Wikivoyage talk:How to re-use Wikivoyage guides

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dict version

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I'd like to provide a dict version of Wikivoyage, but then I first need an SQL dump :) (WT-en) Guaka 14:29, 2 Aug 2004 (EDT)

I think that's a great idea. (WT-en) Georg Muntingh 16:38, 2 Aug 2004 (EDT)

too many to authors to fit in that block

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I have idea that could simplify attribution authors by thirdparties (mirrors, printed versions, etc.).

We could include all contributors to the article in a footer, but hide them in normal page view using appropriate style.

Entity that re-use the article would have to disable this one particular style, so all authors show up.

It would look like:

<li id="f-credits">This page was last modified 18:09, 6 Feb 2005 by Wikivoyage user Wojsyl. 
Based on work by Jan Słupski and Mark Jaroski, Wikivoyage user(s) Dimitris, 
Anonymous user(s) of Wikivoyage and others<span id="f-authorshid"> (Alan, Miche, Wojtek, Adam)</span>.</li>

And style:

#f-authorshid { display: none; }

-- (WT-en) JanSlupski 10:14, 9 Feb 2005 (EST)

That's a real good idea. Frankly, if we can get the credits block to wrap properly, I'm happy to get rid of the "others" link altogether and just list all contributors. The main reason it's limited right now is that the GFDL only requires that 5 contributors be listed, and some Wikipedians thought there'd be too much credits content if we used > 5. This is kind of moot at this point, as Wikipedia doesn't use the credits block and I don't think the foundation has any plans to. --(WT-en) Evan 10:57, 9 Feb 2005 (EST)
...if we can get the credits block to wrap properly.... We can! ;) But indeed displaying all spammers that have contributed to Main Page could be too much... (ok, ok, I know spammers are mostly anonymous) -- (WT-en) JanSlupski 11:09, 9 Feb 2005 (EST)

Requirement to specifically credit Wikivoyage

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I think that it is more than fair that we should ask people who re-use articles to credit Wikivoyage as well as the actual authors - after all it is usually Wikivoyage that has at least facilitated the creation and improvement of the articles. At least then people have more of a clue of where the articles originated from. It needn't be a requirement, but certainly a strong preference. (WT-en) DanielC 19:38, 9 April 2005 (BST)

Wikivoyage book

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Swept in from the Project:Travellers' pub:

I made a PDF for all of Italy (I think). See more on my user page --(WT-en) elgaard 18:28, 15 Jul 2005 (EDT)

That's great! I think I'd like to put together some mechanisms for making print books using print-on-demand technologies so you could assemble a bunch of Wikivoyage Web pages and then send them off to a service to be printed, bound, and shipped to you. --(WT-en) Evan 20:03, 15 Jul 2005 (EDT)
I posted som thoughts made while travelling on User:(WT-en) Elgaard/bookproject --Elgaard (cant find tilde on it keyboard)

Printable TravelGuides and Levels of Information in Contributions

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Swept in from the Project:Travellers' pub:

On wikipedia there are now many readers on different topics. Would that be possible for wikivoyage, too? I have in mind a complete pdf-guide for e.g. a country, a region, or also a big city (similar to traditional Lonely Planet guides, e.g.). For those to be compiled automatically, there should be different levels of information in the single contributions (e.g. if there would be a Travel Guide to London it should contain much more detailed info on London - possibly also from wikipedia itself - than in a guidebook on the UK). E.g. putting tags on different sections of articles on cities that would go into a (e.g.) Europe, Western Europe, France, Burgundy or City-Guide (e.g.). Did I make clear what I mean? E.g. in a Europe Guidebook you would probably only include like 5 pubs in Munich, but in a Guidebook on Bavaria, you would include 20. So it would be nice to be able to (internally) mark this on the respective Munich page, in order to be able to automatically create Travel Guides. Are there any plans regarding such issues.

I've been thinking about this too, and I think Wikivoyage will need to adopt the Mediawiki Category system at some point to make this possible. Further discussion here please: (WT-en) Jpatokal 09:35, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT)
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Swept in from Talk:Main Page:

Where can I find out how to produce a list of contributors such as are presented in the footer of this page? Thanks! :)

I found that is an option in the DefaultSettings.php file. :)

printable version

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Quoted from Practice: "The printable version of a guide is probably the easiest to convert, print, and redistribute." Am I completely blind? Is there actually a printable version link on Wikivoyage? I have searched everywhere in the help file and can not find a thing about it, only a few users' comments about it. -- (WT-en) Brendio 18:47, 19 Jan 2006 (EST)

You're right; that was a feature in very old versions of Mediawiki. --(WT-en) Evan 18:50, 19 Jan 2006 (EST)
Also related to what I have seen talked about. Are there any tools to help with the printing out of Wikivoyage guides (say to print a state, plus all the cities within that states) without having to manually click through each link? And does handing a printout of a Wikivoyage page meet the licencing requirements. I take it that it does if the block at the bottom is there. Cheers, (WT-en) Brendio 18:58, 19 Jan 2006 (EST)

Hey cool. I wish I'd spotted this text...

