Logo of the Volapük Misplaced Pages | |
Main Page of the Volapük Misplaced Pages in April 2013 | |
Type of site | Internet encyclopedia |
---|---|
Owner | Wikimedia Foundation |
URL | vo.wikipedia.org |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional |
Users | 37,161 registered accounts 186 contributors (July 2014) |
Launched | February 2003 (created) 27 January 2004; 20 years ago (2004-01-27) (official) |
Content license | Creative Commons Attribution/ Share-Alike 4.0 (most text also dual-licensed under GFDL) Media licensing varies |
The Volapük Misplaced Pages (Volapük: Vükiped Volapükik) is the Volapük-language edition of the free online encyclopedia Misplaced Pages. It was created in February 2003, but launched in January 2004. As of 6 January 2025, it is the 110th-largest Misplaced Pages as measured by the number of articles, with about 39,000 articles, and the third-largest Misplaced Pages in a constructed language after the Esperanto Misplaced Pages and the Ido Misplaced Pages.
The edition is most notable for raising questions about the role of bots on Misplaced Pages, which initiated the development of policies and alternative measures of Wikipedias' quality. Its large number of bot-generated articles brought attention to the Volapük language, which often exemplifies the extent of Misplaced Pages's multilingualism across national, minority, dead and constructed languages alike.
In 2022, most of the bot's articles have been deleted.
History
The Volapük Misplaced Pages was created in February 2003, alongside the Croatian, Lithuanian, Armenian, and Bihari Wikipedias. The main page was created on 27 January 2004, marking the edition's official launch. It underwent a redesign on 3 March 2004, and a second one on 15 December 2006, which serves as the basis for the current layout.
In January 2007, Wikipedian Sérgio Meira (Smeira) began to actively use a bot called SmeiraBot to create many new articles about Volapük-related topics, before massively adding stubs about cities primarily in France, Italy, and the United States. MalafayaBot was another active bot on the Volapük Misplaced Pages: It served primarily to greet new users, add interlanguage links, and clean up deprecated files, but also created hundreds of stubs about individual years.
Between June and September 2007, the Volapük Misplaced Pages grew very quickly with the use of bots. On 7 September 2007, it became the 15th Misplaced Pages to reach the milestone of 100,000 articles, surpassing many editions in much larger languages including Arabic, Turkish, Indonesian, Korean, Vietnamese, and Danish. Starting with only some 5,000 articles in June, it had over 110,000 articles by November of the same year, surpassing even the Esperanto Misplaced Pages to become the largest Misplaced Pages in a constructed language. While among the largest editions, the Volapük Misplaced Pages received a considerable amount of attention from the Misplaced Pages community, bloggers, and even some media coverage.
In early September, Smeira's work was criticized by a few Wikipedians including Chuck Smith, founder of the Esperanto Misplaced Pages, who asked about his motive for favoring "quantity at the great expense of quality".
In response to the criticism, Smeira wrote:
I thought I could try to get some new people interested in learning the language and contributing by doing something a little crazy -- like increasing the size of the Volapük Misplaced Pages as fast as I could, with Python programs for copying and pasting information onto pre-translated templates. In many Wikipedias this had already been done (I actually got the idea from the US city articles in the English Misplaced Pages).
Soon after, on 21 September 2007, a proposal was submitted to Meta-Wiki to close the Volapük Misplaced Pages. A long discussion followed, as did eventual disputes and even vandalism. Wikipedians were divided on the issue and the discussion was closed on 6 November 2007. The final decision was to keep the Volapük Misplaced Pages.
On 25 December 2007, a second, "more balanced request" was created, suggesting a radical cleanup of Volapük Misplaced Pages with the aim of removing all bot-created articles, and transferring the remaining articles to the Wikimedia Incubator. This proposal was also rejected, on 28 January 2008. The Esperanto Misplaced Pages's number of articles caught up, on 23 September 2009, two years after being surpassed, and it remains the largest Misplaced Pages in a non-natural language to this day. Since then, the number of articles has remained relatively stable on the Volapük Misplaced Pages, while the edition's collaborative quality has increased, as more effort is put on improving current articles than creating new ones, which led to a doubling of the depth indicator since SmeiraBot made its last edit in April 2008, after a total of over 1,150,000.
