Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc Re: DBpedia usage in the bbc - selected highlights - selected highlights
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc - selected highlights ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 12:08 AM, Gregor Hagedorn g.m.haged...@gmail.comwrote: In my observation, numeric-URI-based systems like Drupal tend to have minimal Links inside their content pages (i.e. beyond the menu system), mediawiki-based system tend to have hundreds of links inside their content. I believe this is so because links inside Drupal pages usually point to something like http://drupal.org/node/21947/ which makes it impossible for humans to easily check whether this is an intentional or erroneous link. This is off-topic, but for Drupal this is a configuration issue. One of the early lessons in books and tutorial series is how to configure this, and many Drupal sites are configured to use human-readable paths. Drupal.org is not because it has millions of nodes which often change names. You are correct that most Drupal sites have fewer internal links than wikis, but I think that holds for Drupal sites that are configured to use human-readable paths as well. The cause is more likely in a different interface issue. I don't mean to spin this out into a tangent about Drupal, just wanted to point out that correlation doesn't imply causation in this case. -Lin -- Lin Clark Drupal Consultant lin-clark.com twitter.com/linclark ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
I don't mean to spin this out into a tangent about Drupal. Me neither, my discussion point here is: There are advantages for opaque (like http:something.org/node123456) and nonopaque (http:something.org/Bonn,_Northrhine-Westfalia,_Germany) URI/IRI identifiers. In the light of the use-case of interlinking discussed here: which is right for Wikidata? Does Wikidata need both in parallel (I believe this is the current plan)? Gregor ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
Yes, we are planning to do both in parallel, as this page explains: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Notes/URI_scheme Cheers, Denny 2012/7/5 Gregor Hagedorn g.m.haged...@gmail.com: I don't mean to spin this out into a tangent about Drupal. Me neither, my discussion point here is: There are advantages for opaque (like http:something.org/node123456) and nonopaque (http:something.org/Bonn,_Northrhine-Westfalia,_Germany) URI/IRI identifiers. In the light of the use-case of interlinking discussed here: which is right for Wikidata? Does Wikidata need both in parallel (I believe this is the current plan)? Gregor ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l -- Project director Wikidata Wikimedia Deutschland e.V. | Obentrautstr. 72 | 10963 Berlin Tel. +49-30-219 158 26-0 | http://wikimedia.de Wikimedia Deutschland - Gesellschaft zur Förderung Freien Wissens e.V. Eingetragen im Vereinsregister des Amtsgerichts Berlin-Charlottenburg unter der Nummer 23855 B. Als gemeinnützig anerkannt durch das Finanzamt für Körperschaften I Berlin, Steuernummer 27/681/51985. ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
Hello Michael, thank you for your input, this is extremely valuable. In general I expect that Wikidata will serve your needs better than an extraction from Wikipedia could. First, yes, we will have more stable identifiers. Second, it should be better at identifying items of interest. Some of the reasons why several meanings are conflated into one article or spread over several articles in Wikipedia is that it simply makes sense for a text encyclopedia. I don't see a reason for Wikidata doing the same. I do not expect Wikidata to solve all problems. In some glorious future, Wikidata will have a community. This community will decide on criteria for inclusion, both with regards to the coverage of items and with regards to what they are saying about them. The community will decide on the kind of sources they accept. Etc. (Actually, decide is too nice a word for the process I expect will unfold... ) We will keep the problems you mentioned in mind, and I fully think that we will improve on every single one of them. 2012/7/3 Michael Smethurst michael.smethu...@bbc.co.uk: So I think we'd be interested in wikidata for 2 (maybe 3) reasons: 1. as a source of data for domains where there's no established (open) authority (eg the equivalent of musicbrainz for films) 2. as a better, more stable source of identifiers to triangulate to other data sources Yes, I expect that both use cases will be covered by Wikidata. ?3?. Possibly as a place to contribute of some of our data (eg we're donating our classical music data to musicbrainz; there may be data we have that would be useful to wikidata) It will be up to the community to accept data donations -- the development team does not speak for the community. Personally I would be thrilled to see such donations happen. See also: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/FAQ#I_have_a_lot_of_data_to_contribute._How_can_I_do_that.3F Have glanced quickly at the proposed wikidata uri scheme (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Notes/URI_scheme#Proposal_for_Wikid ata) and snip http://{site}.wikidata.org/item/{Title} is a semi-persistent convenience URI for the item about the article Title on the selected site Semi-persistent refers to the fact that Wikipedia titles can change over time, although this happens rarely /snip Not sure on the definition of infrequently but I know it's caused us problems. Fully agree. But they make for nice looking URIs. The canonical URI though is the ID-based one, and these are stable. The pretty ones are for convenience only. I will take a look at the note to see if this needs to be made more explicit. Wondering if the id in http://wikidata.org/id/Q{id} is the wikipedia row ID (as used by dbpedialite)? Also wondering why there's a different set of URIs for machine-readable access rather than just using content negotiation? No it is not. There is no such thing as the wikipedia row ID, what you mean is the page ID on the English Wikipedia. As there are plenty of items that have articles only in Wikipedia other than English, a reliance on the English Page ID would be problematic. We introduce new IDs for Wikidata, but we will provide mappings to page IDs in the different Wikipedia language editions. Thank you again for your input, and I hope the answers help. Cheers, Denny ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
