Hello,
My name is Ahmen Khawaja and I work for the BBC. I would like to get in touch with the
Wikimedia community in Delhi to see if a volunteer can take part in an event we are
collaborating and planning with Wikipedia to run in Delhi. We would appreciate it if we
can get a couple of volunteers on board to take part in our Mass Participation event on
the 8th of Dec. It’s a part of our annual BBC 100 Women Series which celebrates
inspirational women across the world.
The information about it is below.
Looking fwd to hearing from you,
100 Women needs you! The internet needs you!
As part of BBC 100 Women 2016 we’re asking the question is the internet sexist?
We watch 1 billion videos on YouTube every day but 4 out of every 5 voices we hear are
male. If you’re a woman, you’re 27 times more likely to be abused online. If you’re in the
developing world, nearly 25% fewer women than the men around you have access to the
Internet
So if we don’t hear women, if they’re harassed, if we don’t see them represented and if
they can’t get online at all…is the internet sexist? And can you do something about it?
Only 15% of Wikipedia editors are women and less than 15% of notable profiles are of
women. Half of the BBC’s 100 women over 3 years still do not have a Wikipedia page.
Are you outraged? Don’t worry, you can do something about it on Thursday 8th December.
100 Women is joining up with Wikipedia to hold a 12 hour edit-a-thon to encourage more
women to become editors on the site and increase the articles and profiles about women
written by anyone. Anyone can edit a Wikipedia page. We will provide you with the tools
and help you need
We will be combining the reach and resources of both Wikipedia and the BBC and this
project will run for the whole day in various countries, in various languages
simultaneously. Editors in locations from around the world will include BBC staff, our
audience, special guests and the Wikipedia community, to add forgotten women to the site
and edit some entries of their choosing.
We’re looking for volunteers to come to one of our events – or to start their own. To get
friends, guests or colleagues together, learn how to edit Wiki articles and add their
nomination of a women forgotten history, a notable woman that has never made it on to the
site, or fill in more details of an inspirational woman whose small profile doesn’t
reflect her contribution.
When? Thursday 8th December 0800-2000 GMT. Main events are 1100-1400 GMT.
Why? 100Women ends with a mass participation event – last year 150 simultaneous debates
happened in 50 countries in 10 languages – we exist to increase female presence and make
content that is particularly attractive to young women around the world. This is the
finale of our season and what we are asking people to get involved with this year.
How? Get in touch BBC100.women@bbc.co.uk<mailto:BBC100.women@bbc.co.uk> or
Ahmen.Khawaja@bbc.co.uk<mailto:Ahmen.Khawaja@bbc.co.uk> and will help you set yours
up and contribute to the live page and content on the BBC outlets throughout the day.
What will be the content?
All edits in all languages will be recorded and live tweeted, gathering around shared
hashtags #100womenwiki. The BBC will have a live page and the event will be reported on
various programmes and platforms over the course of the day.
The goal is to make a visible impact on the 7th most visited site in the world. We’re
hoping for new pages, new edits, better citations, longer articles and more language
editors.
What do I need? The best way to make a Wiki entry is via Laptops as they are the most
friendly. You don’t need to bring anything if you’re coming to our event in London. For
all other bureax and audiences at home, please try and use laptops to make your entries as
it will be easier!
Exactly will I need to do on the day? You have 3 options to participate –
1. Come to an event and we will provide you with the knowledge and info to make small
edits that you can do like adding photos, information and stubs (the basic new page of a
wiki article)
2. If you can’t come to an event – check out
www.bbc.co.uk/100women<http://www.bbc.co.uk/100women> and watch a how to video on
becoming a wiki editor – make your changes on the 8th of December and tweet using
#100womenwiki so we can pick up your edit and share it.
3. If you know of a woman that you believe should be on Wikipedia, do some research,
come to an event equipped with your sourced facts and we will try to help you add her. You
can check out what makes a notable person.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability_(people) You can’t add yourself or your
mate but there are thousands of women who should be on and who aren’t.
Why? This is your chance to add your voice, to recognise women’s achievements and be part
of something. You will be able to say…..today, I made the internet (a little) less
sexist.
Ahmen Khawaja
Producer 100 Women
+447956531567
[bbc-100-women]
From: Wikimediaindia-l [mailto:wikimediaindia-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of
Joe Sutherland
Sent: 16 November 2016 08:47 PM
To: wikimediaindia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org; chapter(a)wikimedia.in
Cc: Anne Gomez
Subject: [Wikimediaindia-l] Supporting offline reading: Give your feedback on WMF
prototypes
Hello, Wikimedians of India!
The Reading team at the Wikimedia Foundation is working to support readers who want to
take articles offline to read and share later on their phones - a use case we learned
about from deep research earlier this
year<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Findings> [0]. We’ve built a few
prototypes and are looking for people to test them, particularly people who don’t know
Wikipedia all that well.
We’d love if you could help us find anyone who doesn’t edit who might be interested in
this feature and would want to test it. If you know anyone like this, please send them the
following message:
----
Hello! Wikipedia needs your help to improve. We’re looking for people who have internet
access at least sometimes and like to have access to content when they’re not connected to
the internet. We would like to learn from you. If you would be willing to participate in a
study to tell us more, please fill out this
survey<https://wikimedia.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_09wJQzQs54DETUF> [1] before
November 25. Testing will only be available in English for now.
Thank you!
[1]
https://wikimedia.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_09wJQzQs54DETUF This survey is hosted on a
third-party service. For information about data handling and privacy, please see the
survey privacy statement:
https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Screener_Survey_for_Offline_Reading_St…
----
You can see the prototypes and leave comments on
meta<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Offline>[2]gt;[2], though please don’t
send this page to anyone filling out the survey as it could bias test results.
We’re also looking for feedback about how to identify and prioritize regions for our work,
and would welcome your perspective on that meta
page<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Target_countries>[3] as well.
Thanks,
Joe + New Readers
[0]
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Findings
[1] (duplicated from excerpt above)
https://wikimedia.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_09wJQzQs54DETUF This survey is hosted on a
third-party service. For information about data handling and privacy, please see the
survey privacy statement:
https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Screener_Survey_for_Offline_Reading_St…
[2]
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Offline
[3]
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/New_Readers/Target_countries
--
Joe Sutherland
Community Advocate
Wikimedia Foundation
joesutherland.rocks<http://joesutherland.rocks/> |
@jrbsu<http://twitter.com/jrbsu>