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PowerGirls Go Wikipedia: Würzburg soccer players research forgotten female national players |
As part of the "PowerGirls go Wikipedia" project, the players of SC Würzburg wrote articles on forgotten female national players for the world's largest online encyclopedia. They were supported by the city library, experienced Wikipedia authors and the European champion Petra Landers. Seven new contributions on hitherto unknown female national players have emerged.
"With men, there are Wikipedia contributions even if they have only sat on the bench of the national team", Gudrun Reinders explains the difference to the national players. Together with her husband, the city library and Wikimedia Deutschland, she launched the "PowerGirls go Wikipedia" project. The goal: to talk to contemporary witnesses on two weekends, research information about the early national female players and write Wikipedia articles about those pioneers of the first hour.
The young soccer players get to know the technical side of the encyclopedia, learn the rules for publishing information and practice correcting existing articles. "In this way, the girls lose their fear of technology and the new media and become safer when using the Internet," says Reinders.
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Raising awareness about Tunisian history and heritage |
In 1991, Tunisia became the first nation in Africa to connect to the internet. Today, it is one of the most connected countries in the Middle East and North Africa, with a thriving community of digital activists and free culture advocates. One of these is Wikimedian Emna Mizouni.
Wiki Loves Monuments is a volunteer-led international photo contest that encourages people to contribute freely-licensed images of local historical monuments and heritage sites in their region. According to the Guinness Book of Records, it holds the world record for largest photography competition. Each year, more than 300,000 photos are added through the contest.
Emna, along with other community members from Northern Africa, have organised three editions of the annual contest in Tunisia since 2013. The contest has attracted thousands of images from volunteers, ten of which are selected as winners every year.
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How does that word sound? The Wikibase installation Lingua Libre structures and preserves spoken language |
Wikimedia's free and collaboratively maintained knowledge database Wikidata structures the knowledge of the world in language-independent data objects that can be enriched with various types of information. Both humans and machines can access this treasure trove of data and generate new knowledge. Wikibase, the software behind Wikidata, is also available as free and open software for all. In 2018, we continued to work on making Wikibase even easier to use for others. Additionally, we offered workshops to interested organizations to explain the use of Wikibase for open knowledge projects.
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