HiI don't have an idea about how to develop this, but it seems like an interesting project!Best,ReemOn 30 Mar 2017 10:17, "Gerard Meijssen" <gerard.meijssen@gmail.com> wrote:______________________________GerardMThanks,Please let us know what the issues are and what it takes to move forward with this, Does this make sense?How difficult is it to come up with something like this. I know this tool would be based on DBpedia but there are several reasons why this is good. First it gives added relevance to DBpedia (without detracting from Wikidata) and secondly as DBpedia updates on RSS changes for several Wikipedias, the effect of these changes is quickly noticed when a new set of data is requested.When we can do this, another thing that will promote the use of a tool like this is when regularly (say once a month) numbers are stored and trends are published.When I care about entries for alumni of a university, I will consider curating the information in question. Particularly when I know the language of the Wikipedia.So given that DBpedia harvests both Wikipedia and Wikidata, can it provide us with a view where a Wikipedia statement and a Wikidata statement differ. To make it useful, it is important to subset this data. I will not start with 500.000 differences but I will begin when they are about a subset that I care about.Hoi,Much of the content of DBpedia and Wikidata have the same origin; harvesting data from a Wikipedia. There is a lot of discussion going on about quality and one point that I make is that comparing "Sources" and concentrating on the differences particularly where statements differ is where it is easiest to make a quality difference.
http://ultimategerardm.blogspot.nl/2017/03/quality-dbpedia- and-kappa-alpha-psi.html _________________
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