While I happily agree that Sources are good, I will not ask people to start adding Sources at this point of time it will not improve quality signifcantly. It makes more sense once we are at a stage where multiple sources disagree on values for statements. Adding sources is signifcantly more meaningful and useful once we start curating data.
the problems will that by the time Wikidata starts to curate data it'll will have corrupted that data with its own data, and secondly past experience with wiki's is that fixing data after its been entered is actually harder and more time consuming to do, along with the fact that the damage to reputation will have a lasting impact and fixing that consumes millions of dollars in Donner money.. As said earlier there are lesson in the development of Wikipedia that should be heeded in an attempt to avoid those same pitfalls
On 29 November 2015 at 08:37, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
Hoi, It was from the Myanmar WIkipedia that a lot of data was imported to Wikidata. Data that did not exist elsewhere. I do not care really what "Freedom House" says. I do not know them, I do know that the data is relevant and useful It was even the subject on a blogpost..
You may ignore data that is not from a source that you like. This indiscriminate POV is not a NPOV.
As to Grasulf, you failed to get the point. It was NOT about the data itself but about the presentation. I worked on this item because a duplicate was created with even less data.
While I happily agree that Sources are good, I will not ask people to start adding Sources at this point of time it will not improve quality signifcantly. It makes more sense once we are at a stage where multiple sources disagree on values for statements. Adding sources is signifcantly more meaningful and useful once we start curating data. Statistically most errors will be found where sources disagree.
When people add conflicting data, it is indeed really relevant to add Sources. My practice for adding data is that I will only add data that fulfils some minimal criteria. Typically I am not interested in adding data that already exists. I will remove less precise for more precise data.
The biggest issue with data is that we do not have enough of it and the second most relevant issue is that we need processes to compare sources with Wikidata and have a workflow to curate differences. Thanks, GerardM
On 28 November 2015 at 19:23, Andreas Kolbe jayen466@gmail.com wrote:
Gerard,
On Fri, Nov 27, 2015, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com wrote:
When you compare the quality of Wikipedias with what en.wp used to be you
are comparing apples and oranges. The Myanmar Wikipedia is better
informed
on Myanmar than en.wp etc.
Is it? The entire Burmese Wikipedia contains a mere 31,646 content pages
at
the time of writing, covering (or trying to cover) all countries of the world, and all aspects of human knowledge.[1]
The English Wikipedia's WikiProject Myanmar, meanwhile, has 6,713 pages within its purview.[2] I dare say that's more articles on Myanmar than
the
Burmese Wikipedia contains. As an indication, the English Wikipedia's article on Myanmar is more than twice as long as the one in the Burmese Wikipedia.
Moreover, according to Freedom House[3], the internet in Myanmar is not free:
"The government detained and charged internet users for online activities [...] Government officials pressured social media users not to distribute or share content that offends the military, or disturbs the functions of government."
When you qualify a Wikipedia as fascist, it does not follow that the
data
is suspect. Certainly when data in a source that you so easily dismiss
is
typically the same, there is not much meaning in what you say from a Wikidata point of view.
Data are always generated within a social context, and data generated by political extremists or people living under oppressive regimes are
suspect
whenever they have political implications. (Looking at the descriptions
of
Burmese politics, my feeling is the Burmese Wikipedia is not under significant government control, but largely written by ex-pats. However, the situation is quite different in some other Wikipedias serving
countries
labouring under similar regimes.)
PS What does your librarian think when she knows
It was a he, but I'll leave him to join in himself if he chooses to.
I happen to work on Dukes of Friuli. Compare the data from Wikidata and
the
information by Reasonator based on the same item for one of them.
https://tools.wmflabs.org/reasonator/?&q=2471519 https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2471519
Let's look at this example. Reasonator says of Grasulf II of Friulim, "He died in 653". There is no source. Wikidata says he died in 653, and the indicated source is the Italian Wikipedia.
However, when you look at the (very brief) Italian Wikipedia article[4], you will find that the year 653 is given with a question mark. The
English
Wikipedia, in contrast, states, in its similarly brief article[5],
"Nothing more is known about Grasulf and the date of his death is uncertain."
Do you now see the problem about nuance? Reasonator and Wikidata confidently proclaim as uncontested fact something that in fact is rather uncertain.
The sole source cited by both the English and the Italian Wikipedia is
the
Historia Langobardorum, available in Wikisource.[6] My Latin is a bit rusty, but while the Historia mentions that Ago succeeded Grasulf upon
the
latter's death, it says nothing specific about when that was. The Historia's time indications are in general very vague, usually limited to the phrase "Circa haec tempora", meaning "about this time". So it is in this case.
For reference, the Google Knowledge Graph states equally confidently that Grasulf II of Friuli died in 651AD. This may be based on the English Wikipedia's unsourced claim (in the template at the bottom of the English Wikipedia article) that his reign ended c. 651, or on some other source like Freebase.
The other Wikipedias that have articles on Grasulf II provide the
following
death dates
Catalan: 651 Galician: 653 Lithuanian: 653 Polish: 651 Romanian: Unknown Russian: 653 Ukrainian: 651
As for published sources, I can offer Ersch's Allgemeine Encyclopädie (1849), which states on page 209 that Grasulf II died in 651.[7]
The extreme vagueness of the available dates is pointed out by Thomas Hodgkin in Vol. 7 of "Italy and Her Invaders" (1895). Hodgkin puts the
end
of Grasulf's reign at 645, "as a mere random guess", and adds that "De Rubeis, following Sigonius", puts the accession of Ago in 661.[8]
There may well be better and more recent sources beyond my reach, but having these published dates in Wikidata, with the source references,
would
actually make some sense. Unsourced data, not so much.
Answers are comfortable, but they are not knowledge when they are unverifiable and/or wrong.
[1]
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wikipedias#10_000.2B_articles
[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Myanmar_(Burma)/Assessme...
[3] https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-net/2015/myanmar [4]
https://it.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grasulfo_II_del_Friuli&oldid=...
[5]
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grasulf_II_of_Friuli&oldid=63...
[6] https://la.wikisource.org/wiki/Historia_Langobardorum/Liber_IV [7]
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=FzxYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA209&dq=grasulf...
[8]
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8ToOAwAAQBAJ&dq=grasulf+friuli+651%7...
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