April 2019
Upcoming releases, and GLAM pilot projects
ByWelcome to the new, and separate, This Month in GLAM report about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons (SDC).
The project Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons adds functionalities for structured and machine-readable data to files on Wikimedia Commons, so that they become easier to view, search, edit, organize and re-use. To achieve that, the Commons backend is migrated to Wikibase, the same technology as used for Wikidata.
- Structured Data on Commons (SDC) general info portal
- Development page (not always up to date)
- GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
- New features of SDC:
- Glossary of SDC terms
What is already released, and what is coming?
Already released on SDC: File Captions and Depicts
In early May 2019, you can already add multilingual file captions and Depicts statements on Wikimedia Commons.
An example of structured data added to this photo of the Monument Demba et Dupont, a public sculpture in Dakar, Senegal:
File captions
File pages on Wikimedia Commons now contain a field where you can add - and translate - multilingual file captions that describe the file. The text in these captions is included in Wikimedia Commons' search function.
Depicts statements
File pages now include a 'Structured data' tab. When you click this tab, you can add 'Depicts' information about the things (people, places, species...) that are shown in the file. In this case, the photo shows the war memorial Monument Demba et Dupont in Dakar, Senegal in the foreground (hence marked as 'prominent'). In the background you see Dakar Station.
Depicts of depicts
This is not a screenshot of the same file, but of the Wikidata item Q61483227 that represents the sculpture itself. Many files on Wikimedia Commons can depict this artwork! Do note that, on Wikidata, there is further information on what the sculpture itself depicts (a Senegalese Tirailleur).
It is not necessary to include this information on the file itself. Later this year, the search function on Wikimedia Commons will support 'Depicts of depicts': when a file on Wikimedia Commons depicts a Wikidata item that itself has Depicts statements, those depicted things (people, species, objects...) will be discoverable on Wikimedia Commons too.
Upcoming releases
In the next iterations, the following features will be released on Wikimedia Commons:
- Add depicts statements in UploadWizard
- Search depicts statements
- Depicts qualifiers
- Other statements than depicts
- Filter search results
- Depicts of depicts
- Depicts and annotations
GLAM pilot projects
At this moment, several community members and GLAM partners are working on the first GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Commons. You can find the overview of projects here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/GLAM/Projects
This month we highlight the ongoing work on a Wikimedia Commons microcontributions tool: ISA.
ISA is a fun, multilingual, mobile-first 'microcontributions' tool, that makes it easy for (groups of inexperienced) people to add structured data to images on Wikimedia Commons.
- With ISA, you can choose a pre-defined set of images on Commons and then ask contributors to 'tag' these with multilingual structured metadata. Points are counted for each contribution, and therefore it is possible to organize 'tagging' or microcontributions competitions or challenges with ISA.
- ISA is originally built to provide better multilingual and structured descriptions of c:Wiki Loves Africa images. But it is also developed to be useful to all of the Wiki Loves competitions, and eventually for all media files on Wikimedia Commons.
- ISA is developed as a collaboration between Wiki In Africa, Histropedia and the Structured Data on Commons project.
- What does the name mean? 'Isa' is the chiShona language word for 'put' or 'place', but it can also serve as an acronym for Information Structured Acceleration, Information Structure Additions and more.
- Access the tool (please note it is still under heavy development!): https://tools.wmflabs.org/isa/
- Follow (or contribute to) the development process on Phabricator: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/project/profile/3981/
Two design mock-ups (please note that this is work in progress!):
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Mock-up design for the screen where participants will describe images
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Mock-up design for the home page of a 'tagging' campaign for campaign managers inside the ISA tool
Events
- Adding structured and machine-readable data for copyright and licensing on Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata, workshop by Sandra Fauconnier about modelling copyright statuses on Wikidata, 10 May, at the Creative Commons Global Summit in Lisbon
May 2019
Updates on development; GLAM pilot projects; Wikimania Hackathon with GLAM focus area
ByThe project Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons adds functionalities for structured and machine-readable data to files on Wikimedia Commons, so that they become easier to view, search, edit, organize and re-use. To achieve that, the Commons backend is migrated to Wikibase, the same technology as used for Wikidata.
- Structured Data on Commons (SDC) general info portal
- Development page (not always up to date)
- GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
- New features of SDC:
- Glossary of SDC terms
Wikimedia Commons updates at the May 2019 Wikimedia Activities Meeting
The May 2019 Wikimedia activities meeting contained several updates about Wikimedia Commons in general.
- Sandra Fauconnier (WMF) gave a brief update about Structured Data on Commons and the GLAM pilot projects. Video (5 minutes): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzSfyWUIjUY&feature=youtu.be&t=169
- Florence Devouard presented the ISA tool which was also featured in last month's This Month in GLAM newsletter. Video (5 minutes): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzSfyWUIjUY&feature=youtu.be&t=473
- Mike Peel talked about his work on Wikidata-driven infoboxes on Wikimedia Commons, which has led to better navigation and a much deeper integration of Wikimedia Commons with Wikidata. Video (10 minutes): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzSfyWUIjUY&feature=youtu.be&t=969
Development updates
Already live: multilingual captions and Depicts statements
As mentioned in the previous Structured Data on Commons update in This Month in GLAM, it is now possible to add multilingual captions and Depicts statements to files on Wikimedia Commons. This is both possible on the file page, and via UploadWizard. A few demonstrations (animated gifs):
Upcoming development
In the next iterations, the following features will be released on Wikimedia Commons:
- Search depicts statements
- Depicts qualifiers
- Other statements than depicts
- Filter search results
- Depicts of depicts
- Depicts and annotations
- UploadWizard using structured data for Wiki Loves... style campaigns
Highlighted GLAM pilot project: Digitized books and Wikisource
Satdeep Gill (WMF) is working together with a group of Punjabi volunteers on a Structured Data on Commons pilot project to practice the full workflow of digitizing publications, uploading them to Wikimedia Commons, transcribing them on Wikisource, and re-using the data on Wikidata across Wikimedia projects.
The pilot project consists of:
- Digitization of a small set of out-of-copyright Punjabi books (in the Qisse genre) Done
- Upload of the digitized files to Wikimedia Commons, in structured data format
- Upload of the books' metadata (and author data) to Wikidata Done
- Indexing and transcribing the books on Wikisource
- Inclusion of the metadata of the books on Wikisource
This pilot project will inspire new thinking and ideas about efficient workflows and re-use of data across Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikisource. It will also lead to improved documentation about this workflow.
The metadata about the books is available on Wikidata. See this Wikidata query, or the Wikidata-driven list on the project's info page.
How can you help?
- Feel free to add your name to the participant list!
- If you are interested in the process of uploading digitized books in structured data to Wikimedia Commons, please mention this on the project's talk page, or e-mail Satdeep (sgill wikimedia.org). Your help is very welcome!
- If you read and write Punjabi, your help will be welcome later in 2019, when transcribing the books on Wikisource.
- We are looking for people who are interested in correct data modelling of books on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons, and people interested in (tools around) improving the workflows across Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikisource.
All current GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons are listed at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/GLAM/Projects
GLAM focus area at the Wikimania Hackathon
The Wikimania 2019 Hackathon in Stockholm, August 14-15, 2019, will have GLAM as one of its focus areas. See the dedicated info page: https://wikimania.wikimedia.org/wiki/2019:Hackathon/GLAM_focus_area
Wikimedia developers and developers working for cultural institutions are very welcome to join this focus area. Feel free to indicate your interest by signing the dedicated page! Areas to work on include (but are not limited to) Structured Data on Commons, IIIF, upgrades of GLAM-Wiki tools, batch uploads, and more. Feel free to add any topics you want to work on.
We especially welcome developers who work at a cultural institution and who want to experiment with Structured Data on Commons. Do you know (or are you) someone who may be interested and would you be interested some guidance? Feel free to get in touch with Sandra Fauconnier (sfauconnier wikimedia.org).
June 2019
Development updates; GLAM focus area at the Wikimania Hackathon
ByThe project Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons adds functionalities for structured and machine-readable data to files on Wikimedia Commons, so that they become easier to view, search, edit, organize and re-use. To achieve that, the Commons backend is migrated to Wikibase, the same technology as used for Wikidata.
- Structured Data on Commons (SDC) general info portal
- Development page (not always up to date)
- GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
- New features of SDC:
- Glossary of SDC terms
Development updates
Multilingual captions, Depicts statements, and (new!) Depicts qualifiers
As mentioned in previous Structured Data on Commons updates in This Month in GLAM, it is now possible to add multilingual captions and Depicts statements to files on Wikimedia Commons. This is both possible on the file page, and via UploadWizard.
In June 2019, it has also become possible to add qualifiers to Depicts statements, in order to make these more precise. For instance, when describing a scan of an old photograph of Dutch speed skater and cyclist Jaap Eden,
in the 'Structured data' tab of the file page you can now say the file depicts Jaap Eden (d:Q719491), and that he is shown wearing a cap (d:Q6147804) and ice skates (d:Q108640), and has a moustache (d:Q15179):
Upcoming development
In the next iterations, the following features will be released on Wikimedia Commons:
- Other statements than depicts
- Search depicts statements
- Filter search results
- Depicts of depicts
- Depicts and annotations
- UploadWizard using structured data for Wiki Loves... style campaigns
GLAM focus area at the Wikimania Hackathon
The Wikimania 2019 Hackathon in Stockholm, August 14-15, 2019, will have GLAM as one of its focus areas. See the dedicated info page: https://wikimania.wikimedia.org/wiki/2019:Hackathon/GLAM_focus_area
Wikimedia developers and developers working for cultural institutions are very welcome to join this focus area. Feel free to indicate your interest by signing the dedicated page! Support will be available for people working on Structured Data on Commons and on topics related to the FindingGLAMs project by Wikimedia Sweden. Areas to work on include (but are not limited to) IIIF, upgrades of GLAM-Wiki tools, batch uploads, and more. Feel free to add any topics you want to work on.
July 2019
Other statements; Wikimania; blog posts on SDC
ByNew feature release: other statements
It is now possible to add other statements than just Depicts statements to files on Wikimedia Commons. How does this work? See below for a few examples of Wikimedia Commons files described with structured data.
A simple case
This photo of sugar cubes has captions in many different languages:
It has a Depicts statement (it depicts sugar cubes) with a few qualifiers (twelve sugar cubes in the color white). You can see this statement (and others) by clicking on the Structured data tab in the file page.
In addition, the file also has various other statements, indicating the license, creator and quality assessment.
A file showing a two-dimensional artwork
This file is a faithful digital representation of a two-dimensional artwork: Jan Bruegel the Elder's The Last Judgement (1602), collection Statens Museum for Kunst.
To indicate that, it has the following structured data statement, pointing to the Wikidata item for that specific artwork:
How can you help?
The two above examples are among the very first Wikimedia Commons files with structured data. Their structured data is still very incomplete. Just like in the early days of Wikidata, the data model for such files (which fields and properties are needed) is not fully established yet. Especially for GLAM files, a lot of thinking is welcome to build best practices on how to describe them properly with structured data. You can help in the following ways:
- Experiment and add structured data to existing uploaded files, and think what kind of data (Wikidata properties and items) you need for that
- Contribute to data modelling discussions. You can check the properties table on Wikimedia Commons to see if the community has already been discussing the kind of data you are interested in. And you can engage on its talk page if you want to discuss and ask questions.
- Propose properties for Wikimedia Commons. The dedicated page for this is at d:Wikidata:Property proposal/Commons; you can see existing Wikidata properties for Wikimedia Commons at this query (click the blue arrow button to run the query): https://w.wiki/6tS.
Structured Data on Commons and GLAM at Wikimania
The following Wikimania sessions will focus on Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons:
- Wikimania 2019 Hackathon - GLAM focus area
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons for GLAM-Wiki
- Structured Data on Commons hands-on training
- Describing files on Structured Commons: problems and opportunities
Blog posts about Structured Data on Commons
Two blog posts by Keegan explain the first steps in the development process of Structured Data on Commons. More blog posts in this series will follow.
- Structured Data on Commons – A Blog Series
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Two – Federated Wikibase and Multi-Content Revisions
August 2019
Recent presentations, workshops and blog posts
ByIntroductions to Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
Basic features for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons have been deployed (see the July 2019 update of This Month in GLAM). If you are interested in learning about the project's current status, and how to edit structured data, check the following presentations and workshop that were organized in August 2019:
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons workshop, Wikidata Lab XVIII
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Video recording of workshop (nearly 2 hours)
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Slides
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Video recording
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Slides (first slide looks broken, but the presentation is viewable)
Other presentations and workshops about SDC
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons hands-on training, Wikimania 2019 (notes)
- Workshop about SDC data modelling, problems and opportunities, Wikimania 2019 (slides / notes)
Blog posts about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
The following blog posts by Keegan Peterzell outline the development process behind SDC:
- Structured Data on Commons – A Blog Series
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Two – Federated Wikibase and Multi-Content Revisions
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Three – Multilingual File Captions
Also check this blog post by Lucas Werkmeister:
October 2019
Getting started, Tool highlights, Blog posts and presentations about SDC
ByHow to get started with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons?
If you are getting started with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons, the recent workshop slides from WikidataCon should give you a quick overview of what's new and how you can edit structured data:
Structured Data on Commons tools
Since several months, it is possible to edit multilingual captions and statements on Wikimedia Commons via UploadWizard and via file pages on Wikimedia Commons. But recently, community members have also started developing various tools with which you can easily add structured data to Commons files. A few highlights below:
The ISA Tool
The ISA Tool is a multilingual, mobile-friendly tool, that makes it easy for anyone - especially beginners! - to add structured data to images on Wikimedia Commons. You can create 'tagging' campaigns and small competitions in ISA, but you can also use it for your personal workflows. Anyone can do this - no need to be an administrator or a skilled user! ISA is developed by Wiki In Africa and Eugene Egbe in collaboration with Histropedia and the Structured Data on Commons team.
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At various past conferences, people have organized mini-challenges with ISA.
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The ISA Tool received a WikidataCon 2019 award in the Multimedia category!
You can give ISA a try by adding structured data in the campaign of Quality images supported by a Wikimedia chapter: https://tools.wmflabs.org/isa/campaigns/33
AC/DC
AC/DC ("Add to Commons, Descriptive Claims") is a batch editing tool by Lucas Werkmeister. It allows for complex data modeling of sets of files, either defined by a category or by a Pagepile. This is the only batch tool right now that supports Qualifiers. Installation is simple through the Preferences Gadget menu, and it supports large and small batches of files well. For more, see commons:Help:Gadget-ACDC
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An example of the AC/DC tool in action
SDC
SDC is a user script developed by Magnus Manske that is similar to HotCat, allowing users to both:
- evaluate the existing structured data statements on a file page from a category or search results page and
- add a limited set of statements (currently P180 (Depicts) and P195 (Collection)). The tool only adds structured data to files on one page of a category; if a Commons category is exceptionally large and you want to add structured data to many or all files, this is not the tool for you.
PetScan integration with QuickStatements
It is now also possible to use PetScan to add structured data to files on Wikimedia Commons, through integration with QuickStatements. The process works as follows:
- Do a search on PetScan that produces a list of files as result (example: files in Category:Volkswagen T1) . For creating PetScan results for Commons files, note that:
- The Wiki needs to be set to “wikimedia” for the project, and “commons” for the language
- The namespace for files needs to be selected in the second tab.
- You will then see a small box at the top right of the file list in which you can enter statements to add to those files (example: P180:Q1819861)
- When clicking 'Start QS', you will be taken to QuickStatements in which you can then run your batch edit.
A link to PetScan from each category is coming to the commons:Template:Wikidata Infobox soon, so creation of the queries should be quite straightforward from that point.
Help welcome with data modeling!
The Wikimedia Commons community is at this moment thinking about the best ways to describe files on Wikimedia Commons with structured data. This is very new territory: there are no established ways yet to, for instance, describe the creators or locations of files.
Please help with this process by participating in the data modeling discussions at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/Modeling and its various subpages. Examples and thoughts about GLAM files are especially welcome here.
Blog posts about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
The following blog posts by Keegan Peterzell outline the development process behind SDC:
- Structured Data on Commons – A Blog Series
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Two – Federated Wikibase and Multi-Content Revisions
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Three – Multilingual File Captions
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Four – Depicts statements
- Structured Data on Commons, Part Five – Other statements
Also check this blog post by Lucas Werkmeister:
Structured Data on Commons at WikidataCon 2019
Andrew Lih presented about Wikidata Commons contribution strategies for GLAM organizations and SandraF did a hands-on workshop about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons.
Structured Data is coming to WikiConference North America
There is also a Workshop at WikiConference North America on Friday, November 8.
November 2019
Continued development, documentation, and blog posts
ByEnd of Sloan grant, but continued development
On December 31, 2019, the Structured Data on Commons project concludes the development work that was funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. In the upcoming months, the Structured Data team at the Wikimedia Foundation will continue work on open tasks: computer-aided tagging, support for more datatypes (including dates and geographical coordinates), search, constraints, and a SPARQL query engine for Wikimedia Commons.
New documentation online
The general information page about Structured Data on Commons has been updated with a general how-to, frequently asked questions, and links to various helpful tools. Feel free to edit and improve this page, and ask questions on the talk page!
More documentation about Structured Data on Commons and GLAM will be published in the upcoming weeks.
Blog posts about GLAM pilot projects
By the time of publishing this edition of This Month in GLAM, three blog posts have been published about GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Commons. Hopefully they are helpful and inspiring!
December 2019
New blog posts
ByNew blog posts about Structured Data on Commons and GLAM
In December, a few new blog posts about Structured Data on Commons have been published on Wikimedia Space:
- Wrapping up version one: Structured Data on Commons; a general overview of what has happened in the past year and of upcoming work, by Keegan Peterzell
- Lua support for Structured Data on Commons: Pulling data into templates; an overview of how structured data is already used in Wikimedia Commons templates, by Keegan Peterzell
- Data Roundtripping: A New Frontier for GLAM-Wiki Collaborations; about the potential of data synchronization for GLAMs through structured data, by Sandra Fauconnier
In January, we will continue to work on more documentation. As mentioned in the previous This Month in GLAM edition, the development team also continues development of several key features.
February 2020
Summary of pilot projects, and what's next
BySince 2019, files on Wikimedia Commons can be enhanced with multilingual and machine-readable structured data. If Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons is still pretty new to you, here's a very short introduction video (3'30 minutes):
A summary of GLAM pilot projects
In the past year, the WMF GLAM team has mentored GLAM staff and Wikimedia community members in a series of pilot projects, to ‘test’ this new technology, explore its potential, and provide inspiring examples. What does Structured Data on Commons make possible? Which new questions and challenges appear?
Structured data for a very small (art) collection
Staff from the Belgian organization PACKED vzw (now called meemoo) have imported the collection of the Jakob Smitsmuseum, a small, municipal art museum, to Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata, in order to experiment with data modeling, and to explore the potential of structured data to make small collections accessible online for the first time.
Connecting different collections, and linking them to their historical context
Another pilot project with PACKED vzw has brought together, and connected, the work of three generations of prominent Belgian silversmiths, exploring the potential of structured data to connect (art) collections around the world and to link them to their broader context. This pilot also highlighted the description of copyright and licenses in structured data.
Describing digitized publications, making data re-usable across wikis
Wikimedians have described digitized books with structured data, to prepare them for transcription on Wikisource, investigating how Structured Data on Commons can help to avoid data duplication across Wikimedia projects and how it can make cross-wiki workflows more efficient.
A game to easily add structured data through campaigns and contests
The ISA Tool is a multilingual, mobile-friendly tool, that makes it easy for anyone - especially beginners! - to add structured data to images on Wikimedia Commons. You can create 'tagging' campaigns and small competitions in ISA. Anyone can do this - no need to be an administrator or a skilled user! ISA was developed as a Structured Data on Commons and GLAM pilot, by Wiki In Africa and Eugene Egbe in collaboration with Histropedia and the Structured Data on Commons team.
The new frontier of data roundtripping
Various organizations researched data synchronization and roundtripping with external databases – a feature that many larger GLAM institutions ask for, and for which structured data on Wikimedia projects provides more advanced foundations.
Blog post: https://space.wmflabs.org/2019/12/13/data-roundtripping-a-new-frontier-for-glam-wiki-collaborations/
Open questions and fresh challenges
A concluding blog post summarizes the open questions and fresh challenges that Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons poses for the GLAM-Wiki community - challenges related to data federation and the correct description of creative works and media files that show these works.
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The difference between data about a creative work and a file showing that work, as described on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons
What's next?
- Development: the Structured Data team will continue development work related to Lua support, top-level statement and datatype support, and constraints. Check the Development page of SDC for an overview.
- Documentation: there is now a draft documentation hub about Structured Data for GLAM-Wiki on meta.wikimedia.org. Feel free to improve and translate these pages, and add more examples to them!
- Technical infrastructure: Wikimedia Sverige is continuing to grow its team, preparing to become a GLAM Hub for the Wikimedia movement. This involves building sustainable tools and infrastructure for GLAM-Wiki projects, also supporting structured data.
New GLAM projects that use Structured Data on Commons
In 2020, the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) provides digital assets from DPLA's contributors to Wikimedia Commons, describing the files with structured data. Dominic Byrd-McDevitt (User:Dominic), formerly Wikipedian in Residence at US National Archives and a GLAM-Wiki pioneer, works as a data fellow on this project.
- Blog post announcing this project: https://dp.la/news/dpla-cultural-artifacts-coming-to-wikipedia-through-new-collaboration-with-wikimedia-foundation
- Project page: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Digital_Public_Library_of_America
Are you also working on a new project that involves structured data? Make sure to add it to the GLAM page of the Structured Data on Commons portal, and report on it in This Month in GLAM!
June 2021
OpenRefine starts Structured Data on Commons development and is searching for two developers
ByOpenRefine is a power tool to clean messy data, popular in a diverse range of communities. It has been serving the needs of journalists, librarians, Wikimedians and scientists for more than 10 years, and is taught in many curricula and workshops around the world.
OpenRefine is quite actively used on Wikidata. In addition, thanks to a Project Grant from the Wikimedia Foundation, OpenRefine will, between September 2021 and August 2022, be extended with structured data functionalities for Wikimedia Commons. This code extension will make it possible to batch edit structured data of existing files on Wikimedia Commons, and to batch upload new Wikimedia Commons files with structured data from the start.
In order to develop the abovementioned features, OpenRefine has two Junior Developer job openings (paid contractor positions; part-time, fully remote). Obviously, Wikimedia and/or GLAM developers are strongly encouraged to apply:
- Junior Developer - Wikimedia Development (6 months, from September 2021 till February 2022)
- Junior Developer - OpenRefine Development (8 months, from November 2021 till June 2022)
August 2021
OpenRefine starts SDC development
ByOpenRefine starts Structured Data on Commons development in September 2021!
The OpenRefine team starts development of Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons (SDC) support in September. This project is funded by a Wikimedia Foundation Project Grant. Eugene Egbe (developer of, among others, the ISA Tool) works as a contractor for this project, and he will develop several Wikimedia-specific functionalities: a Wikimedia Commons reconciliation service and an upload tool. In November, a second developer will come on board who will work more closely on the OpenRefine side.
This project runs until end June 2022; by then, OpenRefine should be enhanced with functionalities to (1) batch edit and (2) upload files with structured data on Wikimedia Commons. We are currently planning to have batch editing functionalities ready by January-February 2022, and batch upload functionalities by June 2022.
Input welcome!
We warmly welcome community feedback in this trajectory. Sandra will soon start reaching out to specific community members who already actively expressed interest in providing input, in testing and piloting new features. If you want to indicate that you'd like to be part of this feedback panel as well, feel free to fill in this form! We value your input!
Follow what we are working on
You can check the planning and milestones of the project, and short monthly reports, on Meta. Notes of the development team meetings are collected in this public Etherpad.
Work on this project will be tracked on Phabricator and on GitHub. Feel free to subscribe to, and participate in the discussions!
- Workboards related to development for this project on Phabricator:
- OpenRefine https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/tag/openrefine/
- Reconciliation https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/tag/reconciliation/
- Workboard related to development for this project on GitHub: https://github.com/OpenRefine/OpenRefine/projects/10
September 2021
First steps for Wikimedia Commons reconciliation service
ByOpenRefine and Structured Data on Commons
Software development
- Eugene Egbe started working as a junior developer (contractor) for Wikimedia-specific features in this project. Eugene is experienced in Structured Data on Commons development, as he was also the developer behind the popular ISA Tool. For OpenRefine, Eugene develops the Wikimedia Commons reconciliation service and a batch upload tool.
- First code has been written for the Wikimedia Commons Reconciliation Service. This service will allow OpenRefine (and tools outside of OpenRefine) to take a list of file names from Wikimedia Commons and to convert these file names to their corresponding entity identifiers (“M numbers” or M-ids - the Wikimedia Commons equivalent of Q-ids). Next, it will then be possible to retrieve Wikitext and structured data from these files, so that this can be processed further. Code is available on Gerrit and the service itself will be available at https://commonsreconcile.toolforge.org/
- Antonin has ported the EditGroups tool (which is already quite popular on Wikidata) to Wikimedia Commons: https://editgroups-commons.toolforge.org/. This makes it possible for Commons contributors to undo certain batch edits on Wikimedia Commons, including future 'faulty' batch edits by OpenRefine.
Community outreach
- There is now a landing page for OpenRefine on Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:OpenRefine. For now, this page will point to information about the development process. As features are deployed, the page will point to general information and documentation.
- Are you interested in receiving notifications about this project? You can sign up with a talk page of your choosing at meta:Global message delivery/Targets/OpenRefine and SDC.
