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The English Wikipedia has reached 6,000,000 articles (en.wikipedia.org)

Stories related to "The English Wikipedia has reached 6,000,000 articles" across the full archive.

The English Wikipedia has reached 6,000,000 articles (en.wikipedia.org)
Russian Wikipedia reaches 1,500,000 articles (ru.wikipedia.org)
English Wikipedia's most popular articles of 2024 (wikimediafoundation.org)
English Wikipedia's most popular articles of 2024 (wikimediafoundation.org)
Wikipedia blacklists archive.today, starts removing 695,000 archive links
Is English Wikipedia’s ‘rise and decline’ typical? (mako.cc)
Think American elections are bad? Indian voters get 1,000 texts a day. (wsj.com)
The EU's copyright proposal is extremely bad news for everyone, even (especially!) Wikipedia (eff.org)
Wikipedia makes the case for Google and Facebook to give back to the Commons, rather than just take (techdirt.com)
Wikipedia blacked out across Europe in protest against laws that could change the internet forever (businessinsider.com)
11,000 Wikileaks Twitter DMs have just been published for anyone to read (forbes.com)
Reddit servers breached; full backup from 2007 (including hashed+salted passwords) obtained by attackers (reddit.com)
Wikipedia is now (in terms of hours of work), the largest collaborative human endeavour ever undertaken. (opendemocracy.net)
The 2020 Tokyo Olympics will use face recognition technology at all of its venues to track over 300,000 accredited attendees. (theverge.com)
GCHQ data collection violated human rights, Strasbourg court rules. Spies breached right to privacy in programme revealed by Edward Snowden, judges say (theguardian.com)
The Internet Archive fixes nine million broken links on Wikipedia (motherboard.vice.com)
Flickr's free accounts will be limited to 1,000 photos and videos starting January 8, 2019 (blog.flickr.net)
A third of Wikipedia discussions are stuck in forever beefs (motherboard.vice.com)
Lenovo to pay $7.3m for installing adware in 750,000 laptops (hackread.com)
.com crash of 2000 (nytimes.com)
What happened to the 100,000-hour LED bulbs? (hackaday.com)
Swiss e-voting trial offers $150,000 in bug bounties to hackers (theverge.com)
2.7 million medical calls breached in Sweden due to an unsecured NAS (hjorthjort.xyz)
Why the Galaxy Fold will be a huge success even at $2,000 -- "[...] Samsung has effectively turned into the new Apple. They are the innovators. They are ahead of the game." (tomsguide.com)
Many companies like Lyft and Uber are going public without having profits - The last time this was so common was in 2000, right before the dot-com bubble burst (vox.com)
Facebook, Axios and NBC paid to manage their reputation on Wikipedia (huffpost.com)
The language Wikipedias in German, Czech, Danish, and Slovak are "blacked out" for twenty-four hours to protest the EU Copyright Directive (wikimediafoundation.org)
Wikipedia’s refusal to profile a Black female scientist shows its diversity problem (slate.com)
Washington Attorney General: Amazon must remove toxic school supplies, kid’s jewelry from marketplace nationwide, pay AG's office $700,000 (atg.wa.gov)
Building a $100,000 speaker - Meridian facility tour (youtube.com)