Here are some useful links from our visit to Ed Iglesias in the Library:
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
Here are some useful links from our visit to Ed Iglesias in the Library:
Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
Please check out Wikipedia:Wikiwomen’s History Month section. See also this article and these instructional videos by Michelle Moravec:
Introduction:
How to evaluate a Wikipedia entry:
De-gendering
How to improve entries about women
Here’s an interesting article on the history of the Internet Archive by Jill Lepore.
Perhaps the class could participate in the virtual edit-a-thon?
via The Guardian, which reports that Wikipedia’s arbitration committee has banned five editors from making changes to certain articles “in an attempt to stop a long-running edit war over the entry on the “’Gamergate controversy’”.
This decision “bars the five editors from having anything to do with any articles covering Gamergate, but also from any other article about “’gender or sexuality, broadly construed.’ Editors who had been pushing for the Wikipedia article to be fairer to Gamergate have also been sanctioned by the committee.”
Blogger and former Wikipedia editor Mark Bernstein has written a series of posts condemning Wikipedia’s decision: According to Bernstein, “This takes care of social justice warriors with a vengeance — not only do the Gamergaters get to rewrite their own page (and Zoe Quinn’s, Brianna Wu’s, Anita Sarkeesian’s, etc); feminists are to be purged en bloc from the encyclopedia.”
Wikipedia has replied to these…
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This is the course blog for the graduate course HIST 511: Digital History for the Public History Program at Central Connecticut State University.