- We have written down first thoughts on batch editing and upload workflows. Feedback on this document is welcome.
October 2021
A Wikimedia Commons Reconciliation Service, You Say?
ByIn October 2021, the OpenRefine team has continued working on structured data functionalities, with a focus on the Wikimedia Commons Reconciliation Service. By the end of October, we have started testing the service in OpenRefine itself, and are including and improving upon additional features, including support for various formats of Commons file names, and data extension, including support for all datatypes. The Wikimedia Commons Reconciliation Service is also available for technical testing at the Reconciliation service test bench.
Why Wikimedia Commons reconciliation? How does it work?
A Wikimedia Commons reconciliation service is necessary groundwork to allow further editing of (structured data of) Wikimedia Commons files in OpenRefine. How does this work?
- The reconciliation service takes a list of file names on Wikimedia Commons that are entered in a column in OpenRefine. It then looks up the M-ids (identifiers) for these files. This process is called reconciliation.
- The magic happens in the next step, though... after reconciliation, the user can proceed to retrieve wikitext and existing structured data statements from these Commons files. As requested, the wikitext and the structured data for each file will be listed in consecutive (new) columns in OpenRefine. This process is called data extension.
- As a result, the user will be able to take this wikitext and existing structured data, modify and clean it further in OpenRefine, and convert wikitext to structured data (for instance: convert strings of names of photographers to their corresponding Wikidata items, and add these as creators (P170) to the files' structured data. This step is currently not yet possible; the OpenRefine team will work on this during the upcoming months.
The reconciliation service is not written specifically for OpenRefine alone; it will also be usable in other tools that want to take existing information (Wikitext and structured data) from Wikimedia Commons files and further process this information.
OpenRefine at WikidataCon 2021
The OpenRefine team presented its ongoing work related to Structured Data on Commons to the Wikidata community at WikidataCon 2021. Additionally, we also gave a general OpenRefine tutorial, and participated in a panel discussion about Wikimedia tool sustainability. Slides (where relevant) of these sessions can be found at https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:WikidataCon_2021/Documentation/List_of_sessions.
January 2022
February 22: Meetup about SDC support in OpenRefine
ByYou are invited! Meetup with the OpenRefine team on February 22
Over 2021-22, OpenRefine is being extended with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons (SDC) support. This project is funded by a Wikimedia Foundation Project Grant.
On Tuesday, February 22, the OpenRefine team working on these functionalities invites you for an update and a first demo of the newly developed SDC editing functionalities in OpenRefine and will talk about what's next. Questions welcome!
- When? Tuesday, February 22, at 15:00-17:00 UTC (check the time in your timezone).
- For whom? For anyone who is keen to hear about the current status of SDC support in OpenRefine!
- Where? Online, via Zoom. Check the event's info page for the link.
- The meeting will be recorded and the recording will be published to Wikimedia Commons afterwards.
Agenda
This meetup will cover:
- Update on past, current and future Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons development in OpenRefine, by Sandra Fauconnier
- Demo of 🚧 Wikimedia Commons reconciliation and SDC editing via OpenRefine 🚧 including use cases, by Sandra Fauconnier and Alicia Fagerving (WMSE)
- Updates and tips about SDC data modelling and Wikitext
- Q&A with the team - bring your questions!
February 2022
Editing SDC with OpenRefine; Monthly OpenRefine and Wikimedia office hours
ByEditing structured data with OpenRefine is now possible
On February 22, 2022, the OpenRefine team held a community meetup to present the current status of Structured Data on Commons development in OpenRefine.
This meetup was fully recorded; the recording can be found on the event page. The slides and an Etherpad with links and notes are also available for review.
In this meetup, the OpenRefine team demonstrated how it's already possible to edit structured data on existing Wikimedia Commons files, using a version 3.6 snapshot release of OpenRefine (it's not possible with the 3.5.x versions or earlier). An explanation of this process can be watched in the meetup's video recording.
The start of this process is also explained in this short video:
Monthly OpenRefine / Wikimedia office hours
In the upcoming months, the OpenRefine team will host monthly office hours for OpenRefine users from the Wikimedia community. You can meet and ask questions to other OpenRefine users here, and talk to members of the development team. These office hours are informal, have no set agenda, and are not recorded.
For now, we have scheduled office hours until end June 2022. Time of the day alternates to accommodate participants from diverse time zones. If these office hours prove to be popular, we will plan more of these later!
- Tuesday, March 22, 2022 at 9AM UTC (how late is this in my timezone?)
- Tuesday, April 19, 2022 at 4PM UTC (how late is this in my timezone?)
- Tuesday, May 24, 2022 at 8AM UTC (how late is this in my timezone?)
- Tuesday, June 21, 2022 at 4PM UTC (how late is this in my timezone?)
These office hours are also listed on OpenRefine's info page on Wikimedia Commons. Zoom links will be provided there.
March 2022
OpenRefine: survey for Structured Data on Commons features
ByOpenRefine is running a short survey to learn about user needs and expectations for its new Structured Data on Commons (SDC) features. If you upload files to Wikimedia Commons and/or edit structured data there, please help by filling in this survey!
May 2022
Uploading files to Wikimedia Commons with OpenRefine: looking for test uploads!
ByThe OpenRefine team is working hard to include Wikimedia Commons (structured data) batch editing and upload functionalities in OpenRefine, and the work is progressing well. The first files have been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons last month.
This means that experimental, basic functionalities for uploading files to Commons are getting ready! It is still fiddly to install and run these - this will be improved in the upcoming months. But we are ready for testing!
The team would like to work with a few (think 3 to 5) diverse community projects to test batch file uploads. This will help a lot to find bugs and to better support your workflows.
Maybe you have an upcoming Commons upload that the OpenRefine team can test with? If so, please contact Sandra!
Ideally this upload of files (any files!) is
- Rather small (max. a few hundreds of files).
- You preferably already have some basic data/information about the files.
- They are ready to be uploaded somewhere in June-September 2022, and it’s OK if there is a bit of delay (you don’t have hard deadlines).
- The rights for the files are cleared / there is evidence that the files have the right licenses/copyright .
- You are OK with it that some mistakes may happen during the test, for instance some errors in Wikitext or structured data. (We are testing new software!). You are willing to help look for and fix mistakes if they happen.
- You can upload the files yourself, or you can let Sandra upload them for you. If you want to upload the files yourself with OpenRefine, the team will help you set up. In that case, it’s good if you are a bit tolerant of bugs, errors, and unfinished software (we are testing brand new code that is still rough around the edges!). It would be great if you can then also give the team tips and feedback about your experience.
Are you interested in this? Then send Sandra an email (sandra.fauconnier gmail.com) with some information about the kind of files you would like to upload.
June 2022
Structured data on Commons editing now possible with OpenRefine 3.6; file uploading with 3.7
ByRelease of OpenRefine 3.6 with Wikimedia Commons editing functionalities
In June 2022, the OpenRefine team released a first beta version of OpenRefine 3.6, which supports editing files on Wikimedia Commons with structured data.
At the time of publication of this newsletter, the most current version is OpenRefine 3.6-rc1 (Release Candidate 1), which you can download at https://openrefine.org/download.html. Give it a try!
Step by step instructions on how to edit files on Wikimedia Commons with OpenRefine are available at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:OpenRefine/Adding_structured_data_with_OpenRefine. If you have suggestions for improvements for this page, please leave them on the talk page (or edit the page directly!).
Note that the OpenRefine installation in the cloud on PAWS, at the time of publication of this newsletter (early July 2022), is not upgraded to OpenRefine 3.6 yet, and it's therefore not yet possible to edit Wikimedia Commons files there.
Experimental uploading to Wikimedia Commons with OpenRefine 3.7
The OpenRefine team is also already working on the next version of the software, version 3.7, which will support the upload of new files to Wikimedia Commons.
If you want to give it a try, you will need to download a snapshot release of OpenRefine 3.7 via GitHub. In this (temporary) Google document you find step-by-step instructions how to upload files with early snapshot releases of OpenRefine 3.7. More than 2,000 files have been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons with OpenRefine already!
This feature is being improved and made more user-friendly in the upcoming months. You can expect the release of an official/stable version of OpenRefine with Commons upload functionalities by end October 2022. Official documentation of that feature will also be published then.
A selection of files uploaded to Wikimedia Commons with OpenRefine
August 2022
New tool in development utilizing Structured Data
ByIn Development: View it! tool
The new “View it!” is a tool for discoverability of Commons media currently under development. You can install the prototype now and get started using it and providing feedback. The following is our first report from the View it! team:
The View it! tool is being designed to improve discoverability and increase editor and reader access to images uploaded to Commons, particularly those utilizing structured data. The tool is available across all Wikipedia platforms if users install the code on User:<YourUserName>/global.js; however, users can enable it on a particular project if preferred– look for the “View” button next to the Article and Talk buttons after the installation. Please visit the Meta page for installation instructions and to sign up for testing and updates.
We are currently working to make the tool multilingual, so the button and text will translate according to the project the user is on. This month, we focus on extending and improving search functionality and View it! Results opening in a new tab/window. Currently, we are seeking comments on the user interface and how users would like View it! to manifest when in use.
More information on View it! and August update
The number of images displayed in a Wikipedia article is finite and highly curated by editors; through the tool, users will have access to the entire catalog of images on Wikimedia Commons, increasing discoverability and giving editors and readers a more broad experience. Our hope is that adoption of View it! will encourage contributors to utilize Commons more readily and include structured data with uploads.
During August, the team of User: Dominic (Project Manager), User:SuperHamster (Developer), and User:JamieF (Community Outreach), hosted two community conversations around the tool. One during Wikimania 2022/Pittsburgh Meetup and a virtual meeting on Wednesday, August 31, 2022. Those interested can find the notes from both events and a recording of the August 31st meeting on the Meta page. We received great feedback, particularly about what the user interface (UI) might look like, the search queries, and how users can manipulate the queries to achieve specific results (like adding a particular location, for example). So far, the tool has shown value for non-English wikis, is helpful for identifying and removing data errors, and is valuable outside of Wikipedia, such as seeing images for places on Wikivoyage or more images of flora and fauna on Wikispecies.
Beta testing is rolling out this week; please feel free to join on the Meta page, where you can also follow along on tool updates. Also, please reach out with any questions you may have!
We want to say a huge Thank you! To the GLAM community for supporting the beta rollout, joining our community conversations, and chatting with us on Telegram about the results you have pulled and recommendations. We appreciate it! The Wikimedia Foundation generously funds View it! through the Structured Data Across Wikimedia project.
September 2022
View it! tool development update
ByView it! tool has new features!
View it! is increasing its functionality with an advanced search option. Please consider helping the developers with language translation.
View it! is available across all Wikimedia projects and the developers have implemented localization for the user script. As of publication, there are now 8 languages supported, and you are invited to follow our step-by-step instructions to add additional translations to the tool in your own language.
View it! now has an advanced search menu. In advanced search, View it! users are able to choose from a dropdown list of properties to search by —"depicts" (P180), "main subject" (P921), and "creator" (P170)—along with an additional free text box and filters for Commons quality assessment and image resolution.
About View it!
The number of images displayed in a Wikipedia article is finite and highly curated by editors; through the tool, users will have access to the entire catalog of images on Wikimedia Commons (particularly those utilizing structured data), increasing discoverability and giving editors and readers a more broad experience. Our hope is that adoption of View it! will encourage contributors to utilize Commons more readily and include structured data with uploads.
Please consider installing View it! or signing up for monthly updates!
Thank you GLAM community for supporting our efforts and providing feedback as you have explored the tool. We really appreciate it. The Wikimedia Foundation generously funds View it! through the Structured Data Across Wikimedia project.
October 2022
View it! tool: now with Commons category search!
ByView it! now has a Commons category search
Per user feedback, View it! now has a Wikimedia Commons category search option.
Users of the tool have regularly requested for View it! to allow direct access to Commons categories without SDC-driven results. This month, the developer implemented a Commons Category (P373) filter when using advanced search. When using the P373 search, users are also given the subcategories to click through as well.
View it! is available across additional Wikimedia namespaces, now including Wikisource Author and Index pages. This change was a result of community feedback from our presentation at the October Wikisource Triage meeting.
View it! is now installed by 97 users; it has also been incorporated into two other Wikipedia-external tools. The team continues to work on tool translation—at present, is has been translated into 14 languages. If you are able, please consider helping us with language translation!
View it! on Toolforge also has a little bit of a new look, and we will continue streamlining the interface where possible for better media viewing.
May 2016
WMF GLAM report
ByNew GLAM-Wiki Strategist Role
Wikipedia Library lead announced on wikimedia-l and cultural-partners, that former Wikipedia Library project Manager, Alex Stinson, will be filling a new GLAM-Wiki Strategist Role at the Wikimedia Foundation. The role is focused on connecting Wikimedia community members, directing attention for specific needs within the GLAM-Wiki community, and facilitating improvements to technologies, documentation and support throughout the movement. Starting in the June "This Month in GLAM", Alex will be providing regular updates in this column about what he has been working on, and how that might be engaged throughout the community.
June 2016
A Wikimania Reflection, GLAM Phabricator Queues, and a WMF Update
ByReflections on Wikimania
For Wikimania, I (Alex Stinson) helped run a number of sessions, including
- A Tools Rotation for Category Tools at the Learning Days
- A talk on Verifiability which is an outgrowth of my work with The Wikipedia Library
- A session on The Wikipedia Library
- A Session with Jaime Anstee about how to develop more community leaders
I also attended, and recommend the notes and conversation from:
In general, I was really happy with and engaged by the large number of people talking about the importance of cultural heritage for the movement. The growing consensus among our community leaders is that there needs to be a coordinated and systematic effort, beyond GLAM-Wiki or Wiki Loves Monuments, to align our collective impact on the cultural heritage space (as is broadly defined by organizations like UNESCO to include non-material heritage and natural heritage alongside our more traditional emphasis on GLAM). I found the conversation at the Wiki Loves Monuments and Connected Open Heritage meeting particularly useful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwkI7iNidXk . Well done John Andersson, Axel Pettersson, André Costa, Philip Kopetzky and Jean Fred Berthelot!
Hopefully, in the next year we can use my new position with the WMF to help provide an advocate for that conversation, and especially as we look to integrate it into the movement strategy conversations that Katherine Maher described as an important part of her new tenure as WMF Executive Director. Staff at the Foundation are increasingly looking for ways to think about GLAM and other programs. A big part of my job will be building awareness in those other teams, especially the technical teams, so that both volunteer and partner GLAM-Wiki stakeholders can benefit from WMF projects.
Their was also a meetup of GLAM-Wiki coordinators at Wikimania, and we talked about the shared needs of the GLAM-Wiki community at the moment. The conversation led to several very clear conclusions on next steps for my role at the WMF: we need to make sure that our communication and documentation channels are clear amongst GLAM-Wiki folks, and that we need to find ways of developing our shared support needs/requests as GLAM-Wiki coordinators (see the next section).
Other highlights for me include:
- A lot of very interesting conversations about and desire to support WikiSource, and significant software improvements for WikiSource including integration of Visual Editor into the Proofread Page Extension. WikiSource is very important for our long-term GLAM-Wiki strategy: emerging communities or communities with small supplies of digital records need these source materials before they can participate in other parts of our communities.
- Lots of interest and positive energy for structured data in general, but also structured data on Commons: I think almost every session I was at mentioned the need for structured data on Commons – and it's in the works (phabricator:T68108). If you have the energy or interest in helping the Wikidata team please reach out.
- Emerging communities are communicating new and different approaches to working with cultural institutions and working with cultural heritage. I hope to help integrate those model projects more with the best practices developed in the early Europe-centered GLAM-Wiki documentation.
Starting Phabricator Projects for GLAM-Wiki
One of the conclusions of the GLAM-Wiki coordinator meetings at Wikimania, was a need for better communication about who needs what help in the GLAM-Wiki Community. Part of this will be overhauling the portal on Outreach to make it easier to find the best contact information and communication channels. I will be coordinating a documentation consultation in the coming months to help us find the best existing material, and identify what needs to be done to improve those materials and make them easier to access.
But there is also a broader need to share the problems we are facing as GLAM-Wiki outreach folks, and at the Wikimania GLAM Coordinators meetup we decided on trying an experiment: shared Phabricator projects for GLAM-Wiki support needs.
- A General GLAM workboard, for tracking support needs related to GLAM program activities, documentation, communications support, or other kinds of non-technical skills
- A GLAM-Tech workboard, for tracking technical needs related to GLAM, both in the core MediaWiki software, in external apps/tools used for GLAM-Wiki projects, or help with templates, Wikidata, or some other kind of more technical on-wiki skills.
How does this work?
Phabricator is a task management system designed by engineers for both project management and bug management. In the Wikimedia community the system has largely been used by developers; however, in the last year, more and more other projects in the movement have started using Phabricator for non-technical task management. Among these non-software uses: the Wikipedia Education Collaborative has created their own Workboard to track shared projects that require collective experience beyond what one Education Coordinator can support. Education leaders submit tasks to the workboard, and then other Education leaders who are part of the Education Collaborative work on those tasks. This time on collective tasks is becoming part of how those Education Coordinators schedule their time.
To get a task in the GLAM-Wiki queues, create a new task in Phabricator (plus sign at the top right), and in the field labeled "Tags" add GLAM or GLAM-Tech. Once in the queues, other GLAM-Wiki coordinators and practitioners can sign up ("Claim") the task if they can commit to solving the problem; moreover the comment section of each task allows us to talk through complications or challenges with those tasks (see for example this recent conversation about the possible reuse cases for dynamic Maps outside of Wikimedia projects). This kind of collaborative task list allow GLAM-Wiki leaders to get support beyond local volunteer communities and personal contacts. This also helps folks who coordinate between communities, like myself as WMF GLAM-Wiki Strategist, to better learn about and coordinate support for GLAM program leaders who need mentoring, documentation, learning materials, or help from someone else in our community.
If you are unfamiliar with Phabricator, the Education Collab has created a great Introduction to Phabricator. Please give it a try: shared work queues only work if you both contribute needs and spend time working on tasks submitted by others.
During the Documentation overhaul, better instructions and use cases will be integrated into the outreach portal.
June WMF GLAM Highlights
Some quick highlights of the work I (Alex Stinson) have been doing as GLAM-Wiki Strategist at the Foundation:
- Wrapping up responsibilities with the Wikipedia Library, including advocating for and supporting a number of relationships and partnerships.
- Consultations
- IFLA: consulting on development of White Papers for IFLA World Congress in Columbus, August 2016
- Corresponded with Ivan Martinez and Wikimedia Mexico for outreach to a university library
- Met with Liam Wyatt about strategy with Europeana and European coordinators; regular correspondence with several European Coordinators
- Wikimania consultations with dozens of people, including:
- Parithi, Tamil Wikimedia work
- Mounir Touzri of Wikimedia Tunisia
- WIRs Jason Evans, Ewan McAndrews, and John Cummings
- Mina Theofilatou of WikiTherapy
- Andrea Zanni and Wikisource meetup group for WikiSource
- Arne Wossink and User:Yarl for work on commons:Commons:Pattypan, as part of work to develop meta:Grants:IEG/Batch uploader for small GLAM projects/Midpoint
- Maartan Dammers, Susanna Ånäs, and Sandra Fauconnier for Wikidata + GLAM workshop and strategy
- GLAM-Wiki Coordinators meetup and WIR meetup
- Had a number of meetings with others, throughout the conference, on request.
- Helped prep guidelines for new Program Grants for GLAM, and revision questions for planning GLAM and content donations at https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/Plan . Also consulted on several requests for PEG and IEG.
- with Dominic Byrd-McDevitt led program for GLAM-Wiki Bootcamp hosted by the National Archive of the United States. Documentation is at en:Wikipedia:GLAM/Boot_Camp. Was invited to help teach the event, since in the United States and a short trip for me. Refined the 2013 curriculum to include better coverage of Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and changes in different models being used to develop GLAM-Wiki partnerships. Consulted with 15 attendees and Wikimedia DC on GLAM work. Working over the next several months to internationalize for other contexts (initial discussions to do this in Tunisia) – if other communities are interested please reach out to astinson wikimedia.org. I hope to help local communities pilot more GLAM-Wiki training around the world in the next several years.
- Attended the Diversity Conference (https://wikidiversity.org/wiki/Main_Page ) since it coincided with the GLAM-Wiki Bootcamp. A number of interesting conversations about representing global and gender diversity in GLAM-Wiki, and how valuable the contributions of GLAM partners is to creating greater diversity. Because of the short timeline for planning the conference, attendance was very U.S.-focused.
- Attended Wikimania (see review above).
- Working with WMF Community Tech Team to GLAM-Wiki identify needs for technological developments – currently talking with the team about supporting the Programs and Events Dashboard (being spearheaded by the WMF Education Program team), WikiSource, and Structured Data on Commons.
- Developed partnership request with WMF Strategic Partnerships for access to Googles OCR tools for WikiSource. Currently, Community Tech is evaluating the API for that tool for solving the Community Wishlist Ask https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T120788
What's next?
- Design and get ready to launch documentation consultation: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T139464
- Begin investigation of best practices for digitization in non-Western contexts – if you are interested in this topic, please reach out to me.
- Work with Community Tech and other teams to further work on structured data on Commons and other technical needs
- Support Wikimedia Blog posts being developed by volunteers/GLAM Coordinators on:
- Wikimedia Netherlands & helping GLAMs release colonial collections
- The Case for Wikidata + GLAM
- Continue discussions with IFLA, ARL, OCLC, etc. as part of relationships developed during the Wikipedia Library work
- Prepare for IFLA conference in Columbus, Ohio
- One-on-one consultations as needed – if you need help on anything related to GLAM-Wiki, please reach out: astinson wikimedia.org.
July 2016
Grants; New Content Donation Evaluation Report; WMF Updates
ByGrants: Review Round 1 of the New Project Grants and Yearly Reports from APG grant recipients
The Grants department at the foundation, recently reconfigured a number of Grants programs. In the process, what was formerly the IEG process, which has funded a number of GLAM-Wiki related grants in the past, has gone from a rolling application period, to a deadline based application period. Round 1 of 2016-17 just ended its submission window, and is now open for comments. The following grants are related to GLAM-Wiki activities:
- GLAM-Wiki Proposals
- Librarybase -- a project by Harej (talk · contribs) which focuses on extracting citation data in a WikiBase from Wikipedia articles for reuse. Relevant for technical outreach to libraries.
- Wikipedian in Residence for training Public Libraries, hosted by OCLC -- a project from long time Wikipedia + Library advocate Merrilee (talk · contribs)
- Related tech proposals
- Arc.heolo.gy- a visualization project for Wikipedia and Wikidata material, used to eveluate and explore WIkipedia's content.
- Wikimedia Augment a project proposed to develop augmented reality features for Wikimedia Projects.
- StrepHit renewal -- a project to improve the primary source refernecing on Wikipedia.
APG 2015-16 FDC Reports arriving
The Round II reports for FDC APG Grants, have been mostly submitted by recieving organizations. Many of them include reports on GLAM-Wiki activities. Find the reports as part of the records at this Meta Page
New Content Donation Evaluation Report
In 2015/14, the Learning and Evaluation team at the Wikimedia Foundation collected data on how Content Donations from GLAMs. The data has been analyzed and turned into a report on Meta.
WMF Updates
This month has been fairly busy, in both recovering from Wikimania, and I had a number of personal events (including my wedding!). The highlights on GLAM-Wiki work includes:
- Recover and followup from Wikimania.
- Finish, and polish IFLA White Papers for publication at World Library -- publication soon.
- Finishing blog post about Wikidata + GLAM, under review from Wikidata+GLAM leaders, should be published mid August.
- Work with TWL team on preparation for IFLA World Librarian Congress and meeting with Association of Research Libraries, as continuation of Wikipedia Library work, and modeling potential collaborations with big networks in Galleries, Archives and Museums.
- Created GLAM-Wiki handle that mirrors the Twitter account on Facebook, so that the communities less active on Twitter, do not loose that channel of communication.
- Worked with Wikimedia Argentina to document case study on digitization to begin collecting best practices/models in digitization. Will be published in August.
- Consultations with:
- Developer of Crotos - http://zone47.com/crotos/
- Wikimedia Argentina
- User:Reem Al-Kashif
- Wikimedia Spain
- GLAMPipe team in Finland -- http://artturimatias.github.io/GLAMpipe/
- User:Rosiestep
- OCLC as part of new grant with the Knight Foundation
- User:Mardetanha
August 2016
IFLA #WLIC2016 & Updates
ByIFLA and White Papers
With the Wikipedia Library team, I attended and presented about two White Papers that I have been supporting. These white papers, which focus on Academic and Research Libraries and Public Libraries, will offer better communication tools for engagement from the Wikimedia community to libraries. For more information about the conference, and talks see the Books and Bytes Update on English Wikipedia.
WMF Updates
- Presented 1st drafts of IFLA White Papers: Academic and Research Libraries and Public Libraries
- Met with ARL at IFLA conference
- Published Wikidata + GLAM Blog Post
- Published WMAR case study on Digitization and Wikipedia.
- Pushed initial draft of Partnerships FAQ to Meta
- Consultations including:
- WMF Legal on the Prado Case
- Consultation on Contracts/MOUs for Affiliate and WMF Legal
- Consultation on WikiConference North America GLAM Day
- Consultation on WIR at University of Edinburogh
- Support GLAM Coordinators in Europe Planning for 2017 meeting
- Advised on OCLC Grant
- Reviewed current GLAM-Wiki related proposals for WMF Community Resources
- Differed several WMF related GLAM requests to relevant communities.