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back when the excuse for the data dumps was that it was something new. Note in the article history the date the text about data dumps was added here, and who added it. -- (WT-en) Mark 03:37, 8 June 2006 (EDT)

I'm not sure I get your point. Could you break this down, please? --(WT-en) Evan 08:50, 8 June 2006 (EDT)
You had said at one point that it was taking a while for IB to come to grips with data dumps because it was something new. But this page shows that it's been on the to-do list for quite some time, so they should have picked it up in their due-diligence. -- (WT-en) Mark 08:58, 8 June 2006 (EDT)
Oh. No, it just wasn't something that was on our radar at announcement time. It's been something that was requested from time to time on the site for quite a while, and it's been on my perpetual (WT-en) todo list for a while. --(WT-en) Evan 09:15, 8 June 2006 (EDT)

Keeping an up to date mirror

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(Moved from User talk:(WT-en) Mark)

If I remember well, somewhere in the long discussion about database dumps you have told that you track wikivoyage's recent changes in order to keep an always up to date mirror of wikivoyage on your own server. Do you still do so? What do you mirror, only en: or also other language versions? Would you leave me a copy of your tracking script?

Something else: Simply to copy and paste parts of other by-sa licensed articles is actualy a license violation since you do not give proper attribution to the contributors of the copied article. You are some of those who want to bring ahead a clean way of copying. Do you already have some more detailed plans on how this might be realized technicaly?

-- (WT-en) Hansm 05:39, 9 July 2006 (EDT)

I don't have a script written right now to do it. I sort of lost interest after the XML dumps were announced. It shouldn't be too hard to do though, and I'm willing to help. I do have a copy of Wikivoyage en: but it's several months old now.
Special:Export provides all of the attribution info you need to comply with the license, so it shouldn't be a problem. Really all you need to do is track recent changes through the rss or atom feed, grab the Special:Export of any page mentioned in the feed and pipe it into Special:Import on your mirror. Hopefully you'll do it in the other direction as well. -- (WT-en) Mark 08:10, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
Thanks, Mark. I already have requested for XML dumps of de:. Evan has explained me in a mail that "IB considers whether to make an XML feed available to you. This will typically involve deciding how much work you're asking for versus how much benefit it will be for Wikivoyage." This sounds somewhat different from his anouncements on Wikivoyage_talk:Internet_Brands#XML_versions_of_Wikivoyage_content. Now, the availability of dumps seem to depend on the benefit for Wikivoyage, which has to be decided by noone else than IB. If IB states that a project fork would not be a benefit, they maybe would deny my request for dumps. But there is not yet any decision made about it. However, this topic is still interesting enough.
Now about the technical aspects: OK, this way you always can keep the current version of each article up to date, but you may loss some of its history. Doing so, you cannot keep track of all contributors to that article. There may raise problems from that fact. Or did I oversee something? Is there a way to request the Mediawiki software for an XML-export of the last N revisions? This would be necessary if there had been more than one contribution to the article between your recent changes requests. --- How do you mean "the other direction as well"? -- (WT-en) Hansm 09:36, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
I don't understand why you have to wait for IB. Getting them to send you a full XML dump would only be a convienience (in addition to being a badly needed show of good faith). You can just do it yourself with a script like this one? (that's what I did):
 #!/bin/sh
 
 URL=http://en.wikivoyage.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Export&action=submit&pages=
 
