Misplaced Pages

Japanese - Misplaced Pages

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(Redirected from Japanese wikipedia) Japanese-language edition of Misplaced Pages

Not to be confused with Javanese Misplaced Pages.
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese. (August 2011) Click for important translation instructions.
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Favicon of Misplaced Pages Japanese Misplaced Pages
Screenshot The Main Page of the Japanese Misplaced Pages on 3 April 2021Main page of the Japanese Misplaced Pages in August 2023
Type of siteOnline encyclopedia
Available inJapanese
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
URLja.wikipedia.org Edit this at Wikidata
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
Launched11 May 2001; 23 years ago (2001-05-11)
Current statusActive
Content licenseCreative Commons Attribution/
Share-Alike
4.0 (most text also dual-licensed under GFDL)
Media licensing varies

The Japanese Misplaced Pages (ウィキペディア日本語版, Misplaced Pages Nihongoban, lit. 'Japanese version of Misplaced Pages') is the Japanese edition of Misplaced Pages, a free, open-source online encyclopedia. Started on 11 May 2001, the edition attained the 200,000 article mark in April 2006 and the 500,000 article mark in June 2008. As of January 2025, it has almost 1,444,000 articles with 12,770 active contributors, ranking fourth in the latter metric behind the English, French and German editions.

As of November 2024, the Japanese Misplaced Pages is the world's second most visited Misplaced Pages language edition after the English Misplaced Pages; it has been the second most viewed Misplaced Pages during most periods since at least 2008. It has a high proportion of anonymous contributors and one of the lowest admin-to-user ratios of any Misplaced Pages language edition.

The Japanese Misplaced Pages has been accused of historical revisionism by a number of scholars, especially its pages on World War II. Its culture has been described as hostile and heavily influenced by the right-wing textboard 2channel.

History

In March 2001, three non-English editions of Misplaced Pages were created, namely, the German, Catalan and Japanese Wikipedias. The original site address of the Japanese Misplaced Pages was http://nihongo.wikipedia.com and all pages were written in the Latin alphabet or romaji, as the software did not work with Japanese characters at the time. The home page also showed an early attempt at creating a vertical text.

The first article was named "Nihongo no Funimekusu" (meaning "Phonemics of the Japanese language"). Until late December in that year, there were only two articles.

Awards

In September 2004, the Japanese Misplaced Pages was awarded the "2004 Web Creation Award Web-Person Special Prize" from the Japan Advertisers Association. This award, normally given to individuals for great contributions to the Internet in Japanese, was accepted by a long-standing contributor on behalf of the project.

Characteristics

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Origin of viewers on the Japanese Misplaced Pages

The Japanese Misplaced Pages is different from the English Misplaced Pages in a number of ways.

Editing

  • An edit is kept only if it is legal under both Japanese and United States laws, to account for the fact that the vast majority of contributors live in Japan. This has two major consequences:
    • The fair use provisions of US law are not considered to be applicable. Articles and media files which do not have a GFDL-compatible license are prohibited, even if they would be legal under the "fair use" doctrine in the US.
    • Materials considered illegal cannot be kept in the archive, even reverted by oneself but caught in history archive. If an illegal edit is inserted between valid versions, an admin may make specific revisions inaccessible from the history.
  • Quotation is discouraged. There is controversy over the GFDL compatibility of quotations. Articles that contain quotations will be deleted unless they meet all the following legal requirements:
    1. The source is clearly referred to.
    2. The quotation is necessary.
    3. The quoting and quoted works can respectively be regarded as the principal and subordinate both in quantity and quality.
    4. The quoting and quoted works are clearly distinguishable.
  • Cut-and-paste moves within Wikipedias, including merging, splitting, and translation from another language, are not allowed unless the original article source and date is explicitly referred to in the edit summary, because such moves are considered to be GFDL violations. Articles created in such a manner will be deleted. A comparable policy is in place on the English Misplaced Pages, but it is only casually enforced.
The Japanese Misplaced Pages has the most anonymous contributions as compared to other major languages in Misplaced Pages. The image is as of December 2007.

