3 Results for Wikimedia

Wikimedia Foundation's Mobile Site Caters to Android, iPhone

The Wikimedia Foundation is presenting a new site formatted for mobile phones, found here. It features a cleaner, less cluttered interface that allows mobile users to get more readable versions of Wikipedia entries. It currently supports Android phones and the iPhone. In addition, the Wikimedia Foundation is looking for open source help in developing the effort.


Wikimedia Gets Creative: Adopts Creative Commons Licensing For Wikipedia

By way of iTWire comes word that Wikimedia is adopting Creative Commons licensing for Wikipedia as well as its other services. From this point forward, Wikipedia content will be licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike (CC-BY-SA) terms, as well the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL, or Copyleft) which has historically been used for Wikipedia content. This means that those wishing to re-use content on Wikipedia can actually choose the license terms that best suit them.

A Creative Commons licensing model certainly feels a little more fitting and logical than the former GFDL terms, but at Wikipedia's inception GFDL was the most appropriate, comprehensive license that meshed with the open encyclopedia's vision.



Wikia Shuts Down; Wales Remains Hopeful Community-Driven Search Will Have Its Day

eWeek reported this morning that Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, has closed up shop for Wikia, his community-driven search engine. Wikia Search launched in January 2008, and was reported to be the fifth-fastest growing community destination by Nielsen Online in February 2009. The Nielsen statistics seem to have incorporated data from other sites in the Wiki line, however, and reports say that Wikia Search was only drawing 10,000 unique visitors per month.

Wikia Search was a very different animal than traditional search engines, as it substituted search results provided by algorithms for those chosen and ranked by community members. It's certainly an interesting idea -- it's an idea that might actually work exceedingly well under the right circumstances. For now, however, Wales has opted to put work on community-based search on hold and focus his team's efforts elsewhere. He also holds out hope that community search is workable, and vows that when it takes hold, he'll be there in some capacity, actively contributing or simply cheering on the effort.