 for a in `cat ../wikivoyage.pages.list `
 do
         curl "$URL$a" > $a.xml
         sleep 20
 done
Do look at the resulting files. They have all of the contributor information. I you want you can import them into your Mediawiki installation using Special:Import.
There is a bug preventing the export from fetching the full history for articles which are long and have been edited a lot. Aside from that this works fine. It took about three days to run over all of Wikivoyage en:.
All this said, I don't really see the point of forking, rather I see the db dumps as being a sort of insurance policy. I want them solely to preserve the content of Wikivoyage in case something goes wrong with the IB deal which causes them to pull down the site. Meanwhile the content is still Free content, in that it really is under the license it's under. -- (WT-en) Mark 10:59, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
Thanks again. In Wikivoyage_talk:Internet_Brands#XML_versions_of_Wikivoyage_content, Evan says: "There's a point between getting one or two articles from Special:Export and getting all 9000 (well, almost) en: guides ..." I understood him in the way that downloading full dumps via Special:Export would not be appreciated because this would require a lot of resources and bandwidth. But sure, if I'm forced to do so, I will.
If you want to know about my reasons for forking, see my contributions to Wikivoyage_talk:Internet_Brands and my discussion with Evan, originally on his talk page, but later moved incidently onto an orphaned sub-page. You also can try to understand my statement in German on de:Benutzer:(WT-de) Hansm/Zur Kommerzialisierung von Wikivoyage.
-- (WT-en) Hansm 11:34, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
I've read all of that several times over again, and I still just can't see how you've made the argument that forking now is worthwhile. Frankly I think maybe you're having a bit of an emotional reaction. The fact that a commercial organization now controls the servers and the trademark for the project have impacted your personal feeling of ownership over it. I've felt that way too.
Still, I think that forking is an awfully big undertaking, and remains completely unnecessary until IB were to do something dumb like sueing sombody using the content correctly under the licence, or of course if they were to shut the project down. It wouldn't be a complete waste of time to fork now, becuase you'll learn some important stuff about running a wiki but still it probably wouldn't be the best use of your time.
Would you contribute to a free software project which is hosted on SourceForge? If not then why not? That's a commercial enterprise.
All of this aside, I think it's very important that IB provide full dumps, as a demonstration that they understand the license. I've been quietly (and occasionally loudly) encouraging this.
As for there being something wrong with taking an entire dump of the site from Special:Export, well I don't feel too bad about it, and I don't think you should either. It's your right under the terms of the license. Now, if they decide to prevent you (or me) from doing so, then and only then would it be time to fork. -- (WT-en) Mark 12:05, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
It's some kind of funny that many here on en: try to reduce the arguments on the fact that IB has commercial interests. That's only one point. As I have stated somewhere in the discussions (maybe it was in the German one), my biggest concern is the loss of confindence in Evan (and Maj). Disgarding his own policies as he likes, his way of leading the wiki, claiming to make decissions in consesus, but basicaly deciding by his own. This are the points that have been putting me off even before they have sold wikivoyage.org. -- (WT-en) Hansm 12:31, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
OK. I hadn't really gotten that before. This makes more sense to me than forking because of IB. I think my inability to read German is partly to blame for this mis-understanding.
Still, I think you are underestimating the amount of power you have to get Evan to do the right thing in most circumstances. I'm pretty sure that the recent spat over the TOC was a bit of a Zen Slap for him in regards to his tendency to plan and sometimes do things without involving Wikivoyagers. I don't think he's completely learned his lesson but I think that he's really sincerely trying to do better.
I also think that you're underestimating how much work you are committing yourself to by undertaking a fork. I worry that without as many eyes on the project that you are more likely to have to resort to hard security measures (as opposed to relying on Soft Security). For instance will you be as stead-fast as Evan is in his commitment to avoiding user bans?
Evan has proven that he can listen. This is good. We also know that he can be kindof lazy, and a bit short-sited in the application of policies and guidelines to his own behaviour. Oh well. Who among us is perfect? In the long run do we care so much so long as we have a platform to acheive our shared goal? I certainly am not worried enough about those details to appoint myself the maintainer of a forked Wikivoyage.
Of course I'll still help you with scripting if you need me to, but I'm still going to try to talk you out of it. The other thing I'm going to do is to ask you before you start to read every single word on MeatBall Wiki. -- (WT-en) Mark 12:49, 9 July 2006 (EDT)
Oh, I didn't expect that you do understand some German at all. If I were flowently enough, I had translated my German statements into English, but I often feel too clumsy to point out exactly what I mean in English.
I think there's a big difference between working on en: as native speaker at one hand and trying to take part on discussions and decissions (that all have come into effect on en:) as a de: contributor who's English is not that well, at the other hand. For you, it's rather easy to tolerate Evan's long winded way of discussing. I often have made the experience that I did try to discuss some very precise points, but Evan started to talk about everthing and nothing. Trying to come to consensus this way is pretty uneffective and enoying.
I do not plan to do the fork by my own. I'm not interested in becoming an Evan II. It's a group of important de: contributors and admins that work on founding a non-profit association according to german law. The new site should be run by this association, not by myself. This way, we can be quite sure that there will be enough eyes to watch the wiki and to intervent if vandalism occures. The new wiki's daily life wouldn't be too different from that de: used to be (its in a crisis now, guess why). The big goal would be independece from IB's interests and Evan's self-importance.
No doubt, there also is a price to pay. IB has money, we haven't. We hope on sponsores. If we shouldn't find enough, a hard discussion about advertising would come up, for sure. It's unpredictable how it would come out. But there is one thing to be sure: that's we, i.e. the association, who keep control over the server, not some company. And even organizing the foundation has turned out to be much harder than estimated before. All that legal and organisatorical stuff is enoying and many are put off from this matter. You do not tell me new things: Organizing a fork is much harder than simply starting a new language version of wikitrvel. So what. We will do so anyway. (Hopefuly.)
-- (WT-en) Hansm 15:02, 9 July 2006 (EDT)

Hi Hans, In my understanding sponsers and advertising would mean that your Wiki would be commercial too. Regardless of its articles of incorporation.

I also have to suspect that regardless of intentions the fork is likely to wind up more authoritarian, and less free than the original. I worry that unless the beaurocrats on the new site are totally versed in the Wiki Way that there will be a tendancy to clamp down on vandals, spammers, and eventually folks who don't agree with policy.

You've attacked Evan several times during this conversation. I don't however see the point of that. You are forgetting some of the cardinal rules of Wiki: Assume Good Faith and Forgive and Forget.

Forking over a personal differences with somebody you've never met, and for that matter somebody who's clearly been making an effort to work with you is even worse than forking because Wikivoyage is running on commercial servers. It is clearly an emotional response, even if you can't bring yourself to admit it. I'd like you to please take the time now to seriously study up on Wikis, and to do some soul-searching. Perhaps an assignment is in order: Please translate this and its sub-pages into German. I have a number of allamanephone freinds who can help me check it for accuracy, so don't worry about that.

I just want to be certain that a Wikivoyage fork will function as advertised. I also want to be sure that the reasons for your doing this are indeed genuine. -- (WT-en) Mark 04:22, 10 July 2006 (EDT)