Community

This section needs to be updated. The reason given is: Percentage of IP edits is lower in recent years. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (July 2021)
  • Anonymous contributions are high compared to other major language versions of Misplaced Pages (see graph).
  • The Japanese Misplaced Pages has the lowest number of administrators per active editors (only 0.31%).
  • Edit wars are strongly frowned upon. Articles may be protected as a result of an edit war with as little as three or four edits. Protected pages will not be unprotected unless someone explicitly requests it. Perhaps because of this, as of September 2005 the Japanese Misplaced Pages had the second-highest number of articles protected for over two weeks, after the German Misplaced Pages. In May 2008, 0.0906% of articles were fully protected (only editable by admins), which was by far the highest percentage among the ten largest Wikipedias. Articles on sensitive topics, such as Japanese war crimes and current territorial disputes, are almost always under lengthy protection.
  • On 18 April 2010, there was a proposal to create a new namespace specifically for WikiProjects to shorten the name of a WikiProject. This proposal finally passed and a new namespace named "プロジェクト:" (Project:) was created for WikiProjects on 20 September the same year (UTC).
  • The edition stresses the fact that it is not a news bulletin, and discourages edits on current events.
  • In keeping with the strong aversion to edit wars, the administrators react negatively to cases where many minor edits are made to a single article in a short period of time.
  • The Japanese Misplaced Pages is Japan-centered, due to the fact that the overwhelming majority of editors are Japanese people, nearly all living in Japan. When referring to places outside Japan they are often called "overseas", and references to Japanese perspective on articles are common. They are trying to discourage this tendency.

Policies

  • Articles will be deleted if they contain the names of private citizens, unless they are public figures (under section B-2 of Japanese deletion policy). For example, an article about Shosei Koda, a Japanese citizen kidnapped in Iraq, does not refer to him by name, but former Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda's name may be mentioned due to his public position. Convicted criminals and their victims are considered private citizens, even if the case was extensively covered in Japanese media, and their names may not be published until their death.
  • The Japanese edition of the English policy Ignore All Rules (directly linked to one of Five Pillars) is neither a policy nor a guideline.
  • The Japanese edition of the English Misplaced Pages how-to guide How to write a plot summary is a formal guideline.
  • The Japanese edition of the English Misplaced Pages page Handling trivia (which is an explanatory supplement to the Manual of Style guideline on trivia sections) is a formal guideline as well.
  • The Japanese edition of the English banning policy is not a policy, for lack of the Arbitration Committee.
  • Toukou Burokku Irai (Requesting for Block), which has no corresponding rules in English Misplaced Pages, is frequently used. And often well-known editors who have been active for a long time are blocked indefinitely. The blocked user may appeal for lifting the block, as in the case of blocking in English Misplaced Pages.
  • There is no local chapter of the Wikimedia Foundation in Japan.

Culture

Andrew Lih has written that influence from 2channel resulted in many Japanese Misplaced Pages editors being unregistered and anonymous. Because of the lack of registered editors, Japanese Misplaced Pages editors as a whole interact less with the international Misplaced Pages community and the Wikimedia Foundation than editors of other Wikipedias do. Lih also wrote that Japanese Misplaced Pages editors are less likely to engage in edit wars than editors on Wikipedias of Western languages, and typically they would instead make alternative drafts of articles on their own userspaces.

Jimmy Wales has pointed out at a conference that the Japanese Misplaced Pages is significantly more dominated by articles about pop culture than other Misplaced Pages projects, and according to one of his slides, "barely 20 percent" of the articles on the Japanese Misplaced Pages were about anything else. The Japanese Misplaced Pages is known to have relatively few moderators as of early March 2010.

Nobuo Ikeda, a known public policy academic and media critic in Japan, has suggested an ongoing "2channel-ization" phenomenon on the Japanese Misplaced Pages. Ikeda argues that by allowing anonymous editing, the community spawns a type of culture seen in anonymous message boards such as 2channel, where hate speech, personal attacks and derogatory expressions are common, and also the source of entertainment. He also remarks on the "emotional-outlet" and "get rid of stress" aspects of Japanese Internet culture, where 90% of blogs are anonymous, a complete opposite of the U.S. where 80% of blogs are expressed under one's real name. Ikeda's arguments are not the only sources hinting cultural correlation, influence, overlapping users from 2channel.