October 2016
Digitization, Travel, Structured Data on Commons, and WMF updates
ByNote: this episode of the WMF report in this Month in GLAM Covers September and October'
Digitization and Case Studies
During Wikimania, and my early assessment of the Wikimedia Community's needs at Wikimedia Conference and through conversation with a number of volunteer communities, I realized that many of our communities are either exploring or working on digitization; this kind of collaboration it offers a number of opportunities to support potential GLAM partners in getting them thinking about open content and knowledge. Because funding and the broader heritage sector is placing emphasis on digital sharing, many institutions, even those without robust digitization programs, are looking for help. Wikimedia Communities can help supporting at different stages in the process, and I have begun collecting those experiences at this outreach portal.
Also, their are folks already working on this in the Wikimedia Community: a couple years ago the Wikimedia user group was formed, to support the best practices for DIY digitization in partnership with other organizations. I am working with members of that group, to both easier to reach, and make sure that materials that they are creating get shared as part of the Digitization portal on outreach.
Also, in attending the Internet Archive Library Leaders Forum, I talked with a number, and will be continue to talk with members of their staff, to see if their is a way for the project that seeks to create access to "all knowledge" with the world, can work with the non-profit project seeking to create access to the "sum of all knowledge" (of course we can! But I bet their are more opportunities). If you have any ideas about digitization, can help writing a case study or best practice, or want to talk about the opportunities with digitization reach out at astinson wikimedia.org.
Structured data on Commons
One of the main reasons for delay in writing a September this Month in GLAM WMF report, was the unexpected opportunity to support development of a possible funding source for expediting Structured Commons alongside the number Events that I attended (see below). For a preview of what the extended funding on the project could look like, see: The Overview on Commons of the new application. Please weigh in.
Events!
September and October included a number of events:
- At WikiConference USA, a number of other Wikipedia + Library leaders offered a whole range of presentations on the role of Wikipedia and Libraries. It had a GLAM heavy focus with Alex, providing workshops on Wikidata and Global GLAM. For highlights from the event, see the blog post on Wikimedia blog
- Jake Orlowitz and Alex Stinson, attended the Internet Archive Library Leaders Forum: the conference featured conversation about the future of libraries, with a number of libraries both within in the United States and Canada. The focus overall, was less on the broader library community, and more on Internet Archive's role in that change, and how to better develop partnerships with their organization. The Wikipedia Library team, attended to both: represent the recent Internet Archive bot, work on WP:OABOT, and the relevance of Wikidata in the library space; and to explore closer collaboration with IA and their partner organizations, like Biodiversity Heritage Library and Family Search.
Also, living in New England, Alex accepted invitations for talks at both the New England Library Association and Cornell University Libraries. These talks at local gatherings allow Alex to listen to the challenges facing our local, and smaller GLAM partners - where even in the United States, the funding and pressure on these professional groups is pretty extensive. The talks went well :)
WMF-related conversations
- The Community Wishlist Survey has opened for its first phase: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/2016_Community_Wishlist_Survey . This year, asks and that support Wikimedia Programs and other smaller and typically unsupported volunteer communities (i.e. WikiSource and Wikitionary), will be given a second grouping of priorities which the Community Tech team will work on. Make sure that you include your program-related requests.
- The Next round of Project grants opens in December: make sure to start planning for projects in that window of time: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project
- #1lib1ref launch: 1lib1ref is beginning planning, please join the conversation by following the instructions at: https://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/glam/2016-October/001094.html . #1lib1ref allows for an excellent opportunity to start talking with library communities and partners who have not yet participated in Wikimedia Collaborations.
Blog Highlights
- Ethnographers and Wikipedians join forces to showcase the cultural heritage of the Carpathian region -- a blog post on the Carpathian Ehtnography Project.
- Engaging the world’s libraries with Wikipedia—what are the opportunities? A blog post about the collaboration between WMF and IFLA to document best practices for Wikipedia and Library collaboration
- UNESCO and Wikimedia collaborate to promote built cultural heritage John Cummings at UNESCO talks about collaboration on Wiki Loves Monuments between UNESCO and the volunteer community
- Semana i held for the third consecutive year -- Leigh Thelmadaughter and collaborators use a variation of the Education program to document rare cultural works
- Wikipedian in residence at the Austrian Constitutional Court - An an unusual variation on the Wikipedia in Residence Role at a Court
- How the world’s first Wikidata Visiting Scholar created linked open data for five thousand works of art -- documents a project supported by the National Library of Wales
Other Consultations
In September and October, I supported a number of community and staff members in consultation, including but not limited to:
- Meetings with WMF Legal and Communications about long term strategies for supporting GLAM
- Reviewing Annual Plan Grant requests with GLAM components with Community Resources at WMF
- Supporting initial design of the Canadian Music Data Project
- Getting Citation Hunt and other #1lib1ref materials prepared for a number of communities
- the Digitization User Group
- WMUG Ghana
- A number of contacts gathered at conferences and movement events
November 2016
Digitization, #1lib1ref, and Tech Updates
ByDigitization Case studies portal drafted and Scoping next Portal
As part of my work documenting case studies and experiences of the Wikimedia community, I have encountered a lot of interest and questions about how to implement projects that either a) help institutions expand their digital collections (digitization), or b) or actively work to disseminate, share and enrich those collections (batch uploads to Commons + engagement of the Wikimedia Communities).
Thus, I have compiled a range of different models for this work into a portal here on outreach: Digitization. I am reaching out to folks who have specific models for implementing these projects, to write better case studies for the portal. For example, I recently worked with User:Joalpe to document a case study from the São Paulo Museum of Veterinary Anatomy. If you have a project that you think will fit well within the scope of the portal, please let me know.
The next step for me, in developing the GLAM case studies online, is to evaluate the other major component of GLAM-Wiki: sharing institutional knowledge in Wikimedia projects by building institutional capacity (workshops and Wikipedians in Residence), promoting direct contribution (training staff to edit and editathons) and collaborating or advising with other groups (Wikipedia Visiting Scholars, Education program assignments).
Structured Data on Commons External Funding Request Feedback ended and proposal submitted
We finished the commenting on the larger project plan at commons:Commons:Structured data, and submitted the request to the external funder. The work completed to scope, and outline a timeline for working on Structured Commons makes it possible to engage others to further the project.
#1lib1ref ramping up
If you haven't already noticed in our other spaces, #1lib1ref is ramping up. Like last year, we are running the campaign under the "Wikipedia Library" brand on meta Wiki: see http://1lib1ref.org.
The two main tools for the campaign, Citation Hunt and the Hashtag tools, now support a number of more languages, and there is support for the campaign from many more affiliates than last year. If you want to support the campaign, please reach out to Alex Stinson astinson wikimedia.org.
Programs and Events Dashboard
The Programs and Events Dashboard has been released in a Beta, for use by program leaders. To learn more about the dashboard, see the introduction to the Dashboard by Amanda Bittaker: on YouTube.
Further documentation on how to use the dashboard will be upcoming at meta:Programs & Events Dashboard/Using the Dashboard
The Dashboard is ideal for application for editathons and other time-bound, and focused events where you know who the participants are.
Community Tech Wishlist
The current WMF Community Tech Wishlist, is currently in its voting phase through December 12, make sure to participate.
There are a number of GLAM related requests including 7 proposals about programs, a number of Commons requests that are related (including an Artwork upload Wizard, and a Changes feed for use of Media elsewhere in Wikimedia Projects, many Wikisource usability requests, and many Wikidata Requests Make sure to vote.
Consultations
In November, Alex consulted with a number of community leaders via email and other communications, including:
- The Digitization User Group
- The Wikimedia Brazil User Group
- Wikimedia Czech Republic
- Wikimedia Espana
- Oxford Wikipedian in Residence
- Wikimedia UK
- Wikimedia France
- WMF Community Resources
- Romaine for This Month in GLAM
December 2016
Structured Data on Commons Funded! #1lib1ref and a holiday break
ByPreparing for #1lib1ref
Mid-January launches the #1lib1ref campaign, in over 12 languages and contexts: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/The_Wikipedia_Library/1Lib1Ref
This year, we are also making a few tweaks to the campaign strategy:
- We added a page for small "Coffee hour" get togethers, to encourage folks to organize a small social activity with librarians.
- We added more international support, from various language communities, by deliberately engaging chapters and community organizers
- We are going to be testing a central-notice banner. Look for posts on GLAM-Wiki Global and the Wikipedia + Libraries Facebook groups for help translating.
If you want to help with #1lib1ref is still not too late! We can still translate and engage more communities in the campaign, or share it with library networks!
Structured Data on Commons: Funded!
One of the greatest difficulties and challenges for GLAMs to work with the Wikimedia community, has been the inconsistent and hard to evaluate usages of GLAM content once its on. The long discussed opportunity for integrating the Wikidata software, Wikibase into Commons to allow for better structured metadata for media is finally upon us!
The WMF and WMDE announced funding for work on Structured data on Commons via a grant from the en:Sloan Foundation. You can find the announcement at the Wikimedia blog. More information about the grant is at Commons:Structured data/Sloan Grant. If you have questions, please join us at the Structured Data on Commons talk page.
Alex will be leading up community engagement during the first few months of the project, while the grant monies allow for hiring a Community Liason and additional GLAM-Wiki Staff to support the project. Please join in supporting the project where you can, and let us know where you can help .
Consultations
Some of the consultations were light in December because of the holiday break, and work on the two above projects.
- Structured Data on Commons consultations with staff and Magnus
- Supporting User:Joalpe
- Communicating with community organizers for #1lib1ref
- Consulting on what components of the Community Wishlist Survey
- Working with the Learning and Evaluation Team at the Foundation on identifying learning day participants
- Several solicitations of GLAM-Wiki support at the Foundation through various channels
January 2017
Ramping up structured Commons, #1lib1ref success, and other updates
ByAt the Wikimedia Foundation, the big focus has been on the Structured Data on Commons Grant, and getting that started, and supporting the #1lib1ref campaign.
Structured Data on Commons
In January, we announced the receipt of the Structured Data on Commons grant from the Sloan Foundation. The Grant, which allows for $3 million over the course of three years, helps us support both the software devlopment side of commons and the development of
However, in addition to the software, we are beginning to develop the team of folks. This will include several positions that would be a good fit for folks familiar with GLAM-Wiki, Commons, Wikidata or all three:
- Program Manager -- whose main responsibilities will include coordinating efforts among various participants and stakeholders in the project and reporting to Sloan about our progress. More information can be found on Greenhouse.
- Another GLAM-Wiki strategist focus on structured data. (See the job posting on Greenhouse).
- Community Liaison -- who will be interfacing with the Commons and Wikidata communities on the project.
Keep an eye out for these position descriptions as they become available from WMF, and if you know folks working in the GLAM sector who would be a good fit, let us know.
Before the team comes onboard, I am beginning to schedule opportunities for talking with various communities, that have a deep understanding of Outreach Parnter and stakeholder need for Structured Data on Commons, including:
- The International Coordinating Team for Wiki-Loves Monuments (already talked with)
- European GLAM-Wiki Coordinators (see meeting agenda)
- DPLA -- this relationship includes talking with their staff soon and providing a 2 hour workshop/talk on Wikidata + GLAM at their annual meeting
- Smithsonian -- supporting some initial Collaboration alongside Wikimedia D.C. around how we could enable more data sharing through Commons
- Europeana -- through Liam, I plan to do outreach with Europeana to better understand how we can be more intertangled with and compatible with their needs.
If there is a particular organization or partner network who you think would benefit from being on our contact list, let Alex know (astinson@wikimedia.org).
1lib1ref: Smashing Success!
We ran year two of #1ib1ref this year, with the help with volunteers in over 18 languages! The outcomes were over 3x last years recorded edits using the hashtags tool: 4,171 edits from 741 contributors to 2,588 pages. See the outcomes from last year by comparison!
We are in the process of doing some deeper and more complex analysis of the campaign and its outcome. We have some preliminary lessons from the campaign:
- Three weeks gave most participants enough time and communications to run small workshops if they didn't have them planned before the beginning of the campaign. We saw a steady flow of workshops discussed on Twitter throughout the campaign, with a burst of them towards the end.
- Coverage in Library publications was not as striking this year, as in previous years. But we got some great support from close allies of the movement, including individual GLAMs that have worked with Affiliates, OCLC, IFLA, Biodiversity Heritage Library, and a number of regional library networks.
- The invitation to more community affiliates to lead their own sub-campaigns, in their own languages and geographies, worked moderately well this year. The number of impacted language communities doubled, but we still didn't reach critical mass in a number of languages for growing the campaigns there. We will need to work on guidance and support for community leaders to build better network impact.
We will do a more thorough report about the other outcomes in the campaign, including some highlights from blogposts and other resources created during the campaign.
We plan to host the campaign again in 2018, and if you are interested in supporting it in your language or context, make sure to join the Wikipedia + Libraries Facebook group: we plan to use that as a coordinating hub for social campaigns around librarians.
Other consultations/support include
- Development of next steps with IFLA and ICOM -- we are trying to develop a better understanding of the next projects for cooperation -- its beginning to look like it might be in the space of Wikidata
- Development of the Met press release and project communications
- Triaging several requests from North American GLAMs to the glam@wikimedia.org OTRS queue
- Several other requests related to WMF Grants
- Support of the Movement Strategy Process
- Supporting the hiring process for the Lead Programs Manager
- Developing European Coordinators Meeting program
- Beginning preparations for Wikimedia Conference
Other WMF updates
- Please share the Inspire Campaign with volunteers who have ideas about collaborations with other outside groups: Inspire Campaign
- Commons is now searchable by file type: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T156413 and https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T150887
February 2017
European Coordinators Meeting and Planning
ByEuropean Coordinators Meeting
One of the principle activities February, was support of European GLAM Coordinators meeting. At the meeting, Alex provided updates on Structured Data on Commons and Wikicite, did a workshop examining the workflows for batch uploads on Commons, and a conversation about the skills that communities learning how to participate in GLAM need most. Paired with the wider workshops and learning from the meeting, the meeting felt very productive for understanding and learning about the work of various affiliates in the greater European community.
Before the meeting we had the opportunity to sit down with partnerships coordinator at the International Council of Museums, and talked to the staff at the ICOM about future collaboration. One area of interest was the possibility of developing, a open registry of museums using Wikidata. ICOM and a number of other heritage organizations (UNESCO for example), organize responses to natural disasters around heritage collections, and in certain parts of the world, where governments haven't collected this data, its hard to figure out which museums are in the region. We are exploring what it would mean to facilitate a campaign to invite the collection of this data through a Campaign like #1lib1ref .
Annual Planning, Programs Team at WMF, and Structured Commons
If you follow the Annual Planning process for the Wikimedia Foundation, you know how each year the foundation completes its planning process during the early part of the year, before going to community consultation. This year GLAM-Wiki will be part of the focus of both the Programs team and Structured Commons work.
We are going through the hiring process for several roles on the Structured Commons team, including the GLAM-Strategist role for the grant, as well as the Lead Programs Manager for the Wikimedia Foundation programs team. Take a look at the hiring page for Wikimedia and share the roles with folks you think would be a good fit.
Additionally, Structured Commons work is ramping up with initial work on backend infrastructure for the integration of Wikibase into Commons.
Other consultations
- Movement Strategy Process -- supporting the outreach to particular partner audiences for track C&D
- Helped support the Inspire Campaign for External Knowledge Networks
- GLAM Workflow Mapping being supported by WMUK
- UNESCO WIR consultation
- 1lib1ref coordination and followup
- Triaged several external requests for how to get involved in GLAM
- Support for The Canada 150 project
March 2017
Wikimedia Conference
ByWikimedia Conference
As part of the broader support of program leaders and the movement strategy, Alex attended Wikimedia Conference. He supported several workshops, including:
- A table at tools rotations for GLAM Upload tools: see the handout
- A workshop on developing partnerships relationships: outlined here.
- A workflow mapping workshop, focused on GLAM projects: outlined here
Other highlights from the conference include a strong interest from the attendees in library partnerships: many emerging communities are finding libraries as a clear entry point for GLAM skill development among community program leaders, and for proof of concept for other GLAM work. Additionally, the movement strategy process has a number of GLAM-Wiki advocates, so they provided significant feedback and advocacy for the knowledge and experience we have developed doing programmatic outreach in the GLAM-Wiki community.
The Wikipedia Library provides a summary of more library-focused conversations at the event: in the Books and Bytes Newsletter.
Consultations
Most of the consultative time for Alex during March focused on the development of Structured Data on Commons and developing the Annual Plan in the Wikimedia Foundation. Other support included:
- Shannon Perry at Libraries and Archives Canada
- Connection with the Global Heritage Foundation
- Development of materials to support a visit by Katherine Maher with WMDC to the Smithsonian, National Archive and Library of Congress
- Internet Archive support of Wikidata
- Consultations as were relevant during Wikimedia Conference
April 2017
DPLAFest and Beyond
ByDPLAFest
This month, as part of the work with the Structured Data on Commons project, Alex attended DPLAFest 2017. At the event, he made sure to connect with and learn from and connect with various partner organizations in the network around DPLA, including Haithi Trust, METRO (which had a Wikipedian in Residence from 2013-15, Internet Archive, California Digital Library, and others in the greater DPLA community.
The conference also allowed me to learn about a number of the challenges and applications for Wikidata in the North American context:
- The existing platforms, like DSPACE and others, don't have robust built-in authority control/linked open data use in ways that would make matching and reuse for DPLA and other organizations, like the Wikimedia community has.
- That authority control creation is still a really messy process -- especially for topics that have only regional interest-- with lots of time consuming back-end issues, some of them related to the bureaucracy of the library/metadata profession and institutional resourcing.
That there are tons of opportunities for using Wikidata to enrich collections and metadata at the aggregation level; we really need to test them though, and many bigger organizations are at the stage where they see the opportunity but haven't done much testing.
At the conference, I also gave a two hour workshop for Wikidata for Cultural Professionals: it was well received but a lot of information. You can find the slide deck on Google Drive and on Commons.
Other consultations
Other consultations included:
- Followup from WMCON
- Followup from DPLAFest
- Continued collaboration with the team working on the Women in Canada Project
- Blog post with Brazilian GLAM community
- Hiring from Structured Commons projects
- GLAM-Ghana
- Libraries and Archives Canada
- Annual Plans for Round II for 2016-17
- Several other requests as they came in
May 2017
Documentation, Categorization and Reviewing what we know!
ByCase Study Portal and Newsletter Categorization drive need your support!
This month, Alex focused heavily on reviewing and revising the framework for documentation on the GLAM portal on outreach. First, by finishing the second of two portals focused on different project models used within the Wikimedia community: GLAM/Sharing_Knowledge which accompanies GLAM/Digital collections. These pages are drafts based on what Alex has been learning from Wikimedia communities what tactics they have employed throughout the years.
As part of the project, Alex has developed a draft new portal for entering the GLAM project models and Case Studies: Join the conversation here.
Additionally, in collaboration with the Education team at the Wikimedia Foundation, Alex deployed a new structured form with prompts to help folks create high quality case studies: see the initial section of the Case studies page.
One of the outcomes of the GLAM coordinators meeting in February, was an identified need for improving the organization of content in the GLAM-Wiki Newsletter. After a second meeting at WMCON in March, a small working group determined that one of the low hanging fruit would be categorizing This Month in GLAM to better make it usable for future analysis and facilitation of its usage for others. The page for the project is at this link.
You can help!
There are several ways that you can help:
- Join the conversation about the new portal
- Join the categorization drive
- Write a case study of one of your projects
Consultations
Alex has provided consultations, including:
- An referral of an U.S. Organization interested in Women in Sports, from WMCH
- A project that Library and Archives Canada is developing with Wikimedia Canada
- Music in Canada Wikidata Project
- Creative Commons is initiating design of a OpenGLAM framework related to Creative Commons licenses
- GLAMpipe team
- Documentation of the Math Video Project at Sau Paulo (see blog post below)
- Several other referrals from within the WMF
From the WMF Blog
Several GLAM and heritage projects have been highlighted in the WMF blog, including:
- Czech–Polish ‘Wikiexpedition’ ends with over three thousand photos of historic Silesia
- Pairing videos with math: Illustrating mathematical concepts in Brazil
- You can now add automatically generated citations to millions of books on Wikipedia
June 2017
Welcome; Documentation Update; Other updates
ByWelcome Sandra Fauconnier for Structured Data on Commons
Sandra Fauconnier (User:Spinster/User:Sfaucconier) has started working on the Structured Data on Commons project, with the main focus as being the Community Liason for the project. However, her deep expertise and support of GLAM-Wiki projects over the last few years, means that she will be also working on supporting GLAM needs in both Wikidata and the Commons as part of the project.
Documentation Update
Last month, Alex announced working on the documentation for GLAM-Wiki. Though originally planning to run a categorization drive for the This Month in GLAM archive, that tactic has been put on pause, do to several concerns about the usefulness of that data. We are reevaluating the workflow and process, and hope to have an update soon.
Additionally, the new portal for GLAM case studies and models has been updated.
Other updates
Alex supported a number of other projects, including:
- Uploads to Wikimedia Commons for the collaboration with
- Submitting a book Chapter for an OCLC book on Wikipedia and Libraries
- Supporting the development of a GLAM user group
- Consultations from Wikimedians in the United States, Canada, and Brazil.
- Continued support of the Structured Data on Commons planning
- Response to this RFC on ENWiki
July 2017
Edit-a-thons, Structured Commons and Wikimedia Blog
ByEdit-a-thon Training Draft
Edit-a-thons are one of the most commonly used programs among Wikimedia program leaders and one of the programs that they want to use most (see this survey result and this survey result.) However, in many settings and situations Wikimedia Community members are not sure what goes on during these events, or are unsure about the best practices for making those events successful.
During the month of July, Alex surveyed the existing documentation for edit-a-thons, to develop an initial draft of a training for folks who have not run Editing events before. The draft was developed, so that it could be included in the Programs and Events Dashboard training module environment. The environment allows for folks to translate such a training on Meta, localizing such a training for their own cultural and language context.
Please participate in giving feedback at the Draft Page.
Structured Data on Commons Update
Structured Data on Commons is making progress on design research and initial back-end development. This initial research, includes targeted outreach to major institutional partners, and deep design-research interviews With folks who have done batch uploads as part of GLAM projects.
With the hiring of User:SandraF (WMF), as the principal Community Liason on the project. She will also be supporting development of best practices for GLAM+Wikidata and the Structured Commons to be used as part of programmatic partnerships. Her background is very deep in GLAM-Wiki, where you may know her as User:Spinster.
The Structured Data team released a Newsletter on July 19 on Commons.
Wikimedia Blog updates
The Wikimedia Blog has included a number of stories of importance to representing GLAM-Wiki:
- Italy’s video game archive breathes life into gaming history and culture (July 26th, 2017)
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 375,000 windows on art history, and that’s just the beginning (July 25th, 2017)
- Bringing the magic of classical music to Ukrainian speakers (July 14th, 2017)
- Community digest: Wikipedia for Peace, editing to celebrate diversity at WorldPride Madrid; news in brief (July 13th, 2017)
Participate in GLAM-Wiki activities at Wikimania
Wikimania this year, is filled with GLAM-Wiki programming, including a significant amount of the WikiConference North America and the main conference program. To learn more about the schedule, see: the post on the public GLAM mailing list.
August 2017
GLAM-Wiki team, Wikimania, and updates
ByOnboarding a Team
The second expansion to the GLAM-Wiki team at the Wikimedia Foundation after the addition of User:SandraF (WMF) as part of the Structured Commons project, came with the addition of Ben Vershbow (User:BVershbow_(WMF)) as Lead Programs Manager for the Community Programs team. Though Ben will support all of the GLAM, Education, and Wikipedia Library teams, Ben’s background over the past decade-plus is in large part in the cultural heritage sector, working at both the Institute for the Future of the Book, and more recently leading the New York Public Library Labs.
Ben brings a deep network within libraries, museums, and digital humanities, and will be helping the team to evaluate, prioritize and advance support of the larger cultural heritage community. It’s exciting to have additional minds working on the GLAM-Wiki program space!
With Ben and Sandra on board, we are beginning to evaluate the where we want to focus GLAM-Wiki support, in light of the movement strategy process.
Wikimania and Structured Data on Commons Offsite
Ben, Sandra and Alex all attended Wikimania, the preconference for Wikimania and an off-site for the Structured Data on Commons project. The conference offered a great opportunity to learn from, reflect on, and gauge the interest of for various needs within the GLAM-Wiki community.
Alongside our own presentations, we noticed a number of trends in the conversation:
- The Library space was vibrantly represented by the community, in part being supported by the great work being done in the Wikipedia + Libraries User Group
- Wikidata use for cultural heritage applications has an ever-increasing global community that will be really well situated to advance GLAM-Wiki into a closer working relationship with GLAMs and other heritage communities. One of the highlights in this, was the gathering of folks for the Cultural Heritage + Wikidata “Birds of a Feather” session.
- Structured data on Commons saw a lot of support from both GLAM-related and other contributors within the Wikimedia community.
- The Wikimedian in Residence Birds of a Feather session was well attended, and highlighted how diverse and challenging the role of “Wiki(p/m)edian in Residence” can be for practitioners, and how challenging it is to make sure that new roles successfully join the community of WIRs. As an outcome of the meeting, a group of WIRs are proposing a user group that can help with onboarding and developing best practices for the roles.
- To find notes and slide decks related to GLAM-Wiki sessions, see the notes page on the Wikimania Wiki.