Sorry to jump in on someone else's talk page, but many of the issues now being raised are relevant to the wider Wiki community - perhaps this conversation could be copied to Project:Internet Brands or some more appropriate location? In any case, I share some of Hans's concerns, especially after reading that XML dumps may only be provided "if there is benefit to Wikivoyage". However, while I think that there may be cause to try to create a mirror of Wikivoyage in order to make sure that a copy of the data is available elsewhere, I don't think there are yet any issues so serious as to merit dividing the Wikivoyage community. I honestly believe that Even, Maj and IB understand that without contributors there is no Wikivoyage, and that they are therefore willing to work to resolve any issues that people have. Yes, there have been times when the rule seems to be "consensus unless Evan wants to do something", but I think that's something that he is working on, and the rest of us are trying to develop policies to make it clearer what the expected behaviors here are. Anyhow, this is more than I wanted to write on Mark's talk page, but I think that we'd all be better off as one community, and that just about any issue can be resolved given some time. -- (WT-en) Ryan 04:53, 10 July 2006 (EDT)
@Mark: Whether you call the planed project commercial or not is a question of definition. German law provides a way to register associations as beeing a non-profit organisation. That means that the association is obliged to work on aims for public benefit defined in their statutes and must not make profit. It is allowed to work commercialy as long as all earnings are used for the association's beneficial aims. That's how the Wikimedia Foundation Deutschland works and that's also what we want. There is a big difference to IB, which works for maximum profit and never would get such a non-profit registration.
I don't see the point at all why you believe that we would have to be more authoritarian than wikivoyage is. Did you forget that we have coordinated de: for more than one year and a half? Have you seen any incidence or discussion on de: that let you think we tend to be authoritarian? I wouldn't know which it could have been. IMHO, claiming consensus but in fact doing one's own things is a kind of less obvious authoritarism and I'm sure that in this point we would be even less authoritarian than the wikivoyage leadership. So, I realy don't see no need to translate some meatball articles. For the moment, there are much more important things to do.
It's true, I have attaced Evan's way of discussing, the way he ignores majorities and the way he uses his privileges on the server. But I didn't attac him as a person and I never would do so since I never have met him personaly and do not know much more about him than that I have seen on wikivoyage. I never have accused him not to have good faith. There are only different ideas about whether something is good or not. I find it is some kind of unfair when you tell me I had forgotten those basic pricipals of wiki communities as cited above. I am a wikivoyager for almost 3 years, and Evan for sure has given me enough occasions to forgive him. And I did. I hoped to make clear what my reasons for forking are and I'm pretty astonished to read in your last posting that it would be simply for personal differences or emational issues. Maybe it's my clumsyness when writing in English that let you missunderstand my points, but be sure, it's not because I wouldn't appreciate Evan as a person. Besides those points I have critisized, Evan has done huge personal efforts and benfits to Wikivoyage. I never have said that everything Evan has done were bad.
@Ryan: Everybody who's interested in the organisation and hierarchical structures of wikivoyage is welcome to drop into this discussion. No reason to be sorry about that.
@both: Don't forget that some wikivoyagers have left wikivoyage after 20th April. Some have loudly anounced it, others simply have disappeared. What we want to do is giving them an alternative for working on the same goal, but under different circumstances. Why should that be bad? I already have told Evan that we would like to cooperate with wikivoyage.
-- (WT-en) Hansm 15:18, 10 July 2006 (EDT)


Hi Hans, First I'd like to say that my goal is to help you understand what you are getting into, and to try to bring up some of the questions that you are going to face with your fork, should you go ahead. I do this to satisfy the superior goal of serving Wikivoyagers by continuing to build a complete Free world travel guide. I hope you take what I write in the spirit of open collaboration.
I'm not sure that the exact legal terms under which a non-profit is organized really prevents it from being commercial. Personally I think that if you have sponsors and you acknowledge that they are sponsors then it's pretty much a commercial undertaking becuase that's essentially a form of advertising. The function is the same: money comes in, staff gets paid.
The organization I work for is very careful to avoid naming donors for exactly that reason. I don't think it matters what the legal terms are under which the organization is organized. It matters what the organization does. Compare WHO, UNICEF, and FIFA. All three are organized officially as non-profit organizations, but one of them looks pretty commercial when you come right down to it. The one in the middle has a big press release section called "corporate sponsorship", but is it commercial? So you see, this comes down to something other than the way you're organized.
Anyhow, you've said that commercialism and IB is not why you are considering a fork, so I guess that's all a bit of a red herring (besides the point, off-topic).
On the question of the possibility that a new Travel Wiki could wind up being more authoritarian than the existing Wikivoyage, I'm just trying to point out that it's something that you Hans, and your collaborators have to take very seriously. The possibility exists that a community will go that way, and the only way that it can be prevented is if a very cool, collected, but strong voice consistently reminds users and especially admins about how Wiki works. I've found Meatball to be an invaluable source for thinking about, and making workable arguments about how Wiki works. I think it's a mandatory read for somebody who's thinking about setting up a Wiki. That's why I wanted the translation, so that I know you've read it.
Do you really have to satisfy me on these questions? No, not really. Only if you want my help. There may (or may not) be others who feel as I do. So far you seem to value my input enough to have continued this conversation. I'm honored, and hope to continue to provide insight where I can into this very difficult question. -- (WT-en) Mark 09:02, 11 July 2006 (EDT)
Sorry Mark, I'm pretty busy at the moment. I'll anwer you in the next days. -- (WT-en) Hansm 12:47, 12 July 2006 (EDT)
Mark, be sure there have been and will be a steady discussion about the pros and cons of sponsorship and advertising among those intending to fork, not only on the wiki but even via mail. We know the problems you have lined out above. If the member contributions to the association or private donations will be high enough, there won't be no need for any kind of advertising at all. At the other hand, a project can only work enduringly if the financial budget is reliable, so all alternatives have to be at least discussed. I feel, idealistic ideas are fine as long as they can be payed. But wait how advertising will develop here on Wikivoyage.
Where did you read that commercialism and IB is not why I am considering a fork? That's wrong. But maybe you want to read my (WT-en) Commercialisation FAQ for a better understanding of my objections.
If I understand you well, you are still asking for the strong leader in order to guarantee a soft security as on Wikivoyage. Let me tell you that I really appreciate Wikivoyage's soft way of dealing with vandalism and other security issues, but I definitly don't want such a strong leader as Evan is on Wikivoyage. Yes, you're right, there will be the risk that a wiki community comes to a point where it requires a harder security policy. And you're also right that we will provide enough democracy that those ideas might come into effect. I would not like that, but in fact, it would be possible. But if the price to prevent that would be the strong voice, my preference is clear: No strong leader.
-- (WT-en) Hansm 14:53, 14 July 2006 (EDT)
"No strong leader" is a good rallying cry, but what you need to avoid anti-wiki behaviour is strong leadership. It has to come from somewhere. Anyhow, somebody will generally rise to the occasion. The important thing is that they understand what they are doing, hence my reliance on Meatball.
As for the question of commercialism: it really does seem to me that several paragraphs above you said that commercialism has nothing to do with the desire to fork, but that it was about a problem that you were having with Evan's management style. I dunno, that's just what I read.
Meanwhile I have to ask myself, and you, why does it matter if some company is paying for the servers right now? I mean after all the content is still Free (libre), so it really doesn't matter. If they mess up somehow we can just take our content and go elsewhere. There's no reason to do so until they mess up though. Sorry, but so far you just haven't convinced me. -- (WT-en) Mark 15:09, 14 July 2006 (EDT)
We neither want to establish a monarchy nor an oligarchy, but democracy. So, everybody has the occasion to take part of the association's or some wiki's leadership as long as he can find a majority in elections. I agree with you, somebody will rise to the occasion, not necessarily me. What's important for me is that even the leadership, whoever might be part of it, is bound to the statutes and must be supported by a majority. Maybe, it would help to integrate the basic ideas of soft security into the statutes, but in the end, it will be rather a question of personal character whether they are applied in daily wiki life or not.
Right now, it doesn't matter too much that IB isn't doing much more than paying for the servers. But I think we agree that this is only a transitional state. However, even for the present situation, there are some points lined out in User:(WT-en) Hansm/Commercialisation FAQ#How about the fact that Wikivoyage's new owner has commercial interests?.
-- (WT-en) Hansm 03:58, 15 July 2006 (EDT)

