User:Facticlopedia/sandbox
Type of site | Online encyclopedia |
---|---|
Available in | Dutch |
Headquarters | Miami, Florida |
Owner | Wikimedia Foundation (de jure) Dutch Wikipedia Bureaucrats User:Kippenvlees1 User:Taketa User:Natuur12 (de facto) |
Created by | Dutch Wikipedia community |
URL | nl |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional |
Launched | 19 June 2001 |
The Dutch Wikipedia (Dutch: Nederlandstalige Wikipedia) is the Dutch-language edition of the free online encyclopedia, Wikipedia. It was founded on 19 June 2001. As of November 2024, the Dutch Wikipedia is the sixth-largest Wikipedia edition, with 2,171,637 articles. It was the fourth Wikipedia edition to exceed one million articles, after the English, German, and French editions. In April 2016, 1154 active editors made at least five edits in that month.
History
[edit]The Dutch Wikipedia was started on 19 June 2001 after a suggestion mail of Mark Van den Borre to Larry Sanger, the co-founder of Wikipedia and chief organizing at that time [1], and reached 100,000 articles on 14 October 2005. It briefly surpassed the Polish Wikipedia as the sixth-largest edition of Wikipedia, but then fell back to the eighth position. On 1 March 2006, it overtook the Swedish and Italian editions in one day to rise back to the sixth position. The edition's 500,000th article was created on 30 November 2008.[2] In a 2006 Multiscope research study, the Dutch Wikipedia was rated the third-best Dutch-language website, after Google and Gmail, with a score of 8.1.[3]
The Dutch language Wikipedia has the largest ratio of Wikipedia pages per native speaker of all of the top 10 largest Wikipedia editions. Its rate of daily article creations spiked in March 2006, rapidly growing to an average of 1,000 a day in early May 2006. After this number was reached, growth dropped to an average of only about 250 a day, comparable to the averages around December 2005. Since then, there have been more article-creation surges, one of the largest peaking at 2,000 new articles per day in September 2007, but the growth rate has always returned to the lowest average of around 250.
In 2008, Dutch businessman Bob Sijthoff attempted to sue "the Vereniging Wikimedia Nederland" and "the Stichting Wikimedia Nederland" to force the removal of his Dutch Wikipedia article, which he stated contained "false and abusive" information.[4] On 10 December 2008, the court rejected his request. The judge ruled that he had sued the wrong entity and that legal responsibility for the content of the articles would not lie in the Netherlands, but with the American Wikimedia Foundation.[5]
Internet bots
[edit]The majority of articles in Dutch Wikipedia (59%) were created by internet bots.[6] In October 2011, several bots created 80,000 articles (then equivalent to 10% of the entire edition's article count) in only 11 days.[7][8]
The Dutch Wikipedia's one-millionth article was created in December 2011, after another surge of bot activity saw 100,000 added articles in only 10 days. In late March 2013, the Dutch Wikipedia surpassed the French Wikipedia to become the third-largest edition of Wikipedia. In June 2013, it overtook the German Wikipedia to become the second-largest Wikipedia edition.