Following discussions about the status and future of the Volapük Misplaced Pages, several initiatives led to the creation of measures to promote the development of quality articles throughout Misplaced Pages. On 7 November 2007, Sérgio Meira introduced the List of Wikipedias by sample of articles, a ranking of Wikipedias based on the size of its articles in a predefined sample based on the List of articles every Misplaced Pages should have. It was created to serve as a measure of Wikipedias' quality, alternative to the list of Wikipedias by size. Two months later, on 8 January 2008, a Proposal for Policy on overuse of bots in Wikipedias was created on Meta-Wiki. Its purpose was to address perceived problems resulting from "massive flood of additions from bots", but as of July 2014, it remains a proposal and is still in the process of gathering consensus for adoption.
Name and logo
Current logo since May 2013Original logo created in 2005The word Vükiped is unique among translations of the name Misplaced Pages because it conveys an adaptation of the original word's connotations while being composed entirely of existent Volapük morphemes. Instead of opting for an habitual calque of the English portmanteau of wiki and encyclopedia, the Volapük Misplaced Pages's community preferred to devise a neologism, since a borrowing of the prefix wiki- would be inconsistent with Volapük morphology. The resulting Vükiped is composed of morphemes vü- ("inter-", "among") and kiped ("to keep", "to preserve", "to maintain"), and has an implied meaning that roughly translates as: "the effort to maintain this Misplaced Pages is shared among a group of folks". The word was adopted in early 2004, for its autological conveyance of a central aspect of Misplaced Pages's nature and because it is both phonologically and orthographically similar to the original term Misplaced Pages.
The first Misplaced Pages logo made for the Vükiped was created by Nohat and transferred to Wikimedia Commons on 8 June 2005. Until May 2013, the Volapük Misplaced Pages was the only edition with over 100,000 articles still using the first generation of Misplaced Pages's logo. It was among the last Wikipedias to make the switch to the second-generation logo. The second-generation logo was uploaded to Wikimedia Commons on 12 June 2010, but only published on the Volapük Misplaced Pages almost 3 years later, on 4 June 2013, because priority was given to a Misplaced Pages's reach, as opposed to its size. The Volapük Misplaced Pages is the only edition with over 100,000 articles that has never replaced its logo with a commemorative version upon reaching new milestones.
Related projects
There is a "!Bang" command available on DuckDuckGo, giving users the ability to redirect a search to the Volapük Misplaced Pages or to access it directly by typing !wvo. In addition to the Volapük Misplaced Pages, the Wikimedia Foundation hosts a Volapük Wiktionary (Vükivödabuk), which contains over 22,000 words. There is also an Idiom Neutral wiki hosted by Wikia.
Statistics
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As of January 2025, the Volapük Misplaced Pages's approximately 39,000 articles account for approximately 8% of all the articles written in a constructed language, making it the second-largest edition in the family after the Esperanto edition, whose share is 73%. The Volapük edition currently has a relatively low depth indicator of 186.6, which is below the Esperanto edition's 17, but higher than the Dutch, Kazakh, Cebuano, and Waray-Waray Wikipedias' (which have a depth indicator of 19.3, 15.4, 2.2, and 4.3 respectively).
At close to 600 articles per speaker, the Volapük Misplaced Pages has, by far, the greatest number of articles per speaker of any edition of Misplaced Pages. These figures were based on a very optimistic estimate of 200 speakers of Volapük. Its editing community currently consists of 2 administrators (6.7% of all active users) and 30 active contributors, of which on average between 1 and 3 are very active every month, and there are in total 8 users with over 1,000 edits (excluding bots).
Content
As it mainly consists of "Poplar Bluff" style articles, it fits the definition of a "botopedia" (Russian: ботопедия), as coined by the Russian Misplaced Pages. Nevertheless, the Volapük Misplaced Pages also has 14 featured articles (Yegeds gudik), and a relatively low proportion of 0.12 featured articles per 1000 articles, on par with the Uzbek, Lithuanian, and Danish Wikipedias. It features a rich collection of articles about the history of the Volapük movement that are mostly unique to the Volapük Misplaced Pages or have shorter translations in other languages. As of 6 January 2025, 9 articles on the English Misplaced Pages could be expanded by translating from the Volapük Misplaced Pages.
In 2013, the Oxford Internet Institute created a graph, as part of its Information Geographies project, and found that the Volapük Misplaced Pages had the 11th-largest amount of geocoded articles of any Misplaced Pages edition. It also noted that although most editions contained "between 12% (Italian Misplaced Pages) and 20% (English Misplaced Pages) of geocoded articles", the Volapük Misplaced Pages contained 79%, and was deemed "the exception". The graph was based on data from the Terra Incognita project, which was developed by Gavin Baily and Sarah Bagshaw at TraceMedia, and was supported by funding from the Arts Council England Grants for Arts and the National Lottery.