Following the conference, the Structured Data on Commons team gathered for an offsite that reflected on what we learned over the course of the conference, and worked on a shared plan going forward. We were very happy to share with the team working on the project its importance for institutional partners and how they work with the Wikimedia community. At the meeting, we also saw some of the early outcomes of the meta:Research:Supporting Commons contribution by GLAM institutions being led by User:Jmorgan (WMF).
Updates will soon be made to the Structured Data on Commons portal at commons:Commons:Structured data. We recommend everyone to also subscribe to the Structured Data on Commons newsletter!
Other updates
Other work by the team, has included collaboration, outreach and consultation on:
- Reviewing grant requests to the Community Resources team at the foundation
- Supporting and consulting on several incoming contacts from external orgs to WMF
- Revising the Edit-a-thon training-- feedback still welcome
- Development of upcoming blog posts for the WMF blog on several different community-led projects.
- Review of contextual materials for the Wikimedia Strategy Process
- Short visits with Europeana and DPLA, to better understand how Structured Data on Commons, and Structured data more generally will impact their work. For a report on the Europeana visit, see the section in the Wikidata report.
- Followup from several Wikimania conversations.
September 2017
Running Edit-a-thons, Studying GLAM Uploads to Commons, Project Grants and more!
ByHow to run an edit-a-thon?
One of the major pieces of work by the team over the course of July to September, was Alex’s work on the Edit-a-thon training on the programs and events dashboard. It’s now live! Check out the training at: https://outreachdashboard.wmflabs.org/training/editathons
We are finishing illustration of the edit-a-thon training, and welcome additional feedback or tweaks to the training at: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Training_modules/dashboard/editathon
If you would like to leave feedback or help us identify gaps in the training, please do so on the talkpage of the training transclusion.
Case studies and communications
In addition to normal communications workflows, such as supporting Twitter and Facebook conversations, the WMF team has supported a number of neat story telling opportunities, including:
- On the blog, an interview with Jason Evans of the National Library of Wales about becoming the world’s first “National Wikimedian”: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2017/09/26/national-wikimedian-jason-evans/
- A case study from GLAM Macedonia on the creation of student clubs at Museums: https://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM/Case_studies/Wiki_Club_in_Macedonia:_from_idea_to_award
- A project supported by the Association of Research Libraries which will use Wikidata to create structured metadata for indigenous archives and manuscript collections : https://blog.wikimedia.org/2017/10/04/libraries-wikipedia-york-university-project/
We are also in the process of developing additional blog posts highlighting both individual community projects and larger trends and opportunities we are seeing. If you have ideas, or want support, consider reaching out to astinson wikimedia.org.
Survey about GLAM uploads to Wikimedia Commons
The Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) has created a survey for people involved in GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums) media upload projects to Wikimedia Commons. Please consider filling out the survey, if you are currently participating in a GLAM batch upload project, or have participated in one in the past! Completing the survey takes 10-15 minutes.
The survey results will be used to understand how the Wikimedia Foundation can improve its support for these important projects - in the project Structured Data for Wikimedia Commons, and beyond. We are interested in learning more about the media collections that are donated, the tools people use to prepare and upload files, and the overall experience of donating media from GLAM organizations to Wikimedia Commons.
The survey data will be collected and stored under the terms of WMF's survey privacy statement <https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/GLAM_Donation_Survey_Privacy_Statement>.
We hope to receive responses from Wikimedia community members and staff at very diverse organizations - geographically, in terms of size and focus!
Review GLAM Project Grant Applications
Round II of 2017 project grants have been proposed on meta. A number have GLAM-related themes or focuses including:
- meta:Grants:Project/Wikipedia Cultural Diversity Observatory (WCDO)
- meta:Grants:Project/ Feature improvements to Wikimedia Programs & Events Dashboard
- meta:Grants:Project/US Women Olympians & Paralympians
- meta:Grants:Project/Engaging Academic Archivists, Librarians and Students to Address the Historical Gender and Racial Gap of Western Pennsylvania through the University of Pittsburgh Library System
- meta:Grants:Project/GLAM/Wikipedian in residence at Gaborone
Other going ons
The GLAM team is working on a number of other opportunities for support across the community, including:
- Conversations with Internet Archive, DPLA, Europeana, UNESCO and a number of other orgs in the heritage space
- Interviews with GLAMs who have embedded Wikidata into their institutional catalogues for an upcoming blog post.
- Support of several organizations considering developing Wikipedian in Residence roles.
- Sandra at Swiss cultural data hackathon
- Consultations with volunteers who want new skills or support for GLAM projects in Europe, North America and Latin America
October 2017
News about Structured Commons!
ByCase studies campaign
Share your case studies! Is there an education, GLAM or other program that you really admire? One you would like to know more about? Have you seen via the newsletter, blog, or social media a project that you think would make a great case study?
The WMF Programs team would like you to encourage program leaders now to submit their case study to the Programs Case Studies Campaign. We will be accepting submissions until January 8, 2017 . We will then select projects in Education, GLAM and across all programs to be highlighted in new case study brochures and materials.
See this page for more information about submission criteria and the selection process.
Structured Data on Commons update
The survey about use of Wikimedia Commons by GLAMs, mentioned in the previous newsletter, received more than 100 responses! We want to thank everyone who participated and who distributed the survey. Results are processed by the end of 2017.
Likewise, Jonathan Morgan and Niharika Ved have finalized interviews with GLAM representatives about their use of Wikimedia Commons. The interviews are being analyzed now.
A new newsletter about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons was published on October 25. You can read the newsletter on meta.wikimedia.org, and contribute to the next one. Of special interest:
- The info and documentation pages about the project have been updated. Feel free to improve them, and give feedback if things are unclear.
- There is now a dedicated community focus group for feedback on the project. Please consider joining!
Structured Data on Commons was presented during WikidataCon by Sandra Fauconnier. You can watch the video recording online.
Other going ons
The GLAM team is working on a number of other opportunities for support across the community, including:
- Conversations with Internet Archive, DPLA, LD4L, ICOM, IFLA.
- Support of initial conversations around GLAM-Wiki Conference
- Review of Annual Plan Grants for FDC Round 1 applications: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:APG/Proposals
- Interviews with GLAMs who have embedded Wikidata into their institutional catalogues for an upcoming blog post.
- Support of several organizations working on GLAM projects with direct requests for consultations.
November 2017
Conferences, case studies, Structured Commons, #1lib1ref
ByAttending regional conferences
Alex Stinson attended two regional conferences, to listen to and evaluate the needs of various GLAM communities that might use structured data.
The first was the Radio Preservation Task Force Conference, hosted by the Library of Congress. As part of the Alex was invited to give a workshop on Wikidata and GLAM, at the University of Maryland’s Maryland Institute of Technology in the Humanities -- with the help of the Smithsonian’s Effie Kapsalis and Wikimedia D.C.’s Andrew Lih, we discussed the role of open. Videos of the workshop can be found at: Part 1 and Part 2 and workshop outlines can be found at wikidata:Wikidata:Events/MITH Workshop. Alex attended the rest of the conference that included a rich mix of archivists, hobbyists, public radio organizations, librarians and other communities interested in researching radio
The next week, Alex attended the Museums Computing Network Conference, and a aatellite event on representing Provenance in Structured Data. At both events, Alex talked to Museum technologists, including representatives of the Getty, Smithsonian, British Museum, Yale Center for British art, and a number of folks who work on or with other kinds of metadata and or
As part of the event, Alex found a number of clear trends in the conversations he had with each of the communities:
- Museums have a lot of vocabularies that the use or rely on internally within the sector, but not many of the institutional staff feel like their software supports using those vocabularies in linked-open-data contexts.
- Archives (at least in the Radio Preservation Context) have much more complexity in creating vocabularies and are constantly needing to revisit standard vocabularies. Wikidata could fill that gap.
- Crosswalking between major vocabularies is very appealing to institutional staff in multiple contexts -- Wikidata could serve that purpose.
Case studies campaign
As we announced last month, the WMF Programs team is collecting more case studies as part of the Programs Case Studies Campaign in an attempt to demonstrate the range of different projects that community members experiment with over the course of their activities. Please submit case studies through January 8, 2017 . We will be highlighting new case studies in communications materials created in the next year!
See this page for more information about submission criteria and the selection process.
Structured Data on Commons
Read a report of the first nine months!
The Structured Commons team has written and submitted a report about the first nine months of work on the project to its funders, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The 53-page report, published on November 1, is available on Wikimedia Commons.
Inventory of tools
Sandra is co-ordinating an inventory of crucial volunteer tools for Wikimedia Commons, GLAM, and structured data in general.
- You can add your favorite tools to this Google spreadsheet.
- Participate in this survey to help the team understand which tools and functionalities are most important to the Commons and Wikidata communities! This survey runs until December 22.
IRC office hours
On November 21, the Structured Commons team held a IRC office hour to discuss recent, current and future development of the project. You can read the public log here.
The next IRC office hour will take place on Tuesday, February 13, 2018, at 18:00 UTC.
#1lib1ref
Preparations are beginning for #1lib1ref. If you would like to do more for the campaign, helping coordinate or expand its impact during 2017: please reach out to astinson@wikimedia.org
December 2017
#1lib1ref, Structured Commons Research, and Blog Highlights
ByHelp us identify program leaders!
Every year, the Wikimedia Foundation runs a survey, called the Community Engagement Insights survey, which asks community members to give feedback on the Wikimedia Foundation’s work. The survey focuses on different audience groups, one of them being community organizers and program leaders who organize activities, outreach, and other programs in the areas of GLAM, Education, Diversity, Gender, STEM, and others.
We want to get in touch with program leaders who aren’t already connected to the Wikimedia Foundation or haven’t attended major Wikimedia movement events (like Wikimedia Conference or Wikimania). By filling out this survey, program leaders become part of our global feedback network and will have a chance to offer feedback on Wikimedia Foundation’s work to support our communities.
If you would like to be part of these feedback opportunities, please fill out this short survey: https://wikimedia.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3mmeBPdVXfCOhlr
If your local community has a mailing list or social media channel or you know an organizer who like didn’t see this message, please share it and encourage participation in the survey.
#1lib1ref is coming
It’s #1lib1ref season! Remember to remind and engage your local librarians to participate in the campaign which lasts from January 15- February 3! Remember #1lib1ref can be done in any language and its simple: encourage librarians in your local context to contribute. Learn more about the campaign at: http://1lib1ref.org.
If you need help supporting the campaign, contact astinson wikimedia.org.
Initial findings for Structured Data on Commons Research
As part of the Structured Data on Commons project, WMF teams are working on various research projects, of which a few have been finalized in the last months of 2017. Here are the highlights:
- GLAM uploads to Commons
Draft findings from the GLAM research as part of Structured Data on Commons has been published on Meta. The research highlights the challenges that GLAM professionals and Wikimedians supporting them face when doing uploads to Commons. The project confirms a lot of assumptions, and anecdotal evidence that the WMF GLAM team had been collecting as part of the Structured Data on Commons process, but also provides some targeted feedback and a body of evidence for strengths and weaknesses in the workflow that we were anticipating.
Highlighted issues in the research are:
- Preserving important metadata about media items
- Functionality and usability of batch upload tools
- Monitoring activity and tracking impact after upload
- Preparing media items for upload
- Working with Wikimedia and Wikimedians
- Read the full report: Supporting Commons contribution by GLAM institutions. You can also watch a 36-minute YouTube video in which Jonathan Morgan presents the research results. We plan to organize more public presentations of this research!
- Baseline metrics for Wikimedia Commons
The Structured Data on Commons project has also investigated the different ways in which Commons can be evaluated in the future. The goal of the research is to identify additional baseline metrics for Structured data on Commons team to evaluate and think about the impact of their work.
- Read the full report: Baseline Metrics for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
- Prioritization of tools for GLAM, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikidata
Additionally, Sandra led an AllOurIdeas poll to find out which tools are relied on heavily by the broader Commons and Wikidata communities, in order to help decide which ones are critical for integrating into product development decisions as part of the grant or future Commons development.
- See the results on AllOurIdeas
From the WMF Blog
- ’’’What can we glean from OCLC’s experience with library staff learning Wikipedia?’’’ -- An interview with Monika-Sengul Jones, Wikipedian in Residence at Webjunction, reflects on what she learned running a MOOC with nearly 300 librarians.
- How do memory institutions use Wikipedia and Wikidata in their collection catalogues? - Alex published a piece exploring the various ways in which GLAMs are using Wikidata to enrich their collections systems.
January 2018
Call for case studies, #1lib1ref, Structured Commons and more
ByCall for Case Studies!
The Community programs team is still looking for case studies, to highlight the great work that is going on around the world in GLAM, Education, and other programs. For that reason, we have decided to extend the case studies collection period, and will be providing additional opportunities to work on case studies together with you!
Additionally, at Wikimedia Conference, Wikimania and other regional conferences, we will be holding clinics to help you draft your case study. We will also hold several virtual clinics where Wikimedia Foundation Programs staff can give you feedback and support on developing your own case studies (keep your eye out for invitations for these workshops!).
- If you thought you might want to submit a case study, but haven’t done so yet: please let us know that you are interested by emailing astinson wikimedia.org or nsaad wikimedia.org.
- We can support you in drafting or developing the case study using the case study templates on outreach. If you would like to share a case study you have already drafted, you can still do so through the input boxes on the same page.
- Learn how to add a case study.
#1lib1ref 2018 and library-related blog posts
To highlight this year's #1lib1ref campaign, the Wikimedia Foundation team published several blog posts, with a focus on the importance of Wikipedia and Libraries Collaboration:
- On #1lib1ref: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2018/01/16/1lib1ref-2018/
- On Cote d’Ivoire: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2018/01/23/cote-divoire-library-partnerships/
- On Librarianship to fill gaps in LGBTQ+ content https://blog.wikimedia.org/2018/01/31/wiki-librarian-lgbtq/
Also, we produced a short explainer video about #1lib1ref:
Look for an upcoming full report and reflection on this year’s campaign!
A bit earlier, two interviews have also been published on the Wikimedia blog:
- With Monika Sengul-Jones, Wikipedian in Residence at OCLC: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2017/12/13/monika-sengul-jones-interview/
- With Jason Evans at the National Library of Wales: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2017/09/26/national-wikimedian-jason-evans/
- If you are interested in sharing your experience collaborating with libraries, email astinson wikimedia.org.
Structured Data on Commons: research on GLAM use of Wikimedia Commons
In 2017-2019, together with the community of Wikimedia volunteers, a team at the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia Deutschland updates Wikimedia Commons, Wikimedia's media repository, to work with structured data. This will make it easier to add, update and find important information about individual files and entire collections.
In order to learn more about the needs of users of Wikimedia Commons, the team performs quite a bit of design research. This helps us understand what to improve, and why it matters. In the past months, we have surveyed and interviewed cultural institutions, asking them about their processes, wishes and pain points when they contribute media to Wikimedia Commons. This survey has been widely distributed and filled in by GLAMwiki volunteers; thank you!
- The research is now concluded and summarized in this blog post: https://blog.wikimedia.org/2018/01/29/glam-multimedia-metadata-commons/
- The full report can be found at https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Supporting_Commons_contribution_by_GLAM_institutions
- Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mx27yTqw7ro and slides to follow alongside the video: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:GLAM_SDC_research_presentation_Jan_2018.pdf
- For more information or feedback, email sandraf wikimedia.org.
Other going ons
- Alex gave a Wikidata workshop and a GLAM-Wiki introduction at Lathrop Library, Stanford University. More info and links to the presentations: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Events/Stanford
- Sandra gave two short introductory Wikidata workshops at the conference Open-Up! in Arnhem, the Netherlands. Her presentation is on Slideshare.
- If you want to re-use some of our workshop materials about structured data and Wikidata, feel free to take a look at, and adapt, the master presentation that we are compiling (Google Sheets, downloadable in various formats)! It is very much work in progress and we'd be interested in any feedback and additions.
- In January, Ben, Alex and Sandra have had continued chats and discussions with the LD4L Community, Smithsonian, Europeana, and several other partners.
February 2018
Structured Data on Commons, Wikidata Workshop materials, and Spring Travel
ByStructured Data on Wikimedia Commons: community consultations
The project Structured Data on Commons is progressing well; in the upcoming time, the free media files on Wikimedia Commons will be converted to a structured and machine-readable format, so that they become easier to view, search, edit, organize and re-use, in many languages.
The most important changes to Wikimedia Commons will take place this year (yes, in 2018! You can check the roadmap for more detail). GLAMs are very important stakeholders for the 'new' Wikimedia Commons, and we need your input too! The best ways to stay up to date about the project:
Some news and updates
- A general community consultation on metadata placement in the 'new' structured data on Commons has concluded on March 1. Several GLAM volunteers and staff members have provided specific feedback on GLAM metadata - thank you! You can still add extra thoughts and insights to the page.
- We are still growing the GLAM focus group for Structured Commons. It is a group of GLAM staff around the world who are willing to advise and provide feedback regularly in the upcoming months and years. GLAM staff from Africa, Asia, the MENA region and Latin America would be especially welcome; feel free to invite people if you know they would be interested! More info can be obtained from Sandra at sandraf wikimedia.org.
Feedback, examples and activities needed for Wikidata Lesson Plan and Query Service One Pager
As part of an ongoing collaboration with the Wikidata team at Wikimedia Deutschland to develop teaching materials that can help GLAM and other communities contribute to Wikidata, Astinson (WMF) (talk · contribs) has developed a lesson plan for teaching Wikidata workshops, and a one pager for helping teach the Wikidata Query service.
We are looking for feedback and contribution, specifically:
- What is missing from the lesson plan and one-pager? What other additional materials would you like?
- If you have taught Wikidata workshops before and find them successful, upload them to Commons or add to the section for presentations
- Once you have uploaded or shared your presentations: Each section has a “Examples” header. Please link to sections of presentations which demonstrate that kind of teaching: we want future Wikidata workshop developers, to have plenty of examples.
- If you have had participants in Wikidata workshops contribute content through specific activiteis, considering writing those activities at: the activities section
Upcoming travel
The GLAM team at the Foundation is going to be at the following community events and conferences. Let us know if you'd like to meet up!
- March 16-18: WikiIndaba 2018, Tunis (Alex)
- April 13-15: Creative Commons Global Summit, Toronto (Alex)
- April 18-22: Wikimedia Conference, Berlin (including Learning Days) (Sandra, Alex, Ben)
- May 10-12: Yerevan 2800, Armenia (Sandra)
- May 14-16: EuropeanaTech, Rotterdam. The GLAM team at the Wikimedia Foundation is working together with Europeana to include quite a few Wikimedia-related program elements to the upcoming international EuropeanaTech conference (Rotterdam, May 15-17 + a workshop day on May 14). Keep an eye on the GLAM mailing lists and/or social media - we will keep you updated there. (Ben, Sandra)
- May 18-20 Wikimedia Hackathon, Barcelona (Sandra)
March 2018
Structured Data on Commons; Upcoming events and travel
ByStructured Data on Commons
In March, a community consultation about structured metadata for copyright and licenses on Wikimedia Commons took place. It is very interesting to read through the insightful discussion that took place. Many thanks to all who participated!
In this new quarter, we announce new GLAM-related activities on Structured Commons in the following two areas. You can expect updates on Commons, and via the GLAM-Wiki mailing lists and other communication channels about these in the upcoming months:
- We start working on mapping GLAM metadata schemas to Wikimedia Commons, in order to make GLAM uploads to Wikimedia more smooth and easy.
- We start to invite and support a diverse set of pilot GLAM-Wiki projects that use Structured Data on Commons. These will be the first GLAM-Wiki projects that use the new technology on Commons. They will be documented well, so that everyone can learn from them, and be inspired. We collect the first candidate projects during the Wikimedia Conference. Do you have ideas for a suitable project already? Get in touch with Sandra at sandraf wikimedia.org!
We are still growing the GLAM focus group for Structured Commons. It is a group of GLAM staff around the world who are willing to advise and provide feedback regularly in the upcoming months and years. GLAM staff from Africa, Asia, the MENA region and Latin America would be especially welcome; feel free to invite people if you know they would be interested! More info can be obtained from Sandra at sandraf wikimedia.org.
Upcoming events and travel
The GLAM team at the Foundation is going to be at the following community events and conferences, and will hold several presentations and workshops. Join us, and/or let us know if you'd like to meet up!
- April 13-15: Creative Commons Global Summit, Toronto (Alex)
- April 18-22: Wikimedia Conference, Berlin (including Learning Days) (Sandra, Alex, Ben)
- Wikidata and Commons workflows session (pre-conference Learning Days)
- Session about Structured Data on Commons and GLAM pilot projects (main conference)
- May 10-12: Yerevan 2800, Armenia (Sandra)
- May 14-16: EuropeanaTech, Rotterdam (Ben, Sandra)
- Various sessions during the main conference program (May 15-16)
- Wikidata and Commons workshop day (May 14)
- May 18-20 Wikimedia Hackathon, Barcelona (Sandra)
April 2018
Wikipedians in Residence and Travel
ByHave you negotiated a Wikipedian in Residence position?
In addition to documenting, and sharing the stories of Wikimedia communities around the world, the GLAM team is also providing support for core tactics used by Wikimedia community. Thus far, the GLAM team has developed supporting materials for two of the three most common tactics used for GLAM-Wiki collaborations: edit-a-thons (through developing a Wikipedia edit-a-thon training and teaching materials for Wikidata trainings) and batch uploads to commons (ongoing work as part of Structured Data on Commons, including Workflow mapping and research to identify needs of GLAM participants). The next major tactic to build support materials for is Wikipedian in Residence positions.
Wikipedian in Residence positions vary greatly, in terms of the amount of capacity, resources, time, and activities that both the resident and institutional partners leverage. Moreover, there are an increasing body of different roles beyond WIR positions (such as Wikipedia Visiting Scholars, Wikipedia Interns, or other staff roles). Though we don’t think we can adequately synthesize the best practice for doing residencies, because of the wide variety of circumstances involved in those positions, we do think we can create guidance on the process for establishing WIR positions.
To this end: if you have negotiated a Wikipedian in Residence or similar extended position within a GLAM institution in the last 2 years, Alex would like to talk about to you about experience. In a short 30-60 minute conversation, Alex would like to learn what worked, what didn’t, and what kinds of questions you had when creating those roles. We are looking to interview an additional 5 people about this process. If you are interested, please email him at astinson wikimedia.org.
If you have thoughts about WIR positions, and aren’t ready to do an interview: that’s okay, there will be a brief followup survey, focus on filling in gaps, resources, and recommendations for creating residency roles.
Wikimedia Conference
The WMF GLAM team participated in the Wikimedia Conference and the preceding Learning Days, with several conversations, workshops and presentations, with a focus on:
- communicating the typical workflows for uploads to Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata in a dedicated workshop during Learning Days.
- During a two-hour workshop, more than 50 participants gathered and brainstormed about potential GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Commons. Sandra and the GLAM team will follow up on this in the upcoming months. If you are planning a GLAM-Wiki project on Wikimedia Commons between Autumn 2018 and Summer 2019, and you would like to use structured data there, get in touch with us via sandraf wikimedia.org!
- We also participated in several workshops and sessions on partnerships, and supporting technical contributors.
Learning about Creative Commons and LD4 communities
In addition to Wikimedia Conference, Alex attended both Creative Commons Global Summit and a meeting of the Mellon- funded “Linked Data for Libraries” working group (also known as LD4 or LD4L). Both meetings proved to be very insightful into the broader opportunities of our work:
- At the Creative Commons meeting, there was broad conversation about many of the challenges and opportunities that the Wikimedia community faces: including how do we address the lack of diversity in Global movements. In particular, both the keynotes and various well attended sessions as part of the main conference focused on how to work well with the cultural and social needs of marginalized groups. As for GLAM conversations, there were plenty of conversations about the intersection of the work that the GLAM-Wiki community does with the larger community working on Open practices in GLAMs. Look for more on both of these fronts soon.
- At the LD4 meeting, participants were from (mostly) North American research institutions and European National Libraries. The meeting energetically discussed the technical practicalities of integrating Linked Open Data into Library systems. Included in the discussion were number of different tools and platforms, but the presence of Wikidata was widespread throughout the meeting both in the deliberate invitation of Dan Scott, Stacey Allison-Cassin, Anna St. Onge and Alex Stinson, but also in projects previously undiscussed in the Wikimedia community.
Both conferences were very effective in terms of creating contacts and opportunities for working on GLAM support throughout the world. Further communications coming from each of the conversations coming soon.
Upcoming Travel
- May 10-12: Yerevan 2800, Armenia (Sandra)
- May 14-16: EuropeanaTech, Rotterdam (Ben, Sandra)
- Various sessions during the main conference program (May 15-16)
- Wikidata and Commons workshop day (May 14)
- May 18-20 Wikimedia Hackathon, Barcelona (Sandra)
- June 4, DDBforum, Berlin (Sandra) - presentation about Structured Data on Commons to German librarians
Other news
- The ALA published “Leveraging Wikipedia: Connecting Communities of Knowledge” includes essays from both the GLAM and TWL teams at the foundation, and has been recently published. See the page at the ALA Store.
- A first community consultation about GLAM metadata and ontology mapping for Structured Data on Commons has just ended; Sandra will follow up on this conversation in the upcoming weeks and months.
May 2018
Recent travels; Structured Data on Commons updates
ByRecent travels and presentations
A group of Wikimedians (including Sandra) were invited to Yerevan, where Wikimedia Armenia organized its GLAM Forum Yerevan for local GLAM professionals. Check this month's Armenia report for a summary!
In May, Europeana held its EuropeanaTech conference, which brought together almost 300 European and worldwide GLAM professionals working on technical aspects of cultural heritage, aggregation and Linked Open Data. GLAM-Wiki and Wikidata were important themes throughout the conference. Read a longer overview in this month's Wikidata report in This Month in GLAM.
