I just want to say that I see a significant difference between the Wikipedia: 
In the news section and our front page.It is not just the interviews. Wikipedia 
is restricted to those events that merit an encyclopedic entry for posterity, 
while we can cover event that are more temporal in nature. Sure, there is a 
great deal of overlap, especially while Wikinews is small. Earthquakes, wars, 
elections all get their own Wikipedia pages.In recent news, however, we have 
had a series of articles, that I have not seen on "Wikipedia: In the news" and 
that would be the stories on Daniel Hauser and the court-ordered 
chemotherapy.Daniel Hauser does not have a Wikipedia entry, but we have at 
least three stories on his case:Minnesota boy with cancer and mother return to 
abide by court rulingsMother and son disappear after court orders cancer 
treatmentCourt rules teen must take chemotherapyWikipedia barely mentions this 
case in Hodgkin's lymphoma: Notable_cases.As we grow, these differences will 
grow.Cheers, SVTCobra----- Original Message -----From: Brion Vibber Date: 
Tuesday, May 26, 2009 7:23 pmSubject: Re: [Wikinews-l] Wikipedia's 'In the 
news'To: [email protected], Wikinews mailing list Cc: 
[email protected]> El 5/26/09 4:28 AM, Fred Bauder escribió:> > 
Wikipedia needs to do what is good for Wikipedia, and some > news coverage> > 
is good for Wikipedia. Detailed original reporting is outside > Wikipedia's> 
mission, as is a sophisticated presentation of the > significance of news.> > 
As things happen, information about them is added to the > corpus of human> > 
knowledge and thus added to Wikipedia.> > Wikinews does relatively little to 
really support firsthand > reporting > either. I'll admit I'm not a hardcore 
Wikinewsie, but what I've > seen > over the last years has generally been 
either:> > * Original interviews> or> * Re-reporting of news stories in other 
media> > Look at today's top stories:> > 
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Trial_against_Church_of_Scientology_begins_in_France>
 http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/North_Korea_conducts_test_of_nuclear_weapon> 
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Obama_nominates_Sonia_Sotomayor_to_U.S._Supreme_Court>
 http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Cyclone_in_Bay_of_Bengal_kills_at_least_17> > All 
four are just rehashes of information found at other news > sites -- > the 
sources are all media news outlets: CNN, BBC, Al-Jazeera, > Reuters, etc.> > 
There is an original reporting section:> 
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Portal:Original_reporting> > but the stories are 
relatively rare, and even many of those seem > to be > basically "a public 
event happened, here's a description" or "a > press > conference happened, 
here's some info".> > > Wikinews lacks a local angle (there's no locality) or a 
unifying > political angle (we're supposed to be neutral), either of which > 
could > make it much easier to organize original reporting. Compare with > say 
> Indynews, which has a strong political angle and has been much > more > 
active about providing infrastructure. Editorial quality > sometimes > suffers, 
but I at least feel like they've got a mission...> > -- brion> > 
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