In 2006, Naoko Kizu (木津 尚子), a Japanese Wikipedian, stated that on the Japanese Misplaced Pages most people start out as page editors and uploaders of images, and that the majority of people continue to serve in those roles. Some people apply to become administrators. Kizu said "Unfortunately, some apply for this role out of a desire for power! And then are surprised when they get rejected."

There are threads of textboards named "【百科事典】ウィキペディア第d刷【Misplaced Pages】" (lit. ' Misplaced Pages Part d Edition ') related to the Japanese Misplaced Pages on 2channel. In these textboards, the Japanese Misplaced Pages community informally discuss with other editors anonymously. On Twitter, they use accounts associated with their username and "#jawp" for mentioning the Japanese Misplaced Pages.

Controversies

Attention was drawn to the Japanese Misplaced Pages article on Kozo Iizuka (飯塚幸三), which used to describe his accomplishments in detail, with no mention of how he killed a woman and her young daughter in the Higashi-Ikebukuro runaway car accident that made him a household name in Japan. An administrator applied protection to the article and later explained that the Japanese Misplaced Pages community takes legal risks arising from potential privacy violations very seriously, as there is no local chapter of the Wikimedia Foundation to support them in court.

Allegations of historical revisionism

Further information: Ideological bias on Misplaced Pages

In a 2018 book, Florian Schneider of Leiden University compared and contrasted Chinese (Misplaced Pages and Baidu) and Japanese articles (南京事件) on the Nanjing Massacre. Schneider was critical of some aspects of each version, but noted that a 2015 version of the Japanese article attempted to justify the rape and murder of Chinese civilians by claiming Japanese soldiers were doing it in the context of apprehending Chinese defectors. Schneider also noted that there were also few to no images on the article; instead it contained a single image of Japanese soldiers checking Chinese prisoners of war for weapons.

In a 2019 paper, Karl Gustafsson of Stockholm University compared various Chinese and Japanese Misplaced Pages articles. Gustafsson was critical of aspects of both versions. For the Nanjing Massacre article, Gustafsson noted that the first paragraph of the Japanese version expressed doubt about the details of the incident and "thereby portrays the Japanese military less negatively". For the article on the Battle of Shanghai, Gustafsson noted that the Japanese article generally emphasized violence by the Chinese combatants against both Japanese soldiers and civilians, while omitting mentions of civilian deaths from Japanese air raids. Gustafsson described the Japanese article as framing the Japanese invasion of the city as a reaction to Chinese aggression.

In a 2021 article published in Slate magazine, Yumiko Sato argued that several Japanese Misplaced Pages articles contained historical revisionism and whitewashing. Notable articles mentioned included the Japanese Misplaced Pages articles on the Battle of Hong Kong (香港の戦い), comfort women (日本の慰安婦), the Nanjing Massacre (南京事件), and Unit 731 (731部隊). A Misplaced Pages editor and academic, Sae Kitamura [ja], responded to Sato's article. While acknowledging that historical revisionism is indeed an issue on the Japanese Misplaced Pages, she pointed out factual errors in Sato's argument that centered around Misplaced Pages policy. In a talk sponsored by the Wikimedia Foundation, Kitamura argued that the revisionism was, in part, the result of a severe shortage of administrators. Kitamura argued that, to combat this, more competent users needed to be attracted and the toxicity of the website needed to be controlled.

In a 2021 article, professor Chelsea Szendi Schieder of Aoyama Gakuin University described Japanese Misplaced Pages's coverage of World War II as right-wing revisionism, and argued there was a divergence between right-wing narratives that are popular online in Japan and academic writings in English.

