protection, the chapter highlights recent comments by a representative of the European Commission's Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology (DG CNCT):
- Age verification is a central issue, and we [the EU] need to work towards a European solution by mid-2025.
- Other ideas than age verification can be implemented, and it's a work in progress. We want to have a public consultation on the DSA guidelines soon.
- We are in close contact with the Australian authorities [these might include the Ministers for Communications, Cyber Security and Social Services] and with Ofcom in the UK [both countries have seen extended debates about mandatory age verification systems in recent years]. Banning seems effective, but it's excluding minors from useful areas. There are other means that are less intrusive. Different platforms pose different issues. Age verification is essential for adult content, but it isn't the answer for social media.
German Wikipedia deletes 20-year-old WP:Café
[edit]In a controversial decision, the German Wikipedia's Café (archive) was recently deleted. Unlike the English Wikipedia's Teahouse, the Café, opened in 2005, was a place for off-topic discussion and socialising. Controversial IP contributions were part of the chain of events that led to the decision to delete – subsequently reviewed and upheld, but still the subject of ongoing discussion as many lament the venue's loss.
– A.K.
Brief notes
[edit]- Turbulent times over at he.wiki: Meta:Requests for comment/Severe Problems in hewiki is an active discussion concerning alleged takeover of Hebrew Wikipedia (he.wiki) by POV editors, "admins, checkusers and bureaucrats".
- Wiki-guests at FOSDEM: Wikimedia projects were at the center of several discussions and initiatives during the 2025 edition of FOSDEM, a volunteer-organized European event about free and open-source software development held yearly in Brussels, Belgium. The related events included a project involving the use of ontologies enhanced with Wikipedia and Wikidata to create Open Knowledge Graphs about climate change – see this issue's "Recent research" for more information – planned improvements for the Airflow data engineering platform used by the WMF, and game stands dedicated to 0 A.D. and Luanti, with this last project receiving a microgrant from Wikimedia Italia.
- Articles for Improvement: This week's Article for Improvement is Ice cream social, followed by Peninsula (beginning 10 February). Please be bold in helping improve these articles!
Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Serendipity Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Op-ed Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/In focus
Palestine-Israel articles 5 has closed
A final decision was posted by the Arbitration Committee concerning the case Palestine-Israel articles 5 (aka PIA5).
Summary of decision
[edit]A concise summary can be found at Special:Permalink/1271417868#Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Palestine-Israel articles 5 closed. This is a summary of the summary.
Arbs agreed on the following:
- Extended confirmed protection (ECP) is now the default status of all PIA articles, whether or not disruption has occurred (also, Articles for creation drafts by non-ECP users apparently will not be accepted, according to a clarification issued just before we go to press[footnotes 1]).
- No new bans occurred – user Ivanaa was already banned in pre-case Arbcom action, but re-banned in IPA5.
- Some topic bans were adopted.
- A number of warnings and admonishments were handed out.
- A novel remedy called "Balanced editing restriction", to be enforced technically (via edit filter), was constructed by the committee as a discretionary sanction:
In a given 30-day period, a user sanctioned under this restriction is limited to making no more than one-third of their edits in the Article, Talk, Draft, and Draft talk namespaces to pages that are subject to the extended-confirmed restriction under Arab–Israeli conflict contentious topic procedures.
- A novel remedy called "Article title restriction" was constructed by the committee (although it failed 10–1).
An article on a violent engagement within the Arab–Israeli conflict, broadly construed...may not describe the engagement as a "massacre", "murder", "bombing", "genocide", or "assassination" or similarly contentious word.
- The community was encouraged to run a request for comment (RFC) on POV forks.
- SPI clerks may invite contributors to leave (with existing authorities).
The committee was divided on "AndreJustAndre banned". An 8–6 majority decided not to enact that remedy, but a majority did decide to levy a "suspended site ban", under which a new Clarification and Amendment (ARCA) case can result in a relatively quick ban by motion.
Footnotes:
Community reaction
[edit]Community reaction to the decision was robust, with nearly 60 kB of comments on the committee noticeboard's talk page, as of this issue's deadline.
Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2025-02-07/Humour
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