Compliant external use of Wikivoyage

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Swept in from the Pub:

Seems to me e-journey.net is one of the very few external sites properly obeying the CC-by-SA 1.0 license. I found them early on June 14th and it appears that the articles they copied and pasted are very old, because all of the articles I looked at had "External Links" on the bottom. I also like how they copied and pasted the links to images, but didn't use any of the images. - (WT-en) Andrew Haggard (Sapphire) 01:42, 14 June 2006 (EDT)

They are incredibly old - the mirror dates back to November 2005. (WT-en) Ravikiran 16:00, 16 June 2006 (EDT)

Attribution on partial reuse

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I would like to place several pages on Western Europe on my site and want to get the attribution right. Is there a way using the Export feature here at Wikivoyage to also automatically obtain the list of contributors? If not, what is the best way to properly document contributors? Finally, over time the list of contributors can grow very large in some destinations. Is there a cutoff point? The list of contributors can get longer than the article in theory. Thanks. (WT-en) RBE 15:39, 15 May 2007 (EDT)rbe

If you're making a manual copy of an article, a copy-and-paste of the credits block would be the easiest way to include this information. -(WT-en) Todd VerBeek 09:42, 17 May 2007 (EDT)

I am using the export feature. So 2 questions - 1. How to make the contributor list populate and 2. How to download the images and put them on my server? One at a time or is there a way to do an export as with pages? Thanks (WT-en) RBE 12:29, 17 May 2007 (EDT)

Licensing

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I think the license should be upgraded from cc-by-sa-1.0 to cc-by-sa-3.0. The 3.0 version of the license will be compatible with version 1.3 of the Free Art License. (WT-en) ksd5 14:13, 20 May 2007 (EDT)

Also, cc-by-sa-1.0 doesn't have the "upgrade clause" that automatically makes it compatible with later versions of cc-by-sa. (WT-en) ksd5 20:10, 27 March 2008 (EDT)

I couldn't agree with you more. Please see wts:WtTech:License upgrade. --(WT-en) Peter Talk 20:34, 27 March 2008 (EDT)

Data Dumps?

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Archived from the Pub:

Is it possible to get SQL Data Dumps of wikivoyage like we can get from wikipedia ? It would be nice to be able to download wikivoyage for offline consumption using Tomeraider or similar. -- (WT-en) Futaris 15:03, 5 December 2006 (AEST)

In theory, yes, see Project:How to re-use Wikivoyage guides. However, nobody has even actually succeeded in obtaining one... (WT-en) Jpatokal 01:09, 5 December 2006 (EST)
Still not? I rest my case... -- (WT-en) Nils 12:50, 13 December 2006 (EST)
I'm also interested in the issue of SQL data dumps. I'm supprized that this isn't attractting more attention. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0 is good, but how much use if you can only access the work from the de facto owner? If anyone succeeds in getting a dump, please leave a note here. Thanks. (WT-en) keithonearth 23:46, 31 May 2007 (EDT)
My own experience is that requests are largely ignored. I have left messages on user pages, I have emailed on multiple occassions, etc. We ended up having to download all pages via a spider. It is doable with a little effort and less frustrating than never getting an answer. Good luck.(WT-en) Rbe2004 17:53, 17 June 2007 (EDT)