The Wikimedia Hackathon, Barcelona included Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons as a focus area. Volunteer developers and the team discussed tools around Structured Commons, first ideas for basic data modelling, and search functionalities.
Structured Data on Commons
Community consultations
A first community consultation about GLAM metadata and ontology mapping for Structured Data on Commons has concluded in early May; a summary and next steps are available on the talk page.
Until 5 June, there was also a design consultation on MediaInfo and multilingual captions for files.
Personas
Recently, the research team of the Wikimedia Foundation published four GLAM contributor personas to Commons. A persona is a fictional character that represents a specific kind of user; the GLAM personas are four typical GLAM staff members that contribute to Wikimedia Commons. These personas, developed by design research intern Niharika Ved,, can help anyone (including developers, designers, and organizers) better understand the people who contribute to Wikimedia Commons from a GLAM perspective, including their needs, and the issues and pain points they encounter. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:GLAM_Personas_for_Structured_Data_on_Commons_v2.pdf
The personas are based on interview and survey responses from GLAM participants collected during the GLAM Structured Data contributor research last Fall.
IRC office hour
A new IRC office hour about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons is planned on Tuesday 19 June. More info and participation link at https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/IRC_office_hours
Other going ons
- Alex is still focused on documenting the processs of creating Wikipedian in Residence positions (see last month for more information). If you would like to share information about a residency that you have hosted please reach out astinson wikimedia.org
June 2018
Structured Data on Commons and Wikimania
ByStructured Data on Commons updates
Structured Commons at Wikimania 2018
The GLAM team will attend Wikimania in Cape Town, with quite a few presentations and sessions that are related to the upcoming Structured Data on Commons. Join us!
- During Learning Days, there is a 90-minute session on structured data and Wikidata partnerships, highlighting the main elements in a workflow for such a partnership, common tips, and an overview of software tools that can help during such a project.
- Structured Data on Commons is a focus area of the Wikimania hackathon, where we will do some work on modelling files and will be brainstorming about the most important properties and metadata that should be part of structured Commons files.
- On Friday 20 July, several sessions about Commons and Structured Data take place as part of the main conference program. There is a session about the research that has been done about GLAMs' use of Wikimedia Commons, and a 90-minute block of general information about the project, together with a panel of projects that deal with knowledge equity on Wikimedia Commons, followed by a design discussion.
IRC office hour log
On Tuesday 26 June, a IRC office hour about Structured Data on Commons took place. It included some discussion about GLAM pilot projects. You can read the log at https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/IRC_office_hours/Office_hours_2018-06-26
New community consultation: Properties for Commons
In July, there is a community consultation on Wikimedia Commons, which collects possible properties for media files that will contain structured data on Commons. People with a GLAM interest in this topic are very welcome to contribute.
Other Wikimania news!
Wikimania looks like it will include a diverse and well represented group of GLAM-Wiki presentations. The GLAM-Wiki Team at the Foundation will probably be attending a range of different sessions; here are some highlights, that we think would be useful to any GLAM organizer:
Learning Days
- Wikimania's Learning Days include a selection of sessions focusing on GLAM and structured data.
Hackathon
- Structured data on Commons is a focus area for the hackathon. We will - among other things - discuss the basic properties that media files will need when structured data is deployed - please join us to provide GLAM-focused ideas!
Main conference program
Friday 20 July
- 10:30-11:00 Wikimedia Commons and GLAM needs around the world
- 11:00-12:00 Gaps in Global GLAM capacity: A Discussion
- 12:00-12:30 #1lib1ref: Reaching 5 million librarians around the world
- 14:00-15:30 Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons and knowledge equity + design discussion
- 16:00-17:00 Centering Knowledge from the Margins: A Whose Knowledge? discussion with indigenous, African, Dalit, queer and feminist communities
Saturday 21 July
- 10:30-11:00 Building an International Knowledge Base for the Performing Arts: Thoughts on Providing Knowledge as a Service and Enhancing Knowledge Equity
- 10:30-11:00 Wikipedia for Indigenous Communities
- 11:00-11:30 How can the Wikimedia community work better with experts? Using open license text to collaborate, a case study from UNESCO
- 11:00-11:30 What everyone can learn from Wiki Loves Monuments in the European Year of Cultural Heritage
- 11:30-12:00 Wiki-fy The Met, and Met-ify the Wiki
- 11:30-12:30 - Wiki Loves Monuments, Hands-on
- 12:00-12:30 The Wikipedia Library Card Platform: How you have access to 100,000 journals
Make sure to join us for the Lunch meetup in the Hong Kong Room 13, Saturday 13:00-14:00: https://wikimania2018.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_and_Heritage_Birds_of_a_Feather_Lunch
- 14:00-14:30 The Visibility Gap: #VisibleWikiWomen's campaign for visual knowledge
- 14:30 - 15:00 Intellectual property barriers to GLAM projects in the global south
- 1500-15:30 One Image at a time; How Governments can help in bridging the information gap on Wikipedia
Sunday 22 July
- 11:00 -11:30 Record every languages of the world village by village, with Lingua Libre
- 11:30-12:30 Pattypan Workshop
Other notes
- The Conference Program team for GLAM-Wiki Tel Aviv will be announcing the program soon.
August 2018
Wikimania, Wikimedians in Residence, Structured Data on Commons, and upcoming conferences
ByWikimania 2018
The Wikimedia Foundation's GLAM team attended Wikimania Cape Town. It was great to see many of you there! We held several sessions during Learning Days - both on GLAM projects and partnerships and on structured data partnerships workflows. The main conference also included several sessions about Structured Data on Commons, including a panel about how GLAM projects related to knowledge equity can benefit from it.
-
A scheme explaining the workflow for (GLAM) partnerships that involve structured data (Wikidata, and Wikimedia Commons in the future). See also a more detailed outline on outreach.wikimedia.org. Does this workflow make sense to you? Is something missing? Feedback is very welcome on the talk page.
Recommendation on creating Wikimedian in Residence positions
Alex has written a document that gathers recommendations on how to create Wikimedian in Residence positions. Please leave feedback on the talk page – or feel free to edit the document directly!
In the past months, the Wikimedia Commons community brainstormed about the Wikidata properties that will be needed to describe media files on Wikimedia Commons with structured data. The proposed properties have now been brought together and grouped in one page. Please take a close look and leave your feedback, as this first collection of properties will be used at the start when Structured Data on Commons is deployed!
Conferences
The GLAM team at the Wikimedia Foundation attends and presents at the following conferences in the upcoming months:
- 5-6 Sep: Open GLAM Mexico, Mexico City (Alex)
- 19-21 Sep: Wikibase Meetup, New York City (Alex, Ben, Sandra)
- 29 Sep - 5 Oct: CIDOC / ICOM Conference, Heraklion (Sandra)
- 25-26 Oct: Shaping Access Conference, Berlin (Sandra)
- 7-8 Nov: Baltic Audiovisual Archival Council Conference, Tallinn (Sandra)
And of course GLAM-Wiki Tel Aviv, 3-5 November, where the entire team will also be present. Check the program!
October 2018
Documentation survey, Structured Data on Commons consultations, blog posts and conferences
ByStructured Data on Commons
Documentation survey
In 2019, the documentation for batch uploads of files to Wikimedia Commons will be improved, on the occasion of Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons.
Before we start working on this, the GLAM team at the Wikimedia Foundation wants to understand better which types of documentation you already use, and how you like to learn new GLAM-Wiki skills and knowledge. To learn more about this, we have created a short survey, which you can access here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdWcLNO6dyM11usIet29bGhEPtbA-01q04dYTruu1V1DtDsVw/viewform
The survey runs until November 30, 2018. It is most relevant for beginning and active GLAM-Wiki volunteers, and for GLAM staff members who have (some) hands-on experience with Wikimedia projects.
A privacy statement applies to this survey. If you have any questions, please get in touch with Sandra at sfauconnier wikimedia.org.
Give feedback on new designs related to licensing!
New designs are up for structured copyright and licensing statements on Wikimedia Commons, based on feedback from the first round of designs of a few months ago. Please take some time to look over the new mockups and tell us what you think. How copyright and licensing is displayed in structured data is extremely important, and the development team needs to hear from you!
Prototype for new search functionality in October
In October, a new prototype for searching Wikimedia Commons via structured data was published. It is still possible to provide feedback here as well.
New blog posts about Wikibase
Wikibase, the software behind Wikidata, is available as free and open software, and can be used for external databases and linked open data projects. It is quickly becoming quite popular in the cultural sector. Together with Jens Ohlig (Wikimedia Deutschland), Sandra and Alex have written a few blog posts on the Wikimedia blog that highlight how institutions use Wikibase:
- Many faces of Wikibase: Cataloging the history of the Illuminati. By Lisa Dittmer and Jens Ohlig, 30 August 2018
- Many faces of Wikibase: Rhizome’s archive of born-digital art and digital preservation. By Sandra Fauconnier, 6 September 2018
- WikibaseNYC conference explores the frontier of linked open data infrastructure. By Alex Stinson, Jake Orlowitz and Jens Ohlig, 24 October 2018
Conferences
It is conference season! The GLAM team is travelling quite a bit and spreading the word about GLAM-Wiki, Wikidata in GLAM, and Structured Data on Commons. A few highlights:
- 5-6 Sep: Open GLAM Mexico, Mexico City (Alex)
- 19-21 Sep: Wikibase Meetup, New York City (Alex, Ben, Sandra) - read blog post
- 29 Sep - 5 Oct: CIDOC / ICOM Conference, Heraklion (Sandra) - see presentation
- 25-26 Oct: Shaping Access Conference, Berlin (Sandra)
- 7-9 Nov: Baltic Audiovisual Archival Council Conference, Tallinn (Sandra) - see presentation
And of course GLAM-Wiki Tel Aviv, 3-5 November, where the entire team was also present. See the program, which will increasingly include video registrations by User:Fuzheado and links to the presentations!
November 2018
Welcoming Satdeep Gill; Structured Data on Commons; WikiCite
ByWelcoming Satdeep Gill!
Satdeep Gill (sgill wikimedia.org) has joined the Community Programs team at the Wikimedia Foundation, as Program Officer, GLAM and Underrepresented Knowledge. He will carry out research, documentation, and community listening to better understand the challenges of doing GLAM projects in emerging communities — with a particular focus on WikiSource and digitization practices.
Satdeep joined the Wikimedia movement as a volunteer in 2009 and became very active around 2012-13. He has contributed in the growth of the content on Punjabi Wikipedia and the Punjabi community. In a professional capacity, he joined the Wikimedia Foundation as a Strategy coordinator in March 2017. In October 2017, he joined the New Readers program as Community Outreach Coordinator (India). Until mid-January 2019, he will split his time between GLAM and New Readers, after which he will start working full-time at the GLAM team.
Welcome, Satdeep!
Structured Data on Commons and GLAM: pilot projects
As mentioned in this month's Sweden report, The Swedish National Heritage Board has initiated the project Wikimedia Commons Data Roundtripping. It researches and develops a prototype tool to return improved media metadata (translations, data additions etc.) back from Wikimedia Commons to the source institution. This project builds upon the new functionalities and APIs from Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons and is one of its official pilot projects.
The other official GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons will be listed on their info page in the upcoming month(s), will kick off around March-April 2019, and lead to new Wikimedia Commons and GLAM documentation later in the year.
WikiCite
Ben and Satdeep participated in the WikiCite 2018 conference in Berkeley. Via the conference site, you can find links to video registrations of the presentations.
December 2018
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons: pilot projects and multilingual captions
ByStructured Data on Wikimedia Commons: first GLAM pilot projects announced
The first official GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons are listed here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/GLAM/Projects
- The Belgian organization VIAA (staff members formerly working for Packed) will perform 2 or 3 example uploads of 'typical' GLAM collections to Wikimedia Commons with structured data - in any case probably one collection of a Belgian art museum and one collection of a city archive.
- There will be a Wikisource pilot, including digitized books in Punjabi, mentored by Satdeep Gill.
- Wikimedia España will upload sets of digitized maps and aerial photographs from the Spanish Instituto Geográfico Nacional with structured data on Commons.
- The Swedish National Heritage Board has started working on the project Wikimedia Commons Data Roundtripping. It researches and develops a prototype tool to return improved media metadata (translations, data additions etc.) back from Wikimedia Commons to the source institution. This project builds upon the new functionalities and APIs from Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
More pilot projects, and more details, will be posted in the upcoming months. All the pilots will lead to new documentation for all Wikimedians and GLAM staff who want to do GLAM batch uploads with structured data on Wikimedia Commons.
First features of Structured Data on Commons going live in January 2019
Multilingual file captions on Wikimedia Commons are the first public feature of Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons. They are released around Thursday, 10 January 2019. Captions are a feature to add short, translatable descriptions to files.
There is a help page for using captions on mediawiki.org (because captions are available for any MediaWiki user). Feel free to contribute to GLAM-related documentation for captions on Wikimedia Commons if a help page becomes available there as well.
January 2019
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
ByMultilingual captions are live on Wikimedia Commons!
In January 2019, multilingual captions went live on Wikimedia Commons. They are the first feature of Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons.
Captions can be added and edited on file pages and during upload of files via the UploadWizard. It is not yet possible to add captions via batch upload tools like Pattypan.
To learn more about captions and how to use them, see the on-wiki documentation. Please add specific suggestions on how to use captions for files uploaded via GLAM-Wiki projects!
Updates about GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Commons
While the Structured Data on Commons development team is squashing the last bugs before releasing more features on Wikimedia Commons in the upcoming months, preparations continue for GLAM pilot projects. The current list of confirmed pilots is available on Wikimedia Commons, and more upcoming pilots are being prepared and discussed.
Among others, Wikimedia España will contribute with a pilot project on historical maps and aerial photographs from the Instituto Geográfico Nacional. Recently WMES has uploaded a first batch of almost 10,000 digitized maps from the Mapa Topográfico Nacional to Wikimedia Commons.
This current upload is still in unstructured data, but was done in a format that should be easily convertible to structured data later:
- The files are described with the
{{Map}}
information template on Wikimedia Commons - Information about the maps on Wikimedia Commons points to Wikidata items for the location shown on the map, the map type, place of publication
- The file pages contain Wikidata-powered
{{Institution}}
and{{Creator}}
templates.
Wikidata properties related to copyright
In preparation for Structured Data on Commons, new Wikidata properties are discussed and created. Structured Data on Commons will include machine-readable copyright information, and for this purpose several copyright-related Wikidata properties now exist, including a few recent ones:
Description of copyright is documented on Wikidata at Help:Copyrights, and this system will likely inspire the way in which copyright of files will be described in structured data on Wikimedia Commons.
February 2019
Structured Data on Commons: GLAM pilots; Wikimania 2019
ByStructured Data on Commons pilot projects update
The first official GLAM pilot projects with Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons are listed here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/GLAM/Projects
A complex collection of decorative arts: the Wolfers collection
The Belgian organization Packed/VIAA will contribute several GLAM pilot projects to demonstrate how Structured Data on Commons can work for various types of cultural collections: a typical museum collection, a photographic archive, and more.
In March 2019, Packed works on a pilot for a complex collection of decorative arts, which can serve as an example on how to describe many different kinds of decorative objects from GLAM collections. The pilot project also explores how different types of collections of decorative arts, from different institutions, can relate to each other on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons.
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Nikè brooch by Philippe Wolfers, 1902
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Design drawing of the same piece of jewellery, Philippe Wolfers, 1902
Olivier van D'huynslager (User:Oliviervd) extensively describes the Philippe and Marcel Wolfers collection on Wikidata this month. Louis Wolfers (1820-1892), his son Philippe Wolfers (1858-1929) and grandson Marcel Wolfers (1886-1976) were part of a family of prominent Belgian silversmiths and designers of decorative arts - jewellery, sculpture and other decorative items. Some of the objects they have designed are in Belgian and international museum collections; their company's archive and many design sketches have been preserved as well. Olivier's work in March focuses, among other things, on describing all these individual items on Wikidata, and interrelating them correctly.
Later this year, images related to these collections will be described in structured data format on Wikimedia Commons, and this pilot project will be used as the basis for new documentation on data modelling for structured data as well.
Research on 'metadata roundtripping'
Unknown actor, Hildur Engström and Julia Caesar in the revue Hertiginnan av Danviken at Kristallsalongen 1906. Photograph 1906 by Anton Blomberg (1862–1936), Scanned glass negative, Swedish Performing Arts Agency, Public Domain.
Don't forget to check out this month's Special Story in This Month in GLAM: it describes progress of a project by the Swedish National Heritage Board to investigate how cultural institutions can retrieve back improved metadata from their files on Wikimedia Commons.
GLAM-Wiki at Wikimania 2019
The Program Design for Wikimania 2019 is live! Please note that it is possible to apply for a scholarship (open till March 15) and there is a call for program Spaces and Leaders (open till March 22). If you think that GLAM-Wiki should be represented in the program, please consider applying for the latter!
March 2019
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons; Bengali Wikisource case study
ByStructured Data on Wikimedia Commons
Deployment updates
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons is in the process of being deployed step by step.
In March 2019, it became possible to test Depicts statements on Test-Commons.
The deployment timeline for April 2019 is, as of April 5:
Early April 2019
- Add/view/edit depicts on file pages
- Add/view/edit depicts in UploadWizard
Mid - late April 2019 Phabricator ticket: T215305
- Search depicts statements
- Depicts qualifiers
- Filter search results
- Depicts of depicts
- Depicts and annotations
GLAM pilot projects
While the first features for Structured Data on Commons are further developed, the first GLAM pilot projects are in progress too.
Project Wolfers
In March 2019, Packed/VIAA (BE) has been doing preparatory work on Project Wolfers, a pilot project for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons that brings the vast oeuvre of the Wolfers dynasty together on Wikidata and - where copyright allows - on Wikimedia Commons.
Louis Wolfers (1820-1892), his son Philippe Wolfers (1858-1929) and grandson Marcel Wolfers (1886-1976) were part of a family of prominent Belgian silversmiths and designers of decorative arts - jewellery, sculpture and other decorative items. Many objects that they have designed have been spread out through Belgian and international museum and private collections; their company's archive and many design sketches have been preserved as well.
In March, many Wikidata items have been uploaded for this project. As soon as Depicts and other statements for Structured Data on Commons are deployed, additional images of the works and sketches will be uploaded in structured data format, and existing images on Wikimedia Commons will be enhanced with structured data too.
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Study of flowers, drawing (1895) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation
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Civilisation et Barbarie, file box (1897-98) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation and Royal Museums of Art and History
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Design drawing for vase 'Peacock Feathers' (1899) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation
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Peacock Feathers, vase (1899) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation and Royal Museums of Art and History
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Design drawing for comb 'Birds and Irises' (1899) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation
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Birds and Irises, comb (ca. 1900) by Philippe Wolfers, collection King Baudouin Foundation and Royal Museums of Art and History
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Swan Pendant (ca. 1901) by Philippe Wolfers, collection Rijksmuseum
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Ondine table centrepiece (1958) by Marcel Wolfers, collection DIVA and King Baudouin Foundation
In general, the pilot project experiments with the following new questions and challenges around structured data:
- Uploading data to Wikidata and related media files to Wikimedia Commons, in structured data format
- Data modelling on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons for decorative arts
- Data modelling for a detailed collection where many objects have a close relationship to each other - for instance, inspirational drawings and design sketches for pieces of jewellery
- Copyright clearance and copyright data modelling for objects with several creators, sometimes also (historical) companies
Other GLAM pilot projects
The (growing) list of other GLAM pilot projects is available at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Structured_data/GLAM/Projects
Consultation about UploadWizard for Wiki Loves... campaigns
In the not so far future, it will also be possible to organize Wiki Loves... (Monuments, Earth, Africa, Art, Love, ...) campaigns on Wikimedia Commons with structured data.
In the course of 2019, the SDC development team wants to improve Wikimedia Commons' UploadWizard to support the campaigns that want to be powered by Structured Data 'new style'.
Do you have ideas and wishes for this? The team wants to hear which structured data features you want to see in UploadWizard. A community consultation runs during the first two weeks of April 2019.
Case Study about Bengali Wikisource 10th Anniversary Proofreading Contest
As an effort to document projects related to Wikisource, we have started by writing the first case study about Bengali Wikisource 10th Anniversary Proofreading Contest held in 2017 with the help of contest organizers Bodhisattwa and Jayantanth. If you know about, or have organized interesting Wikisource related projects that you would like to be documented in form of a case study, feel free to reach out to us at sgill wikimedia.org.
April 2019
OpenGLAM Principles, ARL and Wikidata, CC Summit
ByStructured Data on Wikimedia Commons
A lot is happening around Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons! In the upcoming months, a separate This Month in GLAM report will be especially dedicated to the project. Check the latest news there: https://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM/Newsletter/April_2019/Contents/Structured_Data_on_Wikimedia_Commons_report
Results of survey about the OpenGLAM Principles
Several months ago, a group of active members of the OpenGLAM community - including Alex Stinson - held a survey to do a temperature check about the OpenGLAM Principles, a set of principles around Open Access for cultural institutions drafted in 2013. The survey investigated whether the Principles are still useful and if they need an update. Read this blog post for a summary of the findings.
Association of Research Libraries Whitepaper on Wikidata
The American Association of Research Libraries published a White Paper describing the opportunities for libraries, especially research and university libraries, to participate in the Wikidata community. You can find more information about this whitepaper in this month's Wikidata report.
Creative Commons Summit, Lisbon
Alex and Sandra are attending the Creative Commons Global Summit 2019, May 9-11 in Lisbon, Portugal, together with quite a few other Wikimedians and GLAM-Wiki community members. The conference has a GLAM track; other sessions in which Wikimedians will be active include:
- Friday, May 10: Adding structured and machine-readable data for copyright and licensing on Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata
- Friday, May 10 and Saturday, May 11: Public Domain Awareness Project: enhancing use of CC’s Public Domain tools for GLAM institutions and re-users Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3
See the entire schedule here: https://ccglobalsummit2019lisbonportugal.sched.com/
May 2019
Creative Commons Global Summit 2019
ByCreative Commons Summit, Lisbon
A large group of Wikimedians attended the Creative Commons Global Summit 2019, May 9-11 in Lisbon, Portugal: staff from the Wikimedia Foundation, WMDE and other affiliates, and various representatives of the movement strategy process. Sandra and Alex facilitated sessions about copyright modeling on Wikidata and Structured Commons and about the needs of movement organizers (in the Wikimedia and broader "open" context). They also engaged in conversations around inclusion of Wikimedia Commons in the new CC Search, the central role of Wikidata in CC's plans around Public Domain tooling, the future of OpenGLAM, and other areas of collaboration.
Sandra and Alex actively participated in the following sessions:
- Friday, May 10: Adding structured and machine-readable data for copyright and licensing on Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata
- Friday, May 10 and Saturday, May 11: Public Domain Awareness Project: enhancing use of CC’s Public Domain tools for GLAM institutions and re-users Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3
See the entire schedule here: https://ccglobalsummit2019lisbonportugal.sched.com/
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
You can read current updates about Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons in this dedicated newsletter section: https://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM/Newsletter/May_2019/Contents/Structured_Data_on_Wikimedia_Commons_report
July 2019
OpenGLAM, Wikimania and Structured Commons
ByPreparing an Open GLAM Declaration
In 2019, the Wikimedia Foundation decided to support the work around publishing a new revision of the Principles or Declaration on Open Access for Culture Heritage for a fiscal year (through August 2019-July 2020). This money will fund project management and support for the OpenGLAM community in the rewrite and release of the OpenGLAM Principles/Declaration; revamping the OpenGLAM website & defining a strategy for current communication channels; and allocating some travel funds for people to promote and engage the sector around the Declaration, among other activities.
You can read more about the work being done on the Open GLAM Meta page: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Open_GLAM.
We expect that this work will provide a workable framework for Open Access for Cultural Heritage.
Please also join us at the session of GLAM Wiki Coordinators where we'll be discussing some of this work.
GLAM team at Wikimania 2019
The Wikimedia Foundation's GLAM team (Alex, Sandra and Satdeep) will attend Wikimania 2019 in Stockholm. Please come and say hi to us; we are looking forward to get to know you and/or to catch up! We will also attend, and talk or present at some of the following sessions, presentations and program elements:
- GLAMwiki Coordinators meeting
- Wikimania 2019 Hackathon - GLAM focus area
- Wikimania 2019 Learning Days
- Let's Talk about Campaigns and Contests
- Rapid Grants to Increase Awareness of Wikimedia Projects
- Designing for Organizing in the Wikimedia Movement
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons for GLAM-Wiki
- Tools for partnerships – developing the technology our partners need
- Public Domain Awareness Project: enhancing use of CC’s Public Domain tools to serve the needs of GLAM institutions and reusers
- Structured Data on Commons hands-on training
- Describing files on Structured Commons: problems and opportunities
- National Libraries Meeting Day
Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons
An important new set of features has been released for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons! You can now add many kinds of statements to Commons files - not just Depicts. Check this month's SDC update for a more in depth demonstration.
August 2019
Updates on OpenGLAM
ByUpdates on Open GLAM
- Stacy Allison-Cassin was present at the IFLA WLIC 2019, where she led a discussion around the Open GLAM Principles and the future of a new Declaration on Open Access for Cultural Heritage. Slideshows available here. Thank you Stacy for your great work leading the discussion!
- On September 16-17, SandraF and Douglas McCarthy will be in Stockholm providing details on the work being carried around the Open GLAM initiative and the Declaration at the Sharing is Caring event.