In 2014, Tobias Treppmann created Misplaced Pages Worldmap, a program for comparative visualization of geocoded Misplaced Pages articles by language. He compared various pairs of Misplaced Pages editions, including Esperanto and Volapük, and came to the conclusion that "Esperanto doesn't seem very interested in the U.S., but does cover Japan. Volapük, however, does know the U.S. and has a curiosity for the Baltics and some place in south west Africa".
Images
The Volapük Misplaced Pages holds no files locally, relying strictly on Wikimedia Commons for images, sound, and other media files. All of its files are freely available under a Creative Commons license and there are thereby no fair use works. It is an approach shared by several other editions lacking an Exemption Doctrine Policy, including i.a. the Spanish, Swedish, Polish, Basque, Czech, Danish, and Latin Wikipedias. The exclusion of fair use images does not hinder the development of the project, because most material pertaining to the Volapük movement was published over a hundred years ago and is therefore in the public domain.
Notability within the Volapük community
In 2013 and 2014, the Volapük Misplaced Pages was presented as evidence that the internet is helping revive the Volapük movement, albeit merely as a hobby, devoid of its former internationalist aim. As one of the largest works written in the language over the last century, it has an impact on the development of modern Volapük neologisms, particularly geographical terms. On the online discussion group Volapükalised, the Volapük Misplaced Pages is the subject of multiple discussions about terminology and usage, being often linked to as a reference for language points. Several prominent figures in the development of Volapük, including Arden R. Smith, link to Vükiped on their websites and it is predominantly featured on the official website of Flenef Bevünetik Volapüka ("The International Community of Friends of Volapük") maintained by volapükologists Ralph Midgley and Michael Everson.
Beyond the Internet, the Volapük Misplaced Pages was presented as an illustration of the Volapük community's continuance during the Esperanto, Elvish, and Beyond: The World of Constructed Languages exhibit held at the Cleveland Public Library from May through August 2008 and at the Third Language Creation Conference on 21–22 March 2009. It was created by Donald Boozer, then a Subject Department Librarian in Literature and currently Coordinator of Ohio's statewide online reference service (KnowItNow24x7) as well as librarian and secretary of the Language Creation Society.
See also
Notes
- Contributors are users who edited at least 10 times since they registered.
- Maintenance of interlanguage links on individual editions of Misplaced Pages has been deprecated since the advent of Wikidata, where interlanguage links from all editions are centralized since 6 March 2013.
- Depth is a rough indicator of a Misplaced Pages's collaborative quality showing how frequently its articles are updated. A higher depth usually indicates that articles are more often edited.
- As of 29 July 2014, the Limburgish, Zeelandic, Ladino, and Cherokee Wikipedias are the last ones still using the old logo.
- A very active user is one with 100+ edits in the main namespace of a given project over the last 30 days.
- A botopedia, or ботопедия in Russian, is a Misplaced Pages whose share of articles created by bots is greater than 50%.
References
- "Misplaced Pages Statistics — Tables — Contributors". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- ^ Zachte, Erik. "Creation history / Accomplishments". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- ^ "Fomam timü 20:42, 2003 setul 27id". Earliest revision of "Cifapad" (in Volapük). Vükiped. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- ^ "List of Wikipedias". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- ^ "List of Wikipedias by language group". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 28 April 2024.
- Tereszkiewicz, Anna (2010). Genre analysis of online encyclopedias : the case of Misplaced Pages (Wyd. 1. ed.). Kraków: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. p. 67. ISBN 978-8323328131.
It can be argued that Misplaced Pages has become a global and largely international product, including the editions in Lombard, Cebuano, Volapük, and Yoruba. The existence of so many versions of Misplaced Pages constitutes an indubitable and exceptional proof of its popularity and reflects the success of the project.
- Yates, Ben; Matthews, Charles; Ayers, Phoebe (23 September 2008). "15". How Misplaced Pages Works: And How You Can Be a Part of It. No Starch Press. p. 410. ISBN 978-1593271763.
The range of languages represented by Misplaced Pages is very large. Wikipedias exist in constructed languages (Esperanto and Volapük with their internationalist aim) and significant dead languages (Latin and Old Church Slavonic ), which have no native speakers.
- Jesper Stein Sandal (30 December 2008). "Misplaced Pages runder 100.000 artikler på dansk". version2.dk (in Danish).