I just set up a page for this: Project:Database dump. (WT-en) Guaka 07:28, 21 June 2007 (EDT)

Attribution by linkback

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I think the most cumbersome part of the reuse requirements is that (theoretically) individual contributors must be credited. Would the license requirements be sufficiently satisfied if the reuser gives a link back to the original article and notes that the contributors are visible there? So two choices, basically:

  1. "This article uses content licensed under Creative Commons by-sa 1.0. A list of contributors is available at the original article Foo on Wikivoyage.org."
  2. "This article uses content licensed under Creative Commons by-sa 1.0, written by John Smith, Mary Jones, ..."

What do you think? (WT-en) Jpatokal 06:40, 21 March 2008 (EDT)

I think that basically covers the requirement, at least in spirit. I'll add a recommendation, for online reuse, to link directly to the credits, a la http://en.wikivoyage.org/w/index.php?title=ARTICLENAME&action=credits. --(WT-en) Peter Talk 15:06, 21 March 2008 (EDT)
Done. (WT-en) Jpatokal 05:37, 22 March 2008 (EDT)

Wikitude

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Swept here from en:pub:

Don't know if anyone else saw this article in the Sunday Times this week, entitled Why mobile phones are the new travel guides. I hadn't heard of Wikitude before reading the article. It's a system that searches Wikipedia based on location. On the website you can type in an address and search for Wikipedia entries close to it. The Times article was focussed on the version that has been developed for the new generation of mobile phones (US: cell-phones) that have GPS functionality, so it will automatically find entries close to your location and show them on a map. Neat. And surely if it linked up with Wikivoyage it would be even more useful? I'm guessing that for it to work we would need to get a lot better at entering lat/long data into our articles (does this even work at the moment?). Have any of the site owners/admins already been in touch with the relevant people at Wikitude? It would be good if we could get on board before someone like Schmap beat us to it. (WT-en) Tarr3n 03:19, 12 November 2008 (EST)

I fully support this idea. It seems tailor-made for Wikivoyage. We don't have the encyclopedic detail on attractions that Wikipedia does, but what we do have is locations for restaurants, bars, and hotels that could be cross-indexed with the user's current location. (WT-en) LtPowers 09:54, 12 November 2008 (EST)
We are terribly short on geotagged listings though. But if anyone wants/needs an area to test, all listings of Copenhagen/Northern suburbs have been geotagged. Besides, as far as i understand IB doesn't provide access to data anyway, and assume they want money (or a way to use ads) to open up. --(WT-en) Stefan (sertmann) Talk 06:57, 13 November 2008 (EST)
I'm trying to look into this a bit more today as I think with the increasing availablity of mobile phones with GPS or at least map software installed this is surely the way forward for all travel guides. Unfortunately Wikitude is currently down for a server migration. However digging about on Wikivoyage for more information about how these geocodes actually work, I found Project:Geographical_data_and_metadata, which seems to imply that the existing geocoding format we are using is not usable by any other applications anyway. Or am I reading this wrong? Picking up on (WT-en) Stefan's point about IB allowing access to the data, I don't really understand this and frankly it would make me question my ongoing contributions to this project. Surely all the data here is licensed for re-use? (WT-en) Tarr3n 06:50, 19 November 2008 (EST)

Re-using Wikivoyage guides

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Swept in from the pub

This page stating that if somebody wants to re-use the Wikivoyage guides, Xe will need to "attribute the authors of the content (Not just Wikivoyage)" but how can that person find who the author(s) are when there's no credit and author information available at the footer of articles. --Saqib (talk) 19:19, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

Edit history. -- AndreCarrotflower (talk) 19:44, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
So that means one will have to attribute all the authors who were involved in the editing of that particular article since the article created? --Saqib (talk) 19:55, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
In importing pages from Wikitravel servers during the fork, we inserted the following text at the bottom of all imported articles:
"More details and the full list of contributors can be found on the associated history page. (Wikitravel contributors are marked by the prefix WT-en.)"
...with the text "history page" linking to the edit history of the page in question. In any event, I suppose that implies that directing readers to the URL of the edit history of the pages you're reusing would be sufficient per copyleft.
-- AndreCarrotflower (talk) 20:36, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
Of course, if that's not true, I'd love someone else to chime in. I think it is, though. -- AndreCarrotflower (talk) 20:38, 9 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
That has long been the assumption on Wikipedia. Linking to the automatically-generated history page is usually considered sufficient attribution. LtPowers (talk) 01:45, 10 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
Back in the day, our project interpreted the attribution requirement to be more onerous than WMF projects have, and requested that re-users print the names of all contributors. To aid, we listed these names through &action=credits and at the bottom of every article. I think it's fair to say (especially after moving to CC-by-SA-3.0) that we have adopted the position of Wikipedia and other projects that a pointer to the attribution history here is sufficient. I'll update the policy page to reflect this more clearly. --Peter Talk 03:25, 10 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

Using Wikivoyage content in a mobile app.