- On September 19, Dr. Andrea Wallace will be participating on a workshop on Digitising and accessing cultural heritage: legal challenges and opportunities where she would also talk about the work being carried around Open GLAM and the Declaration.
You can read more about the work being done on the Open GLAM Meta page: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Open_GLAM and join us on September 12th for our community call!
September 2019
GLAM Manager Role Announced!
ByGLAM Manager Role Announced!
The Wikimedia Foundation is looking for a Senior Program Manager in GLAM and Culture. The role will be leading the GLAM team and focused on developing a strategy to support the international community of practice working on GLAM-Wiki. Please help us find someone who is qualified and can help us represent the global diversity of institutions and professionals working in the space. Please share the job listing widely. Or share, the our Tweets about it or LinkedIn Posting.
October 2019
1Lib1Ref, Wikimedia Sweden Research and other updates
By1Lib1Ref
The Wikipedia Library team published a retrospective on the 2019 1Lib1Ref campaign this month. You can read the summary version on Wikimedia Space and the full report on Medium. Key takeaways included continued expansion of the reach and impact of the event, the need to continue supporting a community organising team, and the value of proactive outreach to underrepresented communities.
1Lib1Ref will be taking place on the same dates in 2020. You can join in between January 15th and February 5th as well as May 15th to June 5th. Organise an event with your local library and librarians, support new contributors, or just add a citation! Read more about how you can participate.
Wikimedia Sweden Research Update
The GLAM team is preparing various pieces of research that will help to inspire the work by Wikimedia Sverige to build better technical and social infrastructure for Wikimedia content partnerships. This research will help to understand which interventions and technologies are most needed around the world.
- GLAM Mapping: research on past GLAM-Wiki projects documented in This Month in GLAM, in various affiliate reports and other on-wiki venues
- Research on international datasets and indicators that help us better understand the potential of Wikimedia content partnerships around the world (starting in 2020)
- Two regional deep dives in which the insights of the datasets and indicators research will be applied to the specific situation in Latin America and the ESEAP (East, South East Asia and the Pacific) region.
This research will soon be documented on the Meta page: WMSE-WMF joint initiative concerning GLAM communities of practice.
Other goings on
- We have been busy on Structured Data on Commons. Check out the report.
- The Wikimedia Foundation is working with UN Human rights to promote coverage of Human Rights topics on Wikimedia Projects: check out the special report to learn more.
- The team is busy screening and interviewing candidates for Senior Program Manager, GLAM and Culture position. We are excited about the diversity of experiences that candidates could bring to the Wikimedia ecosystem.
- Open GLAM -- a team of partners from the Wikimedia Foundation, Creative Commons, Euopeana and others are working together on revitalizing OpenGLAM work -- if you haven’t caught it, check out the community page on Meta: Open GLAM
- Community Wishlist Survey 2020 is open and unlike previous years is focused on the smaller Sister projects (not Wikidata, Commons or Wikipedia). The GLAM-Wiki community has often show up heavily in the wishlist voting and idea sharing: please join the conversation. We also created a special Wikisource report about the wishlist: Read it here.
December 2019
Mapping GLAM-Wiki collaborations
ByMapping GLAM-Wiki collaborations
In late 2019 and early 2020, the GLAM team at the Wikimedia Foundation collects data about the past international GLAM-Wiki activities that have been publicly documented by the Wikimedia community: in this newsletter, in affiliate and project reports and other resources. We have started this research project to build a better overview of the kinds of GLAM-Wiki projects that have been done in the past, and in order to analyze this for broad developments and patterns. This research project primarily supports the work of Wikimedia Sverige to establish a GLAM support hub, but of course the data will be useful for many different purposes.
Krishna Chaitanya Velaga and Davit Saroyan work on the data collection. You can read more about this research here and look at the work in progress in the spreadsheet. Feel free to leave comments in the spreadsheet if you have suggestions, additions or other remarks.
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GLAMWiki Activities by continent (as of 9th January 2020)
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GLAMWiki Activities by project per year (as of 9th January 2020)
February 2020
New Team Leadership, GLAM-Focused Grants Review, OpenGLAM Declaration Research
ByWMF Welcomes Fiona Romeo as Senior Program Manager, GLAM and Culture
We are thrilled to welcome Fiona Romeo as the new lead of our GLAM program. Fiona comes to us with a deep background in digital strategy and exhibition design in the international museum sector, and an eclectic mix of other tech/media experience ranging from the BBC to Skype to online games. She's also no stranger to Wikimedia collaborations. :-) Fiona also brings a strong ethical orientation and personal priority around knowledge equity, as evidenced most recently by her work redesigning a permanent exhibit at London's Wellcome Collection (described more below).
Fiona is just two weeks into the job, but is already starting to establish contact with various GLAM-Wiki volunteers and organizers. Please join us in welcoming her to the Foundation, and to the movement.
More About Fiona
Fiona Romeo has been working in the cultural sector for 14 years, leading teams to deliver both digital and exhibition programs. She recently produced the Being Human gallery at Wellcome Collection, which was lauded for its inclusive design (“Is This The World’s Most Accessible Museum?”). Previously, she was Director of Digital Content and Strategy at The Museum of Modern Art (New York) and Head of Design and Digital Media at Royal Museums Greenwich (London).
Fiona’s work demonstrates a longstanding commitment to openness. At Royal Museums Greenwich, she developed new platforms for participation, including citizen science projects, such as Old Weather, and the annual Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition. Under her digital leadership, Royal Museums Greenwich was an early contributor to many open GLAM initiatives, sharing its collections and data with Flickr Commons, Europeana, Wikimedia, and Art UK. The museum’s digitisation programme was extended through large-scale collaborations, such as a project with The National Archives and volunteers to transcribe Merchant Navy crew lists.
At MoMA, Fiona dedicated the collection data to the public domain and hosted a datathon to explore it. She also supported a project to stabilise and capture all 200 MoMA exhibition websites for the Internet Archive, released a comprehensive exhibition history, and deepened MoMA’s engagement with Wikimedia through editathons and linked data. This work was reported in a Wall Street Journal article, titled “Museums Open Up to Power of Wiki”.
More recently, Fiona has been advising smaller heritage organisations, such as The MERL, a small museum with an outsize digital following.
GLAM focused WMF Project Grants
Its that time of the year again for WMF Project Grant review! We are excited that there are a lot of different project grants related to GLAM practices: many of the more innovative independent GLAM projects in the movement start with seed funding from this program.
As a reminder, WMF grant programs are open for community review and endorsement, so we encourage community members to either endorse the grants or leave feedback on the project pages. We may have missed a project that you might be interested in or related to your GLAM project: see the full list on meta.
Here are the GLAM related projects:
- Project/Geogap in South Asia and Dutch Caribbean on Wikimedia projects
- Project/PanLex/Balinese palm-leaf transcription platform on Wikisource
- Project/Global Open Initiative/Wikidata GLAMs Campaign, Ghana
- Project/Wikipedia in African Libraries
- Project/FLG/History of Quebec and French-speaking North America 2020-2021
- Project/National Film Registry
- Project/Fjjulien/Modelling and Populating Performing Arts Data in Wikidata
- https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Project/WNAIL/Projet_Atikamekw_2020-2021
- Project/ISUR/Wikipedia women and ancestral knowledge from the global south in the Colombian context/2
- Project/Giornata della memoria 2021
- Project/Groundings: Black British Archival Workshops
- Project/Amyc29/Community of Soul: Writing Black Music History in Wikipedia
- Project/Heritage GLAM 2020
- Project/McMaster University Health Sciences Library Faculty & Researcher Engagement Effort
Structured Data on Commons: GLAM pilot projects concluded
The GLAM pilot projects for Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons have been concluded, summarized and documented. See this month's Structured Data on Commons report for an overview.
Open GLAM collaboration: research to inform the Open GLAM Declaration
The WMF is moving forward with its collaboration with Creative Commons to produce a revised set of principles for GLAM institutions on Open Access. We are in the process of preparing a White Paper, which is going to deliver the most current up-to-date research and practical guidance on how different institutions are adopting their Open Access policies.
We are making available the papers, slideshows, videos, talks, blogposts, among many other materials, that are informing that research. We are also asking for community input: what are the resources that you have found the most useful when talking with institutions about implementing and using CC licenses? It can be anything, from slides to papers, to talks and videos. Read more about the story here. Complete the form here, or if your list is too long and you have many resources that you want to share, drop us an email at info @ openglam.org.
March 2020
Mapping GLAM-Wiki collaborations
ByUpdate regarding mapping GLAM-Wiki collaborations
It has been previously reported that as part of the collaboration between Wikimedia Foundation and Wikimedia Sverige, a project to map all the GLAM-Wiki activities in the movement in a structured format has been started in November 2019. By the end of the first week of April 2020, a phase of this project has been concluded.
This phase largely includes substantial research and prototyping of a database to host the gathered data. Data being gathered from various sources on and off Wikimedia projects has been populated to four broad categories - GLAM Wiki collaborations, GLAM-Wiki events, GLAM-Wiki conference participations, and GLAM-Wiki tools. The first category of projects are comparatively large projects, the second category mostly contains single/stand-alone events ranging one day to a few days such as edit-a-thons, and the last category where the Wikimedia community engaged with conferences and other similar activities in the sector.
Sources that have been researched through for gathering the data are as follows;
- This Month in GLAM: January 2011 to February 2020
- Grant reports submitted to the Wikimedia Foundation: Rapid Grant, Conference & Event Grant, Project Grant, Simple Annual Plan Grant, Annual Plan Grant through Funds Dissemination Committee process[1], Individual Engagement Grant, Project and Event Grant, and Travel and Participating Support.
- Wikimedia Foundation’s Affiliate reports: Reported via pages and subpages linked from Meta:Reports.
By the end of this (the first) phase of research and data gathering, a total of 884 GLAM-Wiki collaborations, 1,340 GLAM-Wiki events, and 344 conference participation/presentations, have been recorded. It is to be noted that these may contain duplicates and umbrella projects, which might be cleaned up and further processed in the next phase. In addition, it is also to note that there are significant data gaps, which are to be dealt in the next phase.
As the final objective to be achieved is to migrate this data to a website based on Linked Data architecture i.e. using Wikibase. Before proceeding with an actual site, Wbstack service has been used to create a test site (https://programs.wiki.opencura.com/wiki/Main_Page) and a substantial testing of data models and properties has been done in the time available. Learning from this testing would be used in later stages.
Details of later stages of the project would be communicated in the coming months, as required.
You are encouraged to review, provide feedback and also help us in filling gaps in the documentation sheet linked below:
GLAM-Wiki Activities Mapping - Community Review and Feedback Sheet
Notes
- Only ‘Impact reports’ have been researched due to time limitations. ‘Progress reports’ which are submitted mid-term have not been covered, unless specifically required in a few cases.
May 2020
GLAM metadata standards and Wikimedia projects
ByGLAM metadata standards and Wikimedia projects
When cultural institutions (GLAMs) start collaborating with Wikimedians, and when they intend to upload files to Wikimedia Commons or contribute data to Wikidata, these institutions often ask how the data models used in their internal collection databases should be translated to Wikimedia platforms.
In order to help GLAMs and Wikimedians collect best practices for this, the Wikimedia Foundation's GLAM team has initiated a page on meta.wikimedia.org – GLAM/Metadata standards and Wikimedia – that provides an overview of the most-often used GLAM standards and how (if at all) they map to data models on Wikimedia projects. The overview focuses on Linked Open Data or structured data, i.e. cultural data on Wikidata and in structured data on Wikimedia Commons).
The list is certainly not complete. Please improve and extend the page, especially on widely-used metadata standards, and help keep it up to date.
In the future, this list can then also be used to prioritize GLAM metadata standards that need to be supported in improved tools for GLAM-Wiki projects: software for batch uploads to Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons, and software that supports metadata roundtripping between Wikimedia platforms and GLAM databases.
June 2020
Departure of Sandra Fauconnier
ByDeparture of Sandra Fauconnier
Sandra Fauconnier left the Wikimedia Foundation at the end of June after a productive and impactful three years. Sandra documented all of her Structured Data on Commons pilots and just posted an invitation for you to work with the OpenGLAM community on best practices for describing copyright on Wikidata and Wikimedia Commons.
August 2020
Wikipedia Library, new WikiCite grant programs, and GLAM office hours
ByGLAM & Culture office hours
Fiona Romeo (WMF) and Satdeep Gill (WMF) from the GLAM & Culture team at the Wikimedia Foundation will be hosting monthly office hours to present product development plans and insights; develop shared practices; and get your feedback and questions. See the Wikimedia Foundation GLAM team page for joining information and updates.
September meeting: IIIF on Wikimedia Commons
The first meeting is on Monday 21 September 3.30-4.30pm UTC and will be repeated on Tuesday 22 September 11.30am-12.30pm UTC. We will be joined by Evan Prodromou, Product Manager in the Platform team. Evan is scoping a potential implementation of International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) on Wikimedia Commons and he is very interested in potential GLAM use cases.
October meeting: Structured Data Across Wikipedia
The second meeting is on Monday 19 October 3.30-4.30pm UTC and will be repeated on Tuesday 20 October 11am-12pm UTC. We will be joined by Carly Bogan, Program Manager for Structured Data. She will share insights into how Wikimedia Commons search works and introduce the Structured Data Across Wikipedia project.
Wikipedia Library
The Wikipedia Library has new collections available through the Library Card platform, including a World Explorer membership for the genealogical and historical records in Ancestry.com.
WikiCite grant programs
There are two new grant programs for projects that support the goals of WikiCite: the promotion open citations and linked bibliographic data to serve free knowledge.
Project & Event grants
Grants between $2,000 and $10,000 (USD equivalent) are available to individuals, groups, and organisations with a project that supports the goals of Wikicite.
All the details, the eligibility criteria, and the application form are available on the WikiCite project & event grants homepage.
Individuals, groups, and organizations may apply, and projects may be of any nature. This includes technical (e.g. software, tools), event (online, or in-person), resources (training materials, documentation), or other forms not mentioned – as long as it supports the goals of WikiCite.
e-Scholarships
The e-scholarship program is a new kind of grant in Wikimedia, created in response to an era of COVID-19 quarantines, and the 2030 Movement strategy goals.
An e-scholarship provides a per-diem equivalent allowance for 1-5 people to stay at their home(s) and work for 2-4 days on a project supporting the mission of WikiCite. e-scholarship recipients' projects can be the kinds of things they might have previously undertaken with a scholarship for an in-person hackathon, unconference, or research trip, for example.
All the details, eligibility criteria, program design principles, and the application form are available on the WikiCite e-scholarships homepage.
Funding will:
- be provided in advance;
- be calculated at the WMF per-diem rate for the city where the e-scholarship recipient lives;
- and (as it is a living allowance) not require recipients to submit expense reports.
Remote group applications are encouraged, as are projects which focus on content or communities which are historically underrepresented in Wikimedia projects. Building a bot, fixing a tool, wrangling a dataset, writing complete documentation... all are valid e-scholarship projects.
September 2020
Launching Wikisource Pagelist Widget
ByLaunching Wikisource Pagelist Widget
Volunteer developer Sohom data worked with Sam Wilson and Satdeep Gill from Wikimedia Foundation to create Wikisource Pagelist Widget as a part of Google Summer of Code 2020.
A Wikisource meetup was organized on 29th September 2020 to showcase the widget and to give a live demonstration of the widget along with instructions to enable the widget. 14 Wikimedians from Asia and Europe attended the meetup. Meeting notes are available on Etherpad. The presentation and a recording of the demonstration is linked towards the right of this report and also linked on the Meta-Wiki page about the widget.
The widget is now available to be enabled on Wikisource and at-least 19 different language Wikisources have enabled the widget till date. Instructions to enable the widget are also available on the relevant page on MediaWiki.
Feel free to provide to feedback about the widget on the Meta-Wiki talk page and/or fill bug reports under ProofreadPage Extension Workboard on Phabricator regarding the same in case you encounter any issues or have suggestions in mind.
December 2020
The GLAM & Culture office hours
ByAs some of the GLAM newsletter readers may already know, for the last three months, the GLAM and Culture team at the Wikimedia Foundation has been holding monthly office hours. There is a specific topic each month with a Foundation host and guest presenters from the movement. The meetings are intended as an open forum, a place for Wikimedians and GLAM professionals to share ideas, conversations, and creativity.
The meetings usually take place in Zoom and there are two slots each month to reach different time zones. January's GLAM & Culture office hours will introduce project grants for community organizing. Join us on Monday 25 January 4.30-5.30pm UTC or Tuesday 26 January 9.30am-10.30pm UTC.
Stay tuned to this page for joining details and information about the following months.
Below, you can find documentation of last year's events:
September: IIIF on Wikimedia Commons
The first GLAM & Culture office hours happened in September and it was about potential GLAM use cases for IIIF, especially on Wikimedia Commons. At the Monday meeting, the presenter was Evan Prodromou, Product Manager in the Foundation's Platform team. Evan gave a general introduction to the Foundation's new API service. On Tuesday, Jason Evans, National Wikimedian at the National Library of Wales, shared his experience of IIIF.
The National Library of Wales has been contributing to Wikimedia for five years and there are already 20,000 images from its collections available on Wikimedia Commons. When Wikidata approved a property for the IIIF manifest, the institution contributed 15,000 items to Wikidata with IIIF manifests.
The IIIF metadata started to get used by others, including an Italian website that is now displaying all the NLW images, without actually having a digital copy of those works, and is also pulling in all the metadata that is associated with those manifests.
Jason also demonstrated how IIIF allows you to clearly state where in an image something is depicted. The image position can be saved in Wikidata and then queried, or even extracted in a IIIF manifest to be used on other platforms.
Therefore the use of IIIF, according to Jason, would accomplish three goals: enhance Commons data, improve import and export options, and have more potential for reuse.
This subject attracted more than 60 participants across the two meetings, including Wikimedians, affiliate staff, and GLAM professionals from the Smithsonian, Metropolitan Museum, DPLA, The Getty, Wellcome Collection, National Gallery UK, Huntington Art Gallery, Harvard Library, V&A, British Library, and Princeton University Library. These attendees were polled to determine the most interesting IIIF use cases for Wikimedia Commons.
Top three from Monday’s meeting:
- Dynamic redisplay of images (e.g. zoom, crops, etc) for reuse on Wikipedia and elsewhere: 65%
- Aggregating Wikimedia images with other IIIF-compatible sources: 48%
- Wikimedia Commons as a free IIIF server for GLAMs and other contributors: 42%
Top three from Tuesday’s meeting:
- Wikimedia Commons as a free IIIF server for GLAMs and other contributors: 83%
- Simplifying bulk contribution of images to Commons: 58%
- Directly annotating media on Wikimedia Commons and Wikipedia: 50%
You can find the collective notes and chat transcripts for both meetings in this document.
October: Structured Data Across Wikimedia
For the October event, we focused on Structured Data, with presentations from Carly Bogen, the Foundation's Program Manager for Structured Data, and Alicia Fagerving and David Haskiya from Wikimedia Sweden.
Carly's presentation introduced the Structured Data Across Wikimedia (SDAW) project, which has the following goals:
- Allow machines to recognize Wikimedia content and suggest relations to other Wikimedia content.
- Design a way to structure articles and pages to enable new content formats.
- Give Wikimedia users a more inviting, more efficient way to search and find content.
So far, the product team has focused on an improved Media Search for Commons. The new Media Search:
- Has an image-focused user interface that will make it easier to find what you're looking for and to discover new things.
- Generates a set of search results that utilizes structured data and is more language-agnostic.
- Has filters for media types and tabs for audio, videos, and categories results.
Carly explained how Wikimedians and institutions can improve the search relevance of a file:
- Add a descriptive title
- Add captions in multiple languages
- Add a detailed description
- Add the file to the relevant categories
- Add depicts statements
This is described in more detail in a new Help page for Media Search.
Carly noted that the “mark as prominent” feature needs to be used more consistently if it is to be included in the search algorithm.
The structured data team will soon add a license filter, which will only use license data contained in structured data statements, so it’s very important that the GLAM community adds license information to the statements.
Finally, Carly posed two questions for the community:
- Should the depicts statements on Wikidata be added to the Commons search index?
- What other statements could most usefully be added to search?
Wikimedia Sweden’s presentation introduced a project that will use Structured Data on Commons to improve discovery and use of Wiki Loves Monuments images. WMSE will add at least 250,000 new ‘’Depicts’’ and ‘’Participant in’’ statements to Sweden’s Wiki Loves Monuments entries, focusing on those that have relevant Wikidata items. They will share their process and tools, which could be useful for other Wiki Loves campaigns, or for museums that have added depicts information to Wikidata.
There were more than 30 attendees across the two sessions, with good representation from cultural institutions, affiliates, and the broader community. At the end, there was a conversation about less useful depicts statements being added to Commons and how to prioritize the creation of tools to help with quality control and maintenance.
You can find the collective notes and chat transcripts for both meetings in this document.
November: Wikisource
The November event was dedicated to Wikisource. Satdeep Gill, Program Officer for GLAM and Culture, shared how he’s coordinating across movement stakeholders to improve Wikisource infrastructure. There were also guest presentations by David Kamholz from PanLex, and Sara Thomas from Wikimedia UK.
Satdeep opened his remarks by saying that he believes Wikisource is a major part of the essential infrastructure for free knowledge. It is imperative to have a really good transcription platform, especially so that underrepresented languages can have their own digital library. Wikisource hasn’t had a lot of investment in its infrastructure and has been mainly volunteer built.
Satdeep shared an overview of the Wikisource workflow, with an overlay of projects that are being worked on this year. These small projects have been supported in different ways—some via the Community Wishlist Survey 2020, others by Wikimedia Foundation grants, and another was achieved through a Google Summer of Code mentorship.
Satdeep shared the recently launched Pagelist Widget, which improves the visualization of files and pages, as well as user experience and editing. It has already been enabled on 25 Wikisources. He also previewed Wikisource Export and encouraged people to give their feedback on the proposed designs.
David’s presentation was about a grant-funded project to develop a Balinese palm-leaf transcription platform on Wikisource.
The starting point for this project was the Balinese Digital Library, which was created in 2011 by the Internet Archive in partnership with major Balinese collections. It made available digital photographs of 3,000 works, containing 130,000 leaves, and covering all aspects of Balinese culture for centuries. However, it turned out that images alone were not enough. They were hard to use, read, and share and the Internet Archive wanted to create something more useful and engage the community.
PanLex applied for a Wikimedia Foundation project grant to have a new Balinese Wikisource as the long-term home for the transcription platform and its works. The project encompassed:
- Uploading scans to Commons
- Importing existing work from Palm Leaf Wiki
- Adding Balinese fonts to the Universal Language Selector
- ProofreadPage improvements for content language
- Balinese Language Converter for transliteration
- User script to activate transcription interface and transliteration
Interestingly, the Balinese Wikisource editing interface uses IIIF to retrieve a high resolution tile for only the part of the image that is being transcribed, reducing data usage in low resource contexts.
Sara’s presentation, Responding to Covid: The National Library of Scotland & Wikisource introduced WikiProject NLS.
In 2020, the National Library of Scotland’s building closed due to the Covid-19 pandemic and they wanted a productive and valuable work-from-home activity for staff. They had a longstanding collaboration with Wikimedia UK and had already considered using Wikisource as an alternative to their in-house OCR, which is auto-generated with no facility to correct it. They decided to correct the OCR for a collection of over 3,000 Scottish chapbooks, which had been recently digitized and made available on the Library's Digital Gallery. The chapbooks covered a wide range of topics and, at just 10-20 pages per book, could be transcribed in a day.
With more than 70 staff members, it was one of the largest professional cohorts Wikimedia UK has ever engaged, and most staff hadn’t tried Wikimedia projects before. The library wanted to complete all 3,000 books so they worked with two members of the Wikisource community to agree on a more limited use of Wikisource templates, striking a balance between completeness and speed.
Library staff reported enjoying the work and the project brought this important collection to a broader audience. Sara concluded that Wikisource probably isn’t a replacement for a better in-house OCR, and ultimately the main benefit of the project was staff learning how to use Wikimedia platforms.
More than 30 participants joined the November meetings, including British Library staff who expressed an interest in learning more about the Balinese palm leaf project by PanLex. Staff from the Foundation were able to address some of the specific issues encountered on the National Library of Scotland project, noting that Google OCR limits can be removed, and committing to fixing the .txt export issue. The new PageList widget presented by Satdeep addressed another of the challenges.
You can find the collective notes and chat transcripts for both meetings in this document.
January 2021
Black History Month, DPLA uploads, and Analytics
ByOffice hours
The GLAM team held two days of office hours in January to talk about Project Grants. We were joined by Marti Johnson, Lead Program Officer in the Community Resources team, who answered questions from potential applicants. Projects Grants accepts community organizing proposals until February 10 and technical and research proposals until March 16. The GLAM team is available to provide feedback on proposals in the week of February 15. Email glam wikimedia.org to book a meeting.
In February, we’ll be talking about analytics. Wikimedia Switzerland and Wikimedia Israel will discuss their collaboration to localize and extend the Cassandra tool. Trilce Navarrete and Elena Villaespesa will share their analysis of the consumption of museum images on Wikipedia, Digital Heritage Consumption: The Case of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The first meeting will happen on Monday, February 22, at 3.30-4.30pm UTC, followed by one on Tuesday, February 23, at 9.30-10.30 UTC.
More details about the February meetings are available on the GLAM team office hours page.