Studies

Further information: Academic studies about Misplaced Pages

2022 study on IP editing

In 2022, a report on IP editing on the Japanese Misplaced Pages was submitted to the Wikimedia Foundation. The report, based on interviews with Japanese Wikipedians, claimed that the Japanese Misplaced Pages's culture was seen as antagonistic, hostile, and susceptible to being manipulated by cliques. One Japanese Wikipedian interviewed said, "I think the Misplaced Pages community is similar to 2Chan in a negative way; it's just as hostile. You can get viciously attacked for what you write". An interviewee alleged that an editor and administrator collaborated to manipulate the website, which resulted in the Wikimedia Foundation investigating the situation.

Some users felt that having an account created more vectors for being antagonized and thus avoided logging in. One interviewee claimed to mainly make minor edits, as large edits were more likely to invite attacks. Interviewees felt that IP users had significant sway over the website's content and toxic atmosphere. The community reportedly held numerous discussions on if and how to regulate IP users, but failed to reach consensus due to polarized opinions. Most of the interviewees felt that IP editing was not an issue on the site.

2023 study on historical revisionism

At the 10th Wiki Workshop on 11 May 2023 hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, Taehee Kim, David Garcia, and Pablo Aragón analyzed which articles were controversial on the Japanese Misplaced Pages. They found that articles on the "Historical recognition and post-war settlement" portal were particularly reverted, and that of the top 20 most controversial articles, 11 were related to Japanese war crimes and topics commonly associated with Japanese right-wing ideology. They also performed a network analysis of editors who mutually reverted other edits in general, and found that those editors were more likely to be editors of articles discussing topics susceptible to right-wing revisionist narratives.