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Hello,

I'm building a mobile app and would like to use Wikivoyage content and am confused about the license. On https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Wikivoyage:How_to_re-use_Wikivoyage_guides, I see this:

When you redistribute Wikivoyage content, you just have to:

  • Attribute the authors of the content. This can be done by simply providing a link back to the Wikivoyage page or, if you are making a printed guide, by providing a link in the hard copy. Alternatively, you can directly credit each of the authors listed in the history of the article.
  • Include the licence. For the text, this is always CC-by-SA 3.0. For images, it can vary a little. Just reproduce the licence that is on the image page at Wikimedia Commons. All the image licences are free and open.

There are no other requirements.

Further down the same page, I see

We've chosen the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 for the text on our site, because it allows our guides to be freely used and modified. Whether for the traditional travel guide style, or for new and creative applications. The licence says:

  • You give attribution to the authors of the article.
  • You make any derivative works available under the same licence. This also applies to subsequent derivative works.
  • You notify readers and other users of the licence.

In order to re-use Wikivoyage content, do I have to release my mobile app under the same license?

Thank you.

Chris Jackson

Hi, Chris!
I and probably the whole WV community are happy to learn that you're interested in using our content! I believe you would just need to have a link to the Wikivoyage article the particular content comes from and state that the content is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0. I don't think your app itself would need to use the same license. I'm however not an expert on licenses and such, so don't rely solely on this advice.
I'll post a notice in the pub where the whole community, including people more knowledgeable about licenses see it. ϒpsilon (talk) 15:37, 11 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
The software part of your app can be released under any license. This is your work, so you decide how to license it. The content must be released under CC-BY-SA-3.0, though. It needs a link to the Wikivoyage site and a list of all editors who contributed to a given article.
It would be great if you described your plans briefly. Do you want to display whole articles, split them section-wise, or perhaps export individual POIs? --Alexander (talk) 16:04, 11 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
Hi Chris! Actually, per recent policy changes, you needn't even link back to Wikivoyage at all! This should make your attribution even easier. Just copy the page history for whatever you want to republish, and link *internally on your own app/site to it, using Wikivoyage usernames.* Voila: done! No need to link externally to wikivoyage, which would lower your Google SEO rank. See the policy change discussion here.
We're thrilled you're using Wikivoyage content rather than the original Wikitravel.org content, despite the fact that wikivoyage has much fewer users so far. This will really help out our fledgling site. Good luck, Travel doc96 (talk) 17:49, 11 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
Appearances aside, I think we are the original. Wikitravel is just the empty shell left after we molted. Texugo (talk) 11:08, 12 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
"which would lower your Google SEO rank" ← I am pretty sure that linking does not lower your Google rank, actually. Cheers! Nicolas1981 (talk) 09:54, 12 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
Chris, I wish you all the best with your app, let us know when it is ready :-) Will the text data be online or offline? Cheers! Nicolas1981 (talk) 09:54, 12 August 2014 (UTC)Reply
Sorry for the slow reply. I assume I'd get an update via email if there was a reply. I'll check back here more often. Thank you all for the information. We are building a mobile app for travelers and want to make available information for each traveler's destination. We're culling information from resources such as the state department and the CDC. We plan to use sections of Wikivoyage pages, rather than whole articles. The data for the mobile app would be available both online and offline (when we know the user's destination). The app won't be ready for a few more months. We plan to make the information available on our website, as well. If it doesn't lower SEO rank (I'll look into that), would you all prefer a link to Wikivoyage? I would think it would be helpful to better promote what you're doing. Again, thank. Chris
If you're only going to be using sections of our guides, then I don't see any real alternative except to link back to our site. Since our site stores the authorship information, that's the best and easiest way to fulfill the license's attribution requirement. The commentator above who was talking about SEO has been giving us grief over our migration from Wikitravel and was trying to be clever above; please don't take much direction from that. Powers (talk) 17:15, 20 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

Offline Wikivoyage based web app tool for you to play with

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Swept in from the pub

Happy 2017 all! I wanted to start the new year by sharing a side project I've been working on in my evening hours for personal purposes. In the interests of sharing, I wanted to show you all what I've built and give an insight into why in the hope this may be useful feedback and get a sense of whether there are any ideas that are interesting to fold into future versions of Wikivoyage.

I've been a little tired of traveling without data plans and carrying thick Lonely Planets with me and for the past few years I've told myself I'll build a web app to solve this issue for me. I finally got round to that and built a proof of concept based on some work I've been doing on a Trending website for Wikipedia. The tool is called someday and currently also hosted on labs. I've written up some notes about my ideas here User:Jdlrobson/Someday along with thought process. If anyone's interested in any of those ideas or sees problems with them or can point me at previously failed experiments - please post on the talk page.

If you're tired of reading but just want to play around have a play with the home page - and click the map (and pan around it to find locations) or scroll the list (like the random list can be scrolled ad infinitum and I've discovered quite a few interesting places/articles on the site using it. There's some awesome content on Wikivoyage!

I'm happy to report through playing with the tool and planning and taking my trip I've edited a lot of content I wouldn't normally have done so if nothing else I'm happy I've found a way to contribute more!

Apologies in advance for bugs :)

Jdlrobson (talk)

Jdlrobson, is it intentional that your app does not use geographical coordinates of the listings? --Alexander (talk) 15:07, 9 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
you. I did in an early version but I found many pages did not have listings and mixing the concepts of exploring a map for cities and exploring a map for hotels was confusing. When travelling I'm not sure it would have been useful. On the occasions I did want to visit a listing I used google maps to navigate. Still very much on the fence about how to include these better. Jdlrobson (talk) 16:54, 16 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
I think you have a typo or some missing text at the start of your reply. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:33, 16 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

Another question about using Wikivoyage content in an app

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Hi! I have a similar question to the previous app developer, but wanted to ask it just to be absolutely sure my intended re-use is ok.