Digital Public Library of America makes an impact in 2020
Images from DPLA partners (in order): Houston County Public Library System (Georgia), Boston Public Library, Toledo-Lucas County Public Library (Ohio), Denver Public Library, and US National Wildlife Research Center. |
In 2020, the Wikimedia Foundation partnered with the Digital Public Library of America on a project with a tremendous impact. DPLA is a national aggregator of cultural heritage metadata for over 4,000 contributing institutions across the United States. With a grant from the Sloan Foundation, DPLA hired Dominic Byrd McDevitt and embarked on a pilot project to provide a technical pipeline for upload of public domain digital assets from cultural institutions across the United States to Wikimedia Commons.
With metadata, including standardized rights statements, provided to DPLA from participating institutions across the country, DPLA developed a workflow for the metadata and uploading it to Wikimedia Commons using Pywikibot under the DPLA bot account. The uploaded images can be seen at Category:Media contributed by the Digital Public Library of America.
Making GLAM-Wiki history
By the numbers, the DPLA project was one of the largest and most successful GLAM contributions to Wikimedia projects so far. Taken as a whole, the project uploaded over 1.25 million media files to Wikimedia Commons, constituting more than 650,000 distinct items from over 200 individual institutions—making it the single largest bulk upload to Wikimedia Commons ever. Indeed, across a single 8-day span in November 2020, DPLA uploaded almost 500,000 files, meaning this single surge of uploads would itself have been one of the top-5 bulk uploads. The following table quantifies the scale of the upload along several metrics (source).
DPLA Hub | Files uploaded | Items uploaded | Size of uploads (GB) |
---|---|---|---|
National Archives and Records Administration | 514,563 | 514,537 | 883 |
North Carolina Digital Heritage Center | 483,886 | 5,742 | 577 |
Ohio Digital Network | 129,767 | 100,041 | 50 |
The Portal to Texas History | 125,031 | 16,702 | 85 |
Indiana Memory | 87,727 | 6,933 | 119 |
Digital Library of Georgia | 42,900 | 11,059 | 33 |
Digital Commonwealth | 11,765 | 8,583 | 3 |
Plains to Peaks Collective | 1,846 | 1,569 | 9 |
Minnesota Digital Library | 295 | 10 | 0 |
Digital Public Library of America (total) | 1,399,412 | 666,808 | 1761 |
In addition to the number of files themselves, DPLA's project was also successful in generating access for the files through usage in Wikipedia. DPLA undertook an outreach program to provide participating institutions with training in Wikipedia editing. Through January 2021, DPLA images had been used in approximately 900 pages on over 70 Wikimedia wikis, with a total of over 13 million page views (see BaGLAMa).
Expanding the program
DPLA is continuing its Wikimedia program into 2021, and planning to expand its upload efforts while focusing on new developing the digital asset pipeline in new ways. With many images from existing partners not yet uploaded, and more partners expected to join the project in 2021, DPLA will be tapping into a pool of many more millions of media files waiting to be uploaded to Wikimedia Commons. As this work continues, it will also explore data synchronization, so that changes made by institutions to their metadata for uploaded images can be updated on Commons. This will be part of a larger effort to migrate its uploads to use Structured Data on Commons statements for metadata where possible.
Black History Month
February is Black History Month in the United States and Canada. Black History Month is an annual observance that originated in the United States as a way of remembering important people and events in the history of the African diaspora. If you’d like us to amplify your event, email diff wikimedia.org to have it shared in this roundup of Wikimedia events, or use the hashtag #WikiBlackHistory.
Black History Month is also observed in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the Netherlands in October.
February 2021
Project Grants, Analytics for GLAMs, and Shared Citations
ByProject Grants
Last month, the Foundation’s GLAM & Culture team gave feedback on community organizing proposals through 1:1 meetings and on the projects’ discussion pages. These proposals are now under consideration by the Committee and grantees will be announced on April 22, 2021.
The research and software round of project grants is open for proposals until March 16, 2021. If you need advice on your proposal, there are weekly clinics with Program Officers and thematic experts. Everyone else is encouraged to review the proposals and leave feedback.
Analytics for GLAMs
In February, the GLAM team held two days of office hours about analytics. Wikimedia Switzerland presented their latest version of the Cassandra tool and Wikimedia Israel shared their work to localize and extend it. We were also joined by researchers Trilce Navarrete and Elena Villaespesa, who shared their analysis of the consumption of museum images on Wikipedia, Digital Heritage Consumption: The Case of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Details of further meetings will be published to the GLAM team office hours page.
Links
- GLAM stat tool Cassandra v2.0 by Wikimedia Switzerland (on Github)
- GLAM Wiki Dashboard by Wikimedia Israel (on Github)
- Presentation by Trilce Navarrete and Elena Villaespesa, Museum Collections on Wikipedia
Highlights
- Cassandra offers a user-friendly way to add new GLAM institutions using the Commons category. Data going back to 2015 is available within 48 hours. The data is broken down by time periods and language versions.
- The main updates for Cassandra v2.0:
- Now includes Commons sub-categories
- A new feature suggests relevant Wikipedia articles and Wikidata items
- Free text search to find an individual file
- Wikimedia Israel worked on the localization of the Cassandra tool. It is now available in English and Hebrew, with Swedish and Portuguese language versions coming soon.
- Trilce and Elena found that paintings were used on Wikipedia as visual documentation and information sources, not only as art works.
- In their analysis of 8,000 paintings used in 10,000 articles in the English Wikipedia, they found that 33% of articles were art-related, receiving 12% of views, while 67% of articles containing a painting were non-art related and received 88% of views.
- Paintings often serve as portraits (of artists, of historical and political figures, of mythological and religious characters) and to illustrate places. Images that have a title like portrait or location are used most often.
- Twenty-six paintings were used in more than one article. One image was used in 76 articles. The Scream can be found illustrating an article about itself, the artist Edvard Munch, but also the page for anxiety disorder, Krakatoa, and existential angst.
Shared Citations
If you’re a Wikimedian who also enjoys libraries, likes structured data, or wants an integrated citation system, you’ll be interested in learning more about the Shared Citations proposal. Conceived by Liam Wyatt as the successor to the WikiCite program, its objective is to build a modern reference management system that spans and supports all Wikimedia projects, including Wikidata, to make citations:
- easier for the editor,
- more useful for the reader,
- and more efficient for our architecture.
The proposal is out for consultation and would benefit from your feedback and ideas.
March 2021
Media Search, Image Suggestion API, and Project Grants
ByMaking cultural content more visible
Several product teams at the Foundation are working hard to improve image discovery and reuse on Wikimedia projects. Two new releases show the potential of these developments for libraries and cultural institutions. The first is the new Media Search on Wikimedia Commons, by the Structured Data Across Wikimedia team, and the second is a proof-of-concept Image Suggestion API, by the Platform Engineering team.
Searching across languages
Media Search (or Special:MediaSearch) is an image-focused interface that makes it easier to find what you’re looking for on Wikimedia Commons. Most importantly, the search results are language agnostic. Given a search term like "zonnevlek" (Dutch for “sunspot”), Media Search won’t just return the one file on Commons that uses that term, it will search Wikidata for relevant entities and then find all files with that term and any of its aliases or translations. For the “zonnevlek” example, the number of images returned increased from one file to more than six hundred files. Media Search will make the millions of images contributed by libraries and cultural institutions much more accessible to a broad global audience.
You can try the new search here. It became the default search landing page for anonymous users on 1 April, 2021, and for all users in May, 2021.
To increase the search relevance of your files, you should include a descriptive title and detailed description, use the relevant Commons categories, and add depicts statements and a caption as Structured Data.
Suggesting images for Wikipedia
The Image Suggestion API is a service that will generate a list of unillustrated articles for any language version of Wikipedia, and then suggest up to 10 images for placement on those articles. The API will be powering a planned ‘add an image’ structured task for newcomers to Wikipedia but could also be used to drive image reuse campaigns, such as Wikipedia Pages Wanting Photos.
Right now, the API is only a proof of concept and is still being developed. You can try it at API Documentation and learn more on the MediaWiki page. If you can imagine using this API in your work with images, share your ideas on the Talk page.
The API uses algorithms that simply aggregate existing information from Wikidata and Commons, drawing on connections already made by experienced contributors. There are four main ways that it suggests matches to unillustrated articles:
- Look at the Wikidata item for the article. If it has an image (P18), choose that image.
- Look at the Wikidata item for the article. If it has a Commons category associated (P373), choose an image from the category.
- Look at the articles about the same topic in other language Wikipedias. Choose a lead image from those articles.
- Search MediaSearch for the title of the article. If an image ranks high enough in the results, choose that image.
To make your files available to the Image Suggestion API, you should use the relevant Commons categories and add depicts statements as Structured Data.
Learn more about the benefits of using Structured Data on Commons by reviewing the updated documentation and joining our April office hours on Monday, 26 April, 3.30pm-4.30pm UTC, and on Tuesday, 27 April, 11.00am-12.00pm UTC.
Research and Technical Project Grants
Grant proposals for research and technology projects are out for community feedback. We’d like to draw your attention to the following proposals:
- Extending the DPLA digital asset pipeline to improve quality and discoverability
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons functionalities in OpenRefine
- Wikidata Impact: mapping records quality and user experience
- Makumbusho: Apps4Museums
April 2021
Wikimedia Hackathon, Product Updates, and Office Hours
ByWikimedia Hackathon
The Wikimedia Hackathon 2021 is happening on May 22 and 23, as a remote event open to everyone interested in discovering or taking part in the technical aspects of Wikimedia projects. Andrew Lih has proposed a Structured data on Commons jam session.
Product Updates
Media Search
In the second week of May 2021, Special:MediaSearch will become the default search landing page for all users. This feature is an image-focused interface that makes it easier to find what you’re looking for on Wikimedia Commons and it will make the millions of images contributed by libraries and cultural institutions much more accessible to a broad global audience.
‘Add an Image’ task on Android
If you have the Wikipedia Android app, you can help train the Image Suggestion API we introduced last month. A new ‘train algorithm’ task will ask logged-in users to determine if a suggested image is a good illustration of the contents of the article displayed. Unlike other suggested edits, this task won’t save edits to any Wiki projects. It’s a temporary task to gather data to improve the image matching algorithm and inform the design of future releases. You can see a GIF preview of the feature on the project page.
If you have feedback after trying the task, please leave it on this Phabricator ticket.
Office Hours
Wiki Movimento Brasil User Group will join our May office hours to start a hopeful conversation about a 2022 GLAM-Wiki conference. The last conference was in Israel in 2018 and the one before was in the Netherlands in 2015. The first office hours meeting will happen on Tuesday 25 May at 12pm UTC, followed by one on Thursday 27 May at 5pm UTC.
More details about past and upcoming meetings are available on the GLAM team office hours page.
The GLAM & Culture team also held two days of office hours in April to talk about Structured data on Commons. On the first day, there were presentations from Carly Bogen, the Foundation's Program Manager for Structured data, and Jennie Choi, General Manager of Collection Information for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The second day’s presentations were by John Cummings, Wikimedian in Residence at UNESCO, and Alicia Fagerving, Developer at Wikimedia Sverige (WMSE). Both shared Wikimedia Sweden’s work with Structured data, GLAM content, and Wiki Loves Monuments.
We had 39 participants across the two meetings and a few institutions present, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Digital Public Library of America, Yale Center for British Art, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Smartify, meemoo (the Flemish Institute for Archive), and Flickr.
Carly Bogen
Carly Bogen presented Media Search, which uses Structured data on Commons metadata to enhance the search results. It also powers the visual editor on Wikipedia, allowing more image results, in more languages, to show up to illustrate Wikipedia articles. To utilise these discovery features, Carly recommended adding multiple depicts statements, both general and specific, to media files on Commons.
Work-in-progress includes an assessment filter for Media Search, to surface files that have been assessed as quality or featured images. And bot writers in the Cebuano and Arabic communities are experimenting with the Image Suggestion API to test the feasibility of adding images to Wikipedia automatically.
Carly shared early concepts for how Upload Wizard could prompt contributors to add both general and specific depicts; how image suggestions could be applied within page editing or VisualEditor flows; and how notifications could be used to suggest articles for images that have just been uploaded, or suggest images for articles on watchlists.
There was an important discussion about balancing automated suggestions with respect for the experience of on-wiki “lived consensus” and some participants suggested an “opt-out” flag for certain pages to be excluded.
Jennie Choi
Jennie shared how she has added more than 10,000 Structured data statements to the Metropolitan Museum of Art files on Commons. Her hope is to improve the use of the institution’s images on Wikipedia, after learning that only 6% of their images have been used on Wikimedia projects. This would greatly improve the already high number of views they receive. Between January and April 2021, for example, the MET had 94 million views on media files across all Wikimedia languages and sites.
For this upload, Jennie used the PetScan tool to get the images' M-IDs (this process is described here), followed by the QuickStatements tool (also described here). You can watch Jennie’s presentation and guide to the upload process in the video below:
Jennie also raised important questions about Structured data on Commons modeling and the differences between metadata on Commons and Wikidata.
John Cummings
John is working at Wikimedia Sweden to share guidelines related to Structured data on Commons with GLAMs. His presentation was an introduction to how both Wikidata and Commons can make content from institutions more searchable, especially with Structured data on Commons properties, such as depicts, creator, source of file, rights statements, location, multilingual captions, and so on. There was a good discussion about the need to find agreement on data modeling and share example queries.
Alicia Fagerving
Alicia’s presentation brought some use cases for the discussion, with the Structured data on Commons uploads for Wiki Loves Monuments on Sweden, Israel, and Poland.
Bots have already added statements like creator, inception, and coordinates of point of view. Now, Alicia has added depicts statements to make images more searchable and participant in statements to allow new analysis. There was interest from other attendees in applying this approach to other contexts and a discussion about the use of participant in versus on focus list of Wikimedia project.
May 2021
Grants and conferences
ByOpenRefine and DPLA technical projects funded
Technical project grants were awarded to both OpenRefine and DPLA to drive structured data adoption:
- Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons functionalities in OpenRefine
- Extending the DPLA digital asset pipeline to improve quality and discoverability
Join a regional grant-making committee
As a part of Grants Strategy Relaunch 2020-21, the Community Resources team is setting up regional committees. The primary role of these committees is to be strategic thought partners, using their understanding of the complexities of any region to make funding decisions for grant applications. They will also provide knowledge and expertise to applicants to support successful movement activities.
Consider applying to join a committee to share your regional knowledge and experience of GLAM and culture projects.
A hopeful conversation about the next GLAM-Wiki conference
João Peschanski of the Wikimedia Movimento Brasil user group shared his vision for the next GLAM-Wiki conference. João hoped it could be a global onsite conference with online access in 2022, to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Brazilian Independence. He stressed the importance of accessibility, with meaningful attendance from home, and distributed local gatherings. He also acknowledged the uncertainty around in-person organizing, due to the impacts of Covid-19, but wanted to "balance utopia and realism."
João proposed that the conference be co-organized by Wikimedia Movimento Brasil and their museum partner, Museu do Ipiranga, in São Paulo. João shared the video "Um Museu Paratodas, todes e todos - part. esp. Chico Buarque" ("A Museum For All"). In this clip, with world famous singer Chico Buarque (grandson of a former director of the museum, one of the most important critical intellectuals in Brazil, Sérgio Buarque), Commons-uploaded images by Militão Augusto de Azevedo (who produced 12,000 portraits, including some of the first images of African Brazilian, in the late 19th century) are remixed with images from musicians from the University of São Paulo and of the Museu do Ipiranga. The song is about hope and Brazilian culture; it is called "Paratodos" (for all).
A major goal for the conference is to "onboard more people from the Global South to Open GLAM and increase the diversity of the community and knowledge on Wikimedia." João wants to "re-imagine Culture & GLAM-Wiki from the margins."
The two office hours sessions were attended by representatives from more than 20 affiliates and user groups, from the Middle East, the Pacific, Latin America, the United States, Northern and Western Europe, and Central and Eastern Europe. João was commended for starting the conversation and there was strong support for Wikimedia Movimento Brasil as an organizer. The attendees also endorsed the emphasis on a Global South perspective on culture. Building on João's ideas, other participants suggested that the conference invite participants from aligned organizations and create space for communal problem-solving.
The Foundation's Senior Program Officer for Conference & Events Grants, Chen Almog, noted that there is no authorization for international travel right now. She also shared that, during Covid-19, event organizers have been having smaller, local gatherings to tackle local and regional questions, followed by an international remote gathering to bring this together in a wider perspective. Chen has noticed that, at a time when we have lost in-person connection with our communities, organizers are focusing more internally, finding local partners and working with new target audiences. There has also been more experimentation with aspects like professional facilitation, simultaneous translation, pre-recorded sessions, and new platforms for socializing. She encouraged everyone to embrace the flexibility and experiment. The attendees were interested in more advice about remote organizing and Chen shared the following resources:
- Risk Assessment During COVID-19
- Remote event guidelines and resources
- Lessons learned from the movement strategy conversations
- Remote social events
Attendees also discussed the challenges of remote organizing, particularly in parts of the Global South, where there is a disproportionately high cost for digital access. While remote organizing can work well for established groups, it is more challenging to invite new people into the movement.
Susanna Ånäs, from AvoinGLAM in Helsinki, shared the good news that Hack4OpenGLAM 2021 has been funded by the Foundation and will take place at the Creative Commons Summit, 20–24 September, 2021. She was interested in collaboratively planning the two conferences.
Tas Elias, the Foundation's Brand Collaborations Lead, shared an idea for pre-recorded museum walkthroughs for the entertainment track of Wikimania. Don't forget that the Wikimania Submissions deadline is June 18th, with a dedicated track for GLAM and Education discussion.
Details of upcoming conversations will be posted on our Office Hours page.
June 2021
Conferences and Structured data modeling
ByConferences and presentations
Wikimania 2021
June usually is a very active month for conferences, especially in the open knowledge movement. Around the Wikimedia community is not different, even in a completely online environment.
In 2021, Wikimania is happening remotely from August 13 to 17. Interested participants submitted their session proposals from May 27 until June 20.
As the last few years, one of the tracks from this year's program is Education & GLAM: "Initiatives and projects of the last 20 years focused on the use and access of Wikimedia projects in educational spaces at all levels and working with GLAM institutions."
Some users shared some ideas about how they thought the GLAM track should be made, with topics such as State of GLAM-Wiki in 2021, Structured Data on Commons, Tools and tech development for GLAM, Underrepresented knowledge, and Suggesting that the Wikimedia culture can enhance the prospects for world peace by encouraging advocacy and research organizations.
The GLAM & Culture team at the Foundation is very excited about the final list of GLAM-related submissions and has also applied for participation in three sessions:
- State of GLAM-Wiki in 2021
- Structured Data on Commons
- Alternative text to images
The announcement with the sessions chosen to form the program will be published between July 5 and 9. Check out some sessions marked as public through this link.
Creative Commons Global Summit 2021
In 2021, Creative Commons is also representing the open movement with an online version of its Creative Commons Global Summit.
One of the conference’s topics is around GLAMs, as CC has just launched its new Open GLAM Program. During the summit, the GLAM track sessions should address: "Improving and expanding open access to cultural heritage."
The deadline for proposals was extended to July 6. The GLAM & Culture team at the Foundation has proposed two sessions (one about Wikisource and another about GLAMs and Wikimedia). The team has also been invited to the session about the new CC Open GLAM program and for the Hack4OpenGLAM opening, on June 29, with a presentation about Knowledge Equity.
The Hack4OpenGLAM is being organized by AvoinGLAM and Creative Commons Finland, in collaboration with CC's OpenGLAM Platform, and supported by the Wikimedia Foundation.
During the opening, there were also presentations about other GLAM hackathons, a look back at Hack4OpenGLAM 2020, and an explanation about what’s in it for GLAMs in this hackathon. For more information about the Hack4OpenGLAM, check last year’s project dashboard.
Arctic Knot Conference 2021
In June, the Arctic Knot Wikimedia Language Conference 2021 took place online on June 24 and 25. The objective of the event was to discuss the "future of indigenous and underrepresented languages and their presence and use on the Wikimedia projects".
There were presentations about many different topics during the conference and, on Friday, a special session only about Wikisource, with three tracks: Wikisource presentation, Digitizing rare texts with Wikisource, and Wikisource workshop. The video with all three is available on the Wikimedia Norge YouTube channel here.
Satdeep Gill, from the GLAM & Culture team, hosted the "Digitizing rare texts with Wikisource" panel, in which there was conversation about experiences of a few different Wikimedia communities in digitizing rare texts on Wikisource: the Balinese community digitizing manuscripts from people's houses, and the Bengali Wikisource community collaborating with the British Library to organize a proofread-a-thon to transcribe 19th century and early 20th century texts from the library's collection.
2021 LD4 Conference on Linked Data
With the theme "Building Connections Together", the 2021 LD4 Conference on Linked Data is set to happen online from July 19 to 23.
This is the second edition of the conference and it aims to: "Focus on concrete ways that linked data impacts GLAM institutions and will share pathways that allow others to participate in linked data. By bringing together a broad range of perspectives, the conference seeks to create a community of practice for linked data in cultural heritage institutions."
The WMF GLAM & Culture team will also be presented at this conference. Giovanna Fontenelle is presenting a tutorial about Structured Data on Commons for GLAM institutions. The session will happen on July 19.
You can see the full program here or register for free on this page.
DPLA's structured data modeling
The GLAM & Culture team would also like to highlight the Structured data on Commons modeling proposed by Dominic Byrd-McDevitt, for the Digital Public Library of America. On June 1st, DPLA had its grant approved and it’s ready to apply structured data to its collections available on Commons.
For that, the institution shared some ideas it had concerning data modeling for its files, in fields such as described at URL (P973), title (P1476), copyright status (P6216), collection (P195), and a few other. DPLA also raised some questions and concerns on the page. As part of the team and advisor for the project, GFontenelle (WMF) suggested some answers on the talk page. If you would like to read or share your ideas about the topic, see Commons talk:Digital Public Library of America/Modeling.
July 2021
A conversation about depicts and Structured Data on Commons
BySince Structured Data on Commons launched in 2019, the community has been working to effectively use the depicts feature, which has been integrated into the Upload Wizard steps, but there is still a lot of uncertainty and divergent practices.
So far, there are two different pages that describe the use of depicts on Commons: the Commons page for depicts and the Structured Data modeling page for depicts. Both offer good information about the feature, but not enough guidance for how depicts should be modeled, or the various ways this data can be found and used.
To build a shared understanding, we have produced a guide to depicts and will be facilitating a discussion about the depicts feature during the Wikimania session, Structured data on Commons: today and tomorrow. We will share how depicts information is used in new product features like MediaSearch and Image Suggestions and suggest some models that will improve the discoverability and reuse of images.
Organized by community member, Andrew Lih, who is also a Wikimedian at Large at the Metropolitan Museum and at the Smithsonian, the session is part of the Education & GLAM track and will include representatives from the Foundation’s Structured Data and GLAM & Culture teams.
Details: Structured data on Commons: today and tomorrow
- Speakers: Andrew Lih, Fiona Romeo, Giovanna Fontenelle & Carly Bogen
- Date: Sunday, August 15
- Time: 19:45 - 20:45 UTC
- Place: Building 5
- Language: English
- Format: Roundtable
- Assume basic understanding (90% of the community)
The GLAM & Culture team is also participating in another Wikimania session, the State of GLAM Wiki in 2021.
Details: State of GLAM Wiki in 2021
- Speakers: Érica Azzellini, Andrew Lih, Giovanna Fontenelle, Dominic Byrd-McDevitt, Siobhan Leachman, Susanna Ånäs, Ederporto & Fiona Romeo
- Date: Sunday, August 15
- Time: 15:00 - 16:30 UTC
- Place: Building 2
- Language: English (also available in Arabic, German, Spanish, French, Russian, and Chinese
- Format: Roundtable
- Ideal for newcomers
August 2021
GLAM conversations and feedback for a better Wikimedia movement
ByConversations during conferences
Wikimania
August was a very busy month in the Wikimedia community. Wikimania 2021 was the biggest conference the movement ever had, as it was conducted in a virtual environment. It had over 4,000 registrations and ran for five days, with sessions across different time zones, covering various topics. All the GLAM and Education sessions are available in this category.
The GLAM & Culture team, at the Wikimedia Foundation, also participated in two sessions. One was the Structured data on Commons: today and tomorrow, that was followed by a discussion table at the unconference, the Structured data on Commons and had presentations by Carly Bogen, Dominic Byrd-McDevitt, and Giovanna Fontenelle. Right now, you can watch the video on YouTube, but it will also be available on Commons soon.
The table was joined by 20 people, the maximum allowed, who provided feedback and had a 30 minutes discussion around the depicts guidelines produced by the GLAM and Culture team to improve the modeling page for Structured data on Commons. During the conversation, the guidelines were available on this sandbox page, but now are published on the main page, with some open questions and issues available on the talk page.
The other session was the State of GLAM Wiki in 2021 and its video is available here. Fiona Romeo, from the WMF GLAM and Culture team, opened with a short intro to GLAM-Wiki and, at the end of the session, presented how the team is thinking about visual knowledge, especially considering the millions of high-quality images the movement’s partnerships with libraries and cultural institutions have brought to the Wikimedia projects and how we can make sure the files GLAMs contribute are well described, discoverable, and used to enrich other projects, more Wikipedia languages and Wikisource.
The session also covered topics such as a panorama of the GLAM-Wiki activities in New Zealand, by Siobhan Leachman, and the social and technical overview of the Digital Public Library of America GLAM-Wiki initiative, by Dominic Byrd-McDevitt.
Another very technical presentation was shared by Éder Porto, from the Wiki Movimento Brasil User Group, who gave a talk about the technical developments and challenges involved in the Museu do Ipiranga partnership, during a data roundtripping project.