References

  1. "[Misplaced Pages-l] new language wikis". 11 May 2001. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
  2. メインページ
  3. "Vital Signs: Pageviews". Wikimedia. Retrieved 4 December 2024.
  4. "Misplaced Pages, massiv: Mehr als 10 Milliarden Abrufe pro Monat". Der Standard (in German). 20 October 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
  5. Erik Zachte (19 October 2008). "Wikimedia page view stats I". Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
  6. Erik Zachte (22 January 2016). "Page Views for Misplaced Pages". Archived from the original on 23 January 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  7. "Wikimedia Traffic Analysis Report - Page Views Per Misplaced Pages Language - Breakdown". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  8. ^ Sato, Yumiko (19 March 2021). "Non-English Editions of Misplaced Pages Have a Misinformation Problem". Slate. The Slate Group. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  9. ^ Sato, Yumiko (9 January 2021). 日本語版ウィキペディアで「歴史修正主義」が広がる理由と解決策 [Reasons Why "Historical Revisionism" is Widespread on Japanese Misplaced Pages and Solutions for It]. Yumiko Sato's Music Therapy Journal (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  10. ^ Schneider, Florian (16 August 2018). China's Digital Nationalism. Oxford University Press. pp. 123–124. ISBN 978-0-19-087681-4.
  11. ^ Gustafsson, Karl (18 July 2019). "International reconciliation on the Internet? Ontological security, attribution and the construction of war memory narratives in Misplaced Pages". International Relations. 34 (1): 3–24. doi:10.1177/0047117819864410. ISSN 0047-1178. S2CID 200020669.
  12. ^ Kato & Suda 2022, p. 14.
  13. ^ Kitamura, Sae (16 August 2021). Come on, It's Misplaced Pages, not Westeros. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 28 September 2024 – via YouTube.
  14. ^ Lih, p. 145.
  15. ^ Kato & Suda 2022, pp. 4–5.
  16. From the Wayback Machine: An early English Misplaced Pages "HomePage" dated 2001-03-30, with links to sister projects in "Deutsch (German)", "Catalan", and "Nihongo" (Japanese).
  17. An early Japanese language Misplaced Pages HomePage (revision #3), dated 2001-03-20 23:00, using Romanized Japanese. A subsequent version (revision #5, dated 2001-03-23 14:52) attempts at vertical text.
  18. ギョーム・ブランシャー. "on the Web Advertising Bureau". Award.wab.ne.jp. Archived from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  19. "JAA English site". Jaa.or.jp. Archived from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  20. Misplaced Pages:削除の方針 [Misplaced Pages:Deletion policy], Japanese Misplaced Pages (in Japanese), 3 October 2022, retrieved 10 December 2022
  21. ja:Misplaced Pages:削除依頼/勝興駅
  22. 46% of the total contributions, compared to 31%, 28% and 19% of English, German and French editions. See Wikistats, ja, en, de, fr (May 31, 2008; English stats updated to October 2006, German February 2008).
  23. "List of Wikipedias by speakers per article". Meta.wikimedia.org. 9 February 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  24. Erik Möller: Misplaced Pages page protection report Wikitech-l mailing list, Sep 14 00:39:12 UTC 2005
  25. Tim 'avatar' Bartel (28 May 2008). "Entsperrung der Misplaced Pages". WikiDE-l mailing list (in German). Archived from the original on 7 July 2012.
  26. ja:Misplaced Pages‐ノート:ウィキプロジェクト/名前空間の新設
  27. ja:Misplaced Pages:性急な編集をしない
  28. ja:Misplaced Pages:同じ記事への連続投稿を減らす
  29. ja:Misplaced Pages:日本中心にならないように
  30. ja:イラク日本人青年殺害事件
  31. Misplaced Pages:存命人物の伝記 [Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons]. Japanese Misplaced Pages (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  32. Lih, p. 146.
  33. Cohen, Noam (31 August 2009). "Misplaced Pages Looks Hard at Its Culture". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
  34. 悩むウィキペディア 少ない管理人 芸能系ばかり人気. The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 4 March 2010. Archived from the original on 7 March 2010. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  35. Ikeda, Nobuo (27 December 2006). 2ちゃんねる化するウィキペディア [2channel-ization of Misplaced Pages] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 20 April 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012 – via goo blog.
  36. Nishi, Kazuhiko (22 October 2009). 「ウィキペディアはネットの肥溜」 西和彦の過激批判の「真意」 [Kazuhiko Nishi: "Japanese Misplaced Pages is like the honey bucket of the Internet"] (Interview). J-CAST News.
  37. "How and Why Misplaced Pages Works: An Interview with Angela Beesley, Elisabeth Bauer, and Kizu Naoko." (Archive) Proceedings of the International Symposium on Wikis (WikiSym), 21-23 Aug. 2006, Odense, Denmark, ACM Press, 2006. Page 3-8. Retrieved on October 31, 2011.
  38. Misplaced Pages:ツール [Misplaced Pages:Tools], Japanese Misplaced Pages (in Japanese), 10 May 2019, retrieved 14 September 2019
  39. ウィキペディアで加筆と削除の応酬 池袋暴走事故めぐり [Statements regarding Ikebukuro runaway accident repeatedly added and removed on Misplaced Pages]. The Asahi Shimbun. 25 September 2020.
  40. (ニュースQ3)日本語版ウィキペディア、削除の波紋. The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 25 September 2020. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  41. Kitamura, Sae (17 January 2021). 佐藤由美子さんの「日本語版ウィキペディアで「歴史修正主義」が広がる理由と解決策」について [Regarding Yumiko Sato's article "Reasons why 'historical revisionism' is widespread on the Japanese Misplaced Pages and solutions for it"]. Commentarius Saevus (in Japanese). Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  42. "Chelsea Szendi Schieder Archives". The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. 5 November 2023. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  43. Schieder, Chelsea Szendi (26 May 2021). "The History the Japanese Government Is Trying to Erase". ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
  44. Kato & Suda 2022, pp. 6–8.
  45. ^ Kato & Suda 2022, pp. 6–7.
  46. Kato & Suda 2022, pp. 9–16.
  47. Kim, Taehee; Garcia, David; Aragón, Pablo (11 May 2023). "Controversies over Historical Revisionism in Misplaced Pages" (PDF). Wiki Workshop 2023. Wikimedia Foundation.
  48. Kim, Taehee; Garcia, David; Aragón, Pablo (11 May 2023), "Session 2: Controversies over Historical Revisionism in Misplaced Pages", Wiki Workshop 2023 (YouTube), Wikimedia Foundation, retrieved 28 June 2023

Sources

Further reading

External links

Misplaced Pages language editions by article count
6,000,000+
2,000,000+
1,000,000+
100,000
–999,999
10,000
–99,999
<10,000
See also: List of Wikimedia wikis
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