While I wouldn't advise mentioning it in a media interview, if there were
someway to remind people that Wikipedia is ultimately political, and deeper
analysis of the edit history and userbase reveals this wonderfully. If you
did venture into this topic Liam, you might point to the profile that the
stats for English WP paint... What were they: young adult male from the
West Coast USA, educated, interested in military history, English as a
primary or only language... If opportunity presented, you might point out
that this self consciousness is part of a larger openness in the Wikimedia
projects, something quite unique for large institutions. I guess it's a
complicated way of reinforcing the advice to "check sources".
On 25/10/2013 9:11 AM, "Kerry Raymond" <kerry.raym...@gmail.com> wrote:

> One could also comment that the citations added in the climate change
> section are to major scientific organisations in Australia and
> internationally.
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On 25/10/2013, at 9:07 AM, Kerry Raymond <kerry.raym...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> The article has had a lot of edits in the past week and the climate change
> section looks like it has been added after the Greg Hunt story. I note a
> few familiar usernames in the edit history as well as IPs. some reverting
> has occurred.
>
> How to phrase it ... Hmm ... I think a key point is that WP is a living
> encyclopedia and events (being both the current bush fires themselves and
> the Greg Hunt statement) focus attention onto those parts of WP, which
> results in them being updated and improved. In that regard some recent
> edits have added information about the relationship between climate change
> and bush fires including citations. WP's role is not to tell people whether
> or not to believe in climate change but to present the best quality summary
> of factual information (with citations for people who want to dig deeper)
> and let people make up their own minds. Greg Hunt has made up his mind in
> one way, others may come to different conclusions. We are delighted that
> Greg Hunt regards WP as an authoritative source but we would urge all
> readers to read the cited material if they need a detailed knowledge of a
> topic on which to make important decisions.
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> On 25/10/2013, at 8:43 AM, Liam Wyatt <liamwy...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Good morning :-)
>
> I've just been called by the producer for ABC702 morning show (presenter
> is Linda Mottram) and asked to talk on radio sometime between 10 and 10:30
> about Wikipedia's errors, how we improve the contet etc, etc, - in the
> context of the recent bushfire / Greg Hunt story in the media.
>
> I can obviously talk about how we get better and that we don't pretend to
> be perfect and that we encourage people to check the footnote and make
> their own assessment... But can someone please advise on the best way to
> phrase how the specific article [[Bushfires in Australia]] appeared last
> week and what has changed? I see there is a "climate change" section - was
> that already there a few days ago? (I can check the history when I get to
> the office, on my mobile at the moment, wanted to write to you straight
> away).
>
> Any advice, ideas? I recall there being a userspace proposal on the
> chapter wiki - can someone point me to that again and advise if you think
> it's appropriate for me to try to quote?
>
> Sincerely,
> -Liam
>
>
>
> --
> wittylama.com
> Peace, love & metadata
>
>
>
> --
> wittylama.com
> Peace, love & metadata
>
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