12 millioner artikler på flere hundrede sprog fra dansk til volapyk.
- Jörn von Lucke (9 May 2010). "Open Government — Öffnung von Staat und Verwaltung – Gutachten für die Deutsche Telekom AG zur T-City Friedrichshafen" (PDF). Gutachten für die Deutsche Telekom AG zur T-City Friedrichshafen (in German). Zeppelin University gGmbH. p. 15. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- Jörn von Lucke, ed. (31 March 2012). "6 T-City Friedrichschafen — Projektfeld Lernen und Forschen". Entdeckung, Erkundung und Entwicklung 2.0 - Open Government, Open Government Data und Open Budget 2.0 (in German). epubli. p. 41. ISBN 9783844217995. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Raleigh Muns (7 November 2008). Baudino, Frank; Ury, Connie Jo; G. Park, Sarah (eds.). "Misplaced Pages Judo: Mutual Benefit by Way of Altruism" (PDF). Brick and Click Libraries — An Academic Library Symposium. Northwest Missouri State University. p. 103. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
- "Fomam dätü 02:39, 2004 mäzul 3id". Difference between revisions of "Cifapad" (in Volapük). Vükiped. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- "Gebanibespik:Jmb". Vükiped. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
- "Fomam dätü 18:15, 2006 dekul 15id". Difference between revisions of "Cifapad" (in Volapük). Vükiped. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- "Patikos:Keblünots/MalafayaBot". Vükiped (in Volapük). Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Nicky Ringland; Joel Nothman; Tara Murphy; James R. Curran. "Classifying articles in English and German Misplaced Pages" (PDF). School of Information Technologies. University of Sydney. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
- ^ Fajstrup, Marianne (6 November 2007). "Der er gået volapyk i Misplaced Pages". berlingske.dk (in Danish). Berlingske. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- Hestad, Kari Mathilde (6 November 2007). "Volapyk på Misplaced Pages". ABC Nyheter (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 9 July 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- "Volapuko kaj la Vükiped". Esperanta Vikipedio (in Esperanto). Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Multiple references:
- Östen Dahl (17 January 2008). "Det rene volapyk". lingvistbloggen.ling.su.se (in Swedish). Stockholm University. Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- Wimmer, Paweł (30 September 2007). "Vükiped, czyli park jurajski". Poradnik internauty (in Polish). Archived from the original on 25 December 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Mr. G. Z. T. (20 October 2012). "Why are there so many articles in the Volapuk Misplaced Pages?". THE ŒCUMENICAL PANHERESY. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Martein Sveinsson (29 April 2008). "Volapük tosto le lingua le plus diffundite del mundo". Blogg Marteins Sveinssonar (in Interlingua). Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- Multiple references:
- Yves Nevelsteen; Chuck Smith; Toño del Barrio; Eddy Van den Bosch; Hèctor Alòs i Font (15 September 2007). "Volapuko jam superas Esperanton en Vikipedio" (in Esperanto). Libera Folio. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Paweł Wimmer (1 December 2007). "Ciekawe wydarzenia w Internecie". PCWorld (in Polish). IDG Poland S.A. p. 1. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Robert Lane Greene (7 March 2013). "The keenest Wikipedians". The Economist. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- vilcxjo-me. "Volapük Gajnas!". Esperanto League for North America (in Esperanto). Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- "Gebanibespik:Smeira/Ragiv01". Vükiped (in English, Spanish, and Volapük). March 2008. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Sérgio, Meira. "Answers?". Gebanibespik:Smeira. Vükiped. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
- "Fomam dätü 14:33, 2007 tobul 25id". Vükiped (in Volapük). Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- "Proposals for closing projects/Closure of Volapük Misplaced Pages". Media-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- ^ "Proposals for closing projects/Radical cleanup of Volapük Misplaced Pages". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- "The bot equivalent to the atom bomb was ignited". ] Just do things and promote them later – not the other way round. Retrieved 12 April 2007.
- Gasper, Donald. "Vükiped". Menefe Bal Püki Bal (in Esperanto). Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- "Depth". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
- "Patikos:Keblünots/SmeiraBot". Vükiped (in Volapük). Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Smeira (7 November 2007). "List of Wikipedias by sample of articles". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- ^ "Proposal for Policy on overuse of bots in Wikipedias". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. 8 January 2008. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- ^ Oliver Pereira; Jay B. "Fomam timü 14:00, 2003 febul 15id". Vükiped. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
- Malafaya; Anonymous (January 2013). "The word "Vükiped"". Vükiped. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- "Add localized/v2 logos for Wikipedias without one IV". Wikimedia Code Review. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- "locked/English_logo". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
- "!Bang". Duckduckgo.com. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- "Cifapad". Vükivödabuk (in Volapük). Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- "Velkom a wikia in Idiom Neutral". Wikia. (in Idiom Neutral). 20 July 2014. Retrieved 20 July 2014.
- "List of Wikipedias by speakers per article". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- "Featured articles". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- Zachte, Erik. "Very active wikipedians". stats.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- "Analytics/Metric definitions". MediaWiki, The Free Wiki Engine. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- van Dijk, Ziko (Fall 2009). "Misplaced Pages and lesser-resourced languages" (PDF). Language Problems and Language Planning. 33 (3). John Benjamins Publishing Co.: 234–250. doi:10.1075/lplp.33.3.03van. ISSN 0272-2690. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
"Poplar Bluff " style articles are like geographical stubs, created schematically by a bot, but they use more data and present it in the form of full sentences. "Poplar Bluff " is a town in Missouri, USA.
- Википедия:Ботопедия. Википедия (in Russian). Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- "Vükiped:Yegeds gudik". Vükiped (in Volapük). Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- "Kladabim". Vükiped (in Volapük). Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- "Category:Articles needing translation from Volapük Misplaced Pages". Misplaced Pages. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- ^ Graham, Dr. Mark; De Sabbata, Dr. Stefano (2013). "Geographic intersections of languages in Misplaced Pages". Oxford Internet Institute. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
- Treppmann, Tobias (25 February 2014). "Misplaced Pages Worldmap — A comparative visualization of geocoded Misplaced Pages articles by language". Arte. Archived from the original on 9 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
Both made-up languages, Esperanto doesn't seem very interested in the U.S., but does cover Japan. Volapük, however, does know the U.S. and has a curiosity for the Baltics and some place in south west Africa.
- "Resolution:Licensing policy". Wiki-Meta. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- "Non-free content". Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Gobbo, Federico (2005). "The digital way to spread conlangs". Academia.edu. Università degli Studi dell'Insubria. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
The Volapük movement appears to have been given a new lease on life by the Internet. At least, internet has given less successful auxlangs the opportunity to demonstrate the tenacity of their supporting movements: Misplaced Pages, a web place which reflects the engagement of a linguistic community supporting a language, has a version of its own in Volapük, counting 44 entries.
- Łukasz Michalik (24 September 2013). "Slovio, wenedyk, toki pona i klingoński. 10 najciekawszych sztucznych języków". Gadżetomania.pl (in Polish). p. 5. Archived from the original on 12 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
jednak po ponad wieku ponownie zyskał na popularności dzięki Internetowi – Misplaced Pages w tym języku liczy niemal 120 tys. haseł!
- Morris, Robert. "Countries and languages names". Menefe Bal Püki Bal (in Volapük). Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- van Steenbergen, Jan. "China, Chile, Czech Republic". Menefe Bal Püki Bal. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- Smith, Arden R. "Yels deglul ela "VOLAPOP!"". Volapükalised (in Volapük). Retrieved 29 July 2014.
- Ralph Midgley; Michael Everson. "Vükiped". Flenef Bevünetik Volapüka (in Volapük and English). Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- Smith, Arden R. "Vükiped: sikloped libik". Volapükayüms (in Volapük). Archived from the original on 14 May 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- Boozer, Donald. "Esperanto, Elvish, and Beyond: The Cleveland Public Library Exhibit". The Conlanger's Library. Language Creation Society. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Boozer, Donald (9 May 2008). "Case 6: Esperanto & Other Auxlangs, left". Conlang Exhibit at Cleveland Public Library. Flickr. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- "6.G. Schisms in a Perfect World". Conlang Exhibit Master File Text. Language Creation Society. pp. 40–41. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Michael Norman (6 June 2008). "Inventing own language, Don Boozer opened up another world". Cleveland.com. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Fiat Lingua. "Review of From Elvish to Klingon: Exploring Invented Languages". Fiat Lingua. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- Emrys, Sai (27 December 2008). "3rd Language Creation Conference: Glossopoesis & Glottotechnia". The LINGUIST List. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- "Officers & Directors". Language Creation Society. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
External links
- Media related to Volapük Misplaced Pages at Wikimedia Commons
- Volapük Misplaced Pages (in Volapük)
- Vükiped:Kafetar The Volapük Misplaced Pages's Village pump (in Volapük)
Wikipedias in constructed languages | ||
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