Brazil was represented twice and Érica Azzellini, Communications Manager of the user group, introduced the Wiki Loves Bahia initiative, which is helping to fill the Wikimedia knowledge gaps of a very underrepresented part of the country. Susanna Ånäs, the GLAM coordinator at Wikimedia Suomi/AvoinGLAM, also talked about knowledge equity and ideas around the recent activities of AvoinGLAM, as a GLAM manifesto.
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GLAM Wiki in New Zealand
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Technical Developments and Challenges in GLAM-Wiki Initiatives: Museu do Ipiranga
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Wiki Loves Bahia: Addressing local knowledge gaps
Hack4OpenGLAM and CC Global Summit 2021
Susanna Ånäs, who presented in the State of GLAM Wiki in 2021 session is also organizing the Hack4OpenGLAM, a 5-day culture hack event, part of the Creative Commons Global Summit 2021 (20–24 September), that intends to use creativity to build projects with open cultural heritage. This year's theme is knowledge equity and some very interesting schemes are already available.
During the CC Global Summit main program, the GLAM and Culture team is also participating and presenting a few sessions:
- What does the Future Hold for Open GLAM and Creative Commons?
- Monday, September 20, 3:30pm - 4:30pm (UTC)
- Speakers: Andrea Wallace, Brigitte Vezina, Giovanna Fontenelle, and Susanna Ånäs
- Monday, September 20, 3:30pm - 4:30pm (UTC)
- Attributing Public Domain Materials: From Best Practices to Standardization
- Wednesday, September 22, 1:00pm - 2:00pm (UTC)
- Speakers: Brigitte Vezina, Deborah De Angelis, Fiona Romeo, and Sarah Pearson
- Wednesday, September 22, 1:00pm - 2:00pm (UTC)
- Introducing Wikisource: The Free Digital Library
- Friday, September 24, 11:00am - 11:30am (UTC)
- Speaker: Satdeep Gill
- Friday, September 24, 11:00am - 11:30am (UTC)
- Spreading CC's message for GLAMs during a pandemic
- Friday, September 24, 12:30pm - 13:30pm (UTC)
- Speaker: Giovanna Fontenelle
- Friday, September 24, 12:30pm - 13:30pm (UTC)
Technical conversations
In the last months and weeks, the GLAM team has also been very active in more technical conversations, especially on Phabricator. In this newsletter, we would like to highlight some of them.
- OpenRefine:
- Design a file format to represent Wikibase edits (T282796)
- Add Structured data on Wikimedia Commons support to OpenRefine (T289971)
- Create a reconciliation service for (Structured Data on) Wikimedia Commons (T289803)
- Minimal prototype for the Commons recon service (T290310)
- Structured Data on Commons reconciliation service accepts Commons category names as input (T290089)
- Describe typical user workflows for batch editing and uploading structured data on Commons (T290296)
September 2021
Updates on grant-funded technical projects
ByDigital Public Library of America
The Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) together with its Wikimedian in Residence, Dominic Byrd-McDevitt, had a grant application approved back in June 2020 to extend the DPLA digital asset pipeline in order to improve the quality and discoverability of the institution's files. This would be accomplished by the upload of Structured Data on Commons to media files the institution had already contributed, but also on new files, and by the constant maintenance of the information, updating data when needed.
In October 2020, only fours months after the grant application was approved, more than 1,8 million files on Commons from DPLA already have Structured Data incorporated. It's easy to identify that with the DPLA ID (P760), which was one of the first properties uploaded by the institution's bot and together with copyright status (P6216) and RightsStatements.org statement according to source website (P6426) made 4.8 million statements added just in the initial round of uploads.
Since then, DPLA is working on adding source of file (P7482), title (P1476), copyright license (P275), Commons media contributed by (P9126), and creator (P170). Every property was chosen after making it available on the DPLA's modeling page for community input.
DPLA's Wikimedian in Residence, Dominic, also recently proposed DPLA as an interwiki link and has been very active in the discussion about if and how references should be used in the Structured Data on Wikimedia Commons's files, both on the SDC talk page and on the proposed phabricator ticket.
Byrd-McDevitt has also shared, during a Wikimania 2021 panel, his "image citation pilot". The idea is to use Structured Data on Commons in an experimental Lua-based template to automatically generate captions and citations for media files on Wikipedia. In September, during the Creative Commons Global Summit, Fiona Romeo from the GLAM and Culture team, participated in the Attributing Public Domain Materials: From Best Practices to Standardization, a session in which she also mentioned Dominic's idea and the Wikimedia community members present really liked the idea.
OpenRefine
OpenRefine received a grant to add Structured Data on Commons functionalities to the tool. Right now, there's a team working on the project, among them Sandra Fauconnier who is leading the initiative. The WMF GLAM and Culture team is helping in the project participating in regular meetings, discussions, activities, and providing feedback.
Other stakeholders are involved in contributing with comments for the project and a few GLAM and technical people are involved in providing general feedback. If you happen to be interested in participating in this second option, you can do so by filling out this form.
The project also has a draft timeline and a workboard on phabricator with a few tasks available.
In September, the OpenRefine was presented during the Creative Commons Global Summit, in the Hack4OpenGLAM track, and the team is also planning to present a session during WikidataCon.
A more detailed and up-to-date description of the activities done in this OpenRefine project so far is available in the latest SDC report in this same newsletter.
October 2021
GLAM office hours, GLAM newsletter moving to Meta-wiki, and more
ByGLAM and Culture office hours
Once again, the GLAM & Culture team is organizing its office hours. Our office hours are one-hour meetings, planned and scheduled by the team, with the aim of sharing experiences and discussing themes of interest.
Wikisource, Outreach, Meta, and Commons logos |
To celebrate Wikisource’s 18th birthday in November, we’re hosting an event with the incoming CEO of Wikimedia Foundation, Maryana Iskendar. There will be guest presentations from partners and community members and we will be asking you to share your perspectives and questions. Please join us on 24 November 2021 from 1:30-3:00 PM UTC.
We’ll close the calendar year by reflecting on recent trainings and courses for museum workers and librarians. On 13 December, Wikimedia Argentina will present their Cultura para abrir course, which attracted more than 600 GLAM professionals in Latin America, and Wiki Movimento Brasil will share their GLAMs tutorial and its use in the Wiki Loves Bahia campaign.
On the next day, 14 December, we expect to have Alice Kibombo talking about the Wikipedia in African Libraries Course she delivered for AfLIA, and Wikimedia UK presenting the Connected Heritage webinars and program.
We’re still confirming the exact timings, so keep an eye on this page.
This month in GLAM newsletter migration
Due to Outreach having limited readership and visibility within the movement, our community newsletters don’t always receive the attention they deserve. To address this, we’re working with our colleagues in the Movement Communications team to migrate the This month in GLAM newsletter to Meta-Wiki.
Both teams are working on this task in the next few weeks in order to:
- Increase visibility and participation in the GLAM newsletter.
- Ensure the GLAM community has a place (Meta-Wiki) where they feel seen, engaged, and supported by the Wikimedia community, partners, and Foundation.
- Increase the amount of multilingual (or translatable) content to engage contributors from other languages and more regions.
This activity already has the support of the newsletter’s main editors and will be more broadly announced to the GLAM-Wiki community on various channels, with further details about the process, timeline, and proposed changes.
If you have any questions or ideas about the migration, please contact the GLAM & Culture team at glam wikimedia.org and the community editors at thismonthinglam gmail.com.
New structured data features
References in SDC
In the last few months, Commons contributors (especially those working with museums) have been very active in pointing out the value of adding references to the Structured Data on Commons interface. References in SDC will allow contributors to attribute the metadata's provenance, giving GLAM institutions credit for the metadata they share. This will allow them to more easily identify and update their metadata without overwriting community contributions.
The product team has announced that this feature will be released soon, after a test period. To follow updates for this feature, check the Phabricator ticket Create a way to see and add references to structured data on Commons (MediaInfo) statements (T230315).
Structured Data on Commons M-ID to Wikidata into dumps
As we highlighted in our August newsletter, GLAM users of Structured Data on Commons also requested that the unique identifier for each file on Wikimedia Commons (the M-ID) be added to Wikidata to simplify queries and the batch upload process. This feature has now been developed. You can learn more by viewing the Phabricator ticket Determine an IRI to join commons mediainfo entities and wikidata properties referencing commons images (T277665) and this example query.
November 2021
Wikisource birthday celebration, Community Tech Wishlist, and upcoming conversation about courses for GLAM professionals
ByWikisource birthday celebration
Wikisource turned 18 years old on 24th November 2021. Wikisource enthusiasts, partners, and Foundation staff celebrated the occasion with the incoming CEO of the Foundation, Maryana Iskander. The event attracted more than 70 participants and was the fourth most attended event in Maryana’s Listening Tour. A second birthday party was organized on 28th November 2021 and attended by another 10 people.
The slidedeck, video presentations, and community feedback are all documented on the event page: Wikisource:Eighteenth Birthday.
Community Tech Wishlist 2022
The Foundation will be running the Community Wishlist Survey 2022 in January. The Community Wishlist Survey is run annually to help identify the features and fixes that are most important to Wikimedia contributors. Eligible proposals that attract the most votes are then prioritized for development by the Community Tech product team. Last year, the Community Tech team worked on ebook export and OCR improvements to Wikisource.
While you wait for the full announcement, you can use a dedicated sandbox to develop your GLAM & Culture feature requests for 2022.
Conversation about courses for GLAM professionals
In December, the GLAM & Culture team will close the year by reflecting on recent trainings and courses for museum workers and librarians.
On Monday, 13 December at 15:00 UTC, Wikimedia Argentina will present their Cultura para abrir course, which attracted more than 600 GLAM professionals in Latin America, and Wiki Movimento Brasil will share their GLAMs tutorial and its use in the Wiki Loves Bahia campaign.
On the next day, Tuesday, 14 December at 10:00 UTC, we will have Alice Kibombo talking about the Wikipedia in African Libraries course she delivered for AfLIA, and Wikimedia UK presenting the Connected Heritage webinars and program.
Joining instructions are available on Meta. We hope to see you there!
December 2021
Some structured data developments
ByUsing references in Structured Data on Commons
As we announced in the October newsletter, the Structured Data team at the Foundation is working on adding references to the Structured Data on Commons interface. The steps towards the launch are being shared through this phabricator ticket (T230315).
According to the developer team, this feature is about to be released, in the second week of January, as it is in its final testing phase. At the moment, users are able to test the feature, as it can already be enabled by appending ?MediaInfoEnableReferences to any file page link.
The SDC references will function and look similar to the way a qualifier does on the SDC interface. However, when editing and adding the data, users will find the option for references below qualifiers. Among the data users will now be able to add are properties such as publication date (P577), stated in (P248), among others. To visualize how the adding references process will look like, there's a video recording available on the phabricator ticket.
SDC references have been a wish from some Commons contributors, especially those working on GLAM-related activities, for some time now. The feature will allow contributors to attribute the metadata's provenance in a better way, which will be especially interesting for GLAM institutions to receive credit for the metadata they share, and it will allow them to more easily identify and update their metadata without overwriting community contributions.
Improved support for the Wikimedia Commons Query Service (WCQS)
The Wikimedia Commons Query Service (WCQS) will soon be in production for general availability, with a release date planned for 1 February 2022. This SPARQL endpoint for the Structured Data on Commons (SDoC) dataset has been available as a beta service since July 2020. Moving WCQS from beta to production comprises some key updates to enhance stability and functionality of the service. The Foundation will aim for 99% of updates to SDoC to be handled within 10 minutes (this dashboard tracks performance). Keep in mind that, similarly to WDQS, while the new Streaming Updater resolved some of our issues with latency, Blazegraph’s instability can still affect update lag.
The biggest change to user behavior will be the requirement for user authentication to use all endpoints. While we recognize that this may make it more difficult for some users to use WCQS, it allows us to address problematic queries that can cause service disruptions for all users, as frequently happens on Wikidata Query Service (WDQS). Please let us know if you experience any issues adapting to this change.
January 2022
Wikimedia campaigns for librarians and museum workers; Community Wishlist Survey; and Wikimedia query services
By1Lib1Ref
The 1Lib1Ref January 2022 campaign ended with 17,905 edits recorded on the Wikimedia Hashtags tool. This amounts to a 42% decrease in the number of edits in comparison to the January 2021 campaign. The leading language is once again Serbian Wikipedia and their leading editor Nikolina Šepić contributed 6,766 edits. The Catalan Wikipedia doubled their edit count from last year and jumped five places to become the second leading Wikipedia.
CEE organizer Gorana Gomirac said that the probable reason behind the decline in the edits was that “the participants are … tired of online activities.” She also added that “even though the results are lower than last year, we are grateful to have editors who put in a lot of effort for the campaign.”
Newcomer experience pilot
This semester, the GLAM & Culture and Growth teams at the Foundation are working on a series of events with Wikimedia Argentina, Wikimedia Mexico, and Wikimedia Chile. There will be four events in March and April, designed to:
- Test the Add an image feature developed for the Newcomer experience pilot;
- Further develop the GLAM-Wiki community in Spanish-speaking Latin America.
The Add an image task is an opportunity to engage new users with the visual culture of Wikimedia, helping to improve the connection between images on Wikimedia Commons and structured data on Wikidata to Wikipedia, and consequently, enhancing the appeal and readability of Wikipedia articles in Spanish. We believe museum professionals are uniquely qualified to judge the selection and captioning of images on Wikipedia, since they work with visual culture. Invitations to the event will therefore go to museum networks.
We're looking forward to evaluating the appeal and suitability of the Add an image feature for museum workers and will share what we learn. We’re also curious to see how events can support the adoption of the structured tasks developed by the Growth team and wonder if Add an image events have the potential to grow into an annual campaign, like #1Lib1Ref.
Community Wishlist Survey
Voting for this year’s Community Wishlist Survey closes on 11 February. This year, there are 326 proposals and 55 "larger suggestions". Every logged-in user can vote for as many proposals as they like.
Wikimedia query services
The Wikimedia Commons Query Service (WCQS) beta 2 is now live and available at commons-query.wikimedia.org (release notes). The main improvements are increased stability and real-time updates of structured data. Authentication is now required but the Search team will continue to work with the community to find a solution that allows us to maintain service reliability while keeping to our values of free and open knowledge. This release was designated as beta 2 to show that this is still a work in progress.
The Search team is also working to scale the Wikidata Query Service (WDQS). As part of this process, they want to better understand some of the use cases and needs you have. There will be feedback sessions on Thursday 17 February at 8:00 UTC and Monday 21 February at 18:00 UTC.
March 2022
Bophana documentaries
ByBophana-UNESCO empowering indigenous Cambodian youth in building audiovisual archives
Bophana Center and UNESCO collaborated on a project for building capacity of indigenous youth in Cambodia for building audiovisual archives by training 24 youth from Brao, Jarai, Kachok, Kreung, and Tampuan Indigenous communities.
The content is currently being organized on Wikimedia Commons and 21 documentaries produced in this project are available in the Wikimedia Commons' category Indigenous Audiovisual Archives through Wiki tools in Cambodia
Read more about the project in this post on Diff.
April 2022
1Lib1Ref, Image Description Week, Commons calls, and the Add an image events
ByThe May campaign for 1Lib1Ref is starting soon
The annual #1Lib1Ref campaign is inviting librarians, researchers, book lovers, wikimedians, and any other knowledge enthusiasts to add missing references to articles, in order to make Wikipedia more reliable, complete, and useful!
The May edition of the 2022 #1Lib1Ref campaign will happen from May 15th to June 5th and is an opportunity for people in the southern hemisphere (Africa, Asia, Latin America & Oceania) to participate.
This year we are experimenting with new contribution methods and expanding the languages on Citation Hunt. During the January campaign, we encouraged contributions on Wikisource and Wikidata and added 9 new languages from CEE. This round, we are hoping to add a new contribution method focused on gender, as a way to test thematic or topical contributions, and we are also adding some more languages from Africa and Asia.
If you're planning to organize an event, join the campaign on Outreach Dashboard, and don’t forget to check the Meta-Wiki page for more information.
Image Description Week
You’re invited to take part in Image Description Week, a conversation linked to International Museum Day (18 May) and Global Accessibility Awareness Day (19 May). It’s a week-long call-to-action to make images more accessible and discoverable, in all languages.
Wikimedia Foundation Annual Plan conversations about Commons
As part of a broader effort to get feedback on the Foundation’s annual plan, we co-hosted two conversations about Commons. The main purpose of the meetings was to bring the sub-networks of Commons users together and start sharing perspectives about different user needs. The meetings were attended by more than 100 people, representing a range of Commons contributors, from Wikipedia editors, to photographers, curators, campaign organizers, batch content uploaders, GLAM staff, technical contributors, and admins.
- Call one recording, EasyRetro Board, and notes
- Call two recording, EasyRetro Board, and notes
If you’re following the Commons conversations, you may be interested to know that the audio and video player for all Wikis was recently updated to new software by volunteer developer Derk-Jan "the DJ" Hartman and Staff Software Architect Brion Vibber. MediaWiki documentation, Phabricator ticket, and community announcement. The new player is already live on Commons and Wikisource.
Add an image events
In partnership with the GLAM and Culture team, the #1Pic1Article was a series of four events organized with three affiliates in Latin America to test the Add an image feature, developed by the Growth team for the Newcomer experience pilot.
Wikimedia Argentina held the first two events, on March 7 and 18, and publicized them through an email campaign that reached more than 1,000 museum workers. The first was a test event and had it was only composed of participants from the Association Directors of Museums of the Argentine Republic (ADiMRA). Both events together gathered almost 50 participants and had 62 edits done by 24 users.
For the third event, Wikimedia Mexico published a blog post and shared posts on Facebook and Twitter. The event assembled more than 50 participants and, from this number, 25 edited and carried out 76 edits.
For the last one, Wikimedia Chile published two blog posts (here and here), wrote on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn, and partnered with Museo de los Museos, an important Chilean organization. This event had 24 participants and 60 edits in total made by 18 users.
WMCL even dedicated an entire episode of its podcast, Wiki Café, to the event: Construyendo cultura visual en Wikipedia (on Spotify). This event's recording is available on YouTube.
A Diff post about the #1Pic1Article event series is being co-authored by the organizers, but small reports have been already shared on the This Month in GLAM newsletter by WMAR and by WMMX, which also marked Mexico's return to the newsletter after almost two years.
May 2022
Results from 1Lib1Ref May 2022
ByThe May 2022 edition of #1Lib1Ref has come to a close with very interesting results. The campaign happened from May 15th to June 5th and it was an opportunity for people in the southern hemisphere to participate.
According to the Outreach Dashboard campaign, we were joined by 24 programs that gathered 520 editors. That is almost 100 more editors than last year!
We also had:
- 8.79K references added
- 1.82M words added
- 10.8K articles edited
- 1.48K articles created
- 1.2K Commons uploads
- 9.54K total revisions on Wikidata
This year's highlights will also go to the campaigns by AfLIA (1Lib1Ref African Librarians Week 2022) and by the Igbo Wikimedians User Group (1lib1ref cite-a-thon). AfLIA added 3.15K references alone and the user group added 1.44K.
This year, the May campaign managed to keep up with last year's stats, overcoming them by a small margin. In 2021, there were 24 programs, 428 editors, and 8.54K references added according to the Outreach Dashboard.
On the other hand, according to the overall stats on Wikipedia, the "#1Lib1Ref" hashtag was used less this year. We are still gathering this data and will update this page with the information soon.
July 2022
What next for 1Lib1Ref?
ByOverview
The first “One Librarian, One Reference” (#1Lib1Ref) campaign was launched in January 2016 to celebrate the 15th birthday of Wikipedia. The organizers asked librarians to “Imagine a World where Every Librarian Added One More Reference to Wikipedia.” Librarians were invited to become contributors to Wikipedia through a small first edit that was perfectly aligned with their purpose, knowledge, and skills.
Since then, #1Lib1Ref has grown from a primarily English-language initiative to a twice-annual campaign with support for more than 50 languages. Organizers around the world have made it their own, localizing the identity and timing (e.g. #1Bib1Ref in Latin America), experimenting with themes (e.g. human rights and gender), and developing the campaign into a more robust professional development opportunity (e.g. African Librarians Week). Recent campaigns have started to experiment with new tasks.
Organizers have also faced local challenges and resistance. Some report that the campaign is perceived to have regressive gender dynamics, inviting a feminized profession (librarians) to clean up after predominantly male Wikipedia editors. Others talk about the difficulty of overcoming internalized censorship in post-communist society. While the campaign is growing in some regions, the numbers are down elsewhere.
We used the opportunity of the Wikimedia and Libraries International Convention to reflect on what’s working and what needs to change, in a workshop titled, Where next for 1Lib1Ref?
Tactics
To complement the core tactic of adding citations, workshop participants suggested creating Wikidata items for works on Wikisource, Nearby adding nearby places of interest to Wikidata and Wikipedia, and adding quotes to Wikiquote. Participants also talked about how 1Lib1Ref could better connect with librarians’ motivations, for example, by focusing on local history, addressing the gender gap, or showcasing writers in underrepresented languages. There was a strong sense that librarians could do more than just add citations, with participants suggesting that they could add sections to articles, or rewrite parts of articles that aren’t achieving a neutral point of view.
Finally, advocacy itself is a tactic. The African Librarians Week campaign called on librarians to represent their country by posting to social media. Having so many librarians sharing their dual identity as ‘Wikibrarians’ helps to build the reputation of our projects and bring in more readers and contributors.
Challenges
Most of the challenges related to how we articulate the benefit of the campaign to librarians. How does 1Lib1ref develop librarians’ digital literacy and career opportunities, raise awareness of their collections, improve their service for researchers and local users, or support their institution? And how do you bring contributors back, year after year?
Participants also noted the need for better campaign tools and they want to measure the quality of contribution, not just the quantity of contribution.
Solutions
There was a lot of discussion about who makes the invitation, with proposals to bolster the campaign through outreach to decision makers for the library sector, for example, government, professional bodies, and leadership at the biggest institutions. Participants also thought it was important to encourage librarians to use their own collection resources and tools, to make the campaign more accessible and impactful for them.
August 2022
Capacity building for Bophana Center
ByCapacity building for Bophana Center
Earlier this year, Bophana Center and UNESCO Bangkok, with support from the Wikimedia Foundation, started a joint project to engage indigenous youth in Cambodia to create audiovisual archives on Wikimedia Commons and further reuse on Wikipedia. More details on Diff.
Now, Bophana Center and the Wikimedia Foundation are collaborating to further build the audiovisual archives. To support this, Sakti Pramudya from the Partnerships team and Satdeep Gill from the Culture and Heritage team did a training for Bophana Center and a cohort of indigenous youth in August 2022. The training was aimed at equipping Bophana Center staff to further provide training to the indigenous youth as they engage with Wikimedia projects. Eighteen users participated in the training and uploaded 90 images. Some of the images have been reused on different language Wikipedias as well. More detailed statistics are available on the Outreach Dashboard.
An engagement event was also organized as part of the workshop, which included two Wikimedians from Cambodia and potential GLAM partners.
October 2022
AfLIA Wikisource webinar, Wiki Rescues Manuscripts & European GLAMwiki Coordinators meeting
ByAfLIA Wikisource webinar
Satdeep Gill delivered a webinar titled "An introduction to Wikisource – the free digital library" for AfLIA in September 2022. The webinar was attended by more than 80 participants.
More details on AfLIA's website: https://web.aflia.net/webinar-an-introduction-to-wikisource-the-free-digital-library/
Launch of Wiki Rescues Manuscripts
In September 2022, Wiki Rescues Manuscripts was kicked-off with the pilot year focusing on three different regions of Indonesia. Pusat Pengkajian Islam dan Masyarakat (PPIM), a research institute based in Jakarta, will be leading the Wiki Rescues Manuscripts pilot in Indonesia in collaboration with Wikimedia Indonesia and the community-led WikiLontar project, with the support of Wikimedia Foundation.
The project also includes a technical pilot which focuses on testing the viability of Transkribus, an AI-powered text and handwriting recognition tool, to support under-supported languages of South-East Asia.
Affiliates, communities, and organizations with interest in manuscript digitization are invited to sign-up below to become a learning partner on this project.
European GLAMwiki Coordinators meeting
Between September 14 and 16, 2022, part of the Wikimedia Foundation's Culture and Heritage team was able to attend the 2022 European GLAMwiki Coordinators meeting. This was the fourth time this event has happened and it is seen by the European Wikimedia affiliates as an opportunity to share skills and best practices, coordinate projects, and consolidate connections.
During the event, the team managed to participate in several presentations and lightning talks. First, Fiona Romeo organized a workshop about Metrics and monitoring, together with Emil Chetty (Lead Product Manager) and Jessica Stephenson (Lead Learning and Evaluation Officer), both also from the Wikimedia Foundation.
Later, Giovanna Fontenelle presented about Crisis and GLAM, accompanied by Anna Khrobolova (Wikimedia Ukraine) and Susanna Ånäs (AvoinGLAM), in which some initiatives were shared, followed by a discussion with the objective of understanding if the Wikimedia projects are the best place for endangered cultural items and how to handle them once they are being uploaded and shared on-wiki. The slides are available here.
Regarding the lightning talks, Giovanna presented alongside Kamila Neuman (Wikimedia Poland) about the topic of welcoming newcomers and how we can exchange knowledge and experiences more regularly and clearly. Following that discussion and also thinking about newcomers, Giovanna addressed the issue of documentation and how difficult it is to document and describe initiatives in Wikimedia projects and how we can work together to improve it.
In addition to presentations, workshops, and lightning talks, the team also participated in discussions on several other topics, which should generate new initiatives soon. Stay tuned!