On 04/07/2012 10:48, Denny Vrandečić denny.vrande...@wikimedia.de wrote: Hello Michael, thank you for your input, this is extremely valuable. In general I expect that Wikidata will serve your needs better than an extraction from Wikipedia could. First, yes, we will have more stable identifiers. Second, it should be better at identifying items of interest. Some of the reasons why several meanings are conflated into one article or spread over several articles in Wikipedia is that it simply makes sense for a text encyclopedia. I don't see a reason for Wikidata doing the same. I do not expect Wikidata to solve all problems. In some glorious future, Wikidata will have a community. This community will decide on criteria for inclusion, both with regards to the coverage of items and with regards to what they are saying about them. The community will decide on the kind of sources they accept. Etc. (Actually, decide is too nice a word for the process I expect will unfold... ) We will keep the problems you mentioned in mind, and I fully think that we will improve on every single one of them. Look forward to seeing it unfold :-) 2012/7/3 Michael Smethurst michael.smethu...@bbc.co.uk: So I think we'd be interested in wikidata for 2 (maybe 3) reasons: 1. as a source of data for domains where there's no established (open) authority (eg the equivalent of musicbrainz for films) 2. as a better, more stable source of identifiers to triangulate to other data sources Yes, I expect that both use cases will be covered by Wikidata. ?3?. Possibly as a place to contribute of some of our data (eg we're donating our classical music data to musicbrainz; there may be data we have that would be useful to wikidata) It will be up to the community to accept data donations -- the development team does not speak for the community. Yes, that goes for musicbrainz too. We can offer data but it's up to the community whether or not they accept it Personally I would be thrilled to see such donations happen. See also: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/FAQ#I_have_a_lot_of_data_to_contribut e._How_can_I_do_that.3F Have glanced quickly at the proposed wikidata uri scheme (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikidata/Notes/URI_scheme#Proposal_for_Wikid ata) and snip http://{site}.wikidata.org/item/{Title} is a semi-persistent convenience URI for the item about the article Title on the selected site Semi-persistent refers to the fact that Wikipedia titles can change over time, although this happens rarely /snip Not sure on the definition of infrequently but I know it's caused us problems. Fully agree. But they make for nice looking URIs. Aesthetic concerns about uris tend to make me shiver :-) The canonical URI though is the ID-based one, and these are stable. The pretty ones are for convenience only. I will take a look at the note to see if this needs to be made more explicit. Think it is explicit. Just that there's so many flavours of URI knocking about it feels a bit confusing. The separation of the human readable and the machine readable feels like it's following the dbpedia design pattern and conflating the NIR IR step with the content negotiation which feels (to me) like a mistake. Have talked about this is the past on the LOD list so to save typing: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/2012Mar/0337.html Not sure putting /data in a URI is ever a good idea. Shouldn't whether you want data or not be decided by your accept headers. Same for ?format=json etc. For reference we use hash uris for things but only reference those in rdf and never link to them. One information resource uri gets exposed in links / the browser bar and does content negotiation for format (and eventually language) and the response comes with content location header of the IR URI dot the_format Wondering if the id in http://wikidata.org/id/Q{id} is the wikipedia row ID (as used by dbpedialite)? Also wondering why there's a different set of URIs for machine-readable access rather than just using content negotiation? No it is not. There is no such thing as the wikipedia row ID, what you mean is the page ID on the English Wikipedia. Ah, ok. Think someone once said that was the id of the underlying database row of the page record. Looking at dbpedialite it seems it does only support en.wikipedia As there are plenty of items that have articles only in Wikipedia other than English, a reliance on the English Page ID would be problematic. We introduce new IDs for Wikidata, but we will provide mappings to page IDs in the different Wikipedia language editions. Cool. Those mappings would be very useful for us. We're using Wikiminer ( https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/meta/wiki/WikiMiner) for entity extraction on archive media which also returns the page ID so some systems only know that ID. Be good to be able to query wikidata by it Thank you again for your
Re: [Wikidata-l] DBpedia usage in the bbc
On 3 July 2012 19:19, Tom Morris tfmor...@gmail.com wrote: A few notes on the BBC's use of DBpedia which Dan thought might be of interest to this list: It's great to see real world use cases to inform the development priorities of Wikidata. Amen to that. === some problems we've found when using dbpedia === 1. it's not really intended for use for data extraction. The semantics of extraction depend on the infobox data and this isn't always applied correctly. So http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_News_Channel and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fox_News_Channel_controversies share the same main infobox meaning dbpedia sees them both as tv channels This is partly (mostly) a social problem which Wikidata will need to solve at the community level, rather than through technical means. Indeed; and if we can better explain these issues to the community we might be better successful in persuading the blockers that such matters are important. Of course, there will always be some Luddites who see Wikipedia as a prose encyclopedia rather than the database of encyclopedic content which it really is ;-) -- Andy Mabbett @pigsonthewing http://pigsonthewing.org.uk ___ Wikidata-l mailing list Wikidata-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata-l