I'd like to quote a paragraph or so of text from a number of Wikivoyage destination pages, describing some possible holiday destinations. I would include these quotes on destination info pages in an app, along with other content from different sources and with different licences. The app is free to download but does make money from ads, etc.

From what I can tell, I'll need to include:

  • attribution to the authors
  • licence info

I was planning to put a link back to the Wikivoyage page (to open in an in-app browser) and to put this at the bottom of the quoted text: "Quoted from Wikivoyage, under licence CC-BY-SA 3.0". That's a little compressed, but since it's an app I don't have lots of screen space to play with. From other comments on the talk page, it sounds like using a link to the page instead of listing all the authors is permissable.

Is that going to be enough to make this a legit use of the content WikiVoyage content? And will including these quotes from WV in the page mean that everything else on that screen (eg photos, info on flight prices) will also need to be CC licensed?

Thanks in advance for any help you can give! —The preceding comment was added by 62.249.252.196 (talkcontribs)

Hi, User:62.249.252.196. The mechanism you propose seems like it would be sufficient, but I am not a lawyer and cannot give a definitive "okay" that it would hold up in court in the (extremely unlikely) event that you were sued. Powers (talk) 23:44, 22 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Free and collaborative audio guide

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Swept in from the pub

Hi, I recently heard about an app for smartphone that uses phone geolocation, searches for the closest POIs and suggests an audio comments about this POI. Interested by such application, I found this app. There are maybe others that work with the same way but I di not find any. I did not find any information that let me think that troubadourstory.fr is free. So I wonder wether you are aware of such free app. If it does not exist, do you think that wikivoyage could play a role? I mean we could imagine to subdivide the information given in the articles by POI in order to provide information need by this kind of apps. As a free project, the descriptions could be improved and translated in many languages. Maybe you already discussed this topic, or similar one, in the past. Pamputt (talk) 16:52, 13 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

That app seems to be free, as stated in French "Disponible gratuitement". The data to make such an app is readily available as CSV at https://github.com/baturin/wikivoyage-listings and there is even a JSON API at http://wvpoi.batalex.ru/api/ that allows you to get the information of the Wikivoyage listings around a given latitude/longitude :-) App developers are encouraged to reuse Wikivoyage data as long as they comply with the license. Syced (talk) 04:18, 15 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for the reply. It seems that a lot of work has already been done. Hope that some dev would have a look on it in the future. Pamputt (talk) 17:08, 15 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
Wikivoyage:How_to_re-use_Wikivoyage_guides explains the rules for reusing WV content. ϒpsilon (talk) 17:44, 15 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
By the way, here is a great app that reuses Wikivoyage information on Android. It is free, open source, based on Kiwix, and of course works offline. It has no audio though. Syced (talk) 03:24, 16 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Copy of Wikivoyage content

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Swept in from the pub

I know not copyrighted but should source be stated? example. --Traveler100 (talk) 18:36, 28 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Under the terms of the CC licence, absolutely. We, as Wikivoyagers, are entitled to attribution from whoever uses our content. The used content must also be under a similar licence. Well-spotted, now what do we do about it? ThunderingTyphoons! (talk) 18:57, 28 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
There's a contact form on the site. The author(s) of the stolen content could drop them a line. Powers (talk) 00:34, 29 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Traveler100: Which article or articles have been copied? It would probably be a good idea to write a note on each of the affected articles' talk pages, so the authors can get their heads together and discuss what to do. --ThunderingTyphoons! (talk) 11:16, 29 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
Difficult to say, but a good number. I have done a many searches in Google and Yahoo over the last few weeks to fix broken links on Wikivoyage. The touristinspiration site turns up often in the top ten search results (often with closed establishments) and when I have visited the page it is a copy of a Wikivoyage listing. --Traveler100 (talk) 11:58, 29 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

I am no legal expert, but from that, it sounds like a bigger issue than can be reasonably handled by whichever editors have had their content stolen. Is there any precedence for the WMF to intervene in cases where third parties use Wikimedia content without following the terms of use? ThunderingTyphoons! (talk) 22:26, 31 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

See also Wikivoyage:Non-compliant redistribution. Pashley (talk) 23:18, 31 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thanks, Pashley. Will take a look at that. --ThunderingTyphoons! (talk) 10:18, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
I have done a bit more digging and posted to Wikivoyage_talk:Non-compliant_redistribution#Tourist_Inspiration, where we should continue this. I will also leave a message on the talk pages of the articles that we currently know are affected, to solicit the input of editors who may have had their work stolen. --ThunderingTyphoons! (talk) 11:36, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
Nitpicking department: "I know not copyrighted but should source be stated?" is technically wrong. The material is copyrighted but is distributed under a Wikivoyage:Copyleft license which requires certain things from anyone who redistributes it, notably attribution to the source. In principle anyone violating the license terms can be sued, if they are in the US their ISP can be hit with a DMCA takedown notice, and similar things in other countries.
There are complications with that. Firstly, neither WV nor WMF claims copyright; that stays with each author, photographer, etc. For a collaborative article, especially if only parts of it are taken, this makes the question of who has standing to sue fairly complex. Second, suing anyone is slow & expensive, & even if you win it may not be worth the trouble. Pashley (talk) 12:36, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply