Hi friends,

I hope you're all enjoying Wikimania, online or onsite! If you're in
Katowice, please come say hi to me.

I'm sharing this message because we need to crowdsource some WikiLove for
an important policy event. As many of you know, explaining the Wikimedia
model to policy stakeholders is a key priority for our movement. We've
identified a BIG stage where we'd like to do this: the South by Southwest
2025 <https://www.sxsw.com/>[1] conference in Austin, Texas. They have a
unique process, and we need your help - to win a popularity contest.

*How you can help:* We submitted a panel proposal (details below the line)
titled "How can fictional futures help us strengthen truth and facts
online?". Panels that are selected are those that get the
most votes. Voting is open between now and August 18th. If there's one
thing we're really good at, it's crowdsourcing. Please vote for our panel
here <https://panelpicker.sxsw.com/vote/151603> [2], and help us explain
the model to this audience.

Grateful if you could also share this with your friends in the movement and
beyond!

Best,

Ziski

[1] https://www.sxsw.com/

[2] https://panelpicker.sxsw.com/vote/151603

_________

The panel,  "How can fictional futures help us strengthen truth and facts
online?", will bring together speakers from the worlds of tech, fiction and
journalism, to talk about how we can create a future where reliable,
well-sourced, and human-verified information is not only flourishing, but
public trust in it is growing. The speakers include:

   -

   Sewell Chan <https://www.texastribune.org/about/staff/sewell-chan/>
   (Moderator) – Editor-in-Chief, Texas Tribune
   -

   Karen Lord <https://karenlord.wordpress.com/> – Award-winning science
   fiction author
   -

   Stephen Harrison <https://www.stephenharrison.com/> – Contributing
   Editor, Slate
   -

   Rebecca MacKinnon, Vice President Global Advocacy, WMF

As part of these discussions, we will raise awareness about how Wikipedia’s
human-led content moderation model is an antidote to mis- and
disinformation. As we enter into a time where the use of artificial
intelligence is becoming increasingly prevalent, Wikipedia’s human approach
to verifying content becomes more important than ever; this is something
that our teams have collectively been emphasizing in our external messaging
to help educate the media, lawmakers and the wider public about how this
model is important in maintaining information integrity, and why it should
be protected.

Franziska Putz (she/her)

Senior Movement Advocacy Manager

Global Advocacy, Wikimedia Foundation

[email protected]

UTC Timezone
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