Article growth
[edit]Date | Number of articles[9] | New articles per day (avg.) |
---|---|---|
19 June 2001 | 1 | 1 |
08/03/2003 | 10,000 | 13 |
02/07/2004 | 20,000 | 53 |
27 January 2005 | 50,000 | 125 |
14 October 2005 | 100,000 | 270 |
24 May 2006 | 200,000 | 625 |
26 December 2006 | 250,000 | 250 |
28 May 2007 | 300,000 | 250 |
17 January 2008 | 400,000 | 435 |
30 November 2008 | 500,000 | 344 |
30 April 2010 | 600,000 | 167 |
19 June 2011 | 700,000 | 625 |
18 September 2011 | 750,000 | 175 |
22 October 2011 | 800,000 | 10,000 |
12 July 2011 | 900,000 | 10,000 |
17 December 2011 | 1,000,000 | 10,000 |
14 September 2012 | 1,100,000 | 3,333 |
3 September 2013 | 1,200,000 | 10,000 |
18 March 2013 | 1,250,000 | 3,333 |
22 March 2013 | 1,300,000 | 10,000 |
4 January 2013 | 1,400,000 | 10,000 |
4 December 2013 | 1,500,000 | 10,000 |
14 June 2013 | 1,600,000 | 10,000 |
14 October 2013 | 1,700,000 | 127 |
8 March 2020 | 2,000,000 | 254 |
Quality
[edit]Article depth
[edit]The depth or editing depth of Wikipedia is a rough indicator of the encyclopedia's collaborative quality, showing how frequently its articles are updated.[10] The depth is measured by taking the average number of edits per article multiplied by the extent in which articles are supported by discussion (among other things, talk pages). Among the nine language editions with one million articles, the Dutch, Swedish, and Polish Wikipedias in that order have depth parameters much lower than the other six.[11] As of March 2012[update], for the English version the article depth is 666, for the German 88, for the French 153, for the Spanish 160, for the Dutch only 18.[12]
Bytes per article
[edit]Compared to most other Wikipedia editions with a similar number of articles, articles on the Dutch Wikipedia have less content with an average of 1,598 bytes per article (as of February 2014[update]). This is roughly 40% of that of the French, German, Italian, Russian, and Spanish editions (3,986–4,277 bytes/article as of February 2014[update]).[13]
Culture
[edit]In 2015 an article in De Volkskrant, basing itself on an internal inquiry by the Dutch branch of the Wikimedia Foundation, reported that most of the surveyed Wikipedians described the atmosphere on the Dutch Wikipedia as confrontational and distrustful, while naming personal egos and stubbornness as main causes of conflicts.[14]
On the 4th of February 2019 NRC Handelsblad published an article about the Dutch Wikipedia named "The Great Wikipedia edit wars", in which it described that, although Dutch Wikipedia had around 1200 regular editors, most of the power-hierarchy within the Dutch Wikipedia project effectually resided with a smaller close-knit in-group of about 200 Wikipedians, consisting of moderators and hardcore editors.[15]
However, a significant number of its administrators and hardcore usually editors has been leaved the project due to onwiki conflicts between the users about onwiki projects such as the Wikipedia gender gap and other project disputes. Another important reason is the desysop try-outs started by users due to distrust of an administrator on that edition. The current situation on this wiki remains jovial. [16]
Two prominent users of the Dutch Wikipedia received an Wikimedia Foundation global ban, in the past few years. [17]
Bibliography
[edit]- de Smits, Ap. "Dat zoeken we op! Wikipedia vs. de Britannica en Encarta". Personal Computer Magazine (in Dutch). April 2008.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Wikipedia:Geschiedenis".
- ^ 500.000e artikel (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 December 2008.
- ^ "Nederlandse Wikipedia groeit als kool" (in Dutch). Multiscope.nl. Retrieved 27 December 2006.
- ^ 'Ik wil niet op Wikipedia!', DAG, 25 November 2008
- ^ Court ruling, Rechtspraak.nl, 10 December 2008
- ^ Wikipedia Statistics
- ^ List of Wikipedias on 20 October 2011 (archived). Wikimedia. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- ^ List of Wikipedias on 31 October 2011 (archived). Wikimedia. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- ^ "Statistics of the Dutch Wikipedia" (in Dutch). Nl.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
- ^ Wikipedia article depth; Wikimedia
- ^ "List of Wikipedias". Wikimedia. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
- ^ Find out more-Wikipedia; Utrecht University Library
- ^ Wikimedia Statistics, Wikipedia statistics, bytes per article. Retrieved 18 February 2015
- ^ De Volkskrant: Leve de Wikipediaan sympathieke online betweter (Dutch), published on 30 November 2015, Retrieved 7 August 2020.
- ^ NRC Handelsblad: NRC Handelsblad De grote Wikipedia bewerkingsoorlogen (Dutch), published 4 February 2019, Retrieved 7 August 2020.
- ^ "Wikipedia vrijwilliger ontvangt koninklijke onderscheiding". 24 April 2020.
- ^ "List of globally banned users - Meta".
External links
[edit]- (in Dutch) Dutch Wikipedia
- (in Dutch) Dutch Wikipedia mobile version
Category:Wikipedias by language Category:Internet properties established in 2001 Category:Dutch encyclopedias Category:Dutch-language websites