Wikipedia:Wikipedia as a source
From Free net encyclopedia
(Difference between revisions)
Current revision
Wikipedia in the media |
Wikipedia as a topic |
In the press |
In books |
In academic studies |
In blogs |
In webcomics |
On TV and radio |
In press releases |
Wikipedia as a source |
In the press |
In books |
On TV and radio |
In academic studies |
In conference |
In court cases |
Elsewhere |
Below is a list of documents that have cited Wikipedia as a source and are of general interest to Wikipedians, but don't fall into one of the other categories (see right).
Contents |
[edit]
2006
- 1 March: Australian Senator Lyn Allison cites the article propaganda to describe Prime Minister John Howard on the eve of his tenth anniversary in office. [1]
[edit]
2005
- Sen. Paul Coghlan quotes Wikipedia on green card in Seanad Éireann debate Coghlan 24 November 2005 - Employment Rights - Statements : Column 1813
- Anne McIntosh MP quotes Wikipedia on persecution of Christians in 9th century China in UK House of Commons debate Hansard 13 Jul 2005 : Column 301WH
- Marilyn Burns an Alberta politician has her website linked to the Wikipedia article [2]
- The Parliament of Canada cites Wikipedia's article on Same-sex marriage in the further reading list of Bill C-38 (An Act respecting certain aspects of legal capacity for marriage for civil purposes). [3]
- American Radio Works (the documentary arm of public radio program producer American Public Media (formerly known as Minnesota Public Radio, still the name of its parent)) cites Wikipedia as a source concerning Y2K, on the references page of its retrospective package "The Surprising Legacy of Y2K".
- In Apple Computer's announcement that one of the winners of its OS X Tiger Dashboard contest is the "WikityWidget", it links Wikipedia's wiki article to explain "wiki technology".
- Gervase Markham writes about the book of mozilla and refers to about:mozilla on his blog, Hacking for Christ.
- del Arte, Alonso. "FUSION : Although current, Wikipedia not always reliable source of information". The South End Newspaper. March 2, 2005. [4]
- History Professor Eric Ash, of Wayne State University, stated that he had looked at the Samuel Smiles article for some general information:
- "Ash recalled that one time, before giving a lecture on a novel by 19th century author Samuel Smiles, he turned to Wikipedia to see if he could find some supplemental information.
- "Ash said, 'Wikipedia had one screen of information. I learned he’d written other books' besides the one he was lecturing about."
- History Professor Eric Ash, of Wayne State University, stated that he had looked at the Samuel Smiles article for some general information:
- Kilmer, Mark. "Fatwa Against bin Laden". March 10, 2005. Redstate. [5]
- Wikipedia defines a fatwa as "a legal pronouncement in Islam, issued by a religious law specialist on a specific issue." OBL does not qualify, while the Spanish Islamic Commission just might. And they've issued a fatwa against bin Laden for making up Islam as he goes along.
- Crouch, Dennis. "Intellectual Property Podcasting". March 17, 2005. [6]
- Podcasting is catching on as an extension of the blog. According to the Wikipedia, a podcast is like an audio magazine subscription: a subscriber receives regular audio programs delivered via the Internet, and can listen to them at their leisure.
- 9 February: Australian MP Danna Vale discusses the article on totalitarianism in a speech about terrorism. [7]
[edit]
2004
- PressThink, a blog by Jay Rosen, cites Spiro Agnew in this update
- Sys Admin, a magazine of the United Business Media, cites Slashdotted in the July 2004 issue, in the article about Squid_cache. Sysadmin
- The American Numismatic Association's biennial publication, Discover the World of Money references Wikipedia's article "Marianne" in an article about that figure on French coins and currency.
- "Mel Gibson's Film "The Passion of the Christ" - AN INTERNATIONAL HOAX" references Wikipedia on a number of topics, particularly Aramaic. It is a document which refers to many sources in order to demonstrate that "The Passion of the Christ" is a Satanic film designed to trick good Christians into worshipping the Antichrist.
- Roger Ebert's review of the 2004 movie "Zatoichi" refers to Wikipedia for information on Takeshi Kitano.
- Something Awful's IHateAlpacas.com Article by Zack "Geist Editor" Parsons uses Wikipedia's Alpaca article to define the Alpaca.
[edit]
2003
- Sony, presskit for the movie The Statement. Cites Vichy France and Paul Touvier. [8]
- National Nuclear Security Administration, "Radiation and how it effects you" part of a Emergency Public Information series. Based on radiation. [9]
- Parliamentry Joint Committee on the Australian Crime Commission, Cybercrime. Cites worm, virus, payload and trojan. [10]
- Mark Doernhoefer, Surfing the net for software engineering notes, ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes (November 2003). Has a section about wikipedia.