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Wikipedia Stats

Wikipedia Announces Their Most Viewed Articles Of 2016 (wikipedia.org) 65

Slashdot reader westand writes, "Wikipedia's 5000 most-visited articles of 2016 have been released, and Donald Trump leads the pack." (Though the site's second-most popular article was about a porn site.) The top 5000 pages account for 21.6 billion views, with 42% of those being mobile traffic... After artificial traffic is discounted, election and celebrity deaths feature prominently.
Wikipedia's article about the U.S. presidential election of 2016 also came in at #11, while their articles about Melania Trump and Hillary Clinton came in at #16 and #19, respectively. Other top-20 articles covered deaths in 2016, as well as "Prince (musician)" and David Bowie, with four more articles that covered 2016 superhero movies also reaching the top 20. (Along with "List of Bollywood films of 2016".) The eighth most-popular article was about web scraping, while Wikipedia's 404.php page was actually more popular than any article on the site.

The original submission also points out that 323 million views were covered by The Wikipedia Zero project, in which mobile operators in the Global South ""'zero-rate' access to Wikimedia sites in their billing system, so their subscribers will not incur data charges while accessing Wikipedia and the sister projects on the mobile web or apps." And Wikipedia adds that their list is generated by Andrew G. West, a senior research scientist at Verisign Labs who "is particularly interested in academic collaboration regarding this English Wikipedia dataset."
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Wikipedia Announces Their Most Viewed Articles Of 2016

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  • So the line-up is like this: Main Page followed by "Hyphen-minus" and 404 Page Not Fount, then Donald Trump. And what's after Donald J. Trump, you may ask? Why, XHampster of course!

    • To be fair, Carrie Fisher only died a few days ago and she's still near the top.

      Who knows what would have happened if she'd died a week earlier?

    • by bongey ( 974911 )

      More like Donald Trump, looks at Melania Trump next stop xhamster.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Kill Wikipeed Zero! Make the Global Brown pay for their Wikipeed data charges!

  • That's just yuggggge - Trump beating the top porn site as the most searched item. I'm guessing it's not regarding the size of his hands

    Making Sex Great Again - since most millennials have stopped having sex

  • Amazing... Winston Churchill (7,517,385) ahead of Justin Bieber (7,376,207). How can that be? A flickering of intelligence? Nah, must be some other explanation.

  • by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Sunday January 01, 2017 @10:35PM (#53590845)

    STEM topics notably missing from top 5,000. Plate tectonics squeezes in at #4994, transistor at #4839. Probably a few more up higher, but they get vanishingly rare. At least "global warming" is ahead of Play Station 4.

    • STEM topics notably missing from top 5,000.

      I know this may come as a shock, but the majority of people in the world are not all that interested in STEM, and those that are do research on specific STEM interests elsewhere.

      Wikipedia is a great resource for writing high school and undergraduate "term papers", though...

  • Compare poplarity with % mobile users

    60% Trump
    94% xHamster
    55% Suicide Squad film
    54% David Bowie
    67% Elizabeth II

    i.e. All above and similar are the result of recent TV, or about the rich and famous.

    Now look at vaguely technical popular articles not about people, films, specific places. (Have to look way down the list to find these.)

    9% Earth
    3% Java (programming language)
    4% HTTPS
    33% Syrian civil war (#277)
    42% Apple corp (probably just looking for the web site)
    45% United Nations #634

    And mobile is the futur

  • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Sunday January 01, 2017 @11:03PM (#53590923)

    What this tells me is that most people use Wikipedia to look up "trivia", a term that has been banished from Wikipedia in favor of "In Popular Culture"...

  • currently wikipedia has a extreme bias toward western secular globalist "liberal" elitist interventionist pov, due to power of entrenched editors.

    prime example is article on british empire; a regime that engaged in all types of atrocities (to greater degree than any other regime in history) to exploit resources of others. genocide, ethnic cleansing, slavery, preventable famines killing millions, torture, brutal suppressions of widespread resistance, etc., etc., well in to 1970s.

    but modern secular globalis

    • currently wikipedia has a extreme bias toward western secular globalist "liberal" elitist interventionist pov, due to power of entrenched editors.

      Ah yes, the required SJW comment!

    • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )

      Could you name a specific fact missing from Wikipedia?

    • by abies ( 607076 )

      a regime that engaged in all types of atrocities (to greater degree than any other regime in history) to exploit resources of others

      Is your point that British Empire was committing atrocities to gain some tangible benefits, while many other regimes, committed a lot of worse things, but just for sake of politics/religion/fun, not to 'exploit resources of others', so they don't count?

      You can just directly say that 'British Empire was engaged in more atrocities than any other British Empire in history' and it will be also true, even more provably.

  • The tech-related topic highest up on the list, on number 8: web scraping.

    I find it utterly strange that this particular corner of the tech world is so high up there. I would have expected new computer languages to be up there, like Swift or Rust.

    So I look down the list and on number 42 no less: Java!

    • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday January 02, 2017 @05:10AM (#53591513) Journal

      Wikipedia searches are now dominated by the general population, not by computer people. Java is much more well known than Rust pretty much overall: Java crops up in all sorts of places Also, Oracle keeps popping in the the business news every now and again sometimes with Java related stuff.

      Swift is really only relevant to iOS developers, and Rust is still young and just getting started. Neither is being pushed hard by a large corporation---Swift sort of is, but not as a general system like Java, more as something to write iOS apps for, which limits wider interest.

  • Almost all of the top 100 or so are absolutely not surprising at all, but what's with Proyecto 40 and AMGTV? I can't find anything newsworthy or interesting about them. I don't understand why they made the top 5000 at all, much less into the top 10.
  • The most views article of 2017 will be https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
  • Web Scraping is likely (mostly) Google doing it's job - crawling the web to update it's server databases.

    I wonder what Google's 'most